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tv   DW News Africa  Deutsche Welle  September 28, 2024 6:30pm-7:01pm CEST

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is going to be funded here repos every weekend on d w the, this is the, the news i've got coming up in the program so that africa is cracking down on the legal immigrants. minnesota africans blame them for the lack of employment as on the kitchen and my grand size quartet from the west place support to say it is about the root of low or sounds. yeah, it could fuel a new wave of in a full. also ahead. so done, so i mean launches another offensive and it's to the guest operation to v game grounds. the staff of the conflict 17 months ago to speak to the us special envoy to the country and ask what steps washington is taking to the fuse tension. changes youth reclaiming the future through
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a new wave of civic engagement. he didn't the charges, twins a joe lawyer, cabassos to educate citizens on the rights and exposes governments for you this and what does it take to make a hitsfeld? we ask one of 9 serious, most famous and successful directors, it 6 inches painting, you finds out that keeping them what they want. you know, i studied so much of course i knew what the people who came to lead me the biggest box office building 9 to and send in my history 2023 tells us about the apps and downs of field making of the country's economy. it's the states, the
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i, i homes eddies, michael junior and you are welcome to the program. the newly formed south african government is getting tough on illegal immigration. the countries collision government has made integration. we found a priority since coming into power. in recent weeks, government agencies have been cracking down on restaurants and farming on businesses in johannesburg by the immigration groups worried the crack down code fuel anti immigrant sentiments in the country. mike league diane hall county as long as an immigration rate under restaurant india had to split labor, department and home. a phase officials inspect the stablish meant for safety violations . and undocumented workers, or the department of homeless phase, which manages board is and immigration has said it will increase these types of inspections by 50 percent in the next year in all sectors known to hire migrant
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workers. it's part of a broad government plan to reduce illegal immigration we have to make sure, in fact, that we have continuous ability to track and monitor and audit the, the number of illegal immigrants. and so that we can say, we know the world is dealing with various crises, but was we've got conflicts, we've got migration issues every way, but you call just leave africa. and then forget about migration in this continent. and specifically, in the case of so that africa as a big receiver in the post of pa take era, south africa was seen as a haven for migrants from the rest of the continent. menu come here, us seeking asylum from persecution in the home country. that's all that's because economy has been stretched for years, experiencing no growth and high levels of joblessness. the mood has changed
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event and exemptions that there must be thought from confess, you know, was meant for model for the model that pop up for the conformant scheme that government what do monday need to walk home on the new immigrant groups, benita? correct. on, on immigration will help solve some of these issues. and despite the legislative latest proposals, these groups believe the government needs even stricter regulations, including closing down for an own shops and barring some industries from hiring migrants competing. in the past few months, several new so called patriotic organizations have cropped up and they say that they want to, quote, reclaimed south africa from illegal immigrants. it's a training that is caused consent in the local migrant community. and they are worried that it will few as in phobic wave here in south africa, migrants yeah,
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also worried that rates done by local good many agencies, all going to fuel an antique, a book, and sentiments, immigrant groups and local entities into phobia organizations. recently held a rally in cape town to push it back against what they see as in a phobic low making ways. now, do you guys want additional by using xenophobic rhetoric as a means to get get both. then we'll see this across the world is not necessarily interesting south africa, but we, as of africans have a responsibility to say that not in our name, not all of us is known as a name but nation. so we, it doesn't matter when you put on as long as you reside in so advocate the same rights should be applied to you as well. so that's, we could, doesn't have any reliable statistics on illegal migration. but the government sees it to ports between 15 and 20000. i'm documented migrants. i get
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the, the recent government cut down and going into immigrant sentiment could change the countries image as a place of safety for the applicants. right. i spoke to dr. young doing global political analyst and senior electra at the event school of governance at africa, asked the what mix this different from previous crackdowns. it was, you know, that, you know, issues of immigration and, and documented immigration, a maintenance at impact to, to that we could the south african club dixie. i, they've been a visa facing the but also of course, and you know that, that is a need to, you know, i'm just of the new one of the periods. the full is special payments for the people from butler,
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as well as the people focus to it is important that the government does involve who is in the country and what the status and all of that. so it becomes very important that you know, the new media stuff coming into the office gets on top of that isn't mental priority. it is very easy to dismiss some of the reasons some of the major reasons people give for being against that illegal immigration by the how the points don't do because they're saying that you know, my grandson, you know, overburdening, infrastructure, health care, dallas will taken away local jobs isn't that good enough reason to keep them away as well? i don't think so, and they don't think my friends are necessarily be doing all that. but to understand that we are in a little bag position phase. the menu you call them is across the world, the studying and as they are selecting the, you know,
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uh for little communities and because citizens um, you know, um, sometimes they get to the point where they get to play, make this the, i'm not seeing any economy properties, and we'll put you in the cheese in the countries, but they've told me that it's not that the swat the migrant that we talk about at the plain one that associates and out of the government. but being able to do but the basic services, if they as opposed to so you wouldn't always have those people, but if it's not on the itself, the pickup and coupon. okay, so you're basically saying it's, it's uh, sort of an easy excuse to blame migraines for you. what's in the responsibility on the governments to make sure that that's more than enough for people on the ground . we're talking about amy grands. what more can you tell us about where they are from? you know, why they're coming into south africa, especially as well as the goods. but we are having is they said the uh, in south africa, they are all over the world. and you know,
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some of them even coming uh, you know, from utah and every couple of quotes will be classified differently accordingly. and some are coming as far as west africa and is definitely cold. those kinds of the, in south africa. but the ones that, um the, you know, we appropriate our pays and right now. oh, maybe we're talking about right now. either give me go into my tools. uh, you know, uh to the photos of south africa. that means um the, you know, uh from as above waiting list because of the proximity of the countries. and that because of it down tends in those countries coming to south africa. and because it's easier for them, you know, to close this one, bought the, into the country without documentation or we can pull out of the, you know, allowance. so it's difficult for people perhaps coming from west africa because they only have to my view by a whole lot of issues with is to get to the country by the out with those. but they go to the board that and that's why we have this pre balance is based on payments.
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what's in bubble in this a to right right now. wow. that may be actual illegal migrants in south africa. isn't that also the case that many of those top desk illegal migrants the actual asylum see just waiting to be process that's that's, that's a huge asylum seeking backlog inside of the guys and it as well. of course there is a huge of silence. the king bed lot inside the bed, look in south africa, but also you must remember that the most the time where we had the biggest the that number in terms of my slab securing it to us. when that was, it took me to kind of violence, especially into the bucket that was all fit into it was reported in tennis and i need but it also becomes difficult in terms of establishing losing us the love seat and cost involved. and this process is going to get you to time it because the need
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to be brought to the table is, is when it's, if a process of documentation, right, right. what impacts cold this crack down have on south africa's economy? how important media migrant workers when a mega blake has a very important for any of the economy and not just so definitely cut and because we do um, even if you go to wherever you find them in the slowing the can, that button does. so you and all of those as they move away king. and because this investors are relying mostly one is cheap on the pay to get back in has own capacity. by my glance, you have had been for the news that you've been the one of the insurance. and so the think i have been complaining about that saying i do the employees at the tremendous and all of that. but without giving back, you know, add to purchase as evidence. so it is given that you're going to, um, you know, update the economy because it also pays a big pizza for. so that's because it is
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a country entire nation id. but also, you know, i, in terms of the impact to on the call when those jobs last and everything. right. thank you very much for all the insights have given us talk back and do it in global political honest of the in so done the, i mean, as long as i tend to re strikes on how to and that's biggest operations as the stop of the war against the rapids, support forces are itself the army loss control of the capital l. e own and has been unable to dislodge the iris f, which has also made advances in other parts of the country. the 17 month war has driven more than 10000000 people from the homes, may need to neighboring countries and costs extreme hunger and farm in the area. you and secretary general antonio gutierrez, voice consent. well, the escalation to the countries ami chief who is in new york for the un general
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assembly that the gates in new york also had testimony from east, as on these activist about conditions in the refugee comes. young mothers are disparate for how new barnes are struggling to stay alive. we must stand together all, especially for the victims of an spoke couple as far as that these including sexual violence and rate. but us backed peace talks in switzerland last month. and the inclusively tone, perianal the us on the board of listed on says as many as 150000 people may have been killed since the stopped of the war. mike league general, do my loud. i'm caught off with him either. you intend on assembly, so fast, ox, how much contact he'd had would sit down and what he makes of the situation on the ground as well. we've been able to talk to thousands and thousands of nice people
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um, through the refugee community in the neighboring countries. also through virtual technology, we talked to sued news every day who are in each of the 18 states. and what we hear unfortunately, is horrific. stories of people who have been literally eating dirt and twigs, people being forced into horror ethics situations of exploitation, including sexual slavery in order to keep their families alive. these are conditions that no human being should face. and we're talking about millions and millions of sudanese, facing this level of trauma and atrocity. we need this word and we need to combat the sam. and immediately we need more of the world to pay attention to the 50 millions who needs people who are suffering. i want to ask you about those talk so that were organized in switzerland, where the sued in use, armed forces did not show up. so those talks failed. what is your plan then after that, the talk to actually very successful, we really showed that you don't need people to show up to have talks. we want to
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get out of that old last century mentality where people use starvation as a weapon of war. so we were able to bring together t allies from across the region along with the african union and united nations. we were able to engage virtually with both the r s f in the south. we had 3 of the major roots that had been shut down to humanitarian aid, open it really, i think, showed the international community. there are no excuses. we cannot use the paralysis of some of the parties as an excuse to not try to help those that are starving and those that are facing, showing, and bombing. so what we did with the alps group was a major breakthrough to reignite, i think, diplomatic momentum and energy. that's what we're seeing more of here at the general assembly as people saying, wait a 2nd, we can do some things in this crisis. we must do something in this crisis, and i think it was a real testament, the secretary blinking then president biden, that they were willing to take that risk with the switzerland talks of knowing this wasn't the traditional way to do it. and showing that we can produce those kind of results and we must and how much of
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a material difference hasn't made on the ground that you outlined the suffering that currently exists there? well, i think there are 2 things that are true. if you're one of the areas that had not had food or medicine for 4 months or 6 months, it was life saving. but we are so many areas that have not been reached yet. so for the areas we haven't yet reached, that hasn't made that difference. but for those we have reached, it has made all the difference in the world. so we need to see the scaling up of the number of trucks getting across the borders and getting to those hard to reach areas like the sam sam can we are have to look at things like air operations to get to areas like to do bly and southcourt a funds that are extremely hard to reach, but each one of those things make a difference. so we cannot allow the fact that we haven't solved everything to be an excuse not to help the people we can and then build out from there. and that's our message this week. i also wanted to ask about the united arab emirates now of course, but it has been accused of fueling this conflict of arming the are assessed the u.
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s. has just signed on a strategic partnership with a u, a. e. how does the us testify its closeness with you a given this controversy, the united states has been very clear to countries across the region and around the world. this is not the time to send more weapons at the time to send more food. it's a time to the partners in peace. we believe that the region has a lot to lose if this war continues, and so much to gain if we get to a stable and democratic sudan. so we see that being an important signal to the neighboring countries. many of whom have taken millions of refugees across their border as well as to our golf partners and those around the world. this is a time to stand in solidarity with the sudanese people for that peaceful democratic future that they so clearly demanded in 2019 with the revolution and have not yet been able to live. but does the u. s. conduct the u. a. e, for its role in the arming the are a self and fueling this conflict into done that we've been very critical of all the countries that are trying to be part of the problem versus part of the solution. we
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appreciated their role as part of the swiss talks and helping us to push for greater humanitarian access. we really think this is a time where 1st and foremost, the rapid support forces and the army needed to come together to end this war. this was a war of choice, and this is a sam and that was created by man. it was not created by a drought or a disease that affected crops or as to nami. this was a choice by the, our stuff in south and a power struggle to fight each other. we believe we need to get back to that idea of a unified, accountable professional army and underneath a civilian democratic sudan. that's what the sudanese people want, and in the meantime we need to address the emergency needs of civilian protection and famine. what sort of consequences does the u. s. c for those countries that are arming both sides like the u. a. so we have been a leader on sanctioning individuals and businesses on both b, r a stuff in south side for their role in atrocities committed, particularly against women. that's included some of the businesses that have been
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associated with that. we will continue to expand that and invite in our european and regional allies to be part of expanding those individual sanctions, not on the country as a whole, but on individuals. and also here at the united nations. we were a big leader in extending the arms embargo for dar for where many of the weapons have come through. we think it's not enough to just extend that. we need to see consequences and accountability in that regard. and we have put forward already a couple of names related to very violations of that arms and bar go. we'd like to see greater international cooperation on that as we see the suffering incident. thank you very much. tom per yellow. thank you so much. i. let's go to kenya where the utah aiming to reclaim the future with a new wave of citizen that civic engagement. one notable for guy driving this is 28 year old lawyer and business man. we're our i could buy so he educates canyons about their rights and ships lights on government shortcomings to his civic
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education tours. and i will be correspondence by exploring got caught up with him and brings us this report. in 6 months time. this video in come, ready in, in westport, which is his story wouldn't be complete. that was kind of then deputy president william brutal making some pain promises during his bid for the election. entered $217.00 the 6 months time. this 10, you income money, which is good. it will you be complete. and this was the social media activist civic educator. a lawyer was that i could bustle just 5 weeks ago in front of the problem is the stadium to the g t. o has made it his business to fall off when the government funded projects after the loans to check on that progress. but in some cases, if they've even been started and to then post his findings on social media. a visit order has been launched by the president william route to twice this order. suppose
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suppose 4400000000 and yet another road project. and i do like to do 10 states, many government projects across the country. i read that to me, less feet more than i could buy, so believes it's his duty as a canyon to keep his fellow citizens informed contract as i've already been paid money. and there is no value for that to money. he does say that being lost through corruption or uh, there's absolutely no project that i started. it started because told me this story . it is completed with the block mentorship or uh, embezzling mental public funds as capacity reputation fund covering corruption has grown so has of his audience. and to help him continue his walk around the country . people have been donating money to come by his field costs, but capacity realizes that he's increasing plumbing, this concept of price. my security is our priest, but i must keep doing what i'm doing. and i want to encourage have, i can use one of their,
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those to step up and do what i'm doing. because when we lose our fia, they're in those they are power. despite the deputies repeated attempts to get a response to the accusations in this report, that cannot government did not answer quickly is meanwhile, more than the hopes that by continuing his walk is of civic, educate to kenyan citizen, to better understand their rights and demand. more accountability from their governments if you're a big fan of nigeria and send them i then you must know from k, i came to just an idea and filmmaker actress, director and producer. basically i couldn't any is a big deal. she made the biggest box office film in i do, and so then my history in 2023 with a movie, a tribe called judah, recent screening in berlin. my colleague, low id i do, we spoke to have all the success and challenge of project a symbol himself of 5 songs from 5 different man are not
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likely tripod judah is the latest fame by nigel and to make a phone calculated, it tells the story of 5 songs desperate to save the sick mother de decide that the only way to pay for her treatment was dropped. a local these, the 5 brothers are from different fighters, symbolized. and i just mean as the groups and the struggles to find unity 6 shown, you know, content that i relate to both. it's 6 and detaining you, your funds out think giving them what they want. you know, i studied so much the cinema of gore's. i know what the contents, that's the 3 you know that people for the 3 and 2 years of life like the high class, the middle class and the low cost coming weeks. so that was really helped me to
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look for the same house sold more than a $1000000.00 across the west africa and making it the highest. i mean, i do a movie ever or like, like else way most niger and themes these days go straight to streaming platforms. but kimberly still has a deep love for cinema. i must say this in my code. so it's very important for me to consider these, this is unique because together miss watching the film together in the big space of the big screen or taking your loved ones and families out there, you know, and also having to sit in as well. also supports citizens, your country, get them job opportunities in working the you know, that would add something stickle having to send them or run it by my dad because to life off and i do as economy was hit by more than 50 percent inflation in the last
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year leaving many people in hardship. this has impacted the feeling, those 32, economies affecting everyone is affecting everything that's going up inflation every way. what's the budget that you could use? maybe like co $700000.00 or the median dollars. you have to go $1500000.00, almost $2000000.00 to produce something has gone up well effect. and what we can do as a citizen, is over to lend a voice for bet to go from this. that's just the result of the okay, is this aim to both entertain and educate that makes one of the most successful because in africa are you not to entertain? and that's why we draw the kansas for more about stories. go to dw dot com slash offer. com. or visit us on the social media. i id,
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michael junior. thanks for watching the to the
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drama specialist oper teams. filmmakers are becoming more innovative. previously, this meant everything by default sent from the dell instead. there's a major market for, for to send them up because audiences one more will show you how they create the on 3 magic. and you enjoy this 77 percent in 30 minutes on the w. the
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is the systems can be used across different geographies. the real china itself needs to be an incredibly scarce way. what the heck us booming business is leo media and lots just green washing. what's now on the october set of 2023 as loans is a terror attack as well. it is the bloodiest a in the history of the 2 is states and the beginning of the war and gaza one year days a week, 7 the backgrounds of the attack. how could it happen? what role that is really on palestinian was from the past
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the her most attacked was the change tel aviv. what he hasn't had on israel's policy capital focused on one year israel hello school starts october 5th on d. w. i get inspired by a free man. a confident bursting with creativity leads to designers and cultural icons between lifestyle and comics as diverse and exciting as the confidence itself is fremont. fremont on dw, the
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business dw news life from berlin has the confirmed the desktop it's meter in and it is really airstrikes. hassan industrial, i was targeted in a bonding in a route on friday. he is credited with turning the lebanese militia into a major fighting force during his more than 30 years at the helm of the group. israel continues to carry out air strikes on what it describes as hezbollah targets across the level not smoke was seen rising over bay route after several attacks on the south of the city is really military says it has hit more than a $140.00 targets in lebanon since friday night.

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