tv Global Us Deutsche Welle February 5, 2024 5:15am-5:45am CET
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especially under printers and also people with disabilities you're watching dw, these live from berlin up next is glow bloss. i'm here, the mohammed, thanks for watching. i'll see you soon. take care of the thing and see you the same way you expect and more different things from life than your parents. i just want to pursue was that's my thought. or you think your kid is 2 different, risky, irresponsible, reasonable stop in port in those nonsense. i want my son to the doctor, joe in the clubs. it's time to tune your generation with the sleep us, i'm them. when generation of class this week on the dw
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says kind of fun, it feels like therapy, the best, the quality of life. columbia is comfortable, good time is trying to drive out the traffic the forever talks in india is because it is still suffering for. she is off to a chemical dissolves the no roof. homelessness is a reality. so many young people in new york city, the, they speak intense,
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the bridges owing to waste is hard to estimate the true number of homeless, partly because many are ashamed of the situation and prefer to stay under the radar . but the un says homelessness effects, at least a 100000000 people worldwide in 202-365-0000 people in the us without adequate housing. so this is where the john lives with his family and a homeless shelter in new york. he says this room in brooklyn with his girlfriends already and the door say, is the bella. the surveys the 1st they also provide a little table. they give you a dresser and
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a bed. it's been a year since they moved in here. they're working hard to be able to move into their own place as soon as possible. i a, a right now we're trying to get help getting an apartment. but it's taking a little while now because the public assistance is backed up with a bunch of cases. right now we're just waiting to get help. john was kick terms of his family who when he was 21. he stayed with friends for awhile before landing in the homeless shelter. he then goes to flat but ended up in a shelter again of to he couldn't afford the rent. we had to do like a few hurdles. and it took us like 3 tries to get to this also. so they have multiple shelters in new york to before they were kind of like, not suitable. like for us living. and then because at the time she was pregnant and
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the conditions were really like that, i would say it was a run down areas. there was a lack of security the space that they provided was really, really small, like i say like, so that's a so the like unit i'd say is like by like, 3 by 3. this one that we got to it was, it was like more convenient for us because it had a little bit more space. homelessness in new york is as its highest level in almost a 100 years. over 90000 on house new york is a currently sleeping in the cities homeless shelters. about a 3rd of them are children. over the past 10 years, the number of homeless adults, new york has, has doubles pushing up to moms for shelter places also among young families. joan works nights as a clinic where he is often confronted with homelessness. in his teens, john broke the news. he was arrested and sent to prison. zoe,
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whom he met in highschool, navigate, fell from him. i never thought i was a good person. you know, i thought i was just average person, but she, she really gets in my head and see that, you know, like, hey, you're strong, i do everything you can to do, right? and this true c c, maybe by c c. maybe you find the fire and myself that didn't know i had already had that fire. i always believed in him. is that for you don't follow him. so many things book, ashes close my use to it because i believe the to this day i've been even to say rodriguez also believes in john, the lawyer runs a non profit, cold avenues for justice, which works to keep young people out of prison and provides young offenders and alternative to incarceration. the cell is very troubled by the changes he seems
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to be easy to be homeless these days because of the economic issue in this neighborhood. there was a time given for me where the model didn't give me. i look around the corner and get a big r apartment before last month. that was the situation. there wasn't, is possible and this issue of, so this things in terms of, you know, how much apartments are costing. we're looking at a lot of that. but today, the issue is out of control, where there is no housing for even people who, who want them. and we've done the apartments that are used to rent worth $200.00. that same apartment today is $4000.00. same upon the center aims to also young people, a safe space. they can do the homework here, have loan shown on how to improve the cd. for example,
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they also have access to counselors who can serve as positive role models. one of them is elsie, who 1st came to the non profit many years ago to join that's program. at the age of 13, i started to sell drugs all the way up to about 16 and a half. and at 16 i was arrested 3 times. and at the same time, i found that i was pregnant, so that just split my whole life around and many different places where the program came in play to help me do that exactly. which is for me back in school. and you know, gave me a place i was living with my mom at the time and in studio apartment on just to prepare myself for being a young mother. i was 16, i had no idea what i was getting myself into between becoming a young mother and facing state prison time. i think those are 2 barriers is party will want to wish on anybody. you cannot possibly do this job. if you just come in
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here, just do a job and go home. this job has more to do with it. mentally we, we are fighting against the system. that clearly is not fair familiarities. so it is like a balance that is just not fair, right? home? supposed to be the safe place and safe home is that safe for most of these kids who come here? unfortunately on and from dad, i was like, wow, you know, like, i got to get it together because i live in cry all the time. you know, most of our kids don't get a good view, like we will hold on, you know, because we up against the system that the law comes and play l. c doesn't just look at the non profit times to donations. she's also studying at n y u, the biggest private university in the states considering her paws to johnny was
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anything but a given. well my, you know, between my trauma that i've been through between being the criminal justice system homeless or the maxine violence survivor. i works on my young stuff that is not my fault um that i am loved the people that do care for me and you can do anything that you put your mind. and so all i think confidence is a very key point to these kids who go through all being in the shelter because some kids in virus and yes, to make them for you, debbie, worthy. elsie has managed to come a long way. john, i'm so we also hoped to be able to stand on their own 2 feet. 2 in spite of everything, the state of tennessee ever since he was born i for the time is in there. i feel
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like a monk. good bye. in a week there's no time to think is everything is happening before i know where we're going to be on living in the apartment with us because i've done the most that i've ever done in my entire life. when it comes to like trying to be responsive to being on top of everything, getting everything that we need together know all the paperwork, all the information having to renew stuff is, is in a lot i feel like i'm i'm ready to go to sleep and wake up to the next year, the almost 40 years ago this factory who bought in india had
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a lease that release done. so for his most gas, you'll get it. yeah. working those who failed never got up on it and everyone was just asking for one thing. god give us death, or i'll give us death. that is that it's led to us some light of toxic water, which is still affecting no, cuz it's kind of run it in a bitter, it tastes weird. these chemicals that in the environment for hundreds of years and because expensive damage long, excuse me, brain cancer as blood defects. this incident continues to have a disastrous impact and has been linked to the depths of thousands of indian residents over the years. the blow by gas vehicles, 1984 is considered one of the boards worst industrial disaster. it's even hom, to be be developing in the the
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today's boy groundwater is 22 years old because my, the meet the full weekend. what is feeding him to fight the and mashed reggie's for lunch? today's was born with said every policy he is unable to walk, sit on, eat without assistance. it's difficult for his mother to provide him with the kid he needs because she has her own health issues this case. so yeah, clean him. his diapers need changing, he needs bathing, and then i have to feed him suddenly, but he cannot do anything with his own hands tires, so connecting them up or whatever has to be done. i have to do it. i need to get him ready. lift him on his wheelchair. every thing that's likely meet that is almost 50 and has many medical elements including epilepsy. oh oh, she lives with their mother. so they car lucky lot. oh ad 70 years of age. is the
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main caregiver for both me thought and her grandson, today's that god, god, god, me that started having seizures after the gas leak. this was born 2 decades later with major health complications to like housing. so if i the victim's his story is a continuation of the tragic legacy of this disaster. we'll see you here at the home level during the gas, like it felt like our eyes were burning and we could not speak of them. it hurt badly. it felt like somebody poured chillies in our eyes and there's, there's somebody choked our throats. so they cause family one more affected by the aftermath of the gas leak. yay! got the catastrophe. doing hardwood upside down after said days was born with new to logical conditions. his father abandoned him and so they called the game that
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primary care give a guess. good. find the concrete buddies on the need before the ghastly. we were a healthy family. we met, we had no medical problems gap for me. we didn't need any medication. although we did all have some issues with our eyes because our eldest daughter had issues with her vision, so she needed classes. our youngest daughter developed a really severe health issues up to the lake. i saw that we all got sick and it is not improved since then. we are always sick with some. thank you though. it seems to be less in $198440.00 tons of deadly betide ice will assign a known as m i. c, gas leak from the best a site blondin. pope, on please. housing people had died within the 1st few hours. official numbers estimate around 15000 victims, but active a say it is nearly 4 times that number. that catastrophe led to significant changes in india. and for the 1st time, the focus shifted to protect people and the environment from industrial accidents.
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and as a response to the tragedy, the government introduced new laws such as the environment protection act. but the company responsibility union god via never face justice board, charged with 5 people who only side it's chief executive, refused to face trial in india. however, the company did agree to a $470000000.00 b out in 1989 retired i. so side 8 is known to damage human dna by interacting with proteins in 1985, the national institute for the search and environmental health and the indian concept for medical research conducted research. finding that 9 percent of the $1040.00 babies born to mothers expos to the toxic gas was born with congenital disorders compared to 1.3 percent of the $1247.00 babies born to unexposed mothers. this data shows a strong coordination between the gas leak and birth defects,
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but it was never released to the public activist question, the more deviations for keeping this data secret, alleging collision between the government and union carbide along with it's got, i don't know. dow chemical, one of the victims that actually the b is helping children born to expose to bed and her centers. shane got april wide stem. that 3 helps get and rehabilitation programs. she says the effects of the gas leak was also a disaster for environment is justice in so just on to $340.00 tons of waste is in a room. but underneath that, the soil is filled with 1100000 tons of waste. and it continues to poisoning the surroundings. the government isn't talking about the clean up only about the waste, but to give up in 2009 the we didn't. government is to do which conducted a study determining the factory side still contains about 1000000 tons of contaminated swans. one tons of more could east village, and nearly $150.00 tons of hazardous beast bodied underground. there is also
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a $330.00 metric tons of toxic waste in the factory says today the factory is deserted, but gourds us still grazing the grounds and people still dress boss in watch would be a containment zone. the area around the factory is densely populated, and many report states that the ground water has become extremely toxic. a professor in the b as in the us department of civil engineering i do met, dress was appointed by india supreme for to examine water contamination in the out in 28th. and she tested 20 samples taken from around the fact the premises she did find to need to come. ringback significantly higher funds from dish, so which of connected to the can become switched for the user union complex. and it is well known fact that these organic chemicals can stay around for tickets after
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this beloved because it, according to the several court orders and findings from v to scientific studies, the government has mandated to provide safe drinking water to $40.80, as in coupons, this is an increase from the 14 areas that it was responsible for just 15 years ago, which indicates the wide spread of contamination quickly. so to need to con phones on the most to be drunk. more of the number of clothing items, more to pick ups, as some of them have been reported to be customer journey neurologic kind of affects. the characteristic, as they have known to partner to is the ghastly, has become a major milestone one since india. again, independence, but the silence that on the event has become designated. i tried to approach the minister responsible to create plans for the cleanup, but he declined to appear on camera saying he's not allowed to speak with flooding
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. press back at her home today. kyle is concerned. ringback about what's been happening to a family after she's going to have both that there was no one else here. what if i get sick or anything? my daughter cannot do anything. what will happen to them when i go? yeah, give me the reading but to work out i can't stop thinking about that these days. let's see here. and these will see that the the profile gas disaster happened almost 40 years ago. many people may have forgotten about it, but thousands of families in india are still affected. the so many people around the world, meaning a car is positive between what happens once the dream has come. true. costs broke up the roads and the yeah. and the noise, each of these,
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each year sees another $18000000.00, rolled off to convey about a huge kind of metal. many of the task residents of how did welcome to to go to the capital of columbia and the metropolis with some of the worst traffic in the world. the new innovative concepts to change that in the sense that each a neighborhood, the pilot project barrios, b college, which means live, the neighborhood was tested on the 38 hector area and financed by the city. the world, the bank was an advisor for the project. come really, how do you like it here? what is to level for i like it is very quiet, is peaceful when you woke about there's no noise freely without much noise without much pollution because it is really quiet and peaceful on the street. and we look at the new la castiano as an engineer and javier where to is an architect. both are
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part of an urban planning project that began in 2022. it was inspired by the super blocks in barcelona and the low traffic districts in london. at 1st it was tested on 8 city blocks in boca time. since then they've added 3 more neighborhoods. company found this whole, the burial spits how this project was introduced and essentially pay that was traffic in old directions. the vehicles used it as a short cuts because the traffic app would guide them around the neighborhood to avoid traffic jams in other areas. we definitely have no traffic in the past. not today, you hardly see any cars here, but the streets have not been close to traffic. the direction of traffic has been changed so that the neighborhood is turned into a kind of may use, making it difficult for drivers to get from one side to the other. out in the bottom, you'll restarted it on the new road layout,
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and the loops allow us to distribute through traffic across bigger street instead of people a c. and that prevents drivers from using san felipe a is a short cut? yes. yes. here you gotta keep us in port, keep go on, somebody pick them on. when about a really low good time is considered one of the worst cities for traffic in the world, a rotating driving then based on the last digit of a cars license plate, has hardly convinced citizens to leave their cars at home and switch to public transport. the out of respect for others, please get back in line. some of the reasons may be that the transfer you then your bus system is overcrowded on seats and expensive 2 decades ago, city officials. so the exclusive bus lanes would be a better,
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cheaper alternative to building a subway. but in the end thing a sub. but in the end, work and book have it ends in more than 2 and a half is still waiting for a subway. the fact that there was a group in the middle of all this traffic is other unusual, but it's thing to transform the neighborhood said job is, i don't know that see, look at how it is. i read a suspect, but it keeps getting bigger. it's just about this axis you can treat. so i've also sets up the tables that signed and click on the to see the to give everything here more color and more life coding must be and instead of the residents themselves, pedestrians with go racks on the streets.
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they're difficult, simple and quick to implement from the when. yeah, we were talking about they told us the problem. i can the neighborhood. i mean yeah. the yeah. but then and tested out in a few pilot projects. a conversing with. when was a bit of fear and it community among businesses younger for k, they so people wouldn't come into the neighborhood to less think of it was committed to don't to go on the contrary, the change has helped us on, on a residential area. it's used more commercially galleries, which also helped them go to the lady at the leather, inform us, and i see that mantic and such a short time
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a this team has grown to district lean for the benefit of the community more, more, more, more, more knows what the z in press box more easily. right? the yellow is kind of the cars now drive slower and the hood boy, you for that that. and those are pretty good model project going? yeah. let me double guys here. how did it go? what happened to you for the good? sorry i'm a little bit, is melania, and it took me a while and here we are. so i hope everything is going well. the most affordable need is as an important neighborhood for children. we have gotten the districts university done every place the you don't have to get phone me when
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think excess ability in the neighbor opinion basically get ready at the item. i want the children, those groups are doing with our activities. this will it with sustainable mobility and traffic safety. the i engaging with these top outside a very so that they can be rolling on last transform, which so that they can be rolling on less than that. parents became for the side of the body of speech, harley's project seems to transform additional city neighborhoods and gradually create a different sustainable boca time. the,
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i just want to pursue what that's nice saw on site. how are you going to buy your house? your job, your decision for your parents assembled? when generations clash i don't remember because i wanted him to become a doctor. and in 15 minutes on d w, the one of mankind's oldest ambitions to be within reach. what is it really is possible to reverse the
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researches and scientists all over the world for a no race against time? they are peers and rivals with one daring goals to help smart nature the more likes watching it on youtube. dw documentary nice cold, easy at the end, just to pass it, got any difficult to access an expedition ventures on to places that no one has the why is the ice melts? the assignment research in the i c d,
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w the to disclose the ships once gabby goulds and merchandise that are on the word the button. and after that time, he's up 80 percent of them end up as hazardous waste sites on solid issuing shores . like go down in buckets done along india and still go mean bundle dish. i'm going to i mean it didn't cost and endangering workers. today we explore bon whether she has she told me she bringing you out to assess the human and environmental tools of the she.
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