tv My Avatar and Me Deutsche Welle October 22, 2023 9:15pm-10:01pm CEST
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taken by how mouse doing it's tara attacks. several protest as were arrested as a separate pro palestinian government, which authorities have banned germany's deed upset. jewish communities must be protected, coming together in grief, disbelief, and resolve in the house of germany's capital. thousands of people from the jewish n y, the communities taking a stand against terra and hatred. it was here in the lean way. one of history's doc is chapters the whole, the cost was orchestrated. mazda is terror attacks on october, say the name eas, ryle, with a deadliest against jews since then, something many struggling to come to terms with you guys in service. i think it's important here in the land of the perpetrators to show what side were on it says i to invest in body said, i'm very sad about what's happening. being here is one thing i can do to my heart from that i feel quite helpless. alice and gum, so i think a very clear sign of my soul
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a day or 2 with israel sentiment strongly encouraged by germany's president skunk 5 to stein maia via zag ones on foreign we say to our friends in israel and to old jews. you are not alone. we stand by your side in these terrible hours. your pain is our pain. meds is the ones that smells protecting. do we slice use something to him and he's got them. and susie, it has a special responsibility to do think is showing the incidents of anti semitism have reason, seems to how mazda attacks. while this demonstration here has gone ahead peacefully, local authorities across germany have bands and many pro palestinian demonstrations from taking place at all. or the use of incitement to anti semitic violence. need 5 police clash we'd protest, is it a non authorized pro palestinian demonstration? something seemed repeatedly info the name recent days. but the bands have laid to feast criticism,
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the minis accusing german of tardies of censorship and political repression. some pro palestinian demonstrations have gone ahead without incident. as the israel solidarity rally in building 2 relatives of hostages, taken by him us pleaded for the site for 10 and ask those gathered to pass on one special message for today's my sister's birthday, please join me in the simple song, a happy birthday song, a strong loud voice of my beloved sister to have the best day to day and the the the then the, the, the okay with me is the w political correspondence. i'm on the young assignment, i mean strong messages from the german president. what else did he say?
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yeah, well he said the officer october the 7th off to those of pulling attacks and carried out at by how much against civilians. nothing will be the same and he told of the unbearable pain as he put it of those affected. and he said your pain is as pain addressing people in israel and in germany as well at around the world. people he's been affected, he said to him, and he stands fairly by the side of it as well as you heard. and this riley was billed as a show of solidarity with these rail specifically. but massey also called on them to stop the barbarism as he puts it, release the innocent hostages immediately. and he also said that these attacks have led to the suffering of people in gaza. he went on to address the rise of anti semitism in germany as one of the other focuses of today's event at saying, you know that there are many people here who are
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a frightened that and he said that, you know, secure. his parents are scared to send that kids to school and that kind of thing. police having to step up protection of jewish institutions and stein maya said that it cost him shame to think that that kind of threat could be on the rise in germany once he can mean you talk to him. it's a bit because yes, we've seen a troubling rise and non to submit tick incidents in germany. says that at tara tax, how important is preston to spam or his attendance at the event today? yeah, well i think it time is like there's of intense conflict between israel and how much s gym and officials like the president, like fear of the chancellor as well. feel that it is important for them to go clearly on record at stating their awareness of the special responsibility, the place from history as a result of the crimes of the nazis, the murder of millions of jews in the holocaust. and that's why stein miller attended this event today, why he spoke to the crowd. so,
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so why chancellor schultz was not far away in the city of decibel today, opening a synagogue. and he to, of course the, and he's remarks a, talking about the conflict, but also talking about the need to protect it. jewish lives and life in germany. and i think based a sense of responsibility is what guides jim and thinking on the conflict of course . but there's a fine line to tread because there are people who are supporting the palestinian side as well. we seen significant protests on the streets at and you know, not everyone is convinced that germany's doing all it can to persuade israel to act with restraint as it carries out his actions in gaza. right. but let's go correspondence. i'm with young. thank you. now it sounds level of shells has opened a new synagogue in the city of the south. in eastern germany, there's been an increase in autism ethic incidents in germany. sense the stats of the conflict between these route and how mass security around jewish institutions
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and public buildings has been tightened, showed stress that germany will do all and con, to for types of jewish communities. so on these images, most office and thoughts on kind. i like to live on that can be no room for enter. semitism in germany is the me most per regardless of whether it is motivated by politics or religion. but funding. so that basically is from of the left or the rights and nothing to give bucks, whether it distressed it to you of a hundreds of years. and the question brought time from the outside auntie limited . most like at least i'm, it isn't. is it poison feeding from resentments to goes to lack of empathy, most and intolerance will just cut because of my boys and that divides of society and in dangers of democracy as of the gazette shift. so it says that onto the dm will continue to fit perfectly fine because even the time it isn't, it's also a fight for a better, more humane and lighting society to position. and that's the responsibility of the whole thing. i mean that's, and you know,
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has been either as prime in his stuff or he combined 15 years or about 3 decades. he is by far the longest 7 premier but also controversial. and polarizing. he's beside the coalition governments that have shipped it to the right. the thing, yeah. who also faces several the indictments for corruption. so how has he stayed impala and what will be his legacy is okay. for him. citizens of israel, a ma, we are at war and if not in operation or rounds, but at war come benjamin netanyahu as a war time later, a player on the world stage at a moment of utmost seriousness. but it wasn't always this way. earlier this year, these were the scenes on the streets of tel aviv, some of the country's biggest ever demonstrations against proposed reforms to the judiciary seen as a threat to israel's democracy. now those reforms are on hold as our, the protests. netanyahu has made
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a career of surviving peebles and scandals that would have doomed many politicians, part of an identity split between seeking to make history and making deals to survive from day to day on the back side. after serving as israel's youngest, ever prime minister in the 19 ninety's, he returned to office in 2009 and quickly found himself butting heads with us president brock. obama. netanyahu had formed a coalition with parties that supported legal settlements in the west bank. he alive himself with republicans in the us, not only on settlements, but in opposing the obama administration, sponsoring of a deal with israel's arch enemy iran. his government's increasing right wing direction seems to pay dividends when donald trump came to the white house within a year, a trump recognize jerusalem as israel's capital, to the dismay of palestinians, far greatest ally the united states of america today. it's embassy open here,
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a big win for netanyahu. the trump administration also spearheaded agreements between is real and middle eastern countries. normalizing relations. meanwhile, netanyahu's problems at home or growing in 2019, he was formerly charged in 3 separate cases. he lost that election, but after 18 months in opposition, he was back in office to achieve a parliamentary majority, he entered the most right wing coalition. israel had ever seen the efforts continued led by the u. s. to improve relations with saudi arabia and others. but it's now unclear when, if ever a saudi deal will be formalized, or dom and offensive in gaza. that results in mass palestinian casualties could undo, hears of diplomacy through it all baby has survived. but his hopes for a legacy as an international statesman have dimmed after the mazda attacks. he formed a unit, the government, but it's not a long term solution to israel's problems. the government also faces an eminent
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decision on how to respond to the hosted crisis in gaza. a miscalculation could have tragic consequences. the question hanging over netanyahu now is whether the attacks of october 7th will be his end. or will he managed yet again to hold onto power? and that's like a most are, is making headlines around a world. thousands got it in paris to demand these were, i'll stop it strikes on gaza. there was a fast authorized pro palestinian demonstration in the french capital as soon as the home off attacks. some protests and friends have been banned on public safety grounds. argentina is choosing a new president's. the vote is likely to unsettle financial markets and set the new political and social pop by right populous javier malay is poised to win the 1st round. but those shows he is likely to face a tight 2nd round reading and media reports, the 16 year old girl dropped out of a train for allegedly not to worry when they had coming is in
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a coma out of me to get a band was detained by the so called and radically police and for some district islamic dress code for women rush and strike on the thing in city of hockey, a pass code, at least 6 people. and one that 14 not as officials say to myself, struck him all. this would be the meal distribution, since i should say the casualties were all forced those stuff. as they're watching the news lights on the battery and he has a quick reminder, lots of story. the 2nd a convoy of 17 tracks has crossed from egypt into gaza. the united nations is wanting that the palestinian territory is likely to run out of fuel within days. thousands of people are valued here in bailey and in support of these route among the crowd of friends and family of hostages, taken by her mast doing it's tara attacks. 2 weeks ago. that's all the news for now. coming up next. documentary series asked whether people would accept
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as i sailed. beautiful habit survived and we are in the west african country. look here and you go into the 20 a good. i mean, the brutal civil war came to an end time i was 13 fights and the government all the what we experience is the 12 months. and then that was the night that i bought great by him, estimated that about 10000 children participated in that will be present like it didn't happen. the 77 percent. next dw
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montenegro is dealing with china for some it's the building project of the century . for others, it's an ecological and teaching on that catastrophe. prestige project highway, built and financed by trying estate owns the company. will this work out for montenegrin? in 60 minutes on d, w, the red and white, we need to stream it, send me an extra ice refresh rate and burn in south africa as well with disabilities. more likely to release the job or the lack lives matter, protest shine a spotlight on racially motivated police by the same sex marriage has been legalized discrimination.
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we all because life is made the hello and welcome to another this in the 77 percent the. so for app because you, i'm your host. let's show here's what we have on today's program. televisions and dancing has lived slowly returns back to normal in ethiopia as t gravely in sierra leone. edith kimani, uh young people, how they get over memories of the civil war and on with their lives to be in an hour award winning girls off new episode. we find out the lifetime coming in
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children are scared of wearing the school uniforms. our show today is about healing after war. and while we do not want to portray africa as war, it in the truth is that there are a current p more than $35.00. i'm conflicts happening on the continent now for peace and healing to occur. it's necessary to understand what the warring factions were fighting about in the 1st place. so let's begin with the t great conflict, and if your pm, if you're not from the horn of africa, you probably haven't heard much about that conflict recently. so let's take a look at where things stand at the moment. on 2nd, november 2022, q, the federal government, and the tv people's liberation fun, but to pure of agree to end, to use a form in the to clean region. but how does the conflict integration begin? let's start on the 4th november 2020. if your best prime minister of mid ordered,
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if you can national defense force troops into degree. civil effect has led to the crisis. power struggle an election and a push for political reform since 1994. if your peer has had a federal system in which different ethnic groups control, this is of 10 regions. 50 po f, which is credited with india if you please, military team in 1991 was quite influential in setting up that system. however, when of the midwest selected, as prime minister the 2018 teachers need to saw his response as an attempt to centralized power and destroyed his federal system. the feud came to a hit in september 20 great, beside the central government to hold its own original election months later, it'd be made, sent the army to degree, and the consequentially escalated into civil, also known as a t. 3 war millions were displaced because of the conflict. humanitarian aid was
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difficult to deliver. those needed and soldiers from both sides, accused of human rights violations, and great. some estimate half a 1000000 people died. if you appears to me, but inform adversary's reach, you joins the if you can government early in the conflict of to months of to 9 the present in spring 2021 prime minister of the estimate admitted that retrench troops will fight to integrate of the peace thoughts have resulted in less violence in the region and a chance for the people into great to rebuild their lives. so the conflict and t gray is not quite over yet, but in many parts of the region, life is slowly getting back to normal. for 40 grand women, finding healing as a war comes in many forms for some senior consulate has helped for admit on that hon. it's finding time to enjoy traditional ceremonies just like before the war. and this year she's especially excited about the ashen, the festival,
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the middle, i'm best time gets a soft ready for this and a traditional to graham festival. that honest woman and goes the joyful atmosphere, however, marks of stock reality. just a few months ago, the train to makeup artist was a soldier in the t great defense for the ultimate i would do one. it's just we were the supply team and delivered munition to the front not to go. we did not care so much about our own lives, but rather the lives of a comrades on the front line to go to taylor because of us, they could engage the enemy. you need to know that what was really hard though, were the drones which followed us and destroyed our depots and hiding places out of
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not being able to deliver ammunition due to the strikes was the hardest part of the law. but i'm happy to odyssey in november 2020, a conflict between the c o p and an arrow trail, and the t great people's liberation friend escalated into a harrowing with a killed of a half a 1000000 people. the women played a vital role in the conflict fabi and being a victim as active as nurses, doctors, and soldiers. they had a decisive impact on shaping the costs of the war. and my candidate capital of t. great in northern you see, oh yeah, that's and as being celebrated for the 1st time, 3 years for one week, man, i expected to present small gifts, while women with additional impressions gathered in town squares and streets to meet these like done and have fun. it's kind of a equity
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a. there are many other female evictions and mikaela just like best time to join the local militia to protect themselves from the um, according to them. a decision that lets i get it gives a busy lassie also had to make the stools because of what the retreat in the human army due to us, the raping and killing of the young people of tikrit, particularly women. our anger and frustration drove us to the front lines, but now with the prospect of peace, were finally feeling a sense of relief and happiness. the celebration is early after the war inflicted a severe toll and full issue of him with the trust that he's committed by all sides, women and t grey. those were disproportionately affected and systematic. he brutalized by soldiers, mckayla's hospital, monuments being leads to the one stop santa for victims of sexual violence. she
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actually has constant stories of extreme abuse, a woman, and goes mutilation and other forms of torture. she does her best to help those who have made the oddest journey to the hospital. my mother tried to follow with i don't want to talk to them. no that's i came here . and that's i came alone. i had so many problems guessing here. you do have lots of fights and going on and the army was to day. ringback i had no other choice but to go to the village. i did this whole picture associates as a will coming go as well as a to the side,
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the face in other words. and let's as a, because the nice because a just to get in to present unnecessary. we went to land on the police on us. we have 3, the special diesel. and it's to get is that sentiment to close women at the front of the country? look buffalo able to keep it after counseling more than 2000 rape survivors. miss vin believes that the remarkable place of women integrates history is one reason why they are old deliberately targeted they make this make this come here with me. you are my boss and this was kind of back on the streets, but from makes a way to the main to send a fist of a t's let's. let's have some fun of this house. at martinez bologna, stadium benz chip. the audience men can only watch from the
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galleries. this was not the 1st will in which the women of t grey ford for their lives and freedom from 1974 to 1991. the tpl if played a pivotal role in defeating if you're, if he has repressive military regime, approximately 88000 women were actively involved. one 3rd of t p. o if competence for the firm from an empty and strain a complementary rather than contradictory destiny. what else? what sets this ocean, the pod from previous ones is the intense fighting, the hunger and all the other hardship. then again, the hums even dick on the ship, but the girls are resilient to this. even after all the attacks witnessing them then tall and celebrate ocean,
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the filled me with immense joy. the outcome of this transformation is what makes this session to truly special this for many this year as a sanders festival. as you need to significant it's not only a celebration of peace, cultural heritage and woman, but also attribute to the resilience of woman degree. we mean us truly. we are facing so many problems, but to always overcome them from one generation to the next. that's what makes it stronger the while a send, a celebrated a recent report by physicians for human rights and the organization for justice and accountability in the horn of africa, revealed military units and t graceful. carry out shocking sexual violence. this is an oven by 2022 piece agreement. in
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fact, that is just one of many conflicts where a rape is used as a weapon of war. and it was the same and the civil war of sierra leone, which lasted for 11 years. now though that conflict ended more than 20 years ago, those will survive that, so carry visible and invisible scars with them. let's look at some background. the wars started in 1991 when the rebel group revolutionary united front form to over throw the government. over 10000 children, some as young as 5 years where recruited by armed groups and became child soldiers . the fighters carried out numerous horrific atrocities, rape abductions, amputations, killings. they also destroyed towns and villages the rebels payments their activities through the sale of so called the blood or conflict. diamonds. with the help of liberia has been president charles taylor diamonds were smuggled abroad and later as sold worldwide. by the time the war ended in 2002,
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after 70000 people had died and over 2000000 were displaced. those sierra leone ends live in peace today. many say that the underlying causes of the war, such as corruption, poverty, and unemployment remain unresolved to the state. in 2022, my colleague, it is kamani travel to the sierra leone and capital free town. and that's just spoke to people who are merely children during the war to find out how the conflict is impacting their lives. even today. the hello and welcome to the 77 percent of the shuffle applicants. this week we are in the west african country. it looks fairly going and 20 years ago this. yeah, i mean lived in india, brutal civil war came to an end. unfortunately, to some of the people who participated in that, who lost their loved ones and even lost some of their lives. what children 20 as on
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those children now become part of the 77 percent and we want to find out from them . what does the world look like for them? so we'll begin to with well, how much here tele view was, what you've been through. i was 50 natural is when the river that fact in our town shape. and we went with a voice for 3 months. then there was nothing to eat with my beard and asked me to go out and get some foods. so on my way, green, i step from out on the mines. so it's a much colors dropped my leg. yeah, so i wasn't a voice for 3 good. this was, i mean that's really, really tough. how do you surviving the bush for 3 days with an unprotected leg? it was really tough for me. it was, i was calling my hands and my niece supposed to be would this i'm really, really sorry to hear about that. unfortunately, it's more terrible news and we're just going to come to you for a 2nd of funds to see we because what they're describing is not alien to you either
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having been an i've and also a teenager about time. no. uh, what am i when i was in actually and for the fact that i think it was in 1998, i was a child and then to rebuild, attacked and killed by law. we went into the bush with our life for like, uh, 5 days a thing gets to my mother. and then my mother is like, you have to go back and get medication. and then i went that and i saw a family friend. and i went back and there was no way to go back to my mother and then he was like, you're safe with me. hey, nick, it's you know, spend the night. and then that was the night that i bought right by him not once or twice. 3 times and then i would say helpless. i could see nothing about set up. okay. well, thank you for sharing that. right? yes. so let's come to each file. please explain to us what happened with you and how you found yourself to be here today alive and well. so when i was about 12
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years old, the war came into my life. i started running from mitch by the time i was 13, i've been recruited to fight in the government army. and i fought for nearly 3 years. i lost everything my, my home, my aspirations long and short of it. i was able to survive to walk in and i was adopted in the family in the united states, so i left. but i carried the burden of the war with me because i felt beautiful having survived. and by the way, you smells case and everybody else we've heard from today. the case is the case is a one of tens of, but it's estimated that about $10000.00 children participate to them. that will. and the children were talking about a probably not older than the ones who are playing football here. so that gives us a visual, but also very difficult to imagine my resume. so you will one when the war ended. but your parents obviously who raised you and who gave us to you were very much part of this crisis. is this something that you discuss at home openly?
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has it affected how you were raised it as affected? lots of family members that i knew directly. and what, what we experience is the trauma trauma will. so you would, you would experience that lots of family members were not able to get job. they're not able to learn skills because they are for mitzi, v is we had destroyed by the war. let me invite john to this conversation. what do you think is the biggest challenge of the biggest thing that people are still carrying with them from the world? well, the biggest thing is to have a conversation. a community live. most of the because in to young generation did not experience the war and for the export as to what we'll do to have the space to have that dialogue. so i think part of our college initial is having an ongoing conversation about what went wrong. okay. so let me come back to fund to see here because we're hearing that on the one hand, not only to the opportunity to them,
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to spaces, to speak openly. they don't exist, but not speaking about it creates more trauma even for the generations after the fact. when one thing we're good at and certainly on is we move too fast and we pretend like what happened yesterday didn't happen. and that's why you have people like me and then the people, the fucking up. there is a time become like sole partner, like any sounds would i i would just like i went into that i would just blackout ishmael. let me come to you. did you get a chance to get sort of mental health care after the fact? uh uh yes, i did have a little bit of mental uh sites as a sure therapy as they used to call it right after the war. that was not the case for a lot of people. yeah. now what i, what i also want to really address is the fact that if you look at the society scenario, now a lot of us are broken. can you give me some of those examples? what think about social personal spaces? the way people view women where people view relationships,
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all of those things said the dis, functionalities had existed during the war. and some of the people who inherited that went on to the parents and race children. they don't know how to pass on those things to them. yeah, i want to hear from my re, um, if the education system is also catering to this, you know, as somebody who says, your facing 2nd generational trauma, is it something that you're taught to school? are you addressing this in your own sort of, you'd circle as mental health issues right now lots of people, even youths as my age do around around mental health discussions, trauma, depression, anxiety, the don't want to talk about it. and even i have spoken to some of my colleagues west study mets in, in things where i live in college of lives. and they'll tell you that i don't want to studies psychology or be a psychiatric piece because everybody in my company to feel out of my fussy and i'm working with my people. so let me ask a question that, you know, it might even sound call us to ask you, but i need to have sierra leonean really lunch from the wor, no, a,
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no, no, no. i say you're saying that everybody says, no. everyone is wrong. you know why? because we pretend like it didn't happen. nobody talk about, say, not in school, not in college now and houses in that it didn't happen. mariam, you? one of the people who said very emphatically, no, we haven't clung all the situations around the wall, all the effects, all the things that let's do all i still present. i still have corruption. these have you to an employment is helpful that these. yeah. and even the fact that we don't talk about seats makes the most kerry, because if we don't talk about the how do we want to move past it? so john, how do we move forward from a situation like this? what we need is, of course truck, the engagement of with young people. let's try to include in the curriculum of schools, the history of the will most likely not part of the curriculum. oh it's oh my
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goodness. it's not to disclose. let's how about going about the show in the schools? does university so that people get to understand what went wrong. all right? if i could add something to that, there is an adage in syria, you, if you don't know it was that you come what's, you know? no, it was i you to go. if you don't know where you're coming from, you will not know where you going. let's know where we've been, what, what's the, what's behind those? do you live with that and didn't know how to go forward. if not, we'll go back to that. yeah, i think that's a fantastic place to end. it's very rare. that's one district debate. we dwell on the past, but it is something that has come a very, very clearly today is that in some instances in order to move forward, as francis has said, very clearly, you sometimes have to look back. thank you for watching the as we heard in the debate, whenever there is armed conflict in the region or a country, it's the children whose stuff are the most to the constant fear of being displaced
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from the home. they grew up and maybe even witnessing people being killed right in front of them. and the english speaking regions of kind of rolling one major impact of the fighting. there has been that children can barely go to school because it's not safe. in our award winning girls of mute peace, a reporter who is a student, herself, spoke to friends and teachers to find out how they are managing to still get an education the and i live on come moon school, georgia like me. i'll face with incredible danger. that's because these are you guys so, but the ground between the government on people one to separate states. sometimes they at the school did you always keeps one eye on the classroom window because the children have been killed by at that goes right into the classroom in this region and still not be shut. ok, not on the way to or from school it as happens to some of my friends and all that.
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i've moved to other parts of the country to continue with that education. look mcguire, the school uniform because i don't want to attack us. no, almost google. i am lacrisha for those of you, and i'm going to be tell you why school children like me. i fights and then we go to school in bremond the why do you worry about when you leave for school early in the morning? let's start with you. fable, when you leave for school in the morning, you have to be scared of the random kidnaps the gunshots. no tags the sometimes because of serial gunshots. the new tags is available for us to go to school elementary school lead. what of you prima? asked me what i would love to go to school and my school uniform. okay, let's go back. let us keep you from the front of me. go. but not i could not co my books and papers. i'm going to squeeze you. how does this confound being?
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just a 6 year education as a student of 4 or 5, are you facing the gc examinations? you have to be in school, you must be able to pull that up. you'll see levels so asked to meet the expectations of did you see both? because he said general eye exam doing no quality that i did not rest on the sub with that in crises and almost don't said based what they told you. those said, based to this level, she was supposed to call back but it community here is not give and up to a show that education continues. it has set up mix you've schools as discreetly as possible. we did so part of unemployed teachers, local clergy. but when the enemy strikes at teach us, i also left helpless. i'll skip it in on. also, as a teacher, i can only play my role in the classroom. and if the government comes into the classroom, i am helpless and you talk to the gills about safety measures. always stood in, avoid should goods avoid going home late at night. i would visiting friends
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on also the move in groups. you remember when last you failed, save on your way to school at school. the last time i felt safe at school on my way to school was around 2016. when do a new crises, i totally lost a good number of friends. so my job out. so my, my wisdom teeth and some of them i don't know with, i don't really dusty i life. i did yells like us here in bomb and once to have an education. but we need a secure environment to achieve that. the long standing police got in security and violence, that'd be an extra thing here in bremond is standing in the way of that. well that report from lou impressions, income rule and wraps up the 77 percent for it today. to remember, you can always get great content from our team anytime you want,
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just follow us on youtube, facebook, instagram, and tick tock. so in the so we heard a lot about how people are overcoming war and hardships and hopefully headed into a positive future. so i want to leave you with an f listings phone here is then love were you acquired with the we will rise. i'm gonna show you next time the
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they the key to sustainable season urban centers devouring energy the world as a to solution. greg intended to intelligence with these centralized control megacities up tomorrow as most climate friendly to or today in 90 minutes on the w the can you hear me names are we are all set i'm we're watching closely. 7 to ring of the story behind the news, we all about unbiased information, feel free mind. so do to name the
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votes. people have to say the that's why we listen to based on the report every weekend on d, w g is taking a scene in the middle of the dash of the current and sasha organizing reconstruction to the beach. but it's getting cold. the volunteers of winning when to freeze their mission, kids take notes to rebuild, starts november 6th on dw,
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the business dw, and use a live from berlin mall aid gets through to gaza. the 2nd come by attracts crosses from egypt into the besieged by his opinion, surgery by the united nations. as one in guys i fees as a humanitarian catastrophe. that will run out of fuel within days. these are all stuff stuff strikes and guys are us from us, continues to file rockets from the territory. so at least 50 people have been killed in the latest one box here in bed and thousands of times the radi and simple
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