Skip to main content

tv   Focus on Europe  Deutsche Welle  January 25, 2024 12:30pm-1:01pm CET

12:30 pm
the fire give rise to don't really have to go see the january 27th on the hello and welcome to focus on europe with me live show in germany reports about a secret meeting of right wing extreme is planning to the porch people with for and background is causing massive waves and cities live cologne unit, collide, fish and berlin. hundreds of thousands are demonstrating, sending a clear message against racism and hatred, spread by right wing extremists and populace was silent. majority is raising its
12:31 pm
voice, calling for an open society and democracy in germany. germany saw the peak of mass migration in 2015 when nearly 1000000 people were registered as asylum seekers. since then, society and politicians have been divided over how to best handle refugees and migrants the matter has given rise to populace to see for and as, as a threat of bavarian village shows a different path. the community inhibits housing, did everything they could to quickly integrate them. zillow journal benefited from this game and he feels very much at home here in germany. a hey, that's housing municipality in the district of the how in the bay area is not like other towns in germany. the just 6000 tons, people welcome more refugees in migrants to the community, then officially requires. and they do so voluntarily. the new comers on needed
12:32 pm
the like most days, p top op drops into a full hospital. when many of the people he takes care of news, the about rock are you still here? i have to know what this is about. how dismisses an application. i'm your alice can have you got everything worked out for the weekend. this is or someone else, not for you. yeah, that's yeah. so that could work. can you get this? this is about a residence permit for you these. i'm sure you can do it yourself at cities, mother, pennsylvania, line it the boss advisors on application, and the ranges language courses urging newcomers to find jobs quickly. according to him, learning the language and finding a job, a key to successful integration using my goal is to put people on the right path. so they can live well here, leaving couldn't, does, is by and see. and this is like,
12:33 pm
there's no end to this. workers are registering goods. jello channel has benefited exactly from this help. originally from sarah leo in west africa. he came to this area 10 years ago. he graduated school and complete his vocational training. now working for a temp agency channel would like to stay in germany and become a citizen and he's working hard to well that's the end. most of his water heating on it's all about motivation, thoughts and knowing you want to stay in germany's when it starts out as wanting to learn the language and then going to school is and then actually speaking german just profit is yes, it really is very hard to learn, but if you just keep going and going, you can talk to people a little and that's very good. i didn't want to happen on talking, does this all 0 good. as the munich temp agency channel, buck stops specializes in referring refugees and migrants to companies in bavaria. but not all of them have the enthusiasm and motivation the channel exhibited to the
12:34 pm
health. because i feel from a to the bottom, the applications we receive every week of eclipse, say only about 10 percent replaceable. 10 percent fox inhibits housing. the percentage is about 8 times that. how come the community does not see refugees in migrants as a threat, but more as a chance for local businesses in dire need of work? cuz small businesses like the town bakery of desperate for help, the country is reliant on immigrant labor. but the conservative mayo from the christian social union would like to see the federal government to organize it better than it has so far. yeah. yourself up to what we can't even manage to distinguish was entering the country, seeking asylum, and who's coming on the basis of immigration. it's a conflict that's that's our biggest conflict on that. we're still trying to process everyone under the heading of asylum of i have to communicate some doing
12:35 pm
quite well things and you're doing well peter has to him a note back at the home for refugees piece up off with mrs. austin, that only few who come here have a real chance of being chrome, so to sign them based on their lives being in danger in the home countries most came to germany and such, but best of life. it's difficult for them to find a job while they're assigned them. applications are being processed. yeah, well the, i'm afraid he doesn't speak english either like the whole science to close personal support and excellent contacts and the he about tell them area bob, doug seats in finding work here for people from all over the world. yeah, on ben's you mentioned that i think of people are here for whatever reason. it enjoyed the i should do everything we can to integrate them and well come down on deep by and by stuff a hospital not far offsets, it's owned policies, it recruits and the employee's qualified personnel from around the world. like how many do i say no day from the wrong? he into germany legally on the work visa. he had already worked as
12:36 pm
a nurse into ron and study job and for the past year he's been making a new life for himself here in the district, the pool. i think the most important part is the language, of course, uh as much to i like to improve my language abilities because that would give me the chance to expand my knowledge and vocational skills thinking as a, as a device on hello ms. low miss, are you? what can i do for you? who do i, can you got some letters? the letter was the knew who the phone, the real estate manager has no doubt that more people will be moving to germany in the future is i couldn't. let's move, we can judge the responsibility anymore and build walls will prevent people from coming and then pretend we don't have any problems. to me, anyone who sees it like that is delusional. uh it is unique page. the box advice is to take the current situation as an opportunity. those who come to hear about the house and will get the help they need to find work and integrate. and have us
12:37 pm
housing could be a model for live germany the. well, countries are still debating on how many migrants they should allow in it is becoming more and more apparent across europe. that the whole continent is facing a growing labor shortage which helped alexandria and i thought to you to find a new job in australia. quickly, he left his home country, brazil to start a new life. in the hopes, working at a busy restaurant in to laptop is quite demanding, but also very rewarding. the crystal who to lodge hurts got over 2000 meters above sea level. and that's all it turns out this easy is in full swing and the alpine lodge is past the shift. alexandra, them itself is new here, the brazilian national team here only a month and
12:38 pm
a half ago. so this is the 1st time on the 3rd day for you. yes it is. i be a one and a half months and is the 1st time that i can appreciate the zoo. i'm speechless and so beautiful. so alexandra only has a few minutes. his shift has already started and there are several 100 meals to prepare. i have a lot of work. it's always a stressful kitchen, is like that. but is not my work is by patient. i think, yes we, i really high, high quality, you know, the food must be perfect. like 2 minutes to prepare. perfect food. of course. it's of course that's why of yeah, that's why we yeah. it's a stroke of luck for the team. train shifts are hard to come by these days with restaurants and hotels, missing thousands of workers, the crystal, who to is no exception. there's 3 people short. do you like it?
12:39 pm
you see of the situation a serious can do this. i have friends who have to close for days on end because they can't get workers or rooms aren't being filled. it needs to be said. and there's a major shortage visits. i was showing that i call somebody to the in the valley below your klausner is working on a solution. he founded a recruitment agency that fills the gap with skilled workers from brazil. right? he and his business partner, eduardo, scan, new applicants in the same time. currently they don't. ready ready really know how to do that. most of them want to come for long term. right. see, i've already referred 84 people and they're 12000 more in the database. the dispute um did choose to leave the stage in a country in the 1st 4 countries. it's larvae i was searching for the chance to. ready have a blue balance between life and war and also. ready ready they just. ready ready
12:40 pm
ready the same of the salary to support this back. but it's not always easy for the brazilians in their new environment. or is it ok says you're in the kitchen, it's hot. you have to somehow produced 90 dishes a night, the watching orders as they come in by. if it's just an insular task which bids uncommon, you have to know what it is. i'll be able to translate it into english, or portuguese is, what does it i'm hopeful english showed up on the book. is this done there, but it's a real challenge for the new arrivals. bruno and his wife on a have been here for a year. they've settled in with their pets and want to stay for them. austria's biggest advantage over you is safety. and i think there's just one crime you like 10 years ago. that's just the it in the, in brazil was like i was mug 2 or 3 times even with the gun points was like quite the normal thing actually was one of the reasons that are the side to the resume. bruno with his many years of experience and catering works as
12:41 pm
a waiter and a burger restaurant, he is well received by the guests here. his colleagues also brazilian explains why, i mean, once we say we phone review, i've given him, i hope in the or not it's about him or is it is people here. they just opened a smile and i always say, i don't talk german, my dog just got the football. so i see so many others are looking for jobs in austria, a page of a 33 year old on we're from syria for example. he tells us about his job search and how as an asylum seeker, he doesn't have a chance to see access to the regular labor market is virtually impossible for asylum seekers in austria. that's due to bureaucratic hurdles, crushed by the ruling of the party, and austria's interior minister who declined to comment. even conservative politicians like friends who are calling for change. after all,
12:42 pm
nobody would lose the job in labor markets 1st, then the 3rd states. but people who are here must work austria benefits from tourism, but entrepreneurs are worried with new people there to work new tourists can come, which is far from ideal for australia is economy. we're back at the cost of you to for lunch. the busiest time of day for ship, alexandra no idea. like 90 a 100. something like this. when it's busy, there's no time for breaks, but i live on foot is happy here. so i want to go out of my or go home. walk on the street and don't be worry about. i'm looking for quality of life. and here, i think i found it. but what does he miss?
12:43 pm
i miss hugs because we all are people. so when we meet each odd that we hug each other. so that's something that i use for you to watch the use. bye bye. uh a miss a probably doesn't remember what it's like to live in a country that is peaceful, just like him. millions of children growing up in ukraine have faced trauma and lost that no parent would wish upon that child for almost 2 years now you create and forces have been defending the country against put into full scale invasion while the soldiers are fighting for freedom, civilians fight for some peace for the children. playing in the snow, myisha is in his element. he's grown up with it. his hometown booklet, a new don't. yeah. it's generally gets more snow than keys. but not much is left of
12:44 pm
books. i doubt the russian forces large scale offensive, good at the town. since then myisha and his parents had been living in keith. it was new. i don't remember. well her, but it was nice to know. i knew every one and i had a dog that i could feel garden meal to send the whole style to taylor and i choice mission isn't the only child in this cube daycare center who split their hometown. they've all had their personal experience. is that the more of one kind or another the preschool teachers try to make them feel safe and secure? have you thought that there are children here whose fathers are at the front, that puts them under great stress? they know p sadly. they know all too well that explosions are constantly happening here. do you remember the thing when they were yes, we suggest that they make it's for their fathers who for the form of fits in and we
12:45 pm
get the other kids to look after the one. do his father's on danger? no smell cool. they could let that to it is not for the to nadine, nearly 2 years into the war. they've collected lots of experience in dealing with the children's commerce psychologist, 80 units, and info is in constant communication with colleagues around the country who have found that painting helps to give you somebody to the children often draw and play war. when they draw a tang shows the rifles will crumble up the paper and throw it away or to hear it are. and that way they can transfer their aggression to the paper and we can help them work through it. but is the sort of that this is sometimes they'll do this several times a day. after all these children are living a middle war and it has left its mark. ukrainian. people will deal with the aftermath for a long time to come meet the profession, greens,
12:46 pm
these children good one believably fast the. by the time they start school, most of them have done crowd funding to collect donations for the military. they know very well what they have to do in an air raid, but they don't even see it as something negative in the air raid shelter, they just keep on playing or singing their songs. and keep to the war has become a part of daily life or ukraine's children will need psychological counseling for years to deal with the inside the depression and pent up anger. yes, it was, i don't see the situation normalizing any time. soon at times we get 5 error rate alarms a day, and then we can to the children on eating or sleeping well. i want them to have care free lives, which assembly sometimes little myisha wants to return to books, i dare. so we can feed his dog like the other kids. he's always worrying about the ones who stayed behind. but as time goes by, keith is becoming more of
12:47 pm
a home for him, especially with friends by his side. 2 years of war and there's still no end in sight. we love to introduce you to europeans who follow their passion no matter what. this man definitely fits that description out here at sea, on his boat, his favorite place to be joseph pest quote. for decades he has been sailing out every week to measure the temperature of the mediterranean. he's not being paid for it, but the data he collects off the coast of list, the teeth is actually pretty useful for researchers for climate policy and for those whose livelihoods depend on fish. it's just after dawn, but jose pasquals is a man on a mission. he's heading out to see the 73 year old,
12:48 pm
collects weather data on land and in the water. i was upset about eunice. the moment i use these special through monitors that you can lower into the c k. uh, but kinda in the process, you have to around 5 minutes of when they flip over, if you spend display the temperature in the deep by now get on the amount of time to elect them back to like a in this, that proof in the past fall knows all about the sea and how to measure it for over half a century. the topography for and son of a fisher has pursued his hobby of the coast of left 13th in northeastern spring, weather permitting. he goes to see twice a week to document water temperatures in the mediterranean. is maybe the receipts. it's my life. that's my place. it's almost like a drug, a vehicle here that ever since i was little, it's thrill heat. i mean,
12:49 pm
that is mainly because data like this didn't exist when i was 15 or 20 years old, then no, no idea that those states having reached his 1st measuring point posts up lower than one of his devices. it shows that at a depth of 30 meters, the water temperature is close to 16 degrees celsius. pascal says the sea surface has warmed by full degrees since he began taking measurements is pretty cool, but then for a couple of the villas, probably must continue more. it's worrying escape because rising temperatures caused the water to expand and without leaving the sea level to rise, he will know the loves and take those guys come most new time. we can see this on the beach and i to spend the money and they are the half a meter narrower ingle. i verify that the beach here has shrunk by 15 meters since 1990. 3. did say that those was made out to go along with the temperature pascal measures the water,
12:50 pm
salt content which has all the one on the other are lovely medical my m k i the one of the pieces and put it providing vital info that fisherman like a sophomore, you have come to rely on and i still feel them. we had that lifestyle work as closely connected to this data. and one thing, if we know a bit more about at all, like he does, we'd be better fishers for sure why they walk in and say to you, i want them to quote as difficult as i use piteous piano support on this deal. there are species of fish that can't cope with the rising temperatures by myself, sort of the others that are used to warmer water, you know, now come up nor that from more southern areas like a style. and of course, the morales posts up past qual, meticulously notes, the coordinates and measurements. then at the local tourist info office, he transfers the data to a website used by scientists worldwide. the dealers have you to get them access to all my data in an american trade magazine and compare them to their own findings
12:51 pm
that about this in the hour they said now they know their satellite instruments are working correctly. so delete this with you and then connect them in pasquals collection of years of data has also made an impression in barcelona. at the institute of maureen sciences, researchers probe how climate change effects plants and animals and humans especially the arctic is affected, says oceanographer jordy slot, but so is the mediterranean. and other than that, we're observing bigger changes on the water surface than in other seas. around the world, canada, there are regions we called hot spots. and the mediterranean is one of them. you know, the new squalls, how the it has grown and important in this era of climate change, which is why it's his mission to keep taking measurements and do his bit to slow down global warming the
12:52 pm
glen, able to get noise when of course, it's painful because it's not a natural process or something, you can see how everything's changing. i mean, how we're changing it and everything is interconnected up. but up the i'll even if only a small part becomes the stable on every things thrown out of balance. with all the full set, pasquals has no children, but hope to find someone to carry on his legacy. still, he plans to keep going out to sea. and conducting his measurements, for as long as he can. yes, that's the spirit. many, all the people in europe lead pretty isolated lives, probably because their families don't live near them. and social events are often designed to attract the younger crowds in sweden, madeleine, one song did not want the loneliness to be her fav. so she decided to take matters
12:53 pm
into her own hands and created a space where people over 50 can party and go wild just like the good old a. when there is music playing, madeline mon son cannot keep still. the 79 year old swedes things in dance as well . she spends records for her guests having to lift feet as no excuse. madeline gets everyone up and dancing. i love music. and if i can make other people happy, that's great. that's exactly what was missing here. for modeling fitness coach madeline mon son has a color co passed, but through her various jobs and stages of life, one thing remained constant for love of music. yeah, whenever she wanted to dance, she encountered the same problem the tongue seeing if there was no where i could go to dance. i'd have to stand in line with 20 year old. and that clubs only get under
12:54 pm
way at 11 p. m. when i'm ready to go to sleep in the store. so madeline mon sun made a virtue out of necessity and became a d jane herself. her disco opens at stores at 6 pm to any $150.00 and up. younger folks must go elsewhere. guests have a drink to warm up before the party starts, then modeling makes clear. they need to put on their dancing shoes. i'm going to play record for 4 hours straight. that means you can dance for, for a street, just accept it. it afterwards you'll go home, happy, it was 20000 steps and you're a pedometer, is it? there? says the pep talk clearly works because even if swedes have a reputation for being rather reserved here, they all let loose we need these kind
12:55 pm
of places. this is our music in our time, they will need to dance floors packed. we all want to dance. the music also helps madeline monson cope when her husband passed away many years ago. she says that though she felt blue, she mustered her courage to start over again. as a teacher, i succeed at many things, but not everything you must dear to try or even to fail. you just have to work up the courage. what's the worst that can happen? madeline turns 80 suit with a sprightly senior has no plans to stop dejan. she's too busy deciding which crowd pleasing track to play next. what a great energy and attitude towards life which brings us to the end of today's
12:56 pm
focus on europe. join us again next week, for more stories from across the continent by the
12:57 pm
the landscape, with a fiery germany's volcanic mindful region. about 10000 years ago, the volcanoes went quiet. calm is something green again, underground. in 15 minutes on the w into the conflicts own with tim sebastian. my guess this week is electric considering co ukrainian. m. p. angelica
12:58 pm
parliamentary, assembly, council of your hello is this the best time? a year ago, gunter ranko had post price because the landscape and reservations about him because he still believe this presidents will be due crying to victory conflict in 19 minutes on dw, the inside gaza. it's been more than 100 days since the last tier attacks on israel dw reporter mohamad concludes lives and works in the cause of stress. he has been documenting life there since the outbreak of the war. the humanitarian situation is catastrophic. the war and its consequences. now on youtube
12:59 pm
or so you don't think you the same way you expect and more different things from life than your parents do i just want to pursue what that's my thoughts or you think your kid is 2 different, risky, irresponsible, reasonable stopping port is not i want my son to become a doctor to in the clubs. it's time to, to get your generation with the sleep us. i'm them. when generation is class this week on the dw says kind of fun. it feels like therapy the
1:00 pm
this is dw news live from the in a military plane crash inside russia, from schools for an international investigation. russian media report say both black boxes have been found at the crash sites must go and keep a blaming each of us. that is off the dozens of the training soldiers were allegedly on board heading home and a prisoner also coming up on the program. israel girls, a rad refused from its store, just allies. the us off to an, a task called a you and shell set in hon eunice, which kills 12 people. the .

32 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on