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tv   DW News Africa  Deutsche Welle  June 16, 2023 11:30pm-12:01am CEST

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the i'm prestigious projects in india. we stand on so the was that we are the morgan manufacture their banners in india, the what secrets why behind being discovered new adventures in 360 degrees and explore fascinating world heritage sites p w world heritage. 360 yeah. now the as best as dw news off for guests coming up on the program. what time his life pots, what if not have to drop off it's dispatched to drink? is that africa cities, people die in from colorado, costs by decades of neglect and risk management of the country's water treatment system. kenya is also facing challenges due to the poor sanitation,
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probably low cost of projects, finding innovative ways to reuse the human waste. and we means on environmental lock, sophistic gonna drawing attention to for you to add water weighs in a most extraordinary way past how much do you know about african, the classical music, the music about n as in nigeria, whose passion, it's about the tune, child offer up in vegas the hi, i'm eddie micah junior and you are welcome to the program. cholera is rubbish in communities in south africa. so 5 is the more on that t people that have died in the outbreaks and hundreds i 2nd with a what's up on disease. so how could this happen in africa's 2nd largest economy?
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citizens outraged by government's failure to address water and sanitation issues about decades. so it advocates, precedents that are on pasa, can see that his government's failure to deal with a crisis dw, and use africa waiting to the worst effect that area in galton province from where the privilege machinery takes up the story. so this is a new, it used to be a mother of 3 healthy children until they call it a camera to how much gra, 1st, the disease killed has 7 year old daughter. and then 4 days later, it took a 9 year old son. so this was to come to comprehend, hit last will understand how his children caught the disease from. okay, why not? my suspicion is that the good call it up from there. what a distributed by truck on with my children never used to one to add around in the community. they only played in the fun, but i am shocked how they could disc contracted. they call it
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a little too quickly here. but let's see what it is. let alone the residents feel powerless to this. what does that mean? you suspect that this the one is causing us before there were credit space. yeah. and watch our people don't die. you because of these merits, please. we asking picked up on me to, to read it temporarily to see what hospital has been set up and how much cross to catch up for call it our patients for more than to the kids this community or how must cry outside victoria. so that's a guess, administrative capital has struggled with access to clean water residents. i'm no use to leave a side by side with dump sites like this one know, call it or his hits, the community type. what that was declared on safe to drink more than 10 years ago
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. now people are only drinking water distributed by trucks from balls, but some see that the water could be contaminated to. so the obvious source is that rule, so spinning from drain down to streams that supply the main what else will sees, you know, how much grow y o koya has been called one of the pods of africa. it was never imagined that call it i would impact south africa, the most industrialized country on the continent. you know how much crow sewage is rolling every way. residents here in greece and the government in the saying that this situation is been neglected for too long. the man of the local municipalities sees it will take one such an effort to fix the problem. i am, i have the discretion at the end of a long line of failures and excuses. the central problem is waiting. you source
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the money to upgrade. the problem is going to run into the billions which exceeds the capacity of associates, one allowed to undertake for people likes to play the suit. that is, quote, come forth fixing the problem now one to bring his children back. know that dozens of people we have already succumbed to the disease. from all of this last spring in leslie, patrick, profess, off chemistry, how the university of the western cape, south africa. hello and welcome to the program. now you work with what does security and water quality on the sage that is the science advisory group on imagine, sees now say, says that the color are related. that's where avoidable. so why away be allowed to happen? well, in south africa we have a really just off the state of the p as in terms of how senate session um most of
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our wastewater treatment plants up for non function. and unfortunately, the, the top of the a cube that should have been taken has not been taken and in fictions left. these people sweep across the street. i mean, it's much big. got problem, isn't that because you also want to be why didn't collapse of what top treatment facilities across south africa. tell us really how bad is the situation the situation is wisdom is going to be my opinion because we've got really close to 90 percent of our wastewater treatment of facilities to turn on functional or goodly functional and pleasurable to treatment system. so i'm, is any proof of the top of state of dilapidation and lack of maintenance. if they
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just doesn't seem to be the political will to do something about ensuring that these facilities, which are so essential, are actually created for and my time clock that should be. so is that how your, uh, put the blame on a government scene? does no political will because that's the question i was gonna ask. that's why it hasn't government failed to address the issue to really in many ways the reason or it is backed up budgets that are allocated on up spent property or spent or mismanaged. and that stuffs are not skilled or are included in positions which they not competent to actually be doing the budget and the, the owner, the consequence management people piece away with absolute negligence and nobody called him to account and the different government department started told one another to account. so the department of autumn segmentation laptops to account
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by the department of health by the department of environmental the fees. so i guess what you're saying is a lot needs to be done on the administrative level of the government, but, but just to be clear, is it sets in that what talk contamination is the cause of this color outbreak. i don't if anybody can really check down the cost of the ok. right. and i think that's like trying to conduct to which front because some unfortunate individual might have quotes the disease of even go to the, to south africa and dean of to that. the virus effect tv, a speed through of wasteful. typically these most edible sanitation and a lot of if then go straight into rivers from which people sprinkle which people use . and i think trying to find the actual cause of the outbreak his life. now we know that the bacteria exist and that if you don't take public key or if you're
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west for this is executive sort of thing that does happen right. time because we've seen cases outside of golfing. that's not mean that is ease of spreading. yes, they seems to be bought a few outbreaks. the 1st one started to come and scroll. but since being, if being outbreaks in other seem to and one can only presume that people are traveling and speeding the bacteria stick that perhaps not everybody is a properly ill who you spoke to get, you know, while they're traveling on just doesn't know it's very well known that human, so the big to for this particular bacteria. ok. thank you very much. leslie patrick, profess off chemistry at the university of the western cape south africa. now
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kenya has been suffering from an even west cholera outbreak. then south africa with a blaine penned on force on occasion, especially in the nations informal settlements of our innovative ways of ensuring that clean water gets to the people. and that the sewage doesn't get anywhere near the drunken water supply. did of use fairly expiring. the when to look at the project in i, vasa, just outside and i wrote this truck is delivering what most people would drive that gets you a golf human excrement in a few days which would be turned into because the method that and she was that no one would even suspect a weave of the original product. the previous is because the legs exist, address the sledges did sunrise, it mix 3 of so that which is also dried. then after that is combined to mix get, which is the final product kenyon cities as growing reputation. but most of the
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sanitation infrastructure was designed for smaller populations. the growing number of people, it means with management system. i've grown me under the flu, but human risk can also be a valuable resource. like, oh, that's not just pill. that could be fertilizer. that could be animal feed, that could be a macro nutrients that the soil needs that could be fuel. there's so many possibilities and so, and i know that we don't want to think or talk about poop because we think it's gross. but we need to remember it is a basic human necessity. just like anything else. that if we deal with it properly, it can be really useful. these restaurants in a row b has been using the big catch for about 5 years. they see the big catch give them more bonds, same and directly, and that's also fuel. irene is the money to $360.00 degrees to some pizza in they will be at the because of very advantageous to us. they're very cost effective.
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their environmental frenzy, in the terms of plenty to of production, seen the food improved as well as the sliver surveys really good and very list procedures, 90 percent of wasting stuff because she typed before being dropped into pain vitamins, interest profile, waste management and practice a sense of the way a waste is going about that into fuels, then i can get to enjoy my pizza in. they will be minutes normally times from why that because i mean the and these will be kits. i even good deals for kenya's woodlands. most of them means less need to cut down trees for firewood. so from what to pete size, what goes in on one end? let's come out bad. so you're watching dw news africa still to come. african classical music for the world. we
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meet a violinist in nigeria who's going back to in her own campaigns. very new offer a house in lake us. before we get into that, let's go to gonna weigh more than 25 percent of the coastal communities depends on what type bodies for their livelihoods. these vital resources are rapidly losing the beauty and purity due to constance pollution. so to draw attention to the problem, the climates active as recently set out on an unprecedented 450, can let me test swim in gun as votes. i like the welds largest mountain made late. she's calling one, i thought reduced to entry, present water bodies for a clean, a sustainable future use. isaac college of reports from the region
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active is finding different way events that day is passionate about guidance environments. prove of that is history mean through gun and slick volta for more than 40 days, covering on a viral root of 450 kilometers. this lake, the world's largest, that the fisher was of why it's one of the few what a waste in ghana still cleaning now forehead to streaming it is so encouraging and so amazing to be able to swing that votes around for like this. and i'd love to see other work somebody's in on and specifically across the, the, some of the, again, took test expedition was to draw attention to the pollution of gun. that's what the bodies, some of which come from 2nd hand clothing waste 15, maybe almost like an 100 clothing items, points gonna every week over a slip of st. ends up in west heaps. like here in the clear, like going in
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a cry that says, competing against environmental pollution was organized by there or foundation scientists, isabella brew. it's part of the team. harold was to take what a samples at various points for testing. in this philip poet bowed, she analyzed the worth of samples for several elements in this smaller borrower tree. it depends on the places where we uh, if we are close to villages for example, we will be collecting some samples for back to a logical tests. if we are close to factories or industrial areas, we will be checking for heavy metals. for example, diagnosed with a bodies continue to be heavily polluted, largely from mining activities manages of the what the resources see. many of them are in critical condition. jacqueline st. about the diverse stating impact my
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director of the water source of the southwest degree of our bodies. the physical gas to ethics is not as good because the level of the d is quite high level settlement into the system. so you have high dvd t and climate change is also compounding the problem with somewhat of bodies drain out the window of what does that leave up with fluids and kind of continued for several months. it's months because now it is with a shuttle to kind of go into what to within 2 months is dry. so in case of any droughts that is, so i mean induced job that is outside the normal cycle of driving and the feeling. then it means that we didn't, we just will just be in danger. direct a wants to continue to raise public awareness. and hope is that gun is what a ways one d, the free of all pollution. not just the rich words cost of coding.
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the now when you think nigeria and music you think i feel beach right? not surprising because it has a cheap, remarkable global popularity. but the same cannot be said for african classical music where opportunities for autos limited. and the chances of performing osland in an effort to change this, the best orchestra on oprah foundation, the home going initiative is dedicated to revitalize in classical music and nigeria, while these extra coma how small from lagos, the it's the last don't be hustles before the big nights, members of the best,
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the orchestra and oprah foundation performing artic denali of the after classical concepts series, illegals, the violinist rustling. i mean you set up the foundation in 2016 to promote music by africa. classical composers and showcase african pallets. every culture has their own classical music and with this orchestra and with the foundation we set out to discover on classical music because of such a musical people africans. and for contemporary composers, you also have those who have been composing but have no or cost just to perform that much. so we take it upon ourselves to that classical music. and nigeria has its roots in the colonial eruption. and it's these parts of the music curriculum budget struggles to get heard above the sounds of modern pop or nigeria as p most
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ruby. it's a real challenge for young talents. the main, your issue is work next of what the next. in fact, in terms of i might go into the plane, or am i going to find something else to do? this is, this is the major issue. we are in the quadrants it's, it's what goes in to a lot of people mind. that's why you can't seem to go to a classical musicians then to go get jobs, go find something that was just to survive the best. the foundation wants to fix that by providing this page and opportunities. the highlights of the season is the performance of a web, gmc by nigeria and composer. sure what the expense of an upper son can do to bad language that tells the tale of
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a soldier who sold off for his failure to cook. a tasting it will be the nigerian staple. the music might have its roots in europe, but did the choice of language under subject months to help nigerians connect. think that, uh, the country were evolving. and i think people can really get into this because of real beats the, to the well. so this can also be to the world, the best that focus right on opera foundation has more concepts planned from october. each one's to bring more after your classical music to the wide public found. because when i media says the main goal is to establish a legal spell for a house, for classical works of african heavy to the
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round of applause for the best. the orchestra that had a very special round of applause, but it's found rosalie niece, who joins me now. you're about to see how fast she is. hello, rosalie, welcome to the program. so you want to mission to promote the music by african classical composes. why is that so important? because in africa we have a lot of music. beautiful music, not just i feel visa and high life. we also have folks music and art music. i think it's important that someone, some of us promote the source of music to show what manner of variety she likes exists in a musical genre on the continent. but as you said, we're not talking about apropos for highlight for his life. well applebee's, but classical music in africa. is it really a cup of tea?
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yeah, well i really the good life is a cup of tea. we enjoyed good things and why not also the expression of our people in the we never had before. and then off form, in a very formal form, if you like, you know, presented in a way that we've never presented our music before. seriously, but at the same time telling a story which is the off part of the expression. you know, and it's something that has been very well received by audiences. classical music is known to have its origins from the western world. so what really is african classical music of the, like the name says it's classical music by african composes. and so you will have it in an african deal. and when you hear it immediately, you pick it out. you say, this isn't typically your pam. the expression is different, which is needed. all cultures all over the world have their own form of music. and
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it sounds similar to the classical music, but it is not quite classical music and i thought it would be important for the will to hear what comes out of africa. very soon we hope to move around the continental, soon as we have settled the nature of property, so to speak, when we the stablished quite a catalogue of composes, we will start to ask about some countries and compose us for this. i mean, look at the time one is trying to do it a spotlight on. so in this case i general music that is not very popular. that obviously challenges. can you tell us some of the main ones? yeah. well the, the, the biggest one of course is funding because art and culture is funded here in my part of the country of my thought of the world nigeria. and so we have some sponsorship to run our programs. we haven't found any, but we keep running our programs anyhow on our own. it's been very tough moving it forward and spreading the woods because one of able to put certain things together
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with p r and marketing of all of that tedious stuff. that costs what we, what we keep working on, we keep our trusting the right talent and the right composes, and which time we believe it will all come together. i like your optimism one of your games for, for a classical music, there's 2 found on full for our house in lagos, nigeria. how would that be different from existing institutions on the continents of the well in west africa, we don't have enough for house in my gerry, for instance, we have a national theater. we have carol culture where we started performing after classical concepts series. and we have the musical society of nigeria, that'd be have stages. but you don't have anything that is dedicated, that is built specifically for the performance of classical music and opera. and so it's very difficult to perform of these, although the schools exist,
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the music exists, the works exist, but we don't have the stage for this. the isn't the technology. we have very small stages we perform now at the might have been aggressive, has the aliens from set, and it's all very similar that the stages quite small. and so we sent off for a house. we would, we're looking at to including the entire community really because on opera house is owned by a community of people. and this is, the goal is to bring people in on the vision of understanding that our music is a lot more than what we see now. there's a lot more expression for the ethic grants. i've said i've had to really and then the best uh, orchestra found. thank you on all the best and that's it. with you now with the best, the orchestra, the foreman, or phone to the top of the by george b z. enjoy, bye for now. the
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seen a throne in the side of the secret fugitive right now that's literally nothing is right here. the where it is who is covering the i wanted stats june 29th on dw the this is dw news, and these are our top stories. a group of african leaders have held talks with ukrainian presidents a lot in there is a landscape and keith about a potential peace plan for ukraine. they'll travel along to st. petersburg.

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