comparemela.com

Card image cap

Major raid. Reporter a team briefing. These Police Officers rely on leads from informers in the drug scene. Thats why they want to remain anonymous. The preparations make it clear this is no runofthemill mission. In a warehouse located in an officer rob de vrij knows about chemistry. This is, without a doubt, a major bust. How much do you think this would be worth on the black market . Rob the chemicals have a retail value of about 200,000 euros. On the black market, this is worth about two million. And once its been turned into amphetamine, it can bring in 50 million or 60 million euros. Reporter but getting the right dosage can be a problem the wrong combination can be deadly. But its possible to get pills analyzed before theyre popped. Charles dorpmans, himself a former drug addict, works for this stateoperated service. Its purpose is to monitor the drug market, warn users, and try to keep particularly harmful substances out of circulation. But dorpmans says their advice often goes unheeded. Charles well if you take an ecstasy pill and a month later again the same doses, you will not get the feeling. So what do the people do . They think, oh, ill take a little bit more or half more, and they are way too much and they only feel energy. And they go bam. And last year, we had seven deadly incidents on high dosages of mdma. Reporter the Police Confiscate a large quantity of cannabis in a residential area in the city of tilburg. And they also discover a mobile drug lab in a garage. If the ventilation system were to fail or something were to catch fire, this could be a major hazard. Willemjan not only the criminals are in danger of being injured or even dying, but the people who live around such a lab, theyre in danger as well. Neeltje the drug money is giving criminals more and more influence on the rest of society. Thats something we really dont want. Reporter successful raids like this usually take the neighbors completely by surprise. Rarely do they suspect that when the friendly folks in the house next door said they were self employed, they were actually engaged in something so illegal. Peter and europes drug trade is estimated to be worth a staggering 24 billion euros. Its still growing, and consumers will, it has to be assumed, continue to pay with their lives. Now, all countries are secretive about their nuclear programs. That particularly applies to france, where there are fears that radioactive waste at a military complex close to the heart of the capital paris may pose a grave threat to the people of the area. Whats called fort de vaujours was for decades used for smallscale atomic experiments. Now its being developed as a gypsum quarry. So, how dangerous is the site . Our reporter has met with a local resident turned activist. Reporter gregory jurado and his friends want to give their neighbors a wakeup call at the marketplace in the village of villeparisis, 20 kilometers from paris. They want people here to know that they may have been exposed to high levels of radiation for decades ever since the french army conducted Nuclear Tests in the area in the 1950s. Gregory tumors have been diagnosed which are completely abnormal and theres no reliable explanation for them. We must do something. And most of all, we must get the Defense Department to finally reveal what happened here 50 years ago. Reporter the possible threat comes from here fort de vaujours, a military facility that covers 45 square kilometers. Starting in 1955, Frances Atomic Energy Commission began experimenting with enriching uranium and developing detonators for atomic bombs on the site. Gregory jurado was a local politician for many years. He spent much of his childhood here. While playing soccer matches, he remembers often hearing muffled explosions. Gregory we all wondered whether something dangerous had happened. But, as i remember, many peoples initial response was they cant be doing anything dangerous because were just 20 kilometers away from paris. Reporter but perhaps residents didnt know the truth. Recently its come to light that not everything was under control. Last summer, sacks filled with radioactive waste were found at the site. They were discovered by workers from placoplatre, a firm which makes Construction Materials. It had bought the property to mine for gypsum. Now placoplatre has been instructed to simply decontaminate the site without knowing exactly what took place here. The Nuclear Tests conducted here are still considered to be military secrets. A Company Spokesman says theyre proceeding cautiously. Gilles at a site like this which is just earth, its easy to spot these objects which are atypical and dont belong here. We pass this info on to a specialist right away and he takes care of the decontamination. Reporter but jurado and his fellow activists call that procedure irresponsible. Theyve sought help from the commission for independent research and information on radioactivity, a french ngo. Nuclear physicist Bruno Chareyron shows us, for instance, how one side of a tile poses no danger, while the other side is highly radioactive. He says the same applies to the ground at the nuclear site. Bruno to decontaminate a site like this, you have to go over every surface with a finetooth comb. And as soon as you start removing the earth, you must keep taking measurements. Because as soon as its a few like this, you have to go over centimeters under ground, this uranium is no longer detectable even with highperformance geiger counters. Reporter despite the risk of being exposed to radiation, placoplatre is letting its workers continue digging. In the process, soil contaminated with radiation could be mixed with uncontaminated earth. Frances Nuclear Safety authority has imposed legal requirements. Yet stringent controls to ensure their implementation are lacking. Bastien the firm placoplatre is primarily responsible for ensuring protection against radiation on its site. We cant post a guard at the sites exit to check every truck that leaves the premises. Thats not our role. Reporter gregory jurado says its a scandal. Hes convinced that the french state just wants to rid itself of the possibly radioactive soil. Gregory as you might imagine, theres collusion between the state and the Construction Materials maker. On one hand, its in the french states interest for us to forget everything as quickly as possible, so we wont keep asking questions. And on the other, the sites buyer, placoplatre saintgobin, wants to get its hands on the gypsum under the ground as quickly as possible. Reporter gregory juardo plans to keep on fighting until the full story of the Nuclear Testing is unearthed. But by then, it could be too late to do much about it. Peter lets go to russia now, which is a country where you might expect women to enjoy equal rights. After all, most historians agree that women played a crucial role in the russian revolution. Whats more, they won the right to vote earlier than women in a number of other european countries. But all that was a century ago. Today, feminism is widely viewed as an unrussian import from the west, and women are complaining about growing sexism and discrimination. Some, though, are fighting back. Reporter it looks like theres more on offer here than just refreshments. The female flight attendants on russias National Carrier aeroflot are young, charming, and attractive without exception. These women, on the other hand, were subjected to discrimination by the company. Russia is waging a war on women, they say, and along with hundreds of other flight attendants, they are the losers. Yevgeniya i got a call from management saying they wanted to have some photos taken. I only realized later how humiliating it was. They took a portrait and a fullbody photo. They wanted me to stand at a 45 degree angle. Then they divided us up like cattle, according to who was allowed to fly where. Reporter aeroflot discussed their actions openly, declaring passengers preferred to see slim women. Male flight attendants were not subject to such restrictions. The women were to settle for less pay and a lower ranking. So Yevgeniya Magurina and Irina Yerusalimskaya took aeroflot to court and won. The company was told it could not dictate the size of its flight attendants clothing. Irina but although we won in court, nothing changed for us. They still never put me on as a senior flight attendant. Yevgeniya it became psychologically unbearable. Irina it was just terrible. Yevgeniya there was constant pressure. They would turn the other female colleagues against us, especially the younger ones. Reporter one of the women left the company. The other was no longer put on the better paid international flights, despite having 20 years of experience. Russian women frequently suffer discrimination. There are few places in the world where so many jobs are off limits to women. And a gender equality bill tabled back in 2011 has failed to make headway. Ksenia take google, for example. Google russia told me they have no one responsible for gender equality. Google has equality commissioners everywhere, but not in russia . The concept has apparently not caught on here the country isnt ready for it. Reporter sexism sells well. This is a commercial for a beverage. Nothing out of the ordinary. Take this advert for an asian restaurant. Shes from st. Petersburg, he says, but she can do asian too and can satisfy my appetite anytime, anywhere. State television has even made fun of the victims of hollywood producer harvey weinstein, and expressed sympathy with the perpetrator. Some russian women have even protested in favor of weinstein, standing outside the u. S. Embassy in moscow. Their posters read harvey makes me excited. Harvey, come to russia. But these two women in st. Petersburg are looking to change that attitude. A few men watch them at work. Feminism is seen as a western idea put out by aggressive, ugly women. Feminists are often attacked. These two woman, former djs, started their own clothing label. Ironic slogans draw attention to ordinary things like they fight for women to have the right to live out their sexuality and dress as they please. Lolja on the one hand, women are supposed to be super housewives faithful, submissive, sweet, innocent, forever young and always at home in the kitchen. And on the other hand they have to be sexy, dress provocatively, always look stylish, and wear high heels. Reporter they also sell bags, and give the proceeds to womens shelters. Half of all russian women are thought to suffer Sexual Violence or harassment at some stage. Many say sexism is on the rise in russia. Lolja i think putin is the ultimate patriarch. A Patriarchal Society is his entire ideology. Reporter Russian Television shows Vladimir Putin giving a successful business woman his fatherly advice. President putin dont forget to fulfill your demographic duty. Reporter in 1917, it was russias women who went out to protest, thus helping to trigger the revolution and the overthrow of the tsars. They gained the right to vote long before most western women did. And they were the first to gain the right to a legal abortion. Feminism flourished here. But 100 years later, the tide has turned. Under the tsars, the smolny cathedral complex in st. Petersburg operated a finishing school for young ladies, where they were trained to be good mothers and officers wives. Now theres a school for girls harp. The parents are fully behind it. They need to learn here how to be women. So much has been lost today in what it means to be a woman. They wear jeans, have to work. But i think a woman should remain a woman. Reporter the girls learn history and french. Etiquette and dance. Patience and humility. Courses like this are in high demand. Not just for girls, but also for adult women seeking to become more feminine. And the secret of this femininity is simple. Natalia the man is the head of the family. The wife is there to support him. She is the mother. Thats her primary purpose. Reporter 100 years after the first womens revolutionary march in russia, many modern girls are once again aspiring to become princesses. Peter many mornings, i cycle to work through the Tiergarten Park in the heart of berlin. And its impossible to overlook the rising number of Homeless People, many of them from Eastern Europe. Local authorities were already struggling to deal with the problem, but alarm bells really began to ring when a berlin woman was recently murdered in viereck has been looking into the situation of the homeless in berlin, and she met up with michal from poland at central alexanderplatz, which he calls home. Linda even though he lives in the middle of berlin, he feels as if he were invisible. Three years ago, michal came here with nothing but a backpack. Since then, hes been sleeping on the streets. Michal when i first came here i slept at alexanderplatz. Back then, i was one of a larger group, 10 or 15 people who slept under this bridge. All of us were polish. A few russians joined us. People of the same kind stick together. We were all in the same situation. Linda more and more immigrants from Eastern Europe live on the streets of berlin. The number is estimated at between 3000 and 10,000. But this estimate is not official. Michal has given up on finding an apartment. Hes gotten used to his life on the streets. He knows most of the homeless in this area, including this young polish woman. They help each other and protect each other against violent attacks, day and night. Michal there are many of things that you yourself cant change. Linda that makes a lot of people in the city feel unsafe. In september, a woman was killed by a homeless man while walking through the park on her way to the subway. The district mayor is under a lot of pressure. He warns that the situation is getting out of control for park officials who deal with Eastern European Homeless People. Stephan we dont know what would happen if we kicked them out. If we say, you are no longer allowed to sleep here, they might throw beer bottles at us or spray us with urine. That was what they told me in a confidential employee meeting. And that was when i realized that we cannot solve the social problems that are happening in poland, hungary, and romania, in our parks. Linda michal tells us that berlin is a magnet for east european homeless. He says its easy to live here without any money because there are so many charitable institutions. He visits a center for young Homeless People twice a week. There he can wash his clothes, shower, sleep, and eat. About 350 people come here almost all of them from Eastern Europe. Politicians looked the other way for years when it came to Homeless People, they tell us here. The topic only began to get public attention when the stream of migrants from Eastern Europe increased. Anett i think berlin, and germany as a whole, has to admit that not only wellsituated europeans benefit from open borders. And i believe that deportation is not the solution. Many homeless dont want to return to their home country, for various reasons. Linda but deportation is exactly the topic that is being discussed by germany and poland. In the near future, polish social workers will be coming to berlin to try to convince their homeless countrymen to return. Michal i dont want to go back to poland under any circumstances. Too much has happened. I have bad memories. If i went back, id do something i regret. I have a daughter there and its not easy for me. When im there, i do things that i shouldnt. Linda and hes more afraid of this than getting through a freezing winter on the streets. He says one day hell tell his daughter what went wrong in his life. But until then, hed rather just stay invisible in berlin. Peter now, one way to prevent young men and boys from falling into the clutches of militant muslim groups is to go to the places where they are typically recruited. And that is precisely what Karim Mabrouk does. The champion kickboxer is a member of a deradicalization the idea top martial arts performers offer the youngsters coaching in the hope of winning their hearts and minds. The project has the backing of two ministries. But what happens next under austrias new government that includes the farright Freedom Party . Reporter kickboxing is much more than a sport, says Karim Mabrouk. He says it also teaches valuable life lessons. Karim combat sports teaches kids determination. It teaches them never to give up in life, to have dreams and pursue them. Reporter he says kids with a focus are less likely to get radicalized by religious just 24, Karim Mabrouk has already won the austrian kickboxing championships several times, and has competed all over europe. He cant get into the ring today due to an injury, so hes cheering on his training partner. That. Theyve just posted a new video online. [video clip] in the ring you have to give it your all and be aggressive. But after the fight, were all brothers. Regardless if youre a jew, a muslim or a christian. Outside the ring, we treat each other with respect. When preaches tell you cant make it in austria, know this we are a community. You are welcome here. Reporter these athletes are positive role models. They often visit schools to talk to students about islamic extremism. Weve all heard about the attacks. Once, a man drove into a crowd of people with a truck. He had a black i. S. Flag. Karim no muslim, no human being should ever do this no matter what his or her background. Nobody should be murdered. Im trying to do the best i can and to lead by example, an example of a good muslim. Reporter ma and to lead bmuslim. Le, an he prays five times a day. Im. Born in vienna, he says life is becoming more difficult for muslims in austria. Karim even as a kid, the fact that i am a muslim was an issue. People would make comments about it. Yes, people often give you weird looks, or make you feel unwelcome. We fear things are going to get worse. Reporter now, austrias new political situation is putting antiradicalization efforts like these in jeopardy. That would lead to more cases like that of emre, who became acquainted with i. S. Sympathizers while in jail. Emre i felt the state hated us those whove emigrated here, foreigners. So i thought i might as well give them a real reason to hate me. Thats what motivated me to get wants to reach kids before the radicals do. They offer free training sessions around town. And theyre open to everybody muslims, jews, christians, everyone. Karim mabrouk is committed to the project whether the austrian state supports him in his efforts or not. Peter well, good luck to karim in his efforts to use the do, though, get in touch with us and let us know what you think about the show. For now, from me, its byebye, and tschuss. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. Visit ncicap. Org] from the Katharine Hepburn Cultural Arts center in old saybrook, connecticut, its the kate. Starting at about age thirteen, i think, i developed this plango out and get them go out and get a guitar, now learn to play the guitar, now play the guitar in front of people, now play the guitar in front of people for money, and keep pushing it and pushing itand just had this plan that was born in me. In my case i had my sister who was my best friend and we grew up together in music and it was a real safety zone. Friends who knew me then and through high school and everything said, we didnt know where you were coming from because you didnt seem to care about boys, you didnt seem to care about dates or clothes. We were raised by a mother who just said, you know, you can do what you want. She just didnt say, but itll really be hard. We spent the first forty percent of our career just

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.