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Climate change is causing temperatures to rise. Extreme weather events and droughts are increasing. Springs and wells are drying up. And everyone needs more water. The battles for control over precious water reserves have begun.
In some countries, water has always been available in abundance - and is wasted carelessly every day. But the climate crisis is changing that. Because the climate is warming, everyone needs more water than ever: for drinking, agriculture and industry. Water is the new gold.
In many countries, the distribution battles for precious water reserves have already begun. In Mendocino, California, there is no longer enough water to flush the toilets. And in Germany, regional drinking water supplies collapse in hot weather. Groundwater levels have dropped to record lows in many places. Will we still have enough drinking water in the future? What happens when our water disappears?
This is a three-part documentary series:
Part 1: The fight for water - https://youtu.be/1MZFrJPPIQ8
Part 2: What happens when our water dries up? - https://youtu.be/pWTg-Gpb2Tw
Part 3: Who owns water? - https://youtu.be/9edWX7TTsLw
Series playlist: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLovlAKbQVz6A0u1yGUdaG7MSh7fG9SR3t&utm_source=EKLEiJECCKjOmKnC5IiRIQ
#documentary #dwdocumentary #water
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Investigative journalist Tim Sebastian exposes the growing threat of far-right extremism in Europe. From secret neo-Nazi gatherings in Germany to the alarming rise of populist leaders, discover the chilling realities facing democracy today. Watch as he delves into the ideologies, scandals, and political maneuvers threatening to reshape the European Union.
00:00 Italian Fascist Memorial Jan 2024
00:34 Konstantin von Notz, Greens
German Bundestag Intelligence Committee on threat to democracy
01:18 Potsdam far-right secret meeting, Nov 2023
02:12 Austrian far-right politician, Martin Sellner, on mass deportations
02:46 Correctiv journalists on secret meeting
04:14 Sellner on location of secret meeting
05:15 Impact of far-right surge in European elections
05:40 EU Commission Vice President Vera Jourova on MEP bribery scandal
06:40 Dresden attack on local Greens politician May 2024
07:14 Stuttgart “Reichsbürger” attempted coup trial
08:15 Jourova on election
09:25 Manfred Weber on elections
10:05 Jourova on mainstream failures
10:45 Sellner on “high-pressure” vis-a-vis immigrants
12:45 German far-right AfD campaign event
13:38 AfD Lead candidate Maximilian Krah on investigations
15:25 Krah on Marine Le Pen
16:13 von Notz on potential far-right government in Germany
17:06 Hungary and Orban’s “illiberal” democracy
18:20 Peter Magyar on FIDESZ system in Hungary
19:28 Magyar on state-capture in Hungary
21:28 Weber on Macron and Scholz
21:50 Assassination attempt on Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico
23:10 Corrective journalists on secret Potsdam meeting plans
25:25 Impact on Ukraine of European elections
#documentary #dwdocumentary
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Rescue workers in Spain continue to search for bodies in the wake of flooding that killed at least 158 people in the eastern Valencia region. The coastal area of Murcia was also badly hit.
Satellite images of Valencia before and after the floods show the extent of the damage. It's the worst flooding to hit Spain in more than three decades - with a year's worth of rain falling in just a day.
Many of those affected are angry about what they say is an inadequate crisis response by authorities. Our correspondent reports from one of the worst-affected communities.
00:00 Hundreds of soldiers aid rescue efforts
00:14 The scale of destruction
00:45 Flood survivors say the warnings came far too late
02:52 DW Correspondent Jan-Philipp Scholz in Valencia, Spain
04:07 Flood alert system under scrutiny
06:39 What triggered the flash floods?
06:50 Jeff Da Costa, Climate Scientist
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#Floods #Spain #EU
Few tourists manage to peek behind the iron curtain of North Korea's dictatorship. But the journalist Luca Faccio managed to visit Kim Jong Un's regime.
Anyone venturing behind the world’s last Iron Curtain into North Korea will experience a very different country to the one we know only through the usual images of rocket launches and mass rallies. The country is ruled by the dictator Kim Jong Un, whom the people worship - or are made to worship - as a god-like father figure. Little is known about daily life in North Korea, because all images that reach the outside world have been censored by the government. Visitors rarely see evidence of oppression, enforced conformity and starvation in the rural population. Still, journalist Luca Faccio is able to offer some interesting insights into the isolated country - although, of course, government watchdogs are on his heels everywhere he goes.
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There are men on this planet who challenge death every day to feed their families. Between the desert and the Pacific Ocean, in the region of Huarmey in Peru, stand vertiginous cliffs. Men like Purunga must overcome them.
Fishers take huge risks to catch particular kinds of fish and seafood: To get to it, they have to climb towering cliffs down to the Pacific. Purunga is one of them. Every day, he makes his way through the desert to the ocean and descends to the sea using ropes and pegs. It’s an immense test of strength that’s already cost many fishers their lives. Purunga’s had a few accidents himself. When the swell is particularly strong, the catch is sometimes meagre. But Purunga knows: the following day he’ll be back to make the descent and try his luck once again.
#documentary #dwdocumentary
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One of the reasons that Russia is turning towards North Korean troops is that it’s desperate. Putin has been throwing more and more Russians into a meat grinder of his own making. Now he’s turning to North Korean troops and that is a clear sign of weakness. Russia has been suffering some 1,200 casualties a day in the east, more than in any other time in the war. And with the deployment of these North Korean troops to Russia and to the front lines, this is the first time in 100 years that Russia has invited foreign troops into the country.
Chapters:
0:00 Russia's invite to North Korean troops
1:02 Mikhail Alexseev, Russia expert at San Diego State University
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#russia #northkorea #putin
Can money and power ever make us happy? How much is enough? Our constant desire for more is part of our human nature.
But is greed getting the better of us? Find out in GREED - A FATAL DESIRE.
From Buddhists and bankers to Eskimos and psychologists, we explore the phenomenon of greed with people from all walks of life. How can it be defined? What makes us greedy? And what are the repercussions?
People like to have a lot of stuff because it gives them the feeling of living forever," says American social psychologist Sheldon Solomon. He thinks we have to come to terms with our own mortality before we can break the cycle.
Are there other ways to feel happy and content? Can we simply stop being greedy by changing the way we think?
Watch Part 2 here: https://youtu.be/qLSt4VtmT5M
Watch the extended cut here: https://youtu.be/CVuVlk2E_e4
Check out our web special:
http://www.dw.com/en/tv/greed/s-32898
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Globalization used to be a guarantor of economic growth. No longer, and the losers are poorer nations. They have restricted access to global markets and are largely excluded from beneficial labor migration.
Part 2: https://youtu.be/gIYaSEwoblY
Unfettered access to the world’s economic markets should boost prosperity and foster peaceful international coexistence - in theory. But which countries take advantage of the opportunities presented by global competition? And which countries avoid it, preferring to protect their economies at the expense of the poor? And why does free global trade preach the unrestricted movement of goods, while setting limits on labor migration? With these questions and contradictions in mind, we travel through the US, Peru, Senegal and Europe.
An agreement with China means the former steel producing center Duisburg is eyeing a renaissance. America, on the other hand, blames China and globalization for its declining steel industry. Billions of US dollars are invested in domestic industries and agriculture as part of the country’s "America First” policy stance. This has a detrimental effect on poorer nations. For example Peru, a nation left behind by globalization that’s making little progress in the fight against poverty.
When it comes to worldwide migration, there are clear winners and losers. Spain’s farming sector is starved of workers, while the EU resists immigration. In countries like Senegal, where illegal fishing and the appropriation of farmland by international concerns has left people destitute, migrants are leaving in search of a better life. One of the chief beneficiaries of globalization is China, whose migrant workers represent the confidence and strategy of their powerful homeland. "Globalization in Crisis" is a two-part documentary telling the stories of those who benefit - and those who suffer - as a result of globalization.
[Part 2 online next week]
#documentary #dwdocumentary #globalization
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With its rich biological diversity, the region around the Mekong River is a jewel of Asia. The river is also known as "the mother of waters.” It’s a transport route, water supply and food source for millions of people.
The film sets out in a journey to the former royal city of Luang Prabang in Laos. It’s regarded as one of the most beautiful cities in southeast Asia and to this day, religion determines everyday life: Every morning, hundreds of monks walk through the city’s ancient center to collect their alms.
In the isolated villages, some of which are only accessible by boat, most Laotians live off the land. There are huge rice paddies on the fertile banks on the Mekong; rice is the Laotians’ main staple, eaten three times a day here. The river also provides some welcome dietary variation in the form of fish.
Locals - and the odd tourist boat - also use the Mekong as a main transit route; even today, the quickest way to reach the country’s larger cities is still by river. At some point, several hundred kilometers downstream, we reach the capital Vientiane, the economic heart of Laos and a trading center for the famous Laotian woven textiles, exported from here all over the world.
#documentary #dwdocumentary #laos #mekong
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They scam unsuspecting victims all across the world — but they are victims themselves. Thousands of people are trafficked worldwide into Myanmar's war-torn east, where they are forced to trick people in Europe, the US, and China into scam schemes.
At KK Park, one of the most notorious facilities, those who refuse risk torture and even murder. Their only hope are a handful of aid workers trying to help them escape.
DW's investigative unit goes to the borderlands of Thailand and Myanmar to track down the perpetrators behind this multi-million-euro operation. Along the way, they uncover a vast criminal network that leads to a notorious Chinese Triad boss.
#documentary #dwdocumentary
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تتمتع لوكسمبورغ بسمعة طيبة في أوروبا باعتبارها واحة للرخاء. ولكن عدد الفقراء والأشخاص بدون مأوى في ازدياد أيضا. وفيما يتردد السياسيون في اتخاذ إجراءات حيال ذلك، تحاول المنظمات غير الحكومية مكافحة أسوأ التجاوزات.
تضم لوكسمبورغ مركزاً مالياً و شركات صورية ومحكمة العدل الأوروبية، وتتمتع لذلك بسمعة طيبة في أوروبا باعتبارها واحة للرخاء والازدهار . وبالفعل فنصيب الفرد من الناتج المحلي الإجمالي هنا أعلى من أي مكان آخر في العالم. لكن لهذه المملكة وجه آخر أيضا. ألكسندرا أوكسازيلاي من منظمة " صوت الشارع" غير الحكومية تعتني يوميا بالأشخاص بدون مأوى. إذ يتوافد المزيد من المحتاجين إلى مطبخ الحساء الخاص الذي تشرف عليه المنظمة، حيث يجدون الأمان والمساعدة ووجبة طعام. من بينهم أحد المجريين الذي يعيش في خيمة منذ سبع سنوات، حتى خلال فصل الشتاء. ترى ألكسندرا أيضاَ تزايد أعداد الفقراء العاملين، أي الأشخاص العاجزين عن تغطية نفقاتهم رغم العمل، كما هي حال سيرج كابل الذي يعاني من التهاب مزمن في ظهره، ولا يجد شقة يستطيع تحمل نفقاتها لارتفاع الإيجارات بشكل كبير. وهذا يرجع إلى تفشي المضاربات العقارية وبطء وتيرة تمويل السكن الاجتماعي، بحسب الباحث أنطوان باكود. استطاعت ألكسندرا توفير السكن بأسعار معقولة لبعض الأشخاص على الأقل. لكن هذا غيض من فيض، لأن عدداً متزايداً من سكان لوكسمبورغ واللاجئين يعتمدون على منظمة " صوت الشارع" بعيداً عن أبراج المكاتب الإدارية الراقية. تزايد الفقر يهدد بانقسام المجتمع. يانك فريتس عاطل عن العمل ويشعر بأن السياسيين خذلوه ويطالب بوقف الهجرة، أما رئيسة منظمة "صوت الشارع" غير الحكومية ألكسندرا أوكسازيلاي لا تفرق بين المحتاجين. ففي أغنى دولة في أوروبا يجب مساعدة الجميع على حد قولها.
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#وثائقي
#dw
#لوكسمبورغ
#فقر
#المال
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Martin Luther - how a humble 15th-century monk was able to change the world. Luther was born into a world governed by the Roman Church and a distant emperor.
He managed to awaken a national spirit in Germans and become someone they identified with. ‘Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation’ was what the territories in central Europe were called in the 15th century. It was the era of the Habsburg ruler Charles V, who saw himself as ruler by God’s grace and defender of Christian unity. In 1521, he said that the sun never set in his empire, which stretched from Latin America in the west to central Europe and to the Philippines in the east. The German territories were just one of his realms, and powerful princes defended their own interests here. Secular and religious power was still based on the Christianity of the Roman church. But many saw the Reformation as an opportunity to distance themselves from Rome and the Emperor, and to improve their standing in the political power structure of the day. Unlike the Habsburg emperor Charles V, who didn’t even speak German, Luther grew to become someone the people identified with, and he became hugely popular. The reformer was one of the first major figures to explicitly play the German card and appeal to national sentiment: one of his missives said, "Why should the Germans put up with robbery and oppression imposed by foreigners?” Luther’s translation of the Bible into German was an important step in forming a German identity, but the Reformation left Germany divided along religious lines.
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Developments in artificial intelligence (AI) are leading to fundamental changes in the way we live. Algorithms can already detect Parkinson's disease and cancer, and control both cars and aircraft. How will AI change our society in the future?
This documentary journeys to the hot spots of AI research in Europe, the USA and China, and looks at the revolutionary developments which are currently taking place. The rapid growth of AI offers many opportunities, but also many dangers. AI can be used to create sound and video recordings which will make it more and more difficult to distinguish between fact and fiction. It will make the world of work more efficient and many professions superfluous. Algorithms can decide whether to grant loans, who is an insurance risk, and how good employees are. But there is a huge problem: humans can no longer comprehend how algorithms arrive at their decisions. And another big problem is AI’s capacity for widespread surveillance. The Chinese city of Rongcheng is already using an AI-supported 'social credit system' to monitor and assess its citizens. Does AI pose a danger to our personal freedoms or democracy? Which decisions can we leave to the algorithms - and which do we want to? And what are AI’s social implications?
A documentary by Tilman Wolff und Ranga Yogeshwar
#Ranga_Yogeshwar
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Cocaine and crack cocaine are spreading across Ireland—and not just in the capital Dublin, but in more rural areas as well. How did this happen, and what is being done to combat it?
International drug smugglers are increasingly setting their sights on Ireland. According to a report by the U.S. State Department, the western Irish coast is regarded as a gateway to Europe. The police, coastguard, navy and customs officials are struggling to secure the fjords and bays, which are difficult to control. People are already referring to County Cork as the Cocaine Coast. The powdery drug can be bought almost everywhere—even in the countryside and small villages. And an increasing number of Irish residents are battling addiction. A report by Killian Bayer.
00:00 Intro
01:01 Darndale: A social hotspot in Dublin
01:55 Hitting the road with social worker Daniel
03:58 A school offers hope
07:33 Crack and cocaine - why Ireland?
09:33 Smuggling routes
#documentary #dwdocumentary
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Sex work is a way of life for thousands of women in marginalized communities in certain parts of rural India. For many, it is the only way to make money - also due to the Indian caste system and centuries-old prejudices which make it difficult for the families to escape poverty. But winds of change are blowing.
In certain Indian villages, sex work is, in a sense, inherited. Mothers and grandmothers have already worked in the same trade. In the past, they mostly belonged to ethnic groups that worked mainly as performers. The British colonial power criminalized them, and to this day it is especially difficult for the men of these ethnic groups to find regular jobs. Therefore, the female members of the family are often the breadwinners. They are the ones who take out loans, build houses, make important decisions, which is otherwise rare in India. Our reporters Akanksha Saxena and Neerat Kaur looked around the villages - and found signs of hope: The young generation is trying to leave this sad tradition behind and fight for better education and rights.
#documentary #dwdocumentary #india
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Will artificial intelligence save us or kill us all? In Japan, AI-driven technology promises better lives for an aging population. But researchers in Silicon Valley are warning of untamable forces being unleashed– and even human extinction.
Will artificial intelligence make life better for humans or lead to our downfall? As developers race toward implementing AI in every aspect of our lives, it is already showing promise in areas like medicine. But what if it is used for nefarious purposes?
In Japan, the inventor and scientist behind the firm Cyberdyne is working to make life better for the sick and elderly. Professor Yoshiyuki Sankai’s robot suits are AI-driven exoskeletons used in rehabilitative medicine to help stroke victims and others learn to walk again. But he doesn’t see the benefits of AI ending there; he predicts a future world where AIs will live in harmony with humans as a new, benevolent species.
Yet in Silicon Valley, the cradle of AI development, there is an unsettling contradiction: a deep uncertainty among many developers about the untamable forces they are unleashing. Gabriel Mukobi is a computer science graduate student at Stanford who is sounding the alarm that AI could push us toward disaster– and even human extinction. He’s at the forefront of a tiny field of researchers swimming against the current to make sure AI is safe and beneficial for everyone.
What are the promises and perils of AI? And who gets to decide how it will be used?
Us & Them Series Playlist: https://www.youtube.com/playli....st?list=PLovlAKbQVz6
#documentary #dwdocumentary #technology #AI #UsandThem
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Sepsis changed Georg Winterling’s life forever: both his arms and legs had to be amputated.
Blood poisoning or sepsis is one of the most common diseases and causes of death worldwide. But even in Germany, it is often not recognized immediately, as was the case for Georg Winterling. Winterling suffered a small cut on his finger when trying to inflate an old air mattress in the cellar. It seemed like a harmless injury that even the family doctor didn’t take seriously at first. But then the wound started to hurt badly. A few days later, Winterling could hardly breathe and was admitted to the hospital. Doctors there said he was suffering from sepsis, a condition which spreads throughout the body rapidly. They put Winterling into an induced coma and were eventually forced to amputate his limbs to save his life. Since then, many things he used to take for granted have become a challenge. He relies on his wife and two children to help him. DW reporter Miodrag Soric accompanied Georg Winterling as he took his first steps into his new life.
00:00 Intro
01:55 Progression of Georg’s sepsis
03:30 What happens in the body during sepsis?
04:30 Therapy: stepping back into life
07:23 Everyday life after rehab
10:40 How can prostheses help?
11:32 An optimistic look into the future
#documentary #dwdocumentary #reporter
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Russian President Vladimir Putin described the collapse of the Soviet Union as "the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century." This documentary from 2021 shows the path Russian foreign policy has followed under Putin.
[This documentary was originally released in 2021. In February 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the invasion of Ukraine.]
On December 25, 1991, the Soviet Union collapsed. Along with it came hope for the end of the Cold War, for independence and freedom for the former Soviet republics. But for many it also brought poverty and war. What remains of the dreams of that time? The documentary includes contemporary witnesses and politicians of the decisive years and shows what has become of the legacy of a world power.
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In India, Varanasi is considered a holy city. Millions of Hindus believe that people who die here, in this city on the Ganges, are lucky. Because if they are cremated here, they can break the eternal cycle of birth, death and rebirth.
Director Oliver Mayer grew up in a world in which most people are influenced by the Christian promise of eternal life. In Varanasi, he wants to understand why it is considered salvation to escape a cycle of rebirth.
He himself has already had to come to terms with death: A few years ago, his mother died, and it took him a long time to come to terms with his grief. He is fascinated by the fact that the end of life is not necessarily seen as negative in Hinduism. He wants to know how people manage to face death pragmatically and without fear - indeed, almost looking forward to it.
Mayer visits a very special hospice for the dying in Varanasi. Here, he encounters a different, more relaxed approach to death. He meets extraordinary people. They include the priests and relatives who care for the dying, workers from lower castes who cremate the dead and children like nine-year-old Kajal, who poses for photos dressed as the deity Shiva to earn money to support herself, her mother and her little brother.
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कुछ भारतीय गांवों में, सेक्स वर्क एक तरह की विरासत है. मांएं और दादियां पहले से ही इस व्यवसाय में काम कर चुकी हैं. वे आम तौर पर उन जनजातीय समूहों से हैं जो ज़्यादातर बतौर कलाकार काम करते थे. ब्रिटिश राज ने इन्हें आपराधिक जातियां घोषित कर दिया था. आज भी इन जनजातीय समूहों के लिए साधारण नौकरियां पाना ख़ासा मुश्किल है. इसलिए, परिवार की महिला सदस्य ही अक्सर घर चलाती हैं. वे ही कर्ज़ लेती हैं, घर बनाती हैं, अहम फैसले लेती हैं, जो कि भारत में, अपने आप में एक दुर्लभ चीज़ है. रिपोर्टर आकांक्षा सक्सेना और नीरत कौर इन गांवों में पहुंचीं और उन्हें बदलाव के संकेत दिखे. युवा पीढ़ी इस कष्टदायी दुखद परंपरा को पीछे छोड़ने, बेहतर शिक्षा और अधिकारों के लिए लड़ने की कोशिश में जुटी है.
#DWDocumentaryहिन्दी #DWहिन्दी #India #CriminalTribesAct #prostitution #castesystem
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