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tv   Al Jazeera English Newshour  LINKTV  March 26, 2021 5:00pm-6:01pm PDT

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anchor: ethiopia's prime minister says soldiers have agreed to withdraw from the tigre region after months of denying they were even there. ♪ anchor: hello. this is al jazeera. coming up a warning that germany's third wave of covid-19 could be the worst one yet with fears of 100,000 infections a day. latest attempts to free the mega
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ship blocking the suez canal failed as maritime traffic builds up at both ends of that waterway. politicians from both parties travel to the u.s. border with mexico painting starkly different pictures of the challenges there. ♪ ethiopia's as -- has agreed to withdraw forces from the tigre region where they have been accused of killing, raping, and torturing civilians. it was this week the ethiopian prime minister finally admitted that the forces are in tigre after months of denials. they fought a border war from 1998 until 2000, although a final peace deal was not agreed until 2018. he was later awarded a nobel peace prize for ending the conflict. they have a common enemy in the liberation front.
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it was the leading force in ethiopia politics for almost 30 years until abu became prime minister. reporter: one at the clearest indications of the presence of airtran -- erutrayan forces. this was after the prime minister addressed parliament on tuesday and admitted for the first time troops from the neighboring country had crossed into border areas in the northwest. he argued they crossed into ethiopia because of concerns by attacks from the liberation front. several rockets were fired when the conflict began last november. >> the reason why they are there is because of a national security concern. we also informed the government they are accused of being -- they are being accused of wrongdoing.
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the government says they will take strong measures on any of its soldiers found guilty. reporter: the prime minister says the soldiers will leave.@@ this is after a meeting he held with the president and the capital. the detail and timeline of the withdrawal is still unclear. >> if the troops were draw -- withdraw, it would be very difficult for the ethiopian federal military to completely crush this rebellion by the defense forces, so it is not clear what the implications are or what the military strategy is from the federal government. perhaps they are also looking to pursue cessation of hostilities. reporter: there are more reports coming out of the region. the white refugee agency faced 2 refugee camps hosting were destroyed by people, and the
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whereabouts of most refugees is unknown. >> we were able to contact around 2000 staying in neighboring towns. some have also been found in the capital, but when our teams were able to reach this what they saw were large areas of the shelters leveled to the ground. our offices, our guest house also burned tohe ground. reporter: the forces have been accused of abuses, including killings, torture, rape, and destruction of property. the human rights commission and united nations refugee agency have agreed to conduct a joint investigation into allegations of abuses committed by all sides. ♪ anchor: parts of kenya will return to lockdown to fight with the president is calling a devastating coronavirus death rate.
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the country is experiencing a third wave of the virus with nearly 25% of test coming back positive, up from just 2% in january. people in the capital of nairobi and 4 other counties have been told not to travel to other areas. restaurants, bars, and schools have been ordered to close and curfews are being extended. german health officials are warning that its latest wave of the coronavirus could be the worst so far. they are urging people to stay home during the upcoming easter holiday to help slow the rapid rise in infections. there are fears there could be as many as 100,000 new cases every day unless the spread is curved -- curved -- curbed. >> there are signals this wave could be significantly worse than the first 2 ways. we must prepare for cases rising strongly and more people eating seriously ill again that hospitals will get overburdened and that a lot of people will die. we are just at the beginning of this development, and if we do
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not [indiscernible] immediately consequences will be grave. anchor: brazil has reported more than 3600 coronavirus deaths, a new record for a single day. infections are surging, prompting the country's most populous state to extend lucked measures until april the 11th. [chanting] in rio de janeiro protesters rallied as the country's second biggest city begin a 10 day lockdown. nonessential shops and businesses will be closed but demonstrators say they need to work despite a financial aid package announce this week. argentina has announced it will suspend flights from brazil, chile, and mexico to prevent the spread of new variants of covid-19 on saturday. the government says it is concerned about the rising number of infections in neighboring brazil, which has
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recorded 12 million cases. argentina as reported nearly 2.3 million advection so far. we have this update from what is harris. reporter: there is major concern in argentina about what is happening not only in brazil but in countries like paraguay where hospitals have collapsed and are struggling to attend those suffering from coronavirus, also an increase in cases in neighboring uruguay among others. that is why the president and his government announced they are canceling flights from chile , mexico, and brazil. back in december they had announced cancellations of flights coming from the united kingdom because of fears of this new strain of coronavirus. now they are increasing the amount of countries banned from flying to argentina. they are also imposing new restrictions on tourists arriving from argentina. they are not only going to need a test to get into the flight
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but another one once they land. if the test is positive they will have to isolate in a hotel. the government has also announced they are going to be increasing the amount of material that passes from one agenda vexing to the second one, and shortages of vaccines is a major concern not only in argentina but across the region. chile is one exception. countries like argentina and paraguay have been struggling. the presidential summit happened this friday. it was scheduled to take place in buenos aires but it was moved online because of the threat of coronavirus. anchor: the latest attempt to re-float to make a shift blocking the suez canal has failed as follow grows for global trade. it has been wedged across the crucial shipping region for three days now. reporter: confusion about the fate of the --
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while i egyptian official seemed confident the suez canal would reopen soon, expert said he would not commit to a specific timeframe, saying it could take days or weeks. it is a mammoth task. the ship is 400 meters long way to hundred thousand tons and stuck in what is most often described as the most important shipping late in the world. a maritime accident with global implications. shipping analysts are protecting disruption enterprise sites. >> the suez canal is a feat of amazing engineering to wellness is taken for granted for hundreds of years. what has happened is very unusual. reporter: the container ship became wedged across the canal on tuesday when high wind blew it of course. -- which connects the red sea to the mediterranean, providing the
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shortest link between asia and europe. the vessel, carrying around 20,000 containers is registered in panama and operated by a taiwanese transport company. it was sailing from china to rotterdam in the netherlands when he got stuck. this image posted on a ship tracking website shows the backlog of many vessels stuck at the exit and entry points and in the middle. the vast majority of oil from the gulf is transported to europe to the canal. global oil prices have risen as a result. experts are warning of a flood of insurance claims. containers may have to be offloaded in order to lessen the weight buried the suez canal authority says around 20,000 ships pass through the canal last year ended egypt to billions of dollars in total fee revenue. it is one of the largest container ships in the world, but for every hour and every day it remains duck on the reef and stationery there are concerns
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about its financial fallout and the impact on global trade. anchor: u.s. politicians are sparring over the surge in migrants crossing the border with mexico, including the arrival of unaccompanied children, which is not reached near record levels in recent weeks, but democrats and republicans have been visiting border facilities in texas. democrats say that trump administration labonte a broken system unable to deal with asylum-seekers humanely. republicans blame president biden for encouraging migrants to make the journey. >> all of us today witnessed the biden cages. what is occurring on the border is heartbreaking, and it is a tragedy. we requested the media accompany us in the facility. the biden administration said no. the trumpet ministrations allowed media facilities --
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allowed media in such is like that. -- the biden administration wants to hide what is going on. >> we are here today to find solutions. we are here today to go back to washington and offer recommendations for how this process can be improved, and how the asylum process can be improved, and peoples humans rights -- human rights can be respected. anchor: we have been monitoring those visits in texas. reporter: everybody seems to accept the fact the reason there is such -- you like to have destabilized into amera foreign policy, but today we have republican saying the overcrowding at the border is because of a biden administration gone mad, throwing open the frontier to disease ridden migrants and coyotes were driving them,
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whereas democrats are sitting this is a system that was broken by trump, and out they are here as the cavalry to fix the system, and it is true, donald trump did dismantle the system of a silent in the u.s. at the southern border, but it is also true contrary to the republican narrative that joe biden has retained the most draconian part of that flooding of the mystic and national humanitarian law when it comes to dealing with asylum. joe biden is not allowing the vast majority of asylum-seekers to get into the system, allowing them to be processed. only unaccompanied children and out reluctantly the biden administration is allowing in families, mothers and fathers with children under the age of seven but only because mexico is refusing to take those families. anchor: let's go to manuel on the other side of that border in tijuana. we have been hearing lots of rhetoric from the u.s. side of the border. what are you seeing on the ground?
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reporter: we have been returning to this migrant gap just a few meters away from the u.s. mexico border where there are somewhere between 1000 and 1500 migrants camped out here, some for over a month, others new arrivals. in the time we have been here we have seen a steady flow of people continuing to arrive. this first line of tense we have behind us actually just popped up overnight, and people here are abreast of the news. a lot of folks said they did actually listen to that press conference yesterday where president biden made it very clear that the border is closed, where he said he expects mexico to share in the burden of taking care of migrant families that will be inevitably deported from the united states back to mexico, but the overwhelming sentiment, the common theme we hear from families whether
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central american families, countries like honduras or families like southern mexico fleeing violence linked to cartels there is hope. a hope that by the grace of god, u.s. authorities will change their minds, opened the borders, give them opportunity to plead their asylum cases to u.s. officials. we were at a separate facility where we spoke to one woman from honduras who crossed a legally into texas just a few days ago, and she was transferred more than 2000 kilometers west into california before being sent to mexico, and that gives us insight into eight tactic, an unofficial policy by u.s. border officials that complicates things even further for migrants, and what we are hearing from both migration policy experts and human rights observers is that that tactic coupled with title 42 that
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prevents asylum-seekers from actually officially being able to seek asylum in the united states, that along with this policy announcement from president biden yesterday that will require migrant families to be set back to mexico is in violation of international military and law and obligations the united states has through treaties signed and ratified. we have unfortunately yet to hear from mexican officials as to how these policies will be implemented here on the border. anchor: manuel telling us about the situation on the ground, thanks so much. still ahead, anger at arrests as the u.s. state of georgia science controversial new voting rules into law -- state of georgia -- as it marks 50 years of independence. ♪
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>> we have been seeing violent storms mcquade for the southeast corner of the u.s.. look at this clutch of thunder rattling through. this is where we saw tornadoes pushing across northern parts of alabama causing damage. we have got that system still in place as we go on through the next couple of days. we fear there could be further problems. just around the deep south across a similar area, showers not quite as intense through saturday but come sunday they become more widespread. there is the likelihood of further tornadoes coming to hear through a good part of this weekend. what are weather will push up toward the eastern seaboard, coming off for new york and d.c. snow and eastern parts of
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canada. central area stir dry by the time we come to sunday. snow coming in across the pacific northwest into that western side of canada. notice wet weather all the way down into southern parts of texas. one or disco showers spreading their way across eastern areas of mexico. a little or cloud at least for a time, but across much of the caribbean it is looking good through the next couple of days. ♪ >> you are dealing with a very powerful people, people inuential positions in government. >> we know there were elements within the police and political elements that we were getting o close to some people higher up. >> [speaking non-english language] >> you have a diplomatic bag that cannot be opened, search. >> al jazeera it investigates
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the posters pipeline. ♪ -- poachers pipeline. ♪ anchor: hello again. let's remind you of our top stories. ethiopia says soldiers have agreed to withdraw from the tigre region where they have been accused of killing civilians. ethiopia prime minister has finally admitted the forces are in tigre after months of denials. the latest attempt to re-float the membership blocking the suez canal has failed as follow grows for global trade. it has been wedged across the
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crucial shipping region for three days. u.s. politicians have been visiting border facilities in texas following a record surge of migrants arriving there at recent weeks. it comes a day after president joe biden defended his handling of the influx of migrants at the southern border, calling it a seasonal increase. a coalition of civil rights groups is suing the u.s. state of georgia after its republican governor signed sweeping new voting restrictions into law. it comes as republicans in many other states are pushing for similar changes as former president trump continues to blame his election laws on voter fraud. we have more from washington dc . reporter: combination of new voting rights laws. >> it is an atrocity. designed to keep people from voting. reporter: demonstrators gathered in the statehouse as the republican government --
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governor signed sweeping measures behind closed doors. >> why does the governor trying to send something in private? reporter: one state legislator was arrested. georgia voted for joe biden in the presidential election, then sent 2 democratic senators to congress in a runoff election. >> is antidemocratic. it is un-american. they are trying to make it harder for people to vote rather than making it easier for people to vote. reporter: here are key measures in the new law. there will be voter id number required for absentee voting. that replaces the signature checks. there will be a limit on the number of drop boxes for early voters in each county so we will be less convenient. the law makes it an offense to hand out food and drink for ose waiting in line to vote but it does expand in person early voting. the man who signed the bill into law it says this cuts the chances of electoral fraud.
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>> georgians will no doubt soon be overwhelmed with fancy tv ads, tailors, and radio spots attacking this common sense election reform measure. in fact, left wing groups funded by out-of-state billionaires are already doing that now. they are using outrageous, false rhetoric to scare you and put millions of dollars in their own pocket. >> this is not about fraud. the only thing this is a response to is increased voter turnout of a black and brown voters in the state of georgia. reporter: georgia's election process is already seen as one of the most efficient in the countries of critics claim this is a solution to a problem that never existed, one imagined by donald trump and his supporters. it will put pressure on politicians in washington, especially democrats to come up with a national baseline for rules and regulations and to do it soon. anchor: karen walker joins us
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from atlanta and, a republican strategist and the founder of black conservatives were truth. a grassroots organization dedicated to minority engagement. thank you for being with us. i want to start by asking you, as an african-american woman yourself, are you concerned this to package of laws will disenfranchise black voters? >> absolutely not. this is a very good bill. it has many of the items the democrats said the bill would not have. the governor signed it into law yesterday. we had no absentee -- no excuse absentee ballot voting so you do not have to have an excuse to vote. we still have drop boxes, sunday voting, saturday voting. this is a very good bill. the reason the democrats are complaining is because it works
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toward their narrative of republican voter suppression against black and brown people, but it is not true. anchor: let's look at some of the numbers. voter rolls have grown by 2 million people but polling stations have been cut by 10%, these are stats from georgia public broadcasting. 80% of the newsletters we are seeing are nonwhite so there have been huge lines in nonwhite neighborhoods where people have been waiting for hours, in some cases 10 hours so if you pass a law saying that one can give them food and water and line impact to get about -- impacts who can devote. >> absolutely not. if you were going to be in line you can bring your own water, your own food. we have never had a situation where people were not bringing water and food. this is nitpicking to being against that. there are many polls close
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together and some have more traffic than others. it costs money to open these polls, to hire workers, to have ballot boxes. having everything concise but still being able to meet the needs of georgia's voters and we are doing that well. during our general election process went smoothly and terms of voting in person. anchor: you say that went smoothly but looking at numbers from that same survey, it looked like the average wait time after 7:00 p.m. across the state was 51 minutes into polling places that were nonwhite but six minutes in places that were white. how do you explain that if you say things went well? >> that is not the survey i have read when you are talking about georgia voters. we have had great experiences during the primary -- we had
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great experiences. during the primary we had extensive lines but that did not occur even in largely minority communities during the general election. it went very well. we heard a lot of things, but that was not one of them during the general, maybe during the primary but not on november 3. anchor: as you are saying these laws to expand early voting, which you are encouraging, and it adds new id requirements, and a lot of people are saying that could be harder them for working people to cast ballots because they might not have ids. does that were you when it comes to representation? >> absolutely not, 90% of georgians have ids, and if you do not have a drivers license you can use any other state id. if you do not have a state id, when you are applying for an absentee ballot you can use your social security number. it will match your social security number against any
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government programs you may participate in as a way to identify you, so the drivers license is a nonfactor. it is just something they want to nitpick over just as they want to nitpick over the drop ballot box. anchor: i went to sq briefly before we go, there is an assumption electoral system is broken and needs to be fixed. you seem to think that it does not need to. is the electrical system broken? >> i do not think the electoral system is broken there are some items that need to be taken care of and that is what this bill does, it strengthens election integrity so people will have faith in the process of voting because when you have faith in voting, faith in the process you are more likely to come out to vote. georgia as 159 counties. over 100 counties did not have
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sunday voting at all. now we have 2 optional sunday voting's. drop boxes before the pandemic, we never had drop boxes so how could you be suppressed from something you never had. we have drop boxes now because of the pandemic but we are keeping it ablaze if you cannot go to a dropbox in your mailbox is a dropbox. anchor: karen walker joining us from georgia. really great to get you here on al jazeera. thanks for being with us. >> thank you. anchor: 2 trains have collided in central egypt, killing at least 32 people and injuring 165 others. the railway authority says someone triggered the emergency brakes on one of those drains and the other one crashed into it from behind. the president is promising to punish those responsible. >> more than 1000 train
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accidents annually in egypt according to the government statistical authority. i have a hard time believing that is the problem of incompetence of the problem of low level employees. what we have is an infrastructure problem, a government problem. anchor: at least watchmen people have been killed by police in bangladesh in protest against visits from india's prime minister. dozens more were injured. the protesters were part of an islamist group which accuses prime minister modi of alienating muslims. we have more. reporter: there have been a protest for the last one week by the leftist party as well as by the right wing religious parties. the criticism, not so much against india and its people, more against the prime minister and his party.
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the citizenship act, the border killing, the cashmere killing against muslims in india, all of these issues come into play. also the fact india has not been a good partner but it has not negotiated a border treaty and other pending issues. just today there have been a major clashes by progressive left-wing students, and the biggest mosque as a protest by religious right parties. the boss is surrounded by police and willing party supporters have been clashed in headquarters of one of the most religious platform supporting against -- supporting -- protesting against prime minister modi's visit here. many people have been detained. hundreds of people have been injured and it is still going on. ♪ anchor: this is al jazeera and
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these are the headlines. ethiopia says forces will be withdrawn from the tea great region where they have been accused of killing, raping, and torturing civilians. it was only this week ethiopian prime minister admitted the forces are in fact in tigre after months of denial. the latest attempt to refloat the mega ship looking the suez canal has failed as follow rows for global trade. it has been wedged across the region for three days now. german health officials are warning that its latest wave of the coronavirus could be the worst so far. there are fears there could be as many as 100,000 new cases every day unless the spread is curbed. u.s. politicians have been visiting border facilities in texas following a record surge of migrants arriving there in recent weeks. democrats leave the trump administration for leaving behind a broken system, while republicans accused biden of
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occurring -- encouraging asylum-seekers to make that journey. we have more from tijuana. reporter: and the time we have been here we have seen a steady flow of people continuing to arrive. this first line of tens we have behind us here actually popped up overnight, and people here are abreast of the news. a lot of the folks we have been speaking to say they did listen to that press conference yesterday where president biden made it very clear the border is closed. he expects mexico to share and the burden of taking care of migrant families that will inevitably be deported from the united states. anchor: 2 trains have collided in central egypt killing 32 people and injuring 165 others. the railway authority says someone triggered the emergency brakes on one of the strains and the other question went from buying. i will have more for you here. >> inmate 2020, the death of
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george floyd sparked protest and outrage across the world. the former police officer responsible for forcibly hitting him to the ground, with a knee behind his neck now faces trial. join us for live coverage of the derek chauvin trial on al jazeera. ♪ >> you will be the first generation in your family to go to school. ♪ anchor: let me show you something.
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this is $1.25. where i live taken by a small cup of coffee. millions of people around the world exist on this less -- exists unless than this every day. at a time the world is looking at how to reduce extreme poverty the spotlight has been turned on women. they have been actively involved in local communities and economies, there are huge benefits to people around them to make. local economists and researchers know that investing in women pays off. it is not just the right thing to do. it is smart economics, because there is a ripple effect that spreads into the wider community. let's take a look at how this looks. if you grow up in the developing world, eating and education can be a challenge. thanks to a huge global was, there are no more in primary school then ever before. girls still lag behind it often
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drop out of secondary education altogether. these women are working hard to make sure that does not happen. ♪ >> [indiscernible] we shall go and settle your debts. >> hello.
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>> how are you? >> i am doing great. >> i am dolores and i am working on our program. >> is great, but i am feeling a little nervous. >> the idea is to support a girl through a journey and get them to a point where they become economically independent, so the young girls go through secondary school with support, receive everything they need to stay and progress. once they complete school, they are going back to the school to support boys and girls to improve their performance. >> good morning. today we are going to talk about needs and wants. someone tell me what basic human needs are.
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>> food, shelter. >> i am here to introduce [indiscernible] to help those in the high school to overcome their learning challenges. name the things we want in life. >> money. >> money, yes. clothing. she wants education. you do not need education, you want education. >> i the pleasure of being a part of the program. when i completed, i can help my younger sisters and older sisters to overcome their challenges and to be a better person in the community.
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>> if your mother went to school, raise up your head and let me see. so your mothers do not go to school. you will be the first generation and your family as women going to school. what do you want to be? >> i want to be a medic. >> do you know any female doctor? >> i do not know any. >> so if you become a female doctor he will make a change. why do you want to become a teacher? >> [indiscernible] >> a young girl in ghana usually faces a lot of areas when they have to access education, and particularly for communities where poverty is endemic, so for these communities, they have to
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make decisions rns who get the opportunity to go to school. usually they tend to focus on the boys. sometimes you see there are even more girls than there are boys. that is because the population of ghana has more females than males, but as they grow up you see that trend is changing. you realize there will be more boys in the classroom than girls. >> as they keep growing up you see girls dropping out, and that is because they could be used for income for the family. arrange marriage is very prevalent, child marriage is prevalence of these are barriers they face to continue their education. >> before we started working in your school, the headmaster told me when they take people only 85
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are girls, the rest are boys. now that we are supporting the girls, you see the number of girls in your school. >> to date we have supported over 53,000 girls. the current academic year, we are supporting 56,000 girls. clearly there is a huge need, and that is what we are trying to address. >> it is very difficult. [indiscernible] [speaking non-english language]
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>> [speaking non-english language] >> [speaking non-english language] >> [speaking non-english language] ♪ >> [speaking non-english
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language] ♪ [speaking non-english language]
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[speaking non-english language] [chickens clucking] >> it does not bring me down.
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it pushes me hard because i look up to role models. i have mentors, and one of my biggest mentors is my mom. she mentors me every day. she is a great woman. >> [speaking non-english language] >> actually my mom is the brave one here because she takes care of the house. since growing up at the age of 10 to 15 was not easy because that is the period when my dad passed away. it was difficult continue my education. getting into the senior high
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school was some kind of a little bit challenging to me. the fees are higher and you have to buy certain things, books and other things which were very expensive. the day i had the chance to be part of it was the best moment of my life. i felt special. i was not left behind. i still have people look after me. ♪ >> i am going into training now, which is training about over 100 young women to be learning guides in schools. once they are done they will form circles with the children
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and support them to the academics -- through the academics. ♪ [singing in unison] >> [indiscernible] nothing. you have to go back to the farm. this program is come to a serious -- for you. it will give you a chance to discover yourself, give you a chance to give back to your community, so that's taken very seriously. when we go to the schools, i am hoping that each one of you, by the time you finish next year you should be able to say that because of me, 10 young people have been able to pass. >> as a student i used to feel
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shy. i was the reserve type. i use do not mingle with other people but seeing that i had this opportunity to go through training, i feel like i am someone greater. [engine revving] >> good morning. >> good morning. >> welcome back to our meeting. >> j [speaking non-english language] >> i went someone to give me 2 core abilities that we have. what else?
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respect, we respect one another. >> giving back to our society. >> giving back to our society. >> i joined when i completed my senior high school. i go through the leadership training. you will be their leader. i went in for this leadership and i was lucky to be one of their leaders. i am very excited to be part of this program, and also i will be going to sunday to attend a program. that is the biggest opportunity in my life. [singing in unison] ♪
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[singing in unison] >> [speaking non-english language]
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>> i am following through on our program which is helping young women to establish innovative businesses in our communities. what we recognize is that once young people complete secondary school, not all of them are going to go into tertiary so we needed to create different pathways for them once they come out of school, and one way of us doing that is looking at our arch mentorship program -- our
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entrepreneurship program. how many groups like this you have? >> -- i used to go to the markets. they will sell it, they will buy it and not get profit. [indiscernible] to come out with quality products. >> she started her business with 2 women, and basically she had a small start. we took her to a lot of exhibitions and conferences, and she went to one, and exhibition where she met with a share of lines and she had in order. it is incredible for her
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business to grow, but beyond that the number of people she is impacting is the change we need to happen with this business. ♪ >> [speaking non-english language] >> [speaking non-english language] i have access to the seed money and i have gone to trainings to
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build my confidence. when i took the money, why not support my mom's business? we bought a new -- to arrange. she is buying 10 a day. that is a big order compared to what she normally does. that is what we are doing.
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[indistinct chatter] >> [speaking non-english language] >> i have had the privilege of seeing so many young people. when you meet them at first they are very shy, very reserved. when they have thri opportunity, the sky is the limit. that is one person able to change her family and that changes other families at uc effects where it multiplies and the whole community is changing, and it is fantastic. it is amazing. >> you will have 2 hours to
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answer the questions. writing, mathematics. writing, you can start. ♪ >> today i am in the year on leadership course and it is a five week course. i am happy to be there because there are a lot of people coming from different countries. it will be exciting. i will be able to make friends so i am very happy. >> [speaking non-english language]
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>> my mom is alone in the house. she is the best thing that has ever happened to me so i am going to miss her. >> [speaking non-english language] >> [speaking non-english language]
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>> she always encourages me, asked me to go higher -- asks me to go higher, and that is what i am doing right now. ♪ >> my dream is to be a journalist, and the biggest challenges we are facing is education, education. ♪
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