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tv   Global 3000  LINKTV  September 17, 2020 1:00am-1:31am PDT

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>> welcome to global 3000. online schooling in china. we find out how beijing is maintaining a a tight grip on kids stuck at home. jungle schooling. we learn how the pandemic is affecting orangutans being prepared for a life back in the wild. but first, we head to italy, where a former drug mule tells us about his time within the nigerian mafia there. drugs, money-laundering, forgery, arms smuggling, theft,
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cyber-crime. when it comes to organised crime, business is booming, with revenues of more than 800 billion euros a ar, accordg to the latest report by the eueuropean policice authority,y, europol.l. the report also says there are around 5000 trans-national criminal groups operating in europe. one of the most lucrative criminal activities is people-trafficking. this particularly affects women from nigeria. many of whom are forced into prostitution in europe. in italy, according to united nations estimates, as much as 80% of nigerian migrant women arriving in the country are at risk of sex-trafficking. and those behind it are often nigerian criminals. the nigerian mafia's stronghold in europe is the small town of castel volturno, just outside naples.
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>> this is nigeria. >> ts is thetalianan coastal coununity ofastetel vourno,, near naples. once an n upscale resosort, now it's a wasteland. we visited before the coronavirus pandemic. >> this is nigeriaia. >> the nigerian mafia has taken root here. this former member tells us how his countrymen make millions in people smuggling, drug running and prostitution. he wishes to remain anonymous. so we will simply call him davide. he changed sides to work with the italian authorities and now his life is in danger. >> castel volturno is a big headquarters for the nigerian mafias because this is the only place they can stay without control and there are many hidden places here in castel volturno where they can hide their things and they can do
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everything they want without notifying the state or the police. >> davide used to work as a drug courier for the nigerian mafia. he would swallow sealed pellets containing cocaine and then smuggle them across international borders to italy. >> so i can swallow up to 2 los. yououannot carry enough. so you have to stay at two days without food. you take latté, like milk, and red oil. if you mix it and drink it, then it all comes out. it is big. >> many of the drug couriers die in the process says radiologist mariano scaglione. if just one packet of cocaine has a leleak or tears open inse theieir intestineses, the resus almost cerertain death. scaglione has teamed up with the italian authorities s to crcrack down on the practice
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>> the pellets you can see are in the intestine. there are 20 to 30 here, each about 7 or 8 centimeters long. they're packed close together. it's an incredible quantity of cocaine. >> a and as the raradiologit explainsns, many countntries k the technical meanans to detet this form of smuggling. >> cocaine wrapped up in a condom will not show up in a normal x-ray. the smugglers now use new materials to avoid detection and prosecution. sometimes it's hard for us to distinguish between these pellets and foodeing digesd. i remember thinking onone tim,
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they could easily be gnocchi. >> somebody is a carri f from somemewhercarryiyingrugs, arriviving in italy.y. if t the pson cacannot dischare the goods, they will just tie the person on the ground, tie the arms, and wait for the person to die. then they take off the goods. the goods are more important than the person. the value of human being is zerocompletelyly zero. >> then there's prostitution. here too, people are disposable. it's another market dominated by the nigerians in a region that's traditionally the stronghold of an italian mafia clan, as w we're told byby a ll prosecututor. >> foror decades, the castel volturno regegion hahas been controlled by a very dangerous and powerful cammorra clan, the
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casalesis. but even so, the nigerian mafia have managed to expand in the area. i am sure these criminal two organizations have come to some kind of arrangement or pact. >> blessing is one of the many women who fell victim to the criminals.s. the e nigerian comomputer sciet was lulured to europope with e promisise of a high-h-paying . she came to italy via spspain with all the right paperwork anand perfectly y legal. but, like e thousands ofof oth nigerian women, was forced into prostitution. >> i got scared when they took away my phone. next, they told me i owed them 65,000 euros. only then did i realize i was at the mercy of people-traffickers. >> blessing found the courage to escape from her fellow
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nigerian tormentors. she went to the police and was taken in by nuns. it's amazing she managed to get out alive. when they put you on the street, they'r're always spyig on you, watching you. if a car comes by, a customer, they keep a list and check your earnings later that evening because you could d be hiding money. if you g get pregnant,t, they e you sosome abortion n drugs and then lock you up at home for three days despite thehe bleedi. >> most ofof thesellegegal activities happen in what the nigerian mafia calls connection houses. during one raid, italian authorities found weapons, drugs and evidence of prostitution. the mafia bosses hold absolute power. those found to be breaking the rules are simply put to death. >> they cut you into pieces, and they will give you to any member that is in the group to
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go and throw it in the forest. so if the body is taken apart into pieces, surely nobody can trace and know what has happened to that person. >> the nigerian mafia has practicacally free rein in casl volturno. davide recalls brazen drug deliveries conducted by boat. >> when we see the signal on the sea, we wait around 9:00 or 10:00 in the night. then we took the s short boat o go there and pick the drugs. >> so, at the end of the day, the boat i see there, it is not a fishing boboat. it's actually the drug dealer's boat. >> exactly. we cannot say all the police know about what is happening. but there mimight be s somebodo knowows how to move these. >> as davide explains, italy has a problem with not just one
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but many c criminal orgaganizas and their influence extends well into officialdom. he wants to do all he can to expose and minimize that. the chinese government is notoriouously intolelerant f dissen t t, something protestos in hong kong i in recent monts know only totoo well. and to eure disssst remains low in mainld d china,he party is extending its influence into the lives of 100 million primary school children. >> lele starts her day at 7:00 in the morning with skipping rope. 130 jumps minimum. that'll earn her bonus points from her teacher. lele is nine years old. she stopped going to school in january because of the coronavirus outbreak. it will stay that way until september. that means seven months of home schooling and skipping rope everery morning.
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>> i i like it. exercise keeps me healthy and i can score some extra points in sports. >> lele lives on a tight schedule, like most people in this housing estate in northern beijing. 100,000 people live here. every morning, the residents meet in the small park to do tai chi. it's a martial art that focuses on balance and harmony between the inner self and what lies outside. before lele can relax, she has to complete certain tasks. chinese society demands good grades and obedience from children. sport plays a part and there are reasons for that. >> children need to develop five basic principles. virtue, intelligence, body, aesthetics and work. all these things are taken into account for the sports grade as well. if a child is too fat or too thin, this impacts the grade. so, children should not be too
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fat or too thin and should keep their bmi in balance. >> at 8:00 in the morning, there are online lessons, math and english. all nine-year-olds throughout china are stuck at home in front of their screens, grappling with the m material. the central vevernment is s ken on homeschooooling. it makes it even e easier to enforce conformity. in the past,t, lele always wisd she could be at home. now things are dififferent. she feels lonely. for months, she's been sitting alone on the sofa doing her schoolwork. above all, she's afraid she won't be able to keep up. >> if i i don't learn well no, i'll grow up and know nothing. and this ignorance will prevent me from becoming a good member of society. >> the pressure to perform in china's schools is extremely high. the learning culture is based on discipline, routitine, competition and performance.
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sitting still, singing the national anthem, rote lelearni. from an early age, children learn that the most important thing is the motherland, as they call it here, and the communist party. ininctrination is also integrated i into their hohome. >> on labour dayay and party d, children are asked to sasay something about our motherlala. they are told to express whatt they think and what they want to do as adults for their motherland. >> lele's mother shows us the homework given to her on july 1, the founding day of the communist party. the online answer reads like it was written by her parents. >> without the party, there would be no new china. the party leled us, and the people founded the new china and made it strong. without generations of party members, this would not be possible..
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>> about 80 kilometres away, outside beijing's 5th ring road in the south of the city, sun ao is also at his computer. he has the same lessons as all other 17 and 18-year-olds throughout china. he i is specializizing in art. hehe says he finds the coronavirus and home s schoolig annoying. >> well, there are four of us, sometimes five, in a single house and for more than half a year now. it gets on your nervrves. >> sun ao and his twin sisters are trying to get along as best they can. before the pandemic, the sisters attended a sports boarding school and came home only on weekends. sun ao was at an art boarding school and was only home once a month. what he enjoys now is less homework and more time for creative art. independent thinking is not something you're supposed to do at school. >> this picture contains all the standards that an art student has to show at the graduation exam.
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you are only allowed to paint a portrait in this style, not any other. and you will only be accepted by a prestigious art university in china if you draw exactly like this. >> painting on the garden wall helps sun ao let his creativity run free. he doesn't hold back with his criticism ofof the fixed mindst in china, especially about art. he is worried about the high school graduation exam, the dreaded gao kao where conformity is fully enforced. >> chinese education, from its earliest days, has always sought answers that conform to the norm. there is a uniform curriculum, a set procedure, and a standard answer. there is no room for diversity and individuality. >> china's schoolchildren spend an average twelve hours a day studying. lele's mother invests an additional 6000 euros a year
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towards her daughter's education. when we ask what she likes best, she tells us painting and dancing. then she focuses on her three hours of private lessons in english, which will go o on unl 8:00 p.m.m. >> no otheher part of africa s as affected by climate change as the sahel, south of the sahara. the population is growing and at the same time, arable land is being destroyed by erosion and drought. the result, conflict, leadin vioiolencand didispcement.. peace coululd come in the formf the great green wall though, a wall of trees set to stretch almost 8,000 kilometres from senegal to ethiopia by 2030. >> finally, titu hawarya can cut the grass for hay.
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for weeks, none of the local farmers were allowed to graze their livestock here. the grass has grown very long. now they can harvest hay to use for animal feed in the coming months when there will be little rain. >> we are happy that things are getting greener again. we use the grass to feed our animals and make roofs for our homes. in the past, it was more barren here. now it is better. >> trees have also been planted to combat the deforestation of the region. a strip of green has now grown up, designed to ensure a better microclimate. stone walls and terracing help stop the erosion of the land. and beehives have been brought in to help with pollination. >> when we first started, the farmers protested, saying that this is their grazing land. but we talked to them and the experts helped them understand the principles behind what we're doing.
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>> this project in northern ethiopia i is part of whwhat's known as the great green wall. a film made by the united nationons reveals the huge spee of t the itiativive. ththe aim at firirst was to sp ththe sahara desest from spreading byby planting a linef trees alalong ththe edge of the sahel regigi. but the vision has since expanded.. the e sahel is onene of the res worst hit t by climate c change worldwide. much of f the land hasas ben dedestroyed by o overfarmin. the great green wall initiative is designed to make it usable again,n, as the african unions project coordinator explainsn. >> it is abobout how to manage the laland, how to adapt the ld to climate change, how to use the land to mitigate carbon, to sequester carbon, how to use the land to provide jobs, create wealth and to bring harmony in the communities where the program is being made. >> but there's concern that increasing levels of terrorism and ethnic conflict in the
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sahel region could threaten the success of the great green wall. it's a patchwork of hundreds of different projects like the one in ethiopia. experts say many of them are successful, but point out that others are less effective. >> we have got to change the basic concept of investing in the great green wall and fortunately, we have massive success stories from all of the countries in the sahel that only needed to be replicicate, and they d depend only on the awareness and the inspiration of fararmers in their vivillas seeing what works. >> the great green wall initiative aims to restore a hundred million hectares of currently degraded land and create 10 million jobs. right now that's still a long , way off. >> over ththyears, we've become
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hugely attached to dora,hehe oranangutalady f frosumatra'a' nglele schl. in 2014,4, team from deutsche welle bebegan following g hr journey backck into the wiwild. the schohool is run byby the frankft zozoologal sococie. after years s of living inin captptivity, the o orangutans n everything they ne t to le inindendent lives in t rainrerest. dora enthralled our team w with her abilility to mr ththe many challllenges pubebee her fore b bei releaseseinto the forest. after a the e year break, we werere due to retutuo the kit tigapuluh nation rk i in innesia,a, to see howw the jungle school and its pupils are getting along. but then came the pandemic. >> humans have to keep their distance from orangutans too, even at lunchtime because both , species are at risk of contracting the new coronavirus. these orangutans are under
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lockdown and have had to stay in their cages for months. >> since the jungle school is closed, we c can trainin themo find and interest them to get some forest foods. so we bring the forest foods to them. so it's like rattan and termites nests and all the forest fruits, so that they can learn from that. >> their meals are delivered wrapped in leaves, so they have to figure out how to get the food. useful practice for when they're e later released into e wild. the cages are disinfected twice a day. hygiene is of crucial importance. the teams who care for the animals rotate every three weeks. beforere they start t work, sf have theirir temperaturere tan anotr cocoronarus prprection. , they s shot the videdeo for h reportrt themselves.s.
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wewe talked to t the head of e prproject by vidideo call. >> orangutanan dna is 9797 pert identical to that ofof humans,o they a are extremely susceptibe to a a our diseases, espececiay thosose affecting ththe respiry tract. that is thmamain rean n why we have impososed such a ststct quarantine, to make rere there is no transmsmison of a virus rereplicating inin humans to a population in ththe wild. it would probably haveve no immumunity at all l to such a v. the efeffects could be dedevastatg. >> deutsche welle has been reportining on thiprproject fr years. the aim is p prepare orgutansns for survivaval in
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their natural jule h habat in theukukit tapuluhuh inforest in central susumaa. many we e rescd as o orpha, often heheld captive a as pets under terrrrible condititions. they had forgotten or had neve arnened hoto movove rough thth treetops, forage for food an ild d nests. their keepepers at the j jungle school teaeach them all l these skills usually out in the rerest , ielf.f. orangutatans enjoy pigiggyback rides. many of themem don't le e to wl ch. this was before the coronavirus pandemic. so no exercises in the forest , for now, even ough they y have so much to learn. >> probably the e most importat item o on thcurriciculum at jungle school is l learning abt frfruit trees. what thehey look like e and wn they bear fruiuit, in whichh season or r in which yeaear. in ord to susurve, evevery orangugutan has to d develop ar dimemensional mamap their hed covering space andime. , it tak t time learnrnll at.. but we have d d to suspend the
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learning process. where are the trees and when do they bear fruit, as the orangutans have to stay in their cacages. >> the locockdown can ononly be relaxed ononce the pandemic hs been conontained. this is t t good f thehe animimals. their fitness deteriorateses, d they bece bored, even lethargic. not the best preconditions for release and survival in the wild. those that have alreready been set free currentlyly lead bettr lives. kekeepers go o on patrol to ck on them and d provide extra a d if need d be. here too, , socialistancncing applies. > we are still continuing or work to monitor the behaviour of the orangutans. so we take daily data of the ororangutans herere on this f, and we record d all the bebehar like feedingng and moving,g, reststing and social behaviour
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and so on. >> thehe school is l located ie bukit tigapuluh rainforest and releases its graduates there. it is a very remote location. so, should any orangutans here catch the coronavirus, they won't pass it on to other ones in the wild. what's more, they tend to be naturally self-isolating creatures anyway and don't hang out in big groups. the team face the challenge of protecting their wards from possible infection while also training them for release. this video was shot a couple of years ago. there is no guarantee that a self-sustaining population will emerge here again. over the past half-century, 80 percent ofof the region'n's rarainforests have been cut t n to make way for vast plantations. on our last visit, peter pratje stressed the importance e of savingng the forest t and teacg the e orantans s surval skilil.
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>> if the orantansns a able toururviveere, t then all thee other animals in theainn forest animal community wi b be too. ththtigers, elephantand d al the her specs. that's why it'soso imptant t t protect them. >> the number of covid-19 cases among humans in indonesia continueues toisise. the project has a backckup pn if t theockdown n goes on for o long. it w will release e its orangus ininto t wild d bere they y ve mpleted eir schooling, b ll then ovide th with longer-term support out in the forest. that way, the orangutans will be able to settle and have offspring and their numbers can grow until the threat of extinction here is banished. ♪ >> thatat is alfromom us at global 300000 is week.k. we'd love to hear your views on the program. what did you particularly enjoy? you can write to us at
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global3000@dw.com and check out our facebook page. dw women. bye for now. take care. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org]
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[water dripping] [indndistinct chatter] man: just watch your steps, yeah? voice-over: most of the people that work here, they used to work at mines before. so whenn the mine decidides to shut down, they have nothing to do but to go down ththere and dig for themselves. [coal crunching underfoot] man 2: we find t that coal is or national r resources. . it's the only thing t that can generate electricity at this point inin time. woman: the owner of the mines are here to get profit. they

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