Scan date : 01/05/2024 03:21
DayHourType Event Name LangEvent nameShort EventExtended LangExtended Event
01/0501h00>01h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0501h02>01h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
01/0501h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTransformation: the price of green businessengThe economy needs to become greener. A city is using a river heat pump, a start-up wants to make green methanol cheaper for container ships. Tesla is laying off employees and EV batteries are being recycled on a large scale.
01/0502h00>02h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0502h15>03h00 (0x00) ?engA World Heritage Site in Danger?South Tyrol Fights for its FutureengTourism in South Tyrol is getting out of hand. In the high season, villages and mountain passes are completely congested. For many visitors, the dream of seeing the ‘Three Peaks’ up close ends when police are forced to close the mountain’s access road due to overcrowding. Access to another attraction, the Pragser Wildsee lake, is also regulated: An Italian TV series was filmed here around 10 years ago. Then, images of the beauty spot were beamed around the world on social media. Now, too many people want to visit.  Mountain guide Erwin Steiner, a member of the traffic commission, is committed to reducing vehicle traffic -- and preserving the nature that constitutes his livelihood. But there are plans afoot to further expand the tourist infrastructure -- with a view to hosting the 2026 Olympics. Conservationists like architect Marlene Roner are fighting to preserve this World Natural Heritage Site. These two activists team up with representatives of the Alpine Association and local heritage organizations. Against the stunning backdrop of the Dolomites, they adopt a manifesto dedicated to protecting the mountains.  With the South Tyrolean government's Tourism Development Concept 2030+, the debate over how to deal with the region’s natural heritage has grown heated. In particular, the plan to cap the number of beds has met with resistance from the hotel and restaurant industries. What is a World Heritage designation actually worth? Does it really help to protect a unique landscape - or just serve to market it?
01/0503h00>03h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0503h02>03h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
01/0503h30>04h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsEducation for All! But how?engIlliteracy, outdated learning concepts, a lack of teachers. Schools around the world are facing major challenges. 250 million children have no access to education at all. How can the education crisis in Brazil, India and Kenya be solved?
01/0504h00>04h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0504h15>04h30 (0x00) ?engIntervieweng
01/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengCoastal communities in The Gambia are struggling not only with the effects of overfishing but also pollution. Protecting Guinea's Tristao Islands, Tunisian olive farming in crisis, an eco hospital in Ghana and a Masai wildlife photographer.
01/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0505h15>06h00 (0x00) ?engA World Heritage Site in Danger?South Tyrol Fights for its FutureengTourism in South Tyrol is getting out of hand. In the high season, villages and mountain passes are completely congested. For many visitors, the dream of seeing the ‘Three Peaks’ up close ends when police are forced to close the mountain’s access road due to overcrowding. Access to another attraction, the Pragser Wildsee lake, is also regulated: An Italian TV series was filmed here around 10 years ago. Then, images of the beauty spot were beamed around the world on social media. Now, too many people want to visit.  Mountain guide Erwin Steiner, a member of the traffic commission, is committed to reducing vehicle traffic -- and preserving the nature that constitutes his livelihood. But there are plans afoot to further expand the tourist infrastructure -- with a view to hosting the 2026 Olympics. Conservationists like architect Marlene Roner are fighting to preserve this World Natural Heritage Site. These two activists team up with representatives of the Alpine Association and local heritage organizations. Against the stunning backdrop of the Dolomites, they adopt a manifesto dedicated to protecting the mountains.  With the South Tyrolean government's Tourism Development Concept 2030+, the debate over how to deal with the region’s natural heritage has grown heated. In particular, the plan to cap the number of beds has met with resistance from the hotel and restaurant industries. What is a World Heritage designation actually worth? Does it really help to protect a unique landscape - or just serve to market it?
01/0506h00>06h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0506h02>06h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
01/0506h30>07h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTransformation: the price of green businessengThe economy needs to become greener. A city is using a river heat pump, a start-up wants to make green methanol cheaper for container ships. Tesla is laying off employees and EV batteries are being recycled on a large scale.
01/0507h00>07h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0507h15>07h30 (0x00) ?engIntervieweng
01/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeAlways tired? How to boost your energy!engPersistent tiredness, lethargy, lack of drive - if that’s your daily experience, it will impact your health and well-being. Sometimes illnesses like chronic fatigue syndrome are to blame. But often a few lifestyle changes can make a huge difference.
01/0508h00>08h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engClose upLuxembourg  Poverty in Europe's Wealthiest CountryengLuxembourg is a financial hub and home to the European Court of Justice as well as countless shell companies. And with the highest per capita GDP anywhere in the world, the country is also known for its wealth and luxury. But there's a different, lesser-known side to the grand duchy. Alexandra Oxacelay is with "Stëmm vun der Strooss,” an NGO dedicated to taking care of people who are homeless and socially vulnerable. The soup kitchen run by this charity is seeing a growing number of people searching for shelter, a hot meal and support. One of them is Stephan from Hungary, who's spent the last seven years living in a tent - even during winter. Alexandra has also noticed an increase in the number of "working poor,” or people struggling to make ends meet despite having a job. Serge Kappel suffers from chronic inflammatory back pain and has been unable to find an apartment he can afford due to a dramatic increase in rental costs. Researcher Antoine Paccoud attributes this to rampant speculation on the real estate market and insufficient funding for social housing. Alexandra can at least provide affordable housing for some people in need. But that help is limited when compared to the growing number of Luxembourgers and refugees who have become dependent on the NGO while living in the shadows of high-profile office buildings. Poverty in Luxembourg has become an increasingly divisive issue. Yannick Wirtz, who is out of work, feels let down by the government and says there should be greater restrictions on immigration. Whereas NGO director Alexandra Oxacelay refuses to discriminate when it comes to the disadvantaged - insisting that in the wealthiest country in Europe, everyone deserves to be helped.
01/0509h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0509h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaChanging weather, changing timesengAn ancient method for collecting rainwater, why freak storms are becoming common in Europe, the local weather enthusiasts turned influencers in India, and an historic weather station in Poland that’s been charting climate change for over a century.
01/0510h00>10h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0510h15>11h00 (0x00) ?engThe Far Right and Neo-NazisAn Increasing Terrorist ThreatengIn Germany, a far-right plan to overthrow the state was averted. In France, six men were arrested for plotting to attack politicians. In Bratislava, a student with links to the far right murdered two people outside an LGTB club. The film crew meets with some of the people who see themselves as ideological leaders of a racial war. The film investigates these white supremacists, and the threat they pose.  The filmmakers traveled to Wunsiedel, northern Bavaria. Here, a neo-Nazi political party, Dritte Weg, gathered to commemorate Adolf Hitler’s deputy, Rudolf Hess. Locals watched silently as the neo-Nazis march through the streets in a torchlit parade, carrying banners and banging on drums.  A team of journalists spent two years investigating semi-clandestine networks in France, Germany and Romania. They set up a fake profile on a French neo-Nazi forum. It’s one of many spreading hate online, and has over 3,600 members. There are also online dating sites exclusively for white people, celebrating ‘white life, white love’. Members trade in Nazi memorabilia. The camera team meets a man who served in the SS back in the Second World War. Shockingly, he still feels nostalgia for Nazi ideals. A role-model for many of these ‘white warriors’ is Daniel Conversano, who left France for the ‘white land’ of Romania. Here, he formed a community. His followers include the convicted terrorist Login Nisin, who admitted to plotting to kill Christophe Castaner and Jean-Luc Melenchon. The team visited Conversano and his supporters in Bucharest. They questioned him about his racist views. Many see the coming "racial civil war” as inevitable. Far-right extremists are now considered one of the biggest threats to democracy in Europe.
01/0511h00>11h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0511h30>12h00 (0x00) ?engClose upLuxembourg  Poverty in Europe's Wealthiest CountryengLuxembourg is a financial hub and home to the European Court of Justice as well as countless shell companies. And with the highest per capita GDP anywhere in the world, the country is also known for its wealth and luxury. But there's a different, lesser-known side to the grand duchy. Alexandra Oxacelay is with "Stëmm vun der Strooss,” an NGO dedicated to taking care of people who are homeless and socially vulnerable. The soup kitchen run by this charity is seeing a growing number of people searching for shelter, a hot meal and support. One of them is Stephan from Hungary, who's spent the last seven years living in a tent - even during winter. Alexandra has also noticed an increase in the number of "working poor,” or people struggling to make ends meet despite having a job. Serge Kappel suffers from chronic inflammatory back pain and has been unable to find an apartment he can afford due to a dramatic increase in rental costs. Researcher Antoine Paccoud attributes this to rampant speculation on the real estate market and insufficient funding for social housing. Alexandra can at least provide affordable housing for some people in need. But that help is limited when compared to the growing number of Luxembourgers and refugees who have become dependent on the NGO while living in the shadows of high-profile office buildings. Poverty in Luxembourg has become an increasingly divisive issue. Yannick Wirtz, who is out of work, feels let down by the government and says there should be greater restrictions on immigration. Whereas NGO director Alexandra Oxacelay refuses to discriminate when it comes to the disadvantaged - insisting that in the wealthiest country in Europe, everyone deserves to be helped.
01/0512h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTransformation: the price of green businessengThe economy needs to become greener. A city is using a river heat pump, a start-up wants to make green methanol cheaper for container ships. Tesla is laying off employees and EV batteries are being recycled on a large scale.
01/0513h00>13h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0513h15>14h00 (0x00) ?engExorcismDangerous Dealings with the DevilengThe film follows modern-day exorcists in France, Switzerland and Germany. They are priests of the Catholic Church, evangelical preachers and freelance "healers" who meet the apparently increasing demand for exorcism. Do they truly believe the devil exists? How does an exorcism ceremony work? Is exorcism a deliverance from evil, or a control technique to keep believers submissive? This film is an investigative journey into the world of contemporary beliefs surrounding demons, devils, and exorcists.
01/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0514h15>14h30 (0x00) ?engHER - Women in AsiaGuardians of natureeng
01/0514h30>15h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengCoastal communities in The Gambia are struggling not only with the effects of overfishing but also pollution. Protecting Guinea's Tristao Islands, Tunisian olive farming in crisis, an eco hospital in Ghana and a Masai wildlife photographer.
01/0515h00>15h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTransformation: the price of green businessengThe economy needs to become greener. A city is using a river heat pump, a start-up wants to make green methanol cheaper for container ships. Tesla is laying off employees and EV batteries are being recycled on a large scale.
01/0516h00>16h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0516h15>17h00 (0x00) ?engThe Far Right and Neo-NazisAn Increasing Terrorist ThreatengIn Germany, a far-right plan to overthrow the state was averted. In France, six men were arrested for plotting to attack politicians. In Bratislava, a student with links to the far right murdered two people outside an LGTB club. The film crew meets with some of the people who see themselves as ideological leaders of a racial war. The film investigates these white supremacists, and the threat they pose.  The filmmakers traveled to Wunsiedel, northern Bavaria. Here, a neo-Nazi political party, Dritte Weg, gathered to commemorate Adolf Hitler’s deputy, Rudolf Hess. Locals watched silently as the neo-Nazis march through the streets in a torchlit parade, carrying banners and banging on drums.  A team of journalists spent two years investigating semi-clandestine networks in France, Germany and Romania. They set up a fake profile on a French neo-Nazi forum. It’s one of many spreading hate online, and has over 3,600 members. There are also online dating sites exclusively for white people, celebrating ‘white life, white love’. Members trade in Nazi memorabilia. The camera team meets a man who served in the SS back in the Second World War. Shockingly, he still feels nostalgia for Nazi ideals. A role-model for many of these ‘white warriors’ is Daniel Conversano, who left France for the ‘white land’ of Romania. Here, he formed a community. His followers include the convicted terrorist Login Nisin, who admitted to plotting to kill Christophe Castaner and Jean-Luc Melenchon. The team visited Conversano and his supporters in Bucharest. They questioned him about his racist views. Many see the coming "racial civil war” as inevitable. Far-right extremists are now considered one of the biggest threats to democracy in Europe.
01/0517h00>17h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0517h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaChanging weather, changing timesengAn ancient method for collecting rainwater, why freak storms are becoming common in Europe, the local weather enthusiasts turned influencers in India, and an historic weather station in Poland that’s been charting climate change for over a century.
01/0518h00>18h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engNomads of BeninDriven Away by DroughtengIn the hills of central Benin, the dry season is getting tougher every year. The Fulani herders living there have to travel further and further, in ever-larger groups in order to be able to provide for their cattle herds. Boubé, a young man in his 30s who comes from a long line of Fulani herders accustomed to migratory herding, knows that with each season that passes, tensions between local farmers and nomadic herders run increasingly high. After all, water shortages caused global warming are also impacting farmers. They’re reluctant to share their water sources with the Fulani herdsmen. But this year, Boubé doesn't want to stand idly by and aims to mediate between the parties. He’s well aware that the conflict between herders and farmers over the division of land and water could escalate.
01/0519h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0519h15>20h00 (0x00) ?engA World Heritage Site in Danger?South Tyrol Fights for its FutureengTourism in South Tyrol is getting out of hand. In the high season, villages and mountain passes are completely congested. For many visitors, the dream of seeing the ‘Three Peaks’ up close ends when police are forced to close the mountain’s access road due to overcrowding. Access to another attraction, the Pragser Wildsee lake, is also regulated: An Italian TV series was filmed here around 10 years ago. Then, images of the beauty spot were beamed around the world on social media. Now, too many people want to visit.  Mountain guide Erwin Steiner, a member of the traffic commission, is committed to reducing vehicle traffic -- and preserving the nature that constitutes his livelihood. But there are plans afoot to further expand the tourist infrastructure -- with a view to hosting the 2026 Olympics. Conservationists like architect Marlene Roner are fighting to preserve this World Natural Heritage Site. These two activists team up with representatives of the Alpine Association and local heritage organizations. Against the stunning backdrop of the Dolomites, they adopt a manifesto dedicated to protecting the mountains.  With the South Tyrolean government's Tourism Development Concept 2030+, the debate over how to deal with the region’s natural heritage has grown heated. In particular, the plan to cap the number of beds has met with resistance from the hotel and restaurant industries. What is a World Heritage designation actually worth? Does it really help to protect a unique landscape - or just serve to market it?
01/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0520h15>20h30 (0x00) ?engHER - Women in AsiaGuardians of natureeng
01/0520h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Jan EgelandengTim Sebastoian interviews Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council. (First aired April 10 2024)
01/0521h00>21h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0521h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
01/0522h00>22h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0522h15>23h00 (0x00) ?engThe Far Right and Neo-NazisAn Increasing Terrorist ThreatengIn Germany, a far-right plan to overthrow the state was averted. In France, six men were arrested for plotting to attack politicians. In Bratislava, a student with links to the far right murdered two people outside an LGTB club. The film crew meets with some of the people who see themselves as ideological leaders of a racial war. The film investigates these white supremacists, and the threat they pose.  The filmmakers traveled to Wunsiedel, northern Bavaria. Here, a neo-Nazi political party, Dritte Weg, gathered to commemorate Adolf Hitler’s deputy, Rudolf Hess. Locals watched silently as the neo-Nazis march through the streets in a torchlit parade, carrying banners and banging on drums.  A team of journalists spent two years investigating semi-clandestine networks in France, Germany and Romania. They set up a fake profile on a French neo-Nazi forum. It’s one of many spreading hate online, and has over 3,600 members. There are also online dating sites exclusively for white people, celebrating ‘white life, white love’. Members trade in Nazi memorabilia. The camera team meets a man who served in the SS back in the Second World War. Shockingly, he still feels nostalgia for Nazi ideals. A role-model for many of these ‘white warriors’ is Daniel Conversano, who left France for the ‘white land’ of Romania. Here, he formed a community. His followers include the convicted terrorist Login Nisin, who admitted to plotting to kill Christophe Castaner and Jean-Luc Melenchon. The team visited Conversano and his supporters in Bucharest. They questioned him about his racist views. Many see the coming "racial civil war” as inevitable. Far-right extremists are now considered one of the biggest threats to democracy in Europe.
01/0523h00>23h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0523h02>23h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
01/0523h30>00h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTransformation: the price of green businessengThe economy needs to become greener. A city is using a river heat pump, a start-up wants to make green methanol cheaper for container ships. Tesla is laying off employees and EV batteries are being recycled on a large scale.
01/0500h00>00h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
01/0500h15>00h30 (0x00) ?engHER - Women in AsiaGuardians of natureeng
01/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengIn Kherson, Ukraine, a doctor is trying to save his patients. +++ How environmental activists are fighting Tesla's Gigafactory in Germany.
02/0501h00>01h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0501h02>01h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
02/0501h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Jan EgelandengTim Sebastoian interviews Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council. (First aired April 10 2024)
02/0502h00>02h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0502h15>03h00 (0x00) ?engDriven by GreedThe Deutsche Bank Story: Gambled Away in the Financial CrisisengThe Deutsche Bank, once the flagship of the German economy, had fallen from grace. In the 2000s, the bank was pumped full of risk in the quest for ever greater profits. In their bid to make the institution a global player, Deutsche Bank managers gave their investment bankers a free hand - a move that would end up being a major contributing factor in the financial crisis of 2007/2008. Supervisory authorities are still imposing fines to this day, penalties that now run into the tens of billions.  The victims in all of this are Deutsche Bank customers and shareholders. The share price is hovering around 10 Euros. Twenty years ago, it was around 60 Euros. The documentary shows: The only ones to walk away from this with a good deal were the investment bankers. Many received millions in bonuses year after year, as their greed increased and they paid no heed to the rules and regulations.
02/0503h00>03h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0503h02>03h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
02/0503h30>04h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTransformation: the price of green businessengThe economy needs to become greener. A city is using a river heat pump, a start-up wants to make green methanol cheaper for container ships. Tesla is laying off employees and EV batteries are being recycled on a large scale.
02/0504h00>04h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0504h15>04h30 (0x00) ?engHER - Women in AsiaGuardians of natureeng
02/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Jan EgelandengTim Sebastoian interviews Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council. (First aired April 10 2024)
02/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0505h15>06h00 (0x00) ?engDriven by GreedThe Deutsche Bank Story: Gambled Away in the Financial CrisisengThe Deutsche Bank, once the flagship of the German economy, had fallen from grace. In the 2000s, the bank was pumped full of risk in the quest for ever greater profits. In their bid to make the institution a global player, Deutsche Bank managers gave their investment bankers a free hand - a move that would end up being a major contributing factor in the financial crisis of 2007/2008. Supervisory authorities are still imposing fines to this day, penalties that now run into the tens of billions.  The victims in all of this are Deutsche Bank customers and shareholders. The share price is hovering around 10 Euros. Twenty years ago, it was around 60 Euros. The documentary shows: The only ones to walk away from this with a good deal were the investment bankers. Many received millions in bonuses year after year, as their greed increased and they paid no heed to the rules and regulations.
02/0506h00>06h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0506h02>06h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
02/0506h30>07h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengIn Kherson, Ukraine, a doctor is trying to save his patients. +++ How environmental activists are fighting Tesla's Gigafactory in Germany.
02/0507h00>07h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0507h15>07h30 (0x00) ?engHER - Women in AsiaGuardians of natureeng
02/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTransformation: the price of green businessengThe economy needs to become greener. A city is using a river heat pump, a start-up wants to make green methanol cheaper for container ships. Tesla is laying off employees and EV batteries are being recycled on a large scale.
02/0508h00>08h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengIn Kherson, Ukraine, a doctor is trying to save his patients. +++ How environmental activists are fighting Tesla's Gigafactory in Germany.
02/0509h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0509h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Jan EgelandengTim Sebastoian interviews Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council. (First aired April 10 2024)
02/0510h00>10h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0510h15>11h00 (0x00) ?engA World Heritage Site in Danger?South Tyrol Fights for its FutureengTourism in South Tyrol is getting out of hand. In the high season, villages and mountain passes are completely congested. For many visitors, the dream of seeing the ‘Three Peaks’ up close ends when police are forced to close the mountain’s access road due to overcrowding. Access to another attraction, the Pragser Wildsee lake, is also regulated: An Italian TV series was filmed here around 10 years ago. Then, images of the beauty spot were beamed around the world on social media. Now, too many people want to visit.  Mountain guide Erwin Steiner, a member of the traffic commission, is committed to reducing vehicle traffic -- and preserving the nature that constitutes his livelihood. But there are plans afoot to further expand the tourist infrastructure -- with a view to hosting the 2026 Olympics. Conservationists like architect Marlene Roner are fighting to preserve this World Natural Heritage Site. These two activists team up with representatives of the Alpine Association and local heritage organizations. Against the stunning backdrop of the Dolomites, they adopt a manifesto dedicated to protecting the mountains.  With the South Tyrolean government's Tourism Development Concept 2030+, the debate over how to deal with the region’s natural heritage has grown heated. In particular, the plan to cap the number of beds has met with resistance from the hotel and restaurant industries. What is a World Heritage designation actually worth? Does it really help to protect a unique landscape - or just serve to market it?
02/0511h00>11h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0511h30>12h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaChanging weather, changing timesengAn ancient method for collecting rainwater, why freak storms are becoming common in Europe, the local weather enthusiasts turned influencers in India, and an historic weather station in Poland that’s been charting climate change for over a century.
02/0512h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengIn Kherson, Ukraine, a doctor is trying to save his patients. +++ How environmental activists are fighting Tesla's Gigafactory in Germany.
02/0513h00>13h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0513h15>14h00 (0x00) ?engThe Far Right and Neo-NazisAn Increasing Terrorist ThreatengIn Germany, a far-right plan to overthrow the state was averted. In France, six men were arrested for plotting to attack politicians. In Bratislava, a student with links to the far right murdered two people outside an LGTB club. The film crew meets with some of the people who see themselves as ideological leaders of a racial war. The film investigates these white supremacists, and the threat they pose.  The filmmakers traveled to Wunsiedel, northern Bavaria. Here, a neo-Nazi political party, Dritte Weg, gathered to commemorate Adolf Hitler’s deputy, Rudolf Hess. Locals watched silently as the neo-Nazis march through the streets in a torchlit parade, carrying banners and banging on drums.  A team of journalists spent two years investigating semi-clandestine networks in France, Germany and Romania. They set up a fake profile on a French neo-Nazi forum. It’s one of many spreading hate online, and has over 3,600 members. There are also online dating sites exclusively for white people, celebrating ‘white life, white love’. Members trade in Nazi memorabilia. The camera team meets a man who served in the SS back in the Second World War. Shockingly, he still feels nostalgia for Nazi ideals. A role-model for many of these ‘white warriors’ is Daniel Conversano, who left France for the ‘white land’ of Romania. Here, he formed a community. His followers include the convicted terrorist Login Nisin, who admitted to plotting to kill Christophe Castaner and Jean-Luc Melenchon. The team visited Conversano and his supporters in Bucharest. They questioned him about his racist views. Many see the coming "racial civil war” as inevitable. Far-right extremists are now considered one of the biggest threats to democracy in Europe.
02/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0514h15>14h30 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledCould architecture save the planet?engArchitects and innovators are rethinking the way we build and live, to create safe and efficient structures that stand the test of time and address the threats climate change pose to life on our planet. On our journey across 4 continents, we travel to five innovative buildings which could shape the future of architecture and speak to the architects forging a path towards a greener future. From a zero net energy building nestled within the dense Yunga Forest to a Thai University’s Urban rooftop to Benin’s National Assembly Hall, a plastic house in Ghana and a repurposed pyramid in Albania.
02/0514h30>15h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Jan EgelandengTim Sebastoian interviews Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council. (First aired April 10 2024)
02/0515h00>15h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengIn Kherson, Ukraine, a doctor is trying to save his patients. +++ How environmental activists are fighting Tesla's Gigafactory in Germany.
02/0516h00>16h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0516h15>17h00 (0x00) ?engA World Heritage Site in Danger?South Tyrol Fights for its FutureengTourism in South Tyrol is getting out of hand. In the high season, villages and mountain passes are completely congested. For many visitors, the dream of seeing the ‘Three Peaks’ up close ends when police are forced to close the mountain’s access road due to overcrowding. Access to another attraction, the Pragser Wildsee lake, is also regulated: An Italian TV series was filmed here around 10 years ago. Then, images of the beauty spot were beamed around the world on social media. Now, too many people want to visit.  Mountain guide Erwin Steiner, a member of the traffic commission, is committed to reducing vehicle traffic -- and preserving the nature that constitutes his livelihood. But there are plans afoot to further expand the tourist infrastructure -- with a view to hosting the 2026 Olympics. Conservationists like architect Marlene Roner are fighting to preserve this World Natural Heritage Site. These two activists team up with representatives of the Alpine Association and local heritage organizations. Against the stunning backdrop of the Dolomites, they adopt a manifesto dedicated to protecting the mountains.  With the South Tyrolean government's Tourism Development Concept 2030+, the debate over how to deal with the region’s natural heritage has grown heated. In particular, the plan to cap the number of beds has met with resistance from the hotel and restaurant industries. What is a World Heritage designation actually worth? Does it really help to protect a unique landscape - or just serve to market it?
02/0517h00>17h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0517h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Jan EgelandengTim Sebastoian interviews Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council. (First aired April 10 2024)
02/0518h00>18h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
02/0519h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0519h15>20h00 (0x00) ?engDriven by GreedThe Deutsche Bank Story: Gambled Away in the Financial CrisisengThe Deutsche Bank, once the flagship of the German economy, had fallen from grace. In the 2000s, the bank was pumped full of risk in the quest for ever greater profits. In their bid to make the institution a global player, Deutsche Bank managers gave their investment bankers a free hand - a move that would end up being a major contributing factor in the financial crisis of 2007/2008. Supervisory authorities are still imposing fines to this day, penalties that now run into the tens of billions.  The victims in all of this are Deutsche Bank customers and shareholders. The share price is hovering around 10 Euros. Twenty years ago, it was around 60 Euros. The documentary shows: The only ones to walk away from this with a good deal were the investment bankers. Many received millions in bonuses year after year, as their greed increased and they paid no heed to the rules and regulations.
02/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0520h15>20h30 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledCould architecture save the planet?engArchitects and innovators are rethinking the way we build and live, to create safe and efficient structures that stand the test of time and address the threats climate change pose to life on our planet. On our journey across 4 continents, we travel to five innovative buildings which could shape the future of architecture and speak to the architects forging a path towards a greener future. From a zero net energy building nestled within the dense Yunga Forest to a Thai University’s Urban rooftop to Benin’s National Assembly Hall, a plastic house in Ghana and a repurposed pyramid in Albania.
02/0520h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engMediterranean JourneySicily - ItalyengSicily produces some 1.5 million tons of citrus fruit annually. Near Catania, Sineb helps organic farmer Manfredi Grinaudi with the winter harvest. She also meets Enrica Arena, whose company "Orange Fiber" makes clothing from citrus peel.  Sicily has a dramatic history, and nobody tells it better than the "Fratelli Napoli", a long-established family of puppeteers from Catania. In the "Piccolo Teatro", Sineb learns all about this famous performance tradition. Sicilians have a special bond with "Mama Etna," as they affectionately call Europe’s highest active volcano. Sineb accompanies volcanologist Giuseppe Salerno up the peak to a chilly 3,000 meters above sea level. Then it's back to the milder temperatures of the Mediterranean: Palermo is Sicily’s capital, and has a population of almost 700,000. It was long considered a stronghold of the Sicilian mafia, until residents fought back. Sineb meets Chiara Utro from the anti-mafia movement "Addiopizzo", as well as Palermo Mayor Leoluca Orlando, who helps people rescuing refugees at sea. Finally, Sineb visits Modica, where she tastes the exquisite products of a local chocolate manufacturer. That’s enough to tempt her colleague Jaafar Abdul Karim to join her, and the two compare notes on their Mediterranean journeys.
02/0521h00>21h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0521h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
02/0522h00>22h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0522h15>23h00 (0x00) ?engA World Heritage Site in Danger?South Tyrol Fights for its FutureengTourism in South Tyrol is getting out of hand. In the high season, villages and mountain passes are completely congested. For many visitors, the dream of seeing the ‘Three Peaks’ up close ends when police are forced to close the mountain’s access road due to overcrowding. Access to another attraction, the Pragser Wildsee lake, is also regulated: An Italian TV series was filmed here around 10 years ago. Then, images of the beauty spot were beamed around the world on social media. Now, too many people want to visit.  Mountain guide Erwin Steiner, a member of the traffic commission, is committed to reducing vehicle traffic -- and preserving the nature that constitutes his livelihood. But there are plans afoot to further expand the tourist infrastructure -- with a view to hosting the 2026 Olympics. Conservationists like architect Marlene Roner are fighting to preserve this World Natural Heritage Site. These two activists team up with representatives of the Alpine Association and local heritage organizations. Against the stunning backdrop of the Dolomites, they adopt a manifesto dedicated to protecting the mountains.  With the South Tyrolean government's Tourism Development Concept 2030+, the debate over how to deal with the region’s natural heritage has grown heated. In particular, the plan to cap the number of beds has met with resistance from the hotel and restaurant industries. What is a World Heritage designation actually worth? Does it really help to protect a unique landscape - or just serve to market it?
02/0523h00>23h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0523h02>23h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
02/0523h30>00h00 (0x00) ?engMediterranean JourneySicily - ItalyengSicily produces some 1.5 million tons of citrus fruit annually. Near Catania, Sineb helps organic farmer Manfredi Grinaudi with the winter harvest. She also meets Enrica Arena, whose company "Orange Fiber" makes clothing from citrus peel.  Sicily has a dramatic history, and nobody tells it better than the "Fratelli Napoli", a long-established family of puppeteers from Catania. In the "Piccolo Teatro", Sineb learns all about this famous performance tradition. Sicilians have a special bond with "Mama Etna," as they affectionately call Europe’s highest active volcano. Sineb accompanies volcanologist Giuseppe Salerno up the peak to a chilly 3,000 meters above sea level. Then it's back to the milder temperatures of the Mediterranean: Palermo is Sicily’s capital, and has a population of almost 700,000. It was long considered a stronghold of the Sicilian mafia, until residents fought back. Sineb meets Chiara Utro from the anti-mafia movement "Addiopizzo", as well as Palermo Mayor Leoluca Orlando, who helps people rescuing refugees at sea. Finally, Sineb visits Modica, where she tastes the exquisite products of a local chocolate manufacturer. That’s enough to tempt her colleague Jaafar Abdul Karim to join her, and the two compare notes on their Mediterranean journeys.
02/0500h00>00h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0500h15>00h30 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledCould architecture save the planet?engArchitects and innovators are rethinking the way we build and live, to create safe and efficient structures that stand the test of time and address the threats climate change pose to life on our planet. On our journey across 4 continents, we travel to five innovative buildings which could shape the future of architecture and speak to the architects forging a path towards a greener future. From a zero net energy building nestled within the dense Yunga Forest to a Thai University’s Urban rooftop to Benin’s National Assembly Hall, a plastic house in Ghana and a repurposed pyramid in Albania.
02/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Jan EgelandengTim Sebastoian interviews Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council. (First aired April 10 2024)
03/0503h30>04h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengIn Kherson, Ukraine, a doctor is trying to save his patients. +++ How environmental activists are fighting Tesla's Gigafactory in Germany.
03/0504h00>04h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0504h15>04h30 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledCould architecture save the planet?engArchitects and innovators are rethinking the way we build and live, to create safe and efficient structures that stand the test of time and address the threats climate change pose to life on our planet. On our journey across 4 continents, we travel to five innovative buildings which could shape the future of architecture and speak to the architects forging a path towards a greener future. From a zero net energy building nestled within the dense Yunga Forest to a Thai University’s Urban rooftop to Benin’s National Assembly Hall, a plastic house in Ghana and a repurposed pyramid in Albania.
03/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTransformation: the price of green businessengThe economy needs to become greener. A city is using a river heat pump, a start-up wants to make green methanol cheaper for container ships. Tesla is laying off employees and EV batteries are being recycled on a large scale.
03/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0505h15>06h00 (0x00) ?engIllegal LeatherHow the Car Industry is Threatening the Rainforesteng"The forest is our home. And now it’s all being destroyed forever.” Wenatoa Parakanã stands outside her cabin in the dense rainforest of the Brazilian Amazonas and is close to tears. The young Parakanã woman has lived her whole life in the remote region of Apyterewa - about a day’s motorboat trip to the next small town.  But for several years now, life for Wenatoa has been changing beyond recognition. Strangers are coming to threaten her village, chop down the trees and turn her homeland into gigantic pasture lands for thousands of cattle. Over the last 20 years, an area of forest almost as large as Germany has been logged in the region - often illegally. Many researchers fear that the Amazonas has already reached its tipping point: It can no longer recover from the many fires and droughts. This could have devastating consequences for the global climate.  On a local level, only very few people dare to oppose the illegal destruction of the rainforest. After all, the animals’ meat and hides are a huge economic driver. Every year, the Brazilian tannery industry exports products valued at more than one billion Euros. These products are sold all over the world. And as the research for this film shows: some of them are also ending up in German luxury cars.   With intrepid journeys to the heart of the action, footage secretly filmed in abattoirs, interviews with insiders and the latest digital research techniques, the team retraces the production steps of this illegal leather right to its source. From the Brazilian rainforest, via shady middlemen to German car dealerships offering the latest models by BMW, Mercedes & Co. - complete with their luxurious leather interiors.  The film embarks on a journalistic quest for clues that turns into an economic crime thriller. After all, this isn’t an isolated case, it’s systematic environmental exploitation. Despite the many glossy brochures touting the carmakers’ sustainability credentials, these complex supply chains are often opaque - keeping their impact on people and the environment in the dark.
03/0506h00>06h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0506h02>06h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
03/0506h30>07h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
03/0507h00>07h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0507h15>07h30 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledCould architecture save the planet?engArchitects and innovators are rethinking the way we build and live, to create safe and efficient structures that stand the test of time and address the threats climate change pose to life on our planet. On our journey across 4 continents, we travel to five innovative buildings which could shape the future of architecture and speak to the architects forging a path towards a greener future. From a zero net energy building nestled within the dense Yunga Forest to a Thai University’s Urban rooftop to Benin’s National Assembly Hall, a plastic house in Ghana and a repurposed pyramid in Albania.
03/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Jan EgelandengTim Sebastoian interviews Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council. (First aired April 10 2024)
03/0508h00>08h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engMediterranean JourneySicily - ItalyengSicily produces some 1.5 million tons of citrus fruit annually. Near Catania, Sineb helps organic farmer Manfredi Grinaudi with the winter harvest. She also meets Enrica Arena, whose company "Orange Fiber" makes clothing from citrus peel.  Sicily has a dramatic history, and nobody tells it better than the "Fratelli Napoli", a long-established family of puppeteers from Catania. In the "Piccolo Teatro", Sineb learns all about this famous performance tradition. Sicilians have a special bond with "Mama Etna," as they affectionately call Europe’s highest active volcano. Sineb accompanies volcanologist Giuseppe Salerno up the peak to a chilly 3,000 meters above sea level. Then it's back to the milder temperatures of the Mediterranean: Palermo is Sicily’s capital, and has a population of almost 700,000. It was long considered a stronghold of the Sicilian mafia, until residents fought back. Sineb meets Chiara Utro from the anti-mafia movement "Addiopizzo", as well as Palermo Mayor Leoluca Orlando, who helps people rescuing refugees at sea. Finally, Sineb visits Modica, where she tastes the exquisite products of a local chocolate manufacturer. That’s enough to tempt her colleague Jaafar Abdul Karim to join her, and the two compare notes on their Mediterranean journeys.
03/0509h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0509h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
03/0510h00>10h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0510h15>11h00 (0x00) ?engDriven by GreedThe Deutsche Bank Story: Gambled Away in the Financial CrisisengThe Deutsche Bank, once the flagship of the German economy, had fallen from grace. In the 2000s, the bank was pumped full of risk in the quest for ever greater profits. In their bid to make the institution a global player, Deutsche Bank managers gave their investment bankers a free hand - a move that would end up being a major contributing factor in the financial crisis of 2007/2008. Supervisory authorities are still imposing fines to this day, penalties that now run into the tens of billions.  The victims in all of this are Deutsche Bank customers and shareholders. The share price is hovering around 10 Euros. Twenty years ago, it was around 60 Euros. The documentary shows: The only ones to walk away from this with a good deal were the investment bankers. Many received millions in bonuses year after year, as their greed increased and they paid no heed to the rules and regulations.
03/0511h00>11h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0511h30>12h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Jan EgelandengTim Sebastoian interviews Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council. (First aired April 10 2024)
03/0512h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engMediterranean JourneySicily - ItalyengSicily produces some 1.5 million tons of citrus fruit annually. Near Catania, Sineb helps organic farmer Manfredi Grinaudi with the winter harvest. She also meets Enrica Arena, whose company "Orange Fiber" makes clothing from citrus peel.  Sicily has a dramatic history, and nobody tells it better than the "Fratelli Napoli", a long-established family of puppeteers from Catania. In the "Piccolo Teatro", Sineb learns all about this famous performance tradition. Sicilians have a special bond with "Mama Etna," as they affectionately call Europe’s highest active volcano. Sineb accompanies volcanologist Giuseppe Salerno up the peak to a chilly 3,000 meters above sea level. Then it's back to the milder temperatures of the Mediterranean: Palermo is Sicily’s capital, and has a population of almost 700,000. It was long considered a stronghold of the Sicilian mafia, until residents fought back. Sineb meets Chiara Utro from the anti-mafia movement "Addiopizzo", as well as Palermo Mayor Leoluca Orlando, who helps people rescuing refugees at sea. Finally, Sineb visits Modica, where she tastes the exquisite products of a local chocolate manufacturer. That’s enough to tempt her colleague Jaafar Abdul Karim to join her, and the two compare notes on their Mediterranean journeys.
03/0513h00>13h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0513h15>14h00 (0x00) ?engA World Heritage Site in Danger?South Tyrol Fights for its FutureengTourism in South Tyrol is getting out of hand. In the high season, villages and mountain passes are completely congested. For many visitors, the dream of seeing the ‘Three Peaks’ up close ends when police are forced to close the mountain’s access road due to overcrowding. Access to another attraction, the Pragser Wildsee lake, is also regulated: An Italian TV series was filmed here around 10 years ago. Then, images of the beauty spot were beamed around the world on social media. Now, too many people want to visit.  Mountain guide Erwin Steiner, a member of the traffic commission, is committed to reducing vehicle traffic -- and preserving the nature that constitutes his livelihood. But there are plans afoot to further expand the tourist infrastructure -- with a view to hosting the 2026 Olympics. Conservationists like architect Marlene Roner are fighting to preserve this World Natural Heritage Site. These two activists team up with representatives of the Alpine Association and local heritage organizations. Against the stunning backdrop of the Dolomites, they adopt a manifesto dedicated to protecting the mountains.  With the South Tyrolean government's Tourism Development Concept 2030+, the debate over how to deal with the region’s natural heritage has grown heated. In particular, the plan to cap the number of beds has met with resistance from the hotel and restaurant industries. What is a World Heritage designation actually worth? Does it really help to protect a unique landscape - or just serve to market it?
03/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0514h15>14h30 (0x00) ?engREVWhy do most countries in the world drive on the right side of the road?engDid camels lead to Pakistan not switching from the left to the right? And which side of the road really is safer to drive on? REV delves into the history of lefts, rights and wrongs.
03/0514h30>15h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeYour amazing brain — Keeping it happy and healthyengYour brain is a complex organ and works hard around the clock. Exercise, good sleep and essential oils can all give your brain a boost.
03/0515h00>15h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaFuture-proof innovations to protect natureengInsects give shrimps a boost in Tamil Nadu - and add bite to pizza toppings. Can local conservation efforts reverse damage at Srinagar’s Dal Lake? Plus hotel owners in Catalonia find creative solutions to water shortages.
03/0516h00>16h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0516h15>17h00 (0x00) ?engDriven by GreedThe Deutsche Bank Story: Gambled Away in the Financial CrisisengThe Deutsche Bank, once the flagship of the German economy, had fallen from grace. In the 2000s, the bank was pumped full of risk in the quest for ever greater profits. In their bid to make the institution a global player, Deutsche Bank managers gave their investment bankers a free hand - a move that would end up being a major contributing factor in the financial crisis of 2007/2008. Supervisory authorities are still imposing fines to this day, penalties that now run into the tens of billions.  The victims in all of this are Deutsche Bank customers and shareholders. The share price is hovering around 10 Euros. Twenty years ago, it was around 60 Euros. The documentary shows: The only ones to walk away from this with a good deal were the investment bankers. Many received millions in bonuses year after year, as their greed increased and they paid no heed to the rules and regulations.
03/0517h00>17h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0517h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engMediterranean JourneySicily - ItalyengSicily produces some 1.5 million tons of citrus fruit annually. Near Catania, Sineb helps organic farmer Manfredi Grinaudi with the winter harvest. She also meets Enrica Arena, whose company "Orange Fiber" makes clothing from citrus peel.  Sicily has a dramatic history, and nobody tells it better than the "Fratelli Napoli", a long-established family of puppeteers from Catania. In the "Piccolo Teatro", Sineb learns all about this famous performance tradition. Sicilians have a special bond with "Mama Etna," as they affectionately call Europe’s highest active volcano. Sineb accompanies volcanologist Giuseppe Salerno up the peak to a chilly 3,000 meters above sea level. Then it's back to the milder temperatures of the Mediterranean: Palermo is Sicily’s capital, and has a population of almost 700,000. It was long considered a stronghold of the Sicilian mafia, until residents fought back. Sineb meets Chiara Utro from the anti-mafia movement "Addiopizzo", as well as Palermo Mayor Leoluca Orlando, who helps people rescuing refugees at sea. Finally, Sineb visits Modica, where she tastes the exquisite products of a local chocolate manufacturer. That’s enough to tempt her colleague Jaafar Abdul Karim to join her, and the two compare notes on their Mediterranean journeys.
03/0518h00>18h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engAfrimaxxModern African LifestyleengIn this edition host Pamela Mtanga meets with architect Gregory Katz at the special Tree House Senegalia. Plus, pencils made from newspapers, Zulu culture in the skies and why dead white man’s clothes fit urban Ghanians.
03/0519h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0519h15>20h00 (0x00) ?engIllegal LeatherHow the Car Industry is Threatening the Rainforesteng"The forest is our home. And now it’s all being destroyed forever.” Wenatoa Parakanã stands outside her cabin in the dense rainforest of the Brazilian Amazonas and is close to tears. The young Parakanã woman has lived her whole life in the remote region of Apyterewa - about a day’s motorboat trip to the next small town.  But for several years now, life for Wenatoa has been changing beyond recognition. Strangers are coming to threaten her village, chop down the trees and turn her homeland into gigantic pasture lands for thousands of cattle. Over the last 20 years, an area of forest almost as large as Germany has been logged in the region - often illegally. Many researchers fear that the Amazonas has already reached its tipping point: It can no longer recover from the many fires and droughts. This could have devastating consequences for the global climate.  On a local level, only very few people dare to oppose the illegal destruction of the rainforest. After all, the animals’ meat and hides are a huge economic driver. Every year, the Brazilian tannery industry exports products valued at more than one billion Euros. These products are sold all over the world. And as the research for this film shows: some of them are also ending up in German luxury cars.   With intrepid journeys to the heart of the action, footage secretly filmed in abattoirs, interviews with insiders and the latest digital research techniques, the team retraces the production steps of this illegal leather right to its source. From the Brazilian rainforest, via shady middlemen to German car dealerships offering the latest models by BMW, Mercedes & Co. - complete with their luxurious leather interiors.  The film embarks on a journalistic quest for clues that turns into an economic crime thriller. After all, this isn’t an isolated case, it’s systematic environmental exploitation. Despite the many glossy brochures touting the carmakers’ sustainability credentials, these complex supply chains are often opaque - keeping their impact on people and the environment in the dark.
03/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0520h15>20h30 (0x00) ?engREVWhy do most countries in the world drive on the right side of the road?engDid camels lead to Pakistan not switching from the left to the right? And which side of the road really is safer to drive on? REV delves into the history of lefts, rights and wrongs.
03/0520h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengThe quest to understand jellyfish. Why oysters are climate heroes. Ugandan teenagers grow fruit and veg - vertically! Mushroom farming boosts livelihoods in Rwanda. And reuseable packaging for online shopping.
03/0521h00>21h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0521h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
03/0522h00>22h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0522h15>23h00 (0x00) ?engDriven by GreedThe Deutsche Bank Story: Gambled Away in the Financial CrisisengThe Deutsche Bank, once the flagship of the German economy, had fallen from grace. In the 2000s, the bank was pumped full of risk in the quest for ever greater profits. In their bid to make the institution a global player, Deutsche Bank managers gave their investment bankers a free hand - a move that would end up being a major contributing factor in the financial crisis of 2007/2008. Supervisory authorities are still imposing fines to this day, penalties that now run into the tens of billions.  The victims in all of this are Deutsche Bank customers and shareholders. The share price is hovering around 10 Euros. Twenty years ago, it was around 60 Euros. The documentary shows: The only ones to walk away from this with a good deal were the investment bankers. Many received millions in bonuses year after year, as their greed increased and they paid no heed to the rules and regulations.
03/0523h00>23h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0523h02>23h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
03/0523h30>00h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaFuture-proof innovations to protect natureengInsects give shrimps a boost in Tamil Nadu - and add bite to pizza toppings. Can local conservation efforts reverse damage at Srinagar’s Dal Lake? Plus hotel owners in Catalonia find creative solutions to water shortages.
03/0500h00>00h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0500h15>00h30 (0x00) ?engREVWhy do most countries in the world drive on the right side of the road?engDid camels lead to Pakistan not switching from the left to the right? And which side of the road really is safer to drive on? REV delves into the history of lefts, rights and wrongs.
03/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
04/0501h00>01h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0501h02>01h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
04/0501h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengHow Supercar Blondie changed the auto industry. The Dubai-based influencer has shaken up the male-dominated luxury car scene and attracted the attention of BMW. And: Chinese carmaker BYD is wooing EV buyers in Europe.
04/0502h00>02h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0502h15>02h30 (0x00) ?engPlanet ACan we really recycle our old clothes?eng
04/0502h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengWhat does the Amazon look like during a major drought? Will Canada's forests recover from massive wildfires? Can we improve on natural photosynthesis? How important are bees in agriculture? And why do researchers get so excited about peatlands?
04/0503h00>03h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0503h02>03h15 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
04/0503h15>04h00 (0x00) ?engA World Heritage Site in Danger?South Tyrol Fights for its FutureengTourism in South Tyrol is getting out of hand. In the high season, villages and mountain passes are completely congested. For many visitors, the dream of seeing the ‘Three Peaks’ up close ends when police are forced to close the mountain’s access road due to overcrowding. Access to another attraction, the Pragser Wildsee lake, is also regulated: An Italian TV series was filmed here around 10 years ago. Then, images of the beauty spot were beamed around the world on social media. Now, too many people want to visit.  Mountain guide Erwin Steiner, a member of the traffic commission, is committed to reducing vehicle traffic -- and preserving the nature that constitutes his livelihood. But there are plans afoot to further expand the tourist infrastructure -- with a view to hosting the 2026 Olympics. Conservationists like architect Marlene Roner are fighting to preserve this World Natural Heritage Site. These two activists team up with representatives of the Alpine Association and local heritage organizations. Against the stunning backdrop of the Dolomites, they adopt a manifesto dedicated to protecting the mountains.  With the South Tyrolean government's Tourism Development Concept 2030+, the debate over how to deal with the region’s natural heritage has grown heated. In particular, the plan to cap the number of beds has met with resistance from the hotel and restaurant industries. What is a World Heritage designation actually worth? Does it really help to protect a unique landscape - or just serve to market it?
04/0504h00>04h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0504h15>04h30 (0x00) ?engREVWhy do most countries in the world drive on the right side of the road?engDid camels lead to Pakistan not switching from the left to the right? And which side of the road really is safer to drive on? REV delves into the history of lefts, rights and wrongs.
04/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engMediterranean JourneySicily - ItalyengSicily produces some 1.5 million tons of citrus fruit annually. Near Catania, Sineb helps organic farmer Manfredi Grinaudi with the winter harvest. She also meets Enrica Arena, whose company "Orange Fiber" makes clothing from citrus peel.  Sicily has a dramatic history, and nobody tells it better than the "Fratelli Napoli", a long-established family of puppeteers from Catania. In the "Piccolo Teatro", Sineb learns all about this famous performance tradition. Sicilians have a special bond with "Mama Etna," as they affectionately call Europe’s highest active volcano. Sineb accompanies volcanologist Giuseppe Salerno up the peak to a chilly 3,000 meters above sea level. Then it's back to the milder temperatures of the Mediterranean: Palermo is Sicily’s capital, and has a population of almost 700,000. It was long considered a stronghold of the Sicilian mafia, until residents fought back. Sineb meets Chiara Utro from the anti-mafia movement "Addiopizzo", as well as Palermo Mayor Leoluca Orlando, who helps people rescuing refugees at sea. Finally, Sineb visits Modica, where she tastes the exquisite products of a local chocolate manufacturer. That’s enough to tempt her colleague Jaafar Abdul Karim to join her, and the two compare notes on their Mediterranean journeys.
04/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0505h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
04/0505h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
04/0506h00>06h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0506h02>06h30 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
04/0506h30>07h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentLanguages in AfricaengHow many languages do you speak? Most Africans grow up multilingual. At school, they're taught in the languages of former colonial powers, like English, French or Portuguese. At home, they speak a local lingua franca like Swahili, Hausa, isiZulu or Pidgin and as well as, another mother tongue. In this Street Debate ask: how do we promote African languages while staying ahead in a globalized world?
04/0507h00>07h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0507h15>07h30 (0x00) ?engREVWhy do most countries in the world drive on the right side of the road?engDid camels lead to Pakistan not switching from the left to the right? And which side of the road really is safer to drive on? REV delves into the history of lefts, rights and wrongs.
04/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengHow Supercar Blondie changed the auto industry. The Dubai-based influencer has shaken up the male-dominated luxury car scene and attracted the attention of BMW. And: Chinese carmaker BYD is wooing EV buyers in Europe.
04/0508h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0508h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
04/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengWhat does the Amazon look like during a major drought? Will Canada's forests recover from massive wildfires? Can we improve on natural photosynthesis? How important are bees in agriculture? And why do researchers get so excited about peatlands?
04/0509h00>09h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0509h15>10h00 (0x00) ?engThe Far Right and Neo-NazisAn Increasing Terrorist ThreatengIn Germany, a far-right plan to overthrow the state was averted. In France, six men were arrested for plotting to attack politicians. In Bratislava, a student with links to the far right murdered two people outside an LGTB club. The film crew meets with some of the people who see themselves as ideological leaders of a racial war. The film investigates these white supremacists, and the threat they pose.  The filmmakers traveled to Wunsiedel, northern Bavaria. Here, a neo-Nazi political party, Dritte Weg, gathered to commemorate Adolf Hitler’s deputy, Rudolf Hess. Locals watched silently as the neo-Nazis march through the streets in a torchlit parade, carrying banners and banging on drums.  A team of journalists spent two years investigating semi-clandestine networks in France, Germany and Romania. They set up a fake profile on a French neo-Nazi forum. It’s one of many spreading hate online, and has over 3,600 members. There are also online dating sites exclusively for white people, celebrating ‘white life, white love’. Members trade in Nazi memorabilia. The camera team meets a man who served in the SS back in the Second World War. Shockingly, he still feels nostalgia for Nazi ideals. A role-model for many of these ‘white warriors’ is Daniel Conversano, who left France for the ‘white land’ of Romania. Here, he formed a community. His followers include the convicted terrorist Login Nisin, who admitted to plotting to kill Christophe Castaner and Jean-Luc Melenchon. The team visited Conversano and his supporters in Bucharest. They questioned him about his racist views. Many see the coming "racial civil war” as inevitable. Far-right extremists are now considered one of the biggest threats to democracy in Europe.
04/0510h00>10h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0510h15>10h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
04/0510h30>11h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeYour amazing brain — Keeping it happy and healthyengYour brain is a complex organ and works hard around the clock. Exercise, good sleep and essential oils can all give your brain a boost.
04/0511h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0511h15>11h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
04/0511h30>12h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
04/0512h00>12h03 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0512h03>13h00 (0x00) ?engUnmasking HezbollahEpisode 1 - Project CassandraengBy 2008, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration had gathered sufficient evidence to show that Hezbollah had transformed from a military and political organization into an international crime syndicate. They were making billions from drug and arms trafficking, money laundering and other criminal activities. "Project Cassandra" was the ambitious, top-secret project designed to stop them.   On 4 August 2020, the city of Beirut was devastated by the explosion of hundreds of tons of ammonium nitrate stored in the port. All eyes turned to Hezbollah, a Shiite party and militia linked to Iran that controls a large part of Lebanon. Despite pressure from both citizens and the international community, Hezbollah (literally: the "party of God") refused to allow any independent investigation into the causes of the explosion.   Hezbollah emerged in 1982 as a resistance organization against the Israeli occupation. Even then, it was supported by Iran. For 40 years, its fighters have infiltrated all areas of the Lebanese state and risen to become the country’s dominant force.   In the mid-2000s, however, a handful of police officers from the American Drug Enforcement Agency (D.E.A.) attempted to bring down Hezbollah. They operated in the greatest secrecy. The code name of their operation: Cassandra. Their investigation begins in the United States, in the still-smoldering ruins of the World Trade Center.   The three-part series tells the story of "Project Cassandra," based on the testimony of DEA agents and other people involved. It also tells the story of the rise of Hezbollah and provides insights into complex geopolitical contexts.
04/0513h00>13h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0513h15>13h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
04/0513h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
04/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0514h15>15h00 (0x00) ?engIllegal LeatherHow the Car Industry is Threatening the Rainforesteng"The forest is our home. And now it’s all being destroyed forever.” Wenatoa Parakanã stands outside her cabin in the dense rainforest of the Brazilian Amazonas and is close to tears. The young Parakanã woman has lived her whole life in the remote region of Apyterewa - about a day’s motorboat trip to the next small town.  But for several years now, life for Wenatoa has been changing beyond recognition. Strangers are coming to threaten her village, chop down the trees and turn her homeland into gigantic pasture lands for thousands of cattle. Over the last 20 years, an area of forest almost as large as Germany has been logged in the region - often illegally. Many researchers fear that the Amazonas has already reached its tipping point: It can no longer recover from the many fires and droughts. This could have devastating consequences for the global climate.  On a local level, only very few people dare to oppose the illegal destruction of the rainforest. After all, the animals’ meat and hides are a huge economic driver. Every year, the Brazilian tannery industry exports products valued at more than one billion Euros. These products are sold all over the world. And as the research for this film shows: some of them are also ending up in German luxury cars.   With intrepid journeys to the heart of the action, footage secretly filmed in abattoirs, interviews with insiders and the latest digital research techniques, the team retraces the production steps of this illegal leather right to its source. From the Brazilian rainforest, via shady middlemen to German car dealerships offering the latest models by BMW, Mercedes & Co. - complete with their luxurious leather interiors.  The film embarks on a journalistic quest for clues that turns into an economic crime thriller. After all, this isn’t an isolated case, it’s systematic environmental exploitation. Despite the many glossy brochures touting the carmakers’ sustainability credentials, these complex supply chains are often opaque - keeping their impact on people and the environment in the dark.
04/0515h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0515h15>15h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
04/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentLanguages in AfricaengHow many languages do you speak? Most Africans grow up multilingual. At school, they're taught in the languages of former colonial powers, like English, French or Portuguese. At home, they speak a local lingua franca like Swahili, Hausa, isiZulu or Pidgin and as well as, another mother tongue. In this Street Debate ask: how do we promote African languages while staying ahead in a globalized world?
04/0516h00>16h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0516h15>16h30 (0x00) ?engMapped OutWhy the nuclear arms race is on againeng
04/0516h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
04/0517h00>17h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0517h15>17h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
04/0517h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
04/0518h00>18h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0518h15>18h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
04/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentLanguages in AfricaengHow many languages do you speak? Most Africans grow up multilingual. At school, they're taught in the languages of former colonial powers, like English, French or Portuguese. At home, they speak a local lingua franca like Swahili, Hausa, isiZulu or Pidgin and as well as, another mother tongue. In this Street Debate ask: how do we promote African languages while staying ahead in a globalized world?
04/0519h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0519h15>19h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
04/0519h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
04/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0520h15>21h00 (0x00) ?engDriven by GreedThe Deutsche Bank Story: Gambled Away in the Financial CrisisengThe Deutsche Bank, once the flagship of the German economy, had fallen from grace. In the 2000s, the bank was pumped full of risk in the quest for ever greater profits. In their bid to make the institution a global player, Deutsche Bank managers gave their investment bankers a free hand - a move that would end up being a major contributing factor in the financial crisis of 2007/2008. Supervisory authorities are still imposing fines to this day, penalties that now run into the tens of billions.  The victims in all of this are Deutsche Bank customers and shareholders. The share price is hovering around 10 Euros. Twenty years ago, it was around 60 Euros. The documentary shows: The only ones to walk away from this with a good deal were the investment bankers. Many received millions in bonuses year after year, as their greed increased and they paid no heed to the rules and regulations.
04/0521h00>21h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0521h15>21h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
04/0521h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engAfrimaxxModern African LifestyleengIn this edition host Pamela Mtanga meets with architect Gregory Katz at the special Tree House Senegalia. Plus, pencils made from newspapers, Zulu culture in the skies and why dead white man’s clothes fit urban Ghanians.
04/0522h00>22h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0522h15>22h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
04/0522h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Jan EgelandengTim Sebastoian interviews Jan Egeland, Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council. (First aired April 10 2024)
04/0523h00>23h03 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0523h03>00h00 (0x00) ?engUnmasking HezbollahEpisode 1 - Project CassandraengBy 2008, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration had gathered sufficient evidence to show that Hezbollah had transformed from a military and political organization into an international crime syndicate. They were making billions from drug and arms trafficking, money laundering and other criminal activities. "Project Cassandra" was the ambitious, top-secret project designed to stop them.   On 4 August 2020, the city of Beirut was devastated by the explosion of hundreds of tons of ammonium nitrate stored in the port. All eyes turned to Hezbollah, a Shiite party and militia linked to Iran that controls a large part of Lebanon. Despite pressure from both citizens and the international community, Hezbollah (literally: the "party of God") refused to allow any independent investigation into the causes of the explosion.   Hezbollah emerged in 1982 as a resistance organization against the Israeli occupation. Even then, it was supported by Iran. For 40 years, its fighters have infiltrated all areas of the Lebanese state and risen to become the country’s dominant force.   In the mid-2000s, however, a handful of police officers from the American Drug Enforcement Agency (D.E.A.) attempted to bring down Hezbollah. They operated in the greatest secrecy. The code name of their operation: Cassandra. Their investigation begins in the United States, in the still-smoldering ruins of the World Trade Center.   The three-part series tells the story of "Project Cassandra," based on the testimony of DEA agents and other people involved. It also tells the story of the rise of Hezbollah and provides insights into complex geopolitical contexts.
04/0500h00>00h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0500h15>00h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
04/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengWhat does the Amazon look like during a major drought? Will Canada's forests recover from massive wildfires? Can we improve on natural photosynthesis? How important are bees in agriculture? And why do researchers get so excited about peatlands?
05/0501h00>01h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0501h02>01h30 (0x00) ?engHome AgainWhat’s the Future for Young Gambians?engAs difficult as his situation in Gambia is, 23-year-old Paabi never wants to have to make the dangerous journey to Europe again. But the pressure on him here at home is immense. He wants to set up a business with the money he received from the International Organization for Migration to help him return home. But the start-up capital is soon spent on clothes and distributed to friends and family. His attempt to earn money on the timber market fails. At the same time, his father expects financial support for the extended family. Paabi therefore soon sees only one option: to attempt the potentially fatal journey to Europe a third time.
05/0501h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeYour amazing brain — Keeping it happy and healthyengYour brain is a complex organ and works hard around the clock. Exercise, good sleep and essential oils can all give your brain a boost.
05/0502h00>02h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0502h15>02h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
05/0502h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
05/0503h00>03h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0503h02>03h15 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
05/0503h15>04h00 (0x00) ?engDriven by GreedThe Deutsche Bank Story: Gambled Away in the Financial CrisisengThe Deutsche Bank, once the flagship of the German economy, had fallen from grace. In the 2000s, the bank was pumped full of risk in the quest for ever greater profits. In their bid to make the institution a global player, Deutsche Bank managers gave their investment bankers a free hand - a move that would end up being a major contributing factor in the financial crisis of 2007/2008. Supervisory authorities are still imposing fines to this day, penalties that now run into the tens of billions.  The victims in all of this are Deutsche Bank customers and shareholders. The share price is hovering around 10 Euros. Twenty years ago, it was around 60 Euros. The documentary shows: The only ones to walk away from this with a good deal were the investment bankers. Many received millions in bonuses year after year, as their greed increased and they paid no heed to the rules and regulations.
05/0504h00>04h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0504h15>04h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
05/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engHome AgainWhat’s the Future for Young Gambians?engAs difficult as his situation in Gambia is, 23-year-old Paabi never wants to have to make the dangerous journey to Europe again. But the pressure on him here at home is immense. He wants to set up a business with the money he received from the International Organization for Migration to help him return home. But the start-up capital is soon spent on clothes and distributed to friends and family. His attempt to earn money on the timber market fails. At the same time, his father expects financial support for the extended family. Paabi therefore soon sees only one option: to attempt the potentially fatal journey to Europe a third time.
05/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0505h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
05/0505h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengHow Supercar Blondie changed the auto industry. The Dubai-based influencer has shaken up the male-dominated luxury car scene and attracted the attention of BMW. And: Chinese carmaker BYD is wooing EV buyers in Europe.
05/0506h00>06h03 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0506h03>07h00 (0x00) ?engUnmasking HezbollahEpisode 1 - Project CassandraengBy 2008, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration had gathered sufficient evidence to show that Hezbollah had transformed from a military and political organization into an international crime syndicate. They were making billions from drug and arms trafficking, money laundering and other criminal activities. "Project Cassandra" was the ambitious, top-secret project designed to stop them.   On 4 August 2020, the city of Beirut was devastated by the explosion of hundreds of tons of ammonium nitrate stored in the port. All eyes turned to Hezbollah, a Shiite party and militia linked to Iran that controls a large part of Lebanon. Despite pressure from both citizens and the international community, Hezbollah (literally: the "party of God") refused to allow any independent investigation into the causes of the explosion.   Hezbollah emerged in 1982 as a resistance organization against the Israeli occupation. Even then, it was supported by Iran. For 40 years, its fighters have infiltrated all areas of the Lebanese state and risen to become the country’s dominant force.   In the mid-2000s, however, a handful of police officers from the American Drug Enforcement Agency (D.E.A.) attempted to bring down Hezbollah. They operated in the greatest secrecy. The code name of their operation: Cassandra. Their investigation begins in the United States, in the still-smoldering ruins of the World Trade Center.   The three-part series tells the story of "Project Cassandra," based on the testimony of DEA agents and other people involved. It also tells the story of the rise of Hezbollah and provides insights into complex geopolitical contexts.
05/0507h00>07h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0507h15>07h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
05/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
05/0508h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0508h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
05/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
05/0509h00>09h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0509h15>10h00 (0x00) ?engA World Heritage Site in Danger?South Tyrol Fights for its FutureengTourism in South Tyrol is getting out of hand. In the high season, villages and mountain passes are completely congested. For many visitors, the dream of seeing the ‘Three Peaks’ up close ends when police are forced to close the mountain’s access road due to overcrowding. Access to another attraction, the Pragser Wildsee lake, is also regulated: An Italian TV series was filmed here around 10 years ago. Then, images of the beauty spot were beamed around the world on social media. Now, too many people want to visit.  Mountain guide Erwin Steiner, a member of the traffic commission, is committed to reducing vehicle traffic -- and preserving the nature that constitutes his livelihood. But there are plans afoot to further expand the tourist infrastructure -- with a view to hosting the 2026 Olympics. Conservationists like architect Marlene Roner are fighting to preserve this World Natural Heritage Site. These two activists team up with representatives of the Alpine Association and local heritage organizations. Against the stunning backdrop of the Dolomites, they adopt a manifesto dedicated to protecting the mountains.  With the South Tyrolean government's Tourism Development Concept 2030+, the debate over how to deal with the region’s natural heritage has grown heated. In particular, the plan to cap the number of beds has met with resistance from the hotel and restaurant industries. What is a World Heritage designation actually worth? Does it really help to protect a unique landscape - or just serve to market it?
05/0510h00>10h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0510h15>10h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
05/0510h30>11h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentLanguages in AfricaengHow many languages do you speak? Most Africans grow up multilingual. At school, they're taught in the languages of former colonial powers, like English, French or Portuguese. At home, they speak a local lingua franca like Swahili, Hausa, isiZulu or Pidgin and as well as, another mother tongue. In this Street Debate ask: how do we promote African languages while staying ahead in a globalized world?
05/0511h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0511h15>11h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
05/0511h30>12h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengHow Supercar Blondie changed the auto industry. The Dubai-based influencer has shaken up the male-dominated luxury car scene and attracted the attention of BMW. And: Chinese carmaker BYD is wooing EV buyers in Europe.
05/0512h00>12h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0512h15>12h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
05/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentLanguages in AfricaengHow many languages do you speak? Most Africans grow up multilingual. At school, they're taught in the languages of former colonial powers, like English, French or Portuguese. At home, they speak a local lingua franca like Swahili, Hausa, isiZulu or Pidgin and as well as, another mother tongue. In this Street Debate ask: how do we promote African languages while staying ahead in a globalized world?
05/0513h00>13h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0513h15>13h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
05/0513h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
05/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0514h15>15h00 (0x00) ?engThe Far Right and Neo-NazisAn Increasing Terrorist ThreatengIn Germany, a far-right plan to overthrow the state was averted. In France, six men were arrested for plotting to attack politicians. In Bratislava, a student with links to the far right murdered two people outside an LGTB club. The film crew meets with some of the people who see themselves as ideological leaders of a racial war. The film investigates these white supremacists, and the threat they pose.  The filmmakers traveled to Wunsiedel, northern Bavaria. Here, a neo-Nazi political party, Dritte Weg, gathered to commemorate Adolf Hitler’s deputy, Rudolf Hess. Locals watched silently as the neo-Nazis march through the streets in a torchlit parade, carrying banners and banging on drums.  A team of journalists spent two years investigating semi-clandestine networks in France, Germany and Romania. They set up a fake profile on a French neo-Nazi forum. It’s one of many spreading hate online, and has over 3,600 members. There are also online dating sites exclusively for white people, celebrating ‘white life, white love’. Members trade in Nazi memorabilia. The camera team meets a man who served in the SS back in the Second World War. Shockingly, he still feels nostalgia for Nazi ideals. A role-model for many of these ‘white warriors’ is Daniel Conversano, who left France for the ‘white land’ of Romania. Here, he formed a community. His followers include the convicted terrorist Login Nisin, who admitted to plotting to kill Christophe Castaner and Jean-Luc Melenchon. The team visited Conversano and his supporters in Bucharest. They questioned him about his racist views. Many see the coming "racial civil war” as inevitable. Far-right extremists are now considered one of the biggest threats to democracy in Europe.
05/0515h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0515h15>15h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
05/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engHome AgainWhat’s the Future for Young Gambians?engAs difficult as his situation in Gambia is, 23-year-old Paabi never wants to have to make the dangerous journey to Europe again. But the pressure on him here at home is immense. He wants to set up a business with the money he received from the International Organization for Migration to help him return home. But the start-up capital is soon spent on clothes and distributed to friends and family. His attempt to earn money on the timber market fails. At the same time, his father expects financial support for the extended family. Paabi therefore soon sees only one option: to attempt the potentially fatal journey to Europe a third time.
05/0516h00>16h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0516h15>16h30 (0x00) ?engHER - Women in AsiaGuardians of natureeng
05/0516h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
05/0517h00>17h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0517h15>17h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
05/0517h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engAfrimaxxModern African LifestyleengIn this edition host Pamela Mtanga meets with architect Gregory Katz at the special Tree House Senegalia. Plus, pencils made from newspapers, Zulu culture in the skies and why dead white man’s clothes fit urban Ghanians.
05/0518h00>18h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0518h15>18h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
05/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
05/0519h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0519h15>19h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
05/0519h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengHow Supercar Blondie changed the auto industry. The Dubai-based influencer has shaken up the male-dominated luxury car scene and attracted the attention of BMW. And: Chinese carmaker BYD is wooing EV buyers in Europe.
05/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0520h15>21h00 (0x00) ?engIllegal LeatherHow the Car Industry is Threatening the Rainforesteng"The forest is our home. And now it’s all being destroyed forever.” Wenatoa Parakanã stands outside her cabin in the dense rainforest of the Brazilian Amazonas and is close to tears. The young Parakanã woman has lived her whole life in the remote region of Apyterewa - about a day’s motorboat trip to the next small town.  But for several years now, life for Wenatoa has been changing beyond recognition. Strangers are coming to threaten her village, chop down the trees and turn her homeland into gigantic pasture lands for thousands of cattle. Over the last 20 years, an area of forest almost as large as Germany has been logged in the region - often illegally. Many researchers fear that the Amazonas has already reached its tipping point: It can no longer recover from the many fires and droughts. This could have devastating consequences for the global climate.  On a local level, only very few people dare to oppose the illegal destruction of the rainforest. After all, the animals’ meat and hides are a huge economic driver. Every year, the Brazilian tannery industry exports products valued at more than one billion Euros. These products are sold all over the world. And as the research for this film shows: some of them are also ending up in German luxury cars.   With intrepid journeys to the heart of the action, footage secretly filmed in abattoirs, interviews with insiders and the latest digital research techniques, the team retraces the production steps of this illegal leather right to its source. From the Brazilian rainforest, via shady middlemen to German car dealerships offering the latest models by BMW, Mercedes & Co. - complete with their luxurious leather interiors.  The film embarks on a journalistic quest for clues that turns into an economic crime thriller. After all, this isn’t an isolated case, it’s systematic environmental exploitation. Despite the many glossy brochures touting the carmakers’ sustainability credentials, these complex supply chains are often opaque - keeping their impact on people and the environment in the dark.
05/0521h00>21h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0521h15>21h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
05/0521h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
05/0522h00>22h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0522h15>22h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
05/0522h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengWhat does the Amazon look like during a major drought? Will Canada's forests recover from massive wildfires? Can we improve on natural photosynthesis? How important are bees in agriculture? And why do researchers get so excited about peatlands?
05/0523h00>23h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0523h02>23h30 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
05/0523h30>00h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
05/0500h00>00h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0500h15>00h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
05/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengHow Supercar Blondie changed the auto industry. The Dubai-based influencer has shaken up the male-dominated luxury car scene and attracted the attention of BMW. And: Chinese carmaker BYD is wooing EV buyers in Europe.
06/0501h00>01h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0501h02>01h30 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
06/0501h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsHunger, hardship and displacement: The forgotten war in SudanengA new civil war in Sudan has left millions of people displaced and struggling to survive; China's government hopes to increase the birthrate with dating events and group weddings. Plus: Copenhagen's "sponge city" idea for combating the impact of climate change.
06/0502h00>02h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0502h15>02h45 (0x00) ?engHome AgainWhat’s the Future for Young Gambians?engAs difficult as his situation in Gambia is, 23-year-old Paabi never wants to have to make the dangerous journey to Europe again. But the pressure on him here at home is immense. He wants to set up a business with the money he received from the International Organization for Migration to help him return home. But the start-up capital is soon spent on clothes and distributed to friends and family. His attempt to earn money on the timber market fails. At the same time, his father expects financial support for the extended family. Paabi therefore soon sees only one option: to attempt the potentially fatal journey to Europe a third time.
06/0502h45>03h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0503h00>03h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0503h02>03h30 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaFuture-proof innovations to protect natureengInsects give shrimps a boost in Tamil Nadu - and add bite to pizza toppings. Can local conservation efforts reverse damage at Srinagar’s Dal Lake? Plus hotel owners in Catalonia find creative solutions to water shortages.
06/0503h30>04h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeYour amazing brain — Keeping it happy and healthyengYour brain is a complex organ and works hard around the clock. Exercise, good sleep and essential oils can all give your brain a boost.
06/0504h00>04h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0504h15>04h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
06/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
06/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0505h15>05h45 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsHunger, hardship and displacement: The forgotten war in SudanengA new civil war in Sudan has left millions of people displaced and struggling to survive; China's government hopes to increase the birthrate with dating events and group weddings. Plus: Copenhagen's "sponge city" idea for combating the impact of climate change.
06/0505h45>06h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0506h00>06h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0506h02>06h30 (0x00) ?engHome AgainWhat’s the Future for Young Gambians?engAs difficult as his situation in Gambia is, 23-year-old Paabi never wants to have to make the dangerous journey to Europe again. But the pressure on him here at home is immense. He wants to set up a business with the money he received from the International Organization for Migration to help him return home. But the start-up capital is soon spent on clothes and distributed to friends and family. His attempt to earn money on the timber market fails. At the same time, his father expects financial support for the extended family. Paabi therefore soon sees only one option: to attempt the potentially fatal journey to Europe a third time.
06/0506h30>07h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengWhat does the Amazon look like during a major drought? Will Canada's forests recover from massive wildfires? Can we improve on natural photosynthesis? How important are bees in agriculture? And why do researchers get so excited about peatlands?
06/0507h00>07h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0507h15>07h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
06/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengThe quest to understand jellyfish. Why oysters are climate heroes. Ugandan teenagers grow fruit and veg - vertically! Mushroom farming boosts livelihoods in Rwanda. And reuseable packaging for online shopping.
06/0508h00>08h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentLanguages in AfricaengHow many languages do you speak? Most Africans grow up multilingual. At school, they're taught in the languages of former colonial powers, like English, French or Portuguese. At home, they speak a local lingua franca like Swahili, Hausa, isiZulu or Pidgin and as well as, another mother tongue. In this Street Debate ask: how do we promote African languages while staying ahead in a globalized world?
06/0509h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0509h30>09h45 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
06/0509h45>10h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0510h00>10h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0510h15>11h00 (0x00) ?engIllegal LeatherHow the Car Industry is Threatening the Rainforesteng"The forest is our home. And now it’s all being destroyed forever.” Wenatoa Parakanã stands outside her cabin in the dense rainforest of the Brazilian Amazonas and is close to tears. The young Parakanã woman has lived her whole life in the remote region of Apyterewa - about a day’s motorboat trip to the next small town.  But for several years now, life for Wenatoa has been changing beyond recognition. Strangers are coming to threaten her village, chop down the trees and turn her homeland into gigantic pasture lands for thousands of cattle. Over the last 20 years, an area of forest almost as large as Germany has been logged in the region - often illegally. Many researchers fear that the Amazonas has already reached its tipping point: It can no longer recover from the many fires and droughts. This could have devastating consequences for the global climate.  On a local level, only very few people dare to oppose the illegal destruction of the rainforest. After all, the animals’ meat and hides are a huge economic driver. Every year, the Brazilian tannery industry exports products valued at more than one billion Euros. These products are sold all over the world. And as the research for this film shows: some of them are also ending up in German luxury cars.   With intrepid journeys to the heart of the action, footage secretly filmed in abattoirs, interviews with insiders and the latest digital research techniques, the team retraces the production steps of this illegal leather right to its source. From the Brazilian rainforest, via shady middlemen to German car dealerships offering the latest models by BMW, Mercedes & Co. - complete with their luxurious leather interiors.  The film embarks on a journalistic quest for clues that turns into an economic crime thriller. After all, this isn’t an isolated case, it’s systematic environmental exploitation. Despite the many glossy brochures touting the carmakers’ sustainability credentials, these complex supply chains are often opaque - keeping their impact on people and the environment in the dark.
06/0511h00>11h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0511h30>12h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengThe quest to understand jellyfish. Why oysters are climate heroes. Ugandan teenagers grow fruit and veg - vertically! Mushroom farming boosts livelihoods in Rwanda. And reuseable packaging for online shopping.
06/0512h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsHunger, hardship and displacement: The forgotten war in SudanengA new civil war in Sudan has left millions of people displaced and struggling to survive; China's government hopes to increase the birthrate with dating events and group weddings. Plus: Copenhagen's "sponge city" idea for combating the impact of climate change.
06/0513h00>13h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0513h15>14h00 (0x00) ?engDriven by GreedThe Deutsche Bank Story: Gambled Away in the Financial CrisisengThe Deutsche Bank, once the flagship of the German economy, had fallen from grace. In the 2000s, the bank was pumped full of risk in the quest for ever greater profits. In their bid to make the institution a global player, Deutsche Bank managers gave their investment bankers a free hand - a move that would end up being a major contributing factor in the financial crisis of 2007/2008. Supervisory authorities are still imposing fines to this day, penalties that now run into the tens of billions.  The victims in all of this are Deutsche Bank customers and shareholders. The share price is hovering around 10 Euros. Twenty years ago, it was around 60 Euros. The documentary shows: The only ones to walk away from this with a good deal were the investment bankers. Many received millions in bonuses year after year, as their greed increased and they paid no heed to the rules and regulations.
06/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0514h15>14h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
06/0514h30>15h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentLanguages in AfricaengHow many languages do you speak? Most Africans grow up multilingual. At school, they're taught in the languages of former colonial powers, like English, French or Portuguese. At home, they speak a local lingua franca like Swahili, Hausa, isiZulu or Pidgin and as well as, another mother tongue. In this Street Debate ask: how do we promote African languages while staying ahead in a globalized world?
06/0515h00>15h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengWhat does the Amazon look like during a major drought? Will Canada's forests recover from massive wildfires? Can we improve on natural photosynthesis? How important are bees in agriculture? And why do researchers get so excited about peatlands?
06/0516h00>16h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0516h15>17h00 (0x00) ?engIllegal LeatherHow the Car Industry is Threatening the Rainforesteng"The forest is our home. And now it’s all being destroyed forever.” Wenatoa Parakanã stands outside her cabin in the dense rainforest of the Brazilian Amazonas and is close to tears. The young Parakanã woman has lived her whole life in the remote region of Apyterewa - about a day’s motorboat trip to the next small town.  But for several years now, life for Wenatoa has been changing beyond recognition. Strangers are coming to threaten her village, chop down the trees and turn her homeland into gigantic pasture lands for thousands of cattle. Over the last 20 years, an area of forest almost as large as Germany has been logged in the region - often illegally. Many researchers fear that the Amazonas has already reached its tipping point: It can no longer recover from the many fires and droughts. This could have devastating consequences for the global climate.  On a local level, only very few people dare to oppose the illegal destruction of the rainforest. After all, the animals’ meat and hides are a huge economic driver. Every year, the Brazilian tannery industry exports products valued at more than one billion Euros. These products are sold all over the world. And as the research for this film shows: some of them are also ending up in German luxury cars.   With intrepid journeys to the heart of the action, footage secretly filmed in abattoirs, interviews with insiders and the latest digital research techniques, the team retraces the production steps of this illegal leather right to its source. From the Brazilian rainforest, via shady middlemen to German car dealerships offering the latest models by BMW, Mercedes & Co. - complete with their luxurious leather interiors.  The film embarks on a journalistic quest for clues that turns into an economic crime thriller. After all, this isn’t an isolated case, it’s systematic environmental exploitation. Despite the many glossy brochures touting the carmakers’ sustainability credentials, these complex supply chains are often opaque - keeping their impact on people and the environment in the dark.
06/0517h00>17h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0517h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsHunger, hardship and displacement: The forgotten war in SudanengA new civil war in Sudan has left millions of people displaced and struggling to survive; China's government hopes to increase the birthrate with dating events and group weddings. Plus: Copenhagen's "sponge city" idea for combating the impact of climate change.
06/0518h00>18h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
06/0519h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0519h15>19h45 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
06/0519h45>20h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0520h15>20h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
06/0520h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsHunger, hardship and displacement: The forgotten war in SudanengA new civil war in Sudan has left millions of people displaced and struggling to survive; China's government hopes to increase the birthrate with dating events and group weddings. Plus: Copenhagen's "sponge city" idea for combating the impact of climate change.
06/0521h00>21h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0521h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
06/0522h00>22h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0522h15>23h00 (0x00) ?engIllegal LeatherHow the Car Industry is Threatening the Rainforesteng"The forest is our home. And now it’s all being destroyed forever.” Wenatoa Parakanã stands outside her cabin in the dense rainforest of the Brazilian Amazonas and is close to tears. The young Parakanã woman has lived her whole life in the remote region of Apyterewa - about a day’s motorboat trip to the next small town.  But for several years now, life for Wenatoa has been changing beyond recognition. Strangers are coming to threaten her village, chop down the trees and turn her homeland into gigantic pasture lands for thousands of cattle. Over the last 20 years, an area of forest almost as large as Germany has been logged in the region - often illegally. Many researchers fear that the Amazonas has already reached its tipping point: It can no longer recover from the many fires and droughts. This could have devastating consequences for the global climate.  On a local level, only very few people dare to oppose the illegal destruction of the rainforest. After all, the animals’ meat and hides are a huge economic driver. Every year, the Brazilian tannery industry exports products valued at more than one billion Euros. These products are sold all over the world. And as the research for this film shows: some of them are also ending up in German luxury cars.   With intrepid journeys to the heart of the action, footage secretly filmed in abattoirs, interviews with insiders and the latest digital research techniques, the team retraces the production steps of this illegal leather right to its source. From the Brazilian rainforest, via shady middlemen to German car dealerships offering the latest models by BMW, Mercedes & Co. - complete with their luxurious leather interiors.  The film embarks on a journalistic quest for clues that turns into an economic crime thriller. After all, this isn’t an isolated case, it’s systematic environmental exploitation. Despite the many glossy brochures touting the carmakers’ sustainability credentials, these complex supply chains are often opaque - keeping their impact on people and the environment in the dark.
06/0523h00>23h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0523h02>23h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
06/0523h30>00h00 (0x00) ?engHome AgainWhat’s the Future for Young Gambians?engAs difficult as his situation in Gambia is, 23-year-old Paabi never wants to have to make the dangerous journey to Europe again. But the pressure on him here at home is immense. He wants to set up a business with the money he received from the International Organization for Migration to help him return home. But the start-up capital is soon spent on clothes and distributed to friends and family. His attempt to earn money on the timber market fails. At the same time, his father expects financial support for the extended family. Paabi therefore soon sees only one option: to attempt the potentially fatal journey to Europe a third time.
06/0500h00>00h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0500h15>00h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
06/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
07/0501h00>01h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0501h02>01h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
07/0501h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengThe quest to understand jellyfish. Why oysters are climate heroes. Ugandan teenagers grow fruit and veg - vertically! Mushroom farming boosts livelihoods in Rwanda. And reuseable packaging for online shopping.
07/0502h00>02h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0502h15>03h00 (0x00) ?engPoorly Treated?Racism in MedicineengThis documentary hears from people who’ve been turned away or received inadequate care in a medical emergency; from midwives who report on racism in the delivery room; from students who criticize teaching according to white norms; as well as from doctors who reflect on the problem.  The film shows just how dangerous conscious or unconscious racism in the healthcare sector can be. Its findings are based on the results of the first representative study on the issue in Germany, published in November 2023 by the German Centre for Integration and Migration Research.  The fact is: Even today, the term ‘Morbus Mediterraneus’ still circulates in the healthcare sector, which is intended to describe "exaggerated suffering in southerners". Standard medical equipment doesn’t always function reliably when used on dark-skinned patients. And many doctors have never learned that some diseases can be diagnosed differently depending on whether the person is Black or White. The medical norm, even in textbooks, is still the white, western European patient. This can result in misdiagnosis and the serious worsening of symptoms.  Take the case of Remziye T. from Lower Saxony: Her infected heart valve went undiscovered for a long time because doctors didn’t take her pain seriously enough. When the problem was eventually correctly diagnosed, it was too late for medical treatment. Now Remziye T. has to live with a mechanical heart valve: the operation has left her unable to walk properly and she is no longer able to work.   Dr. Bismarck Ofori allowed the camera team to film in his Hanover surgery. Many of the patients who attend the Black doctor’s practice have a migrant background. They tell him they’ve not been taken seriously in other surgeries; some of them were even brusquely turned away. In Ofori’s treatment room, it’s evident that careful diagnosis and overcoming language barriers in the process costs time and money. Not that language is the only obstacle to making a correct diagnosis. The pulse oximeter, for example, a device used to measure the blood’s oxygen content, can be less accurate when used on patients with darker skin. But this is not systematically taught at medical school.  The healthcare system is only just beginning to unpack the issue of racism and its impact. But many doctors, medical students, midwives and a medical historian have spoken out - addressing a problem that, in the worst-case scenario, can have fatal consequences.
07/0503h00>03h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0503h02>03h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
07/0503h30>04h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengHow Supercar Blondie changed the auto industry. The Dubai-based influencer has shaken up the male-dominated luxury car scene and attracted the attention of BMW. And: Chinese carmaker BYD is wooing EV buyers in Europe.
07/0504h00>04h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0504h15>04h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
07/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
07/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0505h15>06h00 (0x00) ?engPoorly Treated?Racism in MedicineengThis documentary hears from people who’ve been turned away or received inadequate care in a medical emergency; from midwives who report on racism in the delivery room; from students who criticize teaching according to white norms; as well as from doctors who reflect on the problem.  The film shows just how dangerous conscious or unconscious racism in the healthcare sector can be. Its findings are based on the results of the first representative study on the issue in Germany, published in November 2023 by the German Centre for Integration and Migration Research.  The fact is: Even today, the term ‘Morbus Mediterraneus’ still circulates in the healthcare sector, which is intended to describe "exaggerated suffering in southerners". Standard medical equipment doesn’t always function reliably when used on dark-skinned patients. And many doctors have never learned that some diseases can be diagnosed differently depending on whether the person is Black or White. The medical norm, even in textbooks, is still the white, western European patient. This can result in misdiagnosis and the serious worsening of symptoms.  Take the case of Remziye T. from Lower Saxony: Her infected heart valve went undiscovered for a long time because doctors didn’t take her pain seriously enough. When the problem was eventually correctly diagnosed, it was too late for medical treatment. Now Remziye T. has to live with a mechanical heart valve: the operation has left her unable to walk properly and she is no longer able to work.   Dr. Bismarck Ofori allowed the camera team to film in his Hanover surgery. Many of the patients who attend the Black doctor’s practice have a migrant background. They tell him they’ve not been taken seriously in other surgeries; some of them were even brusquely turned away. In Ofori’s treatment room, it’s evident that careful diagnosis and overcoming language barriers in the process costs time and money. Not that language is the only obstacle to making a correct diagnosis. The pulse oximeter, for example, a device used to measure the blood’s oxygen content, can be less accurate when used on patients with darker skin. But this is not systematically taught at medical school.  The healthcare system is only just beginning to unpack the issue of racism and its impact. But many doctors, medical students, midwives and a medical historian have spoken out - addressing a problem that, in the worst-case scenario, can have fatal consequences.
07/0506h00>06h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0506h02>06h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
07/0506h30>07h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaFuture-proof innovations to protect natureengInsects give shrimps a boost in Tamil Nadu - and add bite to pizza toppings. Can local conservation efforts reverse damage at Srinagar’s Dal Lake? Plus hotel owners in Catalonia find creative solutions to water shortages.
07/0507h00>07h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0507h15>07h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
07/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
07/0508h00>08h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engHome AgainWhat’s the Future for Young Gambians?engAs difficult as his situation in Gambia is, 23-year-old Paabi never wants to have to make the dangerous journey to Europe again. But the pressure on him here at home is immense. He wants to set up a business with the money he received from the International Organization for Migration to help him return home. But the start-up capital is soon spent on clothes and distributed to friends and family. His attempt to earn money on the timber market fails. At the same time, his father expects financial support for the extended family. Paabi therefore soon sees only one option: to attempt the potentially fatal journey to Europe a third time.
07/0509h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0509h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengThe quest to understand jellyfish. Why oysters are climate heroes. Ugandan teenagers grow fruit and veg - vertically! Mushroom farming boosts livelihoods in Rwanda. And reuseable packaging for online shopping.
07/0510h00>10h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0510h15>10h45 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
07/0510h45>11h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
07/0511h00>11h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0511h30>12h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengWhat does the Amazon look like during a major drought? Will Canada's forests recover from massive wildfires? Can we improve on natural photosynthesis? How important are bees in agriculture? And why do researchers get so excited about peatlands?
07/0512h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeYour amazing brain — Keeping it happy and healthyengYour brain is a complex organ and works hard around the clock. Exercise, good sleep and essential oils can all give your brain a boost.
07/0513h00>13h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0513h15>13h45 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
07/0513h45>14h00 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
07/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0514h15>14h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
07/0514h30>15h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaFuture-proof innovations to protect natureengInsects give shrimps a boost in Tamil Nadu - and add bite to pizza toppings. Can local conservation efforts reverse damage at Srinagar’s Dal Lake? Plus hotel owners in Catalonia find creative solutions to water shortages.
07/0515h00>15h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsHunger, hardship and displacement: The forgotten war in SudanengA new civil war in Sudan has left millions of people displaced and struggling to survive; China's government hopes to increase the birthrate with dating events and group weddings. Plus: Copenhagen's "sponge city" idea for combating the impact of climate change.
07/0516h00>16h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0516h15>16h45 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
07/0516h45>17h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
07/0517h00>17h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0517h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengThe quest to understand jellyfish. Why oysters are climate heroes. Ugandan teenagers grow fruit and veg - vertically! Mushroom farming boosts livelihoods in Rwanda. And reuseable packaging for online shopping.
07/0518h00>18h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengHow Supercar Blondie changed the auto industry. The Dubai-based influencer has shaken up the male-dominated luxury car scene and attracted the attention of BMW. And: Chinese carmaker BYD is wooing EV buyers in Europe.
07/0519h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0519h15>20h00 (0x00) ?engPoorly Treated?Racism in MedicineengThis documentary hears from people who’ve been turned away or received inadequate care in a medical emergency; from midwives who report on racism in the delivery room; from students who criticize teaching according to white norms; as well as from doctors who reflect on the problem.  The film shows just how dangerous conscious or unconscious racism in the healthcare sector can be. Its findings are based on the results of the first representative study on the issue in Germany, published in November 2023 by the German Centre for Integration and Migration Research.  The fact is: Even today, the term ‘Morbus Mediterraneus’ still circulates in the healthcare sector, which is intended to describe "exaggerated suffering in southerners". Standard medical equipment doesn’t always function reliably when used on dark-skinned patients. And many doctors have never learned that some diseases can be diagnosed differently depending on whether the person is Black or White. The medical norm, even in textbooks, is still the white, western European patient. This can result in misdiagnosis and the serious worsening of symptoms.  Take the case of Remziye T. from Lower Saxony: Her infected heart valve went undiscovered for a long time because doctors didn’t take her pain seriously enough. When the problem was eventually correctly diagnosed, it was too late for medical treatment. Now Remziye T. has to live with a mechanical heart valve: the operation has left her unable to walk properly and she is no longer able to work.   Dr. Bismarck Ofori allowed the camera team to film in his Hanover surgery. Many of the patients who attend the Black doctor’s practice have a migrant background. They tell him they’ve not been taken seriously in other surgeries; some of them were even brusquely turned away. In Ofori’s treatment room, it’s evident that careful diagnosis and overcoming language barriers in the process costs time and money. Not that language is the only obstacle to making a correct diagnosis. The pulse oximeter, for example, a device used to measure the blood’s oxygen content, can be less accurate when used on patients with darker skin. But this is not systematically taught at medical school.  The healthcare system is only just beginning to unpack the issue of racism and its impact. But many doctors, medical students, midwives and a medical historian have spoken out - addressing a problem that, in the worst-case scenario, can have fatal consequences.
07/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0520h15>20h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
07/0520h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengWhat does the Amazon look like during a major drought? Will Canada's forests recover from massive wildfires? Can we improve on natural photosynthesis? How important are bees in agriculture? And why do researchers get so excited about peatlands?
07/0521h00>21h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0521h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
07/0522h00>22h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0522h15>22h45 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
07/0522h45>23h00 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
07/0523h00>23h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0523h02>23h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
07/0523h30>00h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentLanguages in AfricaengHow many languages do you speak? Most Africans grow up multilingual. At school, they're taught in the languages of former colonial powers, like English, French or Portuguese. At home, they speak a local lingua franca like Swahili, Hausa, isiZulu or Pidgin and as well as, another mother tongue. In this Street Debate ask: how do we promote African languages while staying ahead in a globalized world?
07/0500h00>00h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0500h15>00h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
07/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsHunger, hardship and displacement: The forgotten war in SudanengA new civil war in Sudan has left millions of people displaced and struggling to survive; China's government hopes to increase the birthrate with dating events and group weddings. Plus: Copenhagen's "sponge city" idea for combating the impact of climate change.