according to local organisations, more than one in eight indigenous people were infected in the amazon region. among those who caught the disease, the mortality rate was 150% higher than the brazilian average. but some communities have been organising their own defences. this is another group who live in villages near the brazil peru border. they have managed to keep coronavirus out of their homes by strictly controlling who goes in and who goes out. so far, the measures have worked. we met leaders just outside the village who showed us how they order food, medicine and other supplies. the goods are brought from the city and unloaded by the river, minimising the risk of transmission. in a country where thousands have
according to the campaign group fauna & flora international. named after mount popa in myanmar, the monkeys are said to be under threat from hunting and a loss of habitat. iam i am following the pronunciation guideline. where was it? it was there. was it? yes. 0k. guideline. where was it? it was there. was it? yes. ok. i suppose out. it s all going very well. it s time for the weather with carol, which is not looking good. good morning. for some of us it is going to be pretty wet and windy today, more especially in the north and we st more especially in the north and west and it has been raining quite solidly through the course of the night. you can see it on the radar picture coming in across scotland, northern ireland, some of it getting
security, and reducing our ability to control the climate. our chief environment correspondent, justin rowlatt reports. during his long career, sir david attenborough has seen first hand some of the most extraordinary natural phenomena. there s more meaning and mutual understanding in exchanging a glance with the gorilla than any other animal i know. but he has also lived through the most profound changes in the natural world in human history. his latest film contains the stunning images you d expect from an attenborough production, but this is not a celebration of the incredible diversity of life on earth. this is a warning. the natural world is being destroyed
she walked into a room and everybody knew she was there. she was always happy. always had a smile. reporter: she moved to florida where her sister said she became a savvy businesswoman running her own neon sign company. she would always make sure she had that income. she made sure she was setting herself up for what exactly what she wanted to do was retire and travel around the world. cher did travel, but mostly in the u.s. then a friend invited her to visit exotic bocus dell toro. cher jumped at the chance. took seven days to decide where we wanted to live the rest of our lives. the people here are phenomenal. we love you. and cher loves children, and panama has lots of kids. keith is a carpenter. he built their dream home. shiny wooden buildings on top of their island. cher planted tropical gardens and adopted a pet monkey and a brown doberman pincher named jack.
it may just change the script and save life as we know it. hey, buddy, happy to meet yo you. when we filmed this episode of united change of america in 2019, there were already deep rotted inequities in the education system. when the pandemic came, schools closed sand we had to shift to online learning. the reality is students and families didn t have the resources to macthat work. how can kids that don t having a says to computers and the internet keep up? the pandemic showed