Transcripts For DW Global 3000 - The Globalization Program 2

Transcripts For DW Global 3000 - The Globalization Program 20171202



welcomes a global story thousand today we're off to the rain forests of paris where the trade and local wildlife is pushing some species to the brink of extinction. in the democratic republic of congo a swiss director has provided a platform for people to talk about their suffering. but first we head to the united states where the far right is also becoming increasingly vocal which is d.p. affecting many communities. there are more than three hundred twenty six million people living in the usa and the far right violence is on the rise that was clear even before the horrors of charlottesville according to recent f.b.i. statistics seven thousand six hundred fifteen people were the victims of hate crime . in two thousand and sixteen that's four hundred more than the previous year and those are only official ficus. people are often victimized because of their skin color sexual orientation all religious affiliation this kind of prejudice is something a muslim community close to hancock in the state of new york is more than familiar with. is a small town in the state of new york it's surrounded by a delicate countryside farmland forests on the delaware river a favorite hold a fishing enthuse yes and this summer a rallying point for the new far right movement. this video is from the so-called proud boys organization. the convoy is headed for the small muslim community of islam but not far from hancock this is a problem yeah the fact that there are places in the united states that are nobody's home where yeah that's what their what was that was just like they did in europe you know go zones and then they take over and then you become the muslim brothers. they're talking about the muslims of america the organization the founded the home that just twenty kilometers northwest of hancock. the proud boys believe the people here are a threat to america. whole basilica tended the rally we met him in new york city in the editing suite where he puts together the proud boys videos the reason why we're singling out. muslims in american isn't burgers because they're connected with. they seem to be law abiding citizens they're not outwardly doing anything illegal but when you are front organization for something else you don't necessarily you're not murdering people on the streets every day. nancy ferd feels enraged by activists like paul bazil she says they're upsetting the peace and hancock everybody knows everybody it's like a family really. moved here twenty years ago and works in local tourism. but since ferrite media link hancock to islam which they allege is a terrorist training camp she's received some unpleasant feedback like this we were going to come for vacation but now i'm not going to bring my kids to a terrorist community why are you supporting. this long but it was founded in the one nine hundred eighty s. by for dominantly african-american muslims it's one of twenty two communities run by muslims of america follow the teachings of pakistani cleric mubarak. its members have turned their backs on the crime poverty and racism of american cities to raise their children in a more stable and religious environment. tahirih klug has lived in islam burke since she was twelve she studied law at the university of albany and is now the community's legal counsel. dear no. concern yes because the attention that they bring to our community and the statements the false accusations that they level against our community can incite others to violence i mean. just a neighborhood get together in hong kong organized by nancy and to here or on behalf of the local religious community. it's a little slow yet because people are still getting there this perceptions that they're sequestered and locked in gated in armed guards at the gates and nobody is allowed in or out it's completely false they're just like you and me they're just they're just normal people trying to live their lives the educate their kids keep them away from harm. to the far right it's a completely different picture are welcome to for the record but by millions of donor dollars the clarion project produces films about the perceived threat from muslims including those in. the messianic cult like leader is the founder of john model and its american front group the muslims of america or am away as they are referred to in f.b.i. documents jemaah is an international terrorist organization with operations in the united states that predate nine eleven by more than twenty years that is completely false. major james bonds from the new york state police works in antiterrorism and is in close contact with the f.b.i. he's frustrated by the far right propaganda targeting the residents of. through my interaction with them throughout the last fifteen years and my experience in law enforcement and the colleagues that i have throughout the state and the federal government i am very confident and i have not concerned in the least about them being portrayed they're nothing like they're being portrayed there has been no cause for any terrorism cases for an. some far right extremists go much further. rob a dog a former tennessee congressional candidate actually planned an attack on the community this is a recording of his voice we. shall be cruel to them and through our cruelty they shall know who we are they will not defeat us and they stop fear us and every night when they close their eyes for sleep they will be tortured. dog got was arrested in twenty fifteen and sentenced in april this year to twenty years in jail for plotting an attack on a mosque in his. he said the sound of the explosion would cause the people to get up and to one out of the building and then they would meet them with gunfire. back in hancock and the neighborhood party. this was the day after hundreds of white nationalists marched in charlottesville virginia one person was killed and nineteen injured when a car drove into a group of counter-demonstrators to hear a clock and feel their message has never been more important. just think about what happened yesterday in charlottesville that is not my america this is my never learn about their neighbor. he may be different from them. it's the same america that nancy wants to live in to. the unified vision of what america should be and and it is. smartphones tablets and p.c.'s all contained red metals metals like lithium coltan and cobalt devices simply wouldn't work without them in just a single smart phone there are over thirty different kinds and they come from all over the world from the central african republic me and afghanistan and the democratic republic of congo where in the east of the country two million minus extract the precious metals my hands thirty percent of them a children under the age of fourteen it's estimated that the democratic republic of congo is sitting on an incredible twenty four trillion us dollars worth of metals. yet the average salary there is just two hundred fifty dollars a year. the country might be commodity rich but its people a desperately poor. swished they to direct their meal how was here in the east and democratic republic of congo researching a project three years ago when a massacre took place in a village. in disability this is morbid with. thirty six people were killed the youngest victim was a two month old baby. girl you. know i've lost my children. the country has long been mired in violence the civil war which ended in two thousand and three claimed six million lives one in three women here have been raped the country has enjoyed horror upon hora all because of its vast natural wealth tin coltan copper without these natural resources there would be no computers mobile phones and electric cars these mineral deposits are at the heart of the conflict between armed forces and rebels the corrupt government grants mining licenses to international companies. but the atrocities are never ending why is there no international court nobody cares what's happening here. thousands of crimes have been committed here with impunity as the government looks on and the west profits from low cost natural resources neal how passionately believes that fear to should address real world issues to him the point of ought is to galvanize people to take a stand against injustice if politicians are failing in nigeria it's up to artists to pick up the slack. as providers join for money others like have a basically dogcart own existence but i can free myself of it by working in a sort of frenzy my channel what's on my mind into a project my mind doesn't remember that's my approach in life when all artists do it's. a work in order to work things out in their heads for it's. just feel to them. the congo tribe you know is neal ours most ambitious project to date in twenty fifteen he staged a symbolic tribunals in eastern democratic republic of congo and shot a film about it three genuine cases are investigated the judge prosecutor and forty witnesses who testified from gold prospectus to government ministers all real too only the judgment isn't it's not the first time that meal or how his stage to tribunals that should have that hasn't taken place he spends months badgering the various parties to get involved then he hands over the stage to them thus it's a good twenty minutes to talk about their village and its destruction about injustice about their business that was written of about people they knew to flee if you give people twenty minutes they'll use them indeed just. in some a twenty seventeen meal clown returned to the country to show his film. he's meeting a village minister who testified at the tribunals he talked about an issue that affects everyone here. a few years ago africa's biggest gold deposit was discovered here a multinational gold mining company relocated the entire village from the first whole valley to a site high up in mountainous territory without asking the inhabitants without compensating them a perfectly legal practice in the democratic republic of congo. i mean what's life like in the new village you know you work it's worrying there are no streets no drinking water but it's hard to get. the audiences electrified for decades people have been seeking justice and had all but given up hope now they're seeing someone on the screen who's giving a voice to their stuff. during it doesn't matter that it's just a film its message is that justice can be done. a revolutionary message. to so i would like to see the culture of impunity tackled and the perpetrators arrested and put on trial. however colorful they are. even if it's the president. of the disappeared. in cities and villages the film makes everyone think from people who can't read to university scholars it makes everyone feel they can change things motivates them to push for real tribunals that's exactly what. to show that what seems impossible is possible . she want to go to the congo tribunals declares the provincial government and the multinational companies equally guilty. the film lays bare the connection between the suffering in the democratic republic of congo and western affluence. to me that recognition is a vital part of democracy. it's like we're having an adolescent crisis our moral and political sensibilities are being overwhelmed. so we need to educate ourselves . we must keep in mind that globalization is complicated it's a dangerous system capitalism is part of tree and we need to stop it to new remissness combines with its breaking to. do you share i mean a rouse view do you consider capitalism predatory let us know post a comment on our facebook page d w global society where you can also find inspiring stories from around the world. this week on global snack comes from the bus named capital sarajevo enjoy. the bosnian capital sarajevo has been a melting pot of muslims jews and catholic and orthodox christians for centuries the old town dotted with markets and courtyards was designed by the turks six hundred years ago. and the ottoman influence is also evident in the local cuisine has served up by this restaurant satch i mean a sacha's been working here for fifteen years it's the place to come for a classic bosnian book back. my name is in mean that it's on born in serbia but i'm living in boston and has to go now i'm working to such the name the shop and so this will and make you the pie. go back is baked pastry with various fillings the snack originated in turkey. in addition to serving the public i mean it also has a hand in making it. the process involves gracefully tossing the dough back and forth until it's just been enough life but it's now here that i've tried to learn how to make a. how to bake it to sell to the bucks needs what's the cheese or spinach potato. once those killings have been added the dough was rolled into long thin sausages and placed in a spiral. this man has an extremely demanding job he is responsible for keeping the charcoal fired oven the light the heat is so relentless that he and his colleagues change over shifts after just four and a half hours. making on the fire but it's still way our father or mother they make it like these on the fire it's very hot here over ten minutes in the oven and they're done with the public is served with yogurt sauce and is washed down with tea or a fresh yogurt drink such is a place that brings hungry locals and tourists together an incredible three thousand portions a day are served up here. it is a version of the current limited and it is a made it by the recipe over the at the. restaurant here in boston a woman what they do here like. the good local liquor mothers do good. except here you pay one euro fifty for a portion of the berk is so popular among locals that many take it away to eat at home. and today in global ideas we head to the peruvian rain forests close to the border with bolivia this inaccessible jungle is home to a rich and unique variety of wildlife but several species are on the stret some because they're being sold for profit are important joined a team of environmentalist who are working to preserve this very special ecosystem . happen if and that spends most of his what life in the jungle. lies on a river on the border between peru and bolivia. his office is in the city of puerto mountain all day a whole day's boat ride away. i always loved nature. but not only to see but myers i wanted to do something for it my favorite color is green and here in the jungle you can see lots of green tea for in the greens even you see one of the most biodiverse areas you know the world with lots of his patients of idaho from france. the focus of kevin's work his the yellow spotted river title it's on the brink of extinction. for years conservationists have been watching their numbers for. you know. this older maybe for me here yeah. you come to the beaches to get or do sex yet because they eat them and also they sell it in berkeley we have more than ninety percent yeah. it's a lucrative business the eggs can be sold on markets outside the jungle at high prices if but when to his stop eating the turtle eggs but he comes from the only village in the vicinity so he knows how to find the nests. simply look through many visiting with us through identify the trail left by the turtle and then we follow it until we reach the mast. the nature reserve covers around a million hectares outside the park woodcutters and gold perspectives are devouring their way through the rain forest. endangered species like parrots seek refuge here. you can feed the work where you go in so doing for years you have the plants all around you you can watch any animal at any moment and when we do our job we wake up really early and go to the forest do some kind of money train for example. and with these results you can make decisions. kevin and his colleagues from the national park want to find out which animals are in the area and where they live. images from the wildlife cambers are invaluable. the conservationists are already one step closer to protecting the titles they're breeding them here on this artificial beach. judging by the temperature there are about to hatch around seven hundred of them which will then be put back in their natural habitat. we are trying to. turn it to right. to make the population grow. they've had a great success with the cameras. we are working we have seen. many dealers really next pictures of the of the years. to talk appears. almost all of these animals are on the red list of endangered species. they should all find a good home soon in the nature. but the people who live in the forest need to make changes to their way of life to. the group meet edwin's family who've come from the village to fish in the river they mostly live off the jungle alongside fish and turtle eggs are a major source of protein. that i. know when. they have the tradition to reduce river looks. they always have done that even their grandfathers before. used to do this they did it today travelling along the river and this is a resource you really can stop. for this reason the jungle residents are allowed to continue eating the eggs but selling them is now strictly prohibited kevin wants to know if the ban is working. but he finds some of the first store. over the woman looking at the equivalent of five euros for a dozen turtle eggs. she doesn't appear to have any qualms. here we could find some rivers are collect it's a dose of this this is a sad. thing. i didn't expect to find it here in the market the central market the pork like foursquare for the main square. well but this means that we have to make more for the next year the world with the people to make to make that these really beautiful and important speeches can go on. but as the city crews the tuttles future looks increasingly. the population of plateau mountain aldo has been soaring ever since it is linked up to a major highway. and as the population rises so does the pressure on the rain forest. laugh. that's all for today thanks for joining us as ever we love hearing from you write to us at global three thousand d.w. dot com or on facebook. see you soon bye for now. opportunity prosperity optimism that's the power of global trade global three thousand brought to you by d.h.l. . confine. credibility. to fasten your seatbelts. if. you. travel. in sixty minutes d w. they know looking like they know what we think. and soon they'll even know how we feel. well i'm not a real person i'm still just a piece of. scientists around the world are working to measure our emotions. so hopefully i can be a helpful piece assault with a virtual person as a therapist or a robotic as a teacher neither would have human empathy. what does a machine need to do to create empathy and a medical context when i disclose more information to a person or to computer in this case the rhythms finn state of feelings measuring emotion starting december sixteenth t w. meet the germans new and surprising aspects of noise and culture in germany. us american good news us take a look at germany it is interesting these other traditions every day lives and language doesn't just come out of my life. so i'm young good. looking guy i'm a d.-w. dot com the germans. every journey begins with the first step and every language of the first word i looked in the nico he's in germany to learn german but. this is just why not with him. it's simple online on euro mile and free. to suffer from d w z learning course those fake german made easy. donald trump's former national security advisor michael flynn has pleaded guilty to making false statements to the f.b.i. about his contacts with a russian deploy.

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