Scan date : 22/05/2024 04:50
DayHourType Event Name LangEvent nameShort EventExtended LangExtended Event
22/0502h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0502h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
22/0502h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyYesterday’s technology, tomorrow’s progressengAn energy revolution is underway in the Arctic. Russia returns to old Soviet times; pneumatic tube transport celebrates a comeback with high-tech; a smart, light and affordable MRI for the global market. And how popular are e-bikes worldwide?
22/0503h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0503h15>04h00 (0x00) ?engBirdsAdapting to a Changing WorldengTheir flying skills, their endurance and their adaptability have always fascinated mankind - birds are astonishing survivalists. New research is giving us thrilling insights into the world of these feathered sky-dwellers. How do they manage to soar kilometers up into the air? How do they cope with those long-haul flights over continents and oceans? And what about the complexity of their sex lives, not to mention their intelligence?  The film explores some of the latest findings about birds by leading scientists. Exciting facts are revealed with the help of modern technology. But the research also sheds light on a darker aspect: many species of birds are threatened with extinction, not least due to urban development.
22/0504h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0504h02>04h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
22/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsBig business - Evangelical churches in BrazilengEvangelical churches are growing rapidly in Brazil, thriving especially in poorer communities. Mass tourism is threatening the coral reefs in Egypt. In Australia, the "Bite Club" helps victims of shark attacks.
22/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0505h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engUnseenengSometimes it seems like a bad dream: floods, air pollution, traffic jams. Sometimes it feels like we’re surrounded by eco-monsters. But they can be defeated. YouTuber Alex Lin presents state-of-the-art devices. Arthur Zhang builds machines for upcycling plastics. And Japanese researchers are even working on mirrors in space.
22/0505h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengCutting the climate footprint of bricks in Uganda. Building greener wind turbines in Sweden. Saving the Baltic Sea’s dead zones. Using the sun to end food waste in Lagos. And growing hope in Niger with wild plants.
22/0506h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0506h15>07h00 (0x00) ?engBirdsAdapting to a Changing WorldengTheir flying skills, their endurance and their adaptability have always fascinated mankind - birds are astonishing survivalists. New research is giving us thrilling insights into the world of these feathered sky-dwellers. How do they manage to soar kilometers up into the air? How do they cope with those long-haul flights over continents and oceans? And what about the complexity of their sex lives, not to mention their intelligence?  The film explores some of the latest findings about birds by leading scientists. Exciting facts are revealed with the help of modern technology. But the research also sheds light on a darker aspect: many species of birds are threatened with extinction, not least due to urban development.
22/0507h00>07h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0507h02>07h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
22/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyYesterday’s technology, tomorrow’s progressengAn energy revolution is underway in the Arctic. Russia returns to old Soviet times; pneumatic tube transport celebrates a comeback with high-tech; a smart, light and affordable MRI for the global market. And how popular are e-bikes worldwide?
22/0508h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0508h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engUnseenengSometimes it seems like a bad dream: floods, air pollution, traffic jams. Sometimes it feels like we’re surrounded by eco-monsters. But they can be defeated. YouTuber Alex Lin presents state-of-the-art devices. Arthur Zhang builds machines for upcycling plastics. And Japanese researchers are even working on mirrors in space.
22/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeHow can you reduce your cancer risk?engThere are more than 300 types of cancer. It’s impossible to guard against all of them completely. But there are a number of risk factors that we can influence ourselves. With the right lifestyle choices, we can significantly reduce our risk.
22/0509h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0509h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engClose upHow Car Tires Drive DeforestationengThe rules are designed to ensure due diligence and corporate accountability. Once the law takes effect, manufacturers in the EU will need to show their tires do not contain natural rubber from deforested land. The likes of Continental and Michelin will be obliged to make their supply chains more transparent. This certification process poses a problem for producers. Most natural rubber is produced in Asia. The supply chains from rubber farmers through various intermediaries to Europe have, however, been largely nontransparent to date. Companies are therefore exploring alternative materials and methods.   Tire manufacturer Pirelli, for example, is working with sustainable producers in Thailand. Michelin is testing high-tech tires to increase the service life of its products. And Continental, in cooperation with a leading German research institute, is looking into a raw material that could act as a substitute: the Russian dandelion. If cultivated on a large scale in Europe, it could help offset the demand for natural rubber. In addition, discarded old tires could be retreaded, recycled, and put back on the market - instead of ending up on a landfill site. Is the industry having a genuine change of heart, or are these merely examples of greenwashing?
22/0510h00>10h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0510h30>11h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaTech and Tradition: The future of farmingengFarmers feed the world. But from Europe to India, farmers are burdened by high costs, low prices, and climate change. Technologies like an AI crop-doctor app and drones can help. But there’s a wellspring of anger among farmers worldwide. Why is that?
22/0511h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0511h15>12h00 (0x00) ?engThe Renewable RevolutionPioneering the Energy TransitionengThe documentary explores the question of what needs to happen in terms of politics, policies, and society to implement what is technically possible, when it comes to renewable energy. To do this, the film visits two completely different places. One is in the US and the other, in Bavaria. These localities have two things in common: Both have completely converted their energy supply to renewables and as a result, both now have more money in their coffers today than before.  The documentary provides a global overview of the solutions that already exist for a worldwide energy transition. And it asks what challenges still need to be overcome -- not only in the laboratories and power plants, but also among the movers and shakers who must drive the change today.
22/0512h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engClose upHow Car Tires Drive DeforestationengThe rules are designed to ensure due diligence and corporate accountability. Once the law takes effect, manufacturers in the EU will need to show their tires do not contain natural rubber from deforested land. The likes of Continental and Michelin will be obliged to make their supply chains more transparent. This certification process poses a problem for producers. Most natural rubber is produced in Asia. The supply chains from rubber farmers through various intermediaries to Europe have, however, been largely nontransparent to date. Companies are therefore exploring alternative materials and methods.   Tire manufacturer Pirelli, for example, is working with sustainable producers in Thailand. Michelin is testing high-tech tires to increase the service life of its products. And Continental, in cooperation with a leading German research institute, is looking into a raw material that could act as a substitute: the Russian dandelion. If cultivated on a large scale in Europe, it could help offset the demand for natural rubber. In addition, discarded old tires could be retreaded, recycled, and put back on the market - instead of ending up on a landfill site. Is the industry having a genuine change of heart, or are these merely examples of greenwashing?
22/0513h00>13h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0513h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyYesterday’s technology, tomorrow’s progressengAn energy revolution is underway in the Arctic. Russia returns to old Soviet times; pneumatic tube transport celebrates a comeback with high-tech; a smart, light and affordable MRI for the global market. And how popular are e-bikes worldwide?
22/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0514h15>15h00 (0x00) ?engTransactionsMoney for Mother, in Zimbabweeng"Transactions" tells the story of migration in Zimbabwe through the eyes of one family whose members have been separated by the failed economy. Frank, who lives in Cape Town, and Miles and Portia, who work in Britain, support their family back home through regular remittances.. At the same time, they yearn for their homeland. A fourth sister, Chrysthle, still lives in Zimbabwe and is unable to offer the family any financial help, despite her full-time job. Their mother, Mamilo, is the central point of contact for everyone in the extended family in Zimbabwe. Anyone who needs money comes to her, full of hope. But with every loan, tensions rise. Frank wants to help, but he resents it when his mother uses the money for things he doesn't agree with.  After the Covid-19 pandemic leads to hard lockdowns in South Africa and Zimbabwe, life becomes increasingly difficult. Mamilo urges her youngest daughter Chrysthle to follow in the steps of her siblings and leave Zimbabwe.  This intimate film documents the situation faced by Frank and his family. How much are they prepared to sacrifice to provide for their family?
22/0515h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0515h15>15h30 (0x00) ?engHER Women in AsiaengFatima Ali Haider, a doctor from Pakistan, lost her husband and son in a terror attack in 2013. Her personal experience of the tragedy made her aware of those suffering in similar situations. She co-founded an initiative called ‘The Grief Directory’. It aims to be a bridge of compassion between victims of terrorism in Pakistan in need of support and those willing to give it. Radhika Dalvie in India suffered unimaginable grief when she lost her son in a traffic accident shortly before his 18th birthday. But instead of giving up hope, she managed to channel her love for her son into creating a small orphanage. Now, Radhika Dalvie has rescued more than/over 100 children. And they all call her ‘Ma’. Alyssa Reinoso of Singapore was widowed shortly after her wedding. Her husband committed suicide. He suffered from bipolar II disorder, and she was the only one who knew of his struggle. People are ashamed to talk about mental health. She founded Calm Collective Asia to encourage conversations on mental health and to facilitate healing and stop stigmatization.
22/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengCutting the climate footprint of bricks in Uganda. Building greener wind turbines in Sweden. Saving the Baltic Sea’s dead zones. Using the sun to end food waste in Lagos. And growing hope in Niger with wild plants.
22/0516h00>16h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0516h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyYesterday’s technology, tomorrow’s progressengAn energy revolution is underway in the Arctic. Russia returns to old Soviet times; pneumatic tube transport celebrates a comeback with high-tech; a smart, light and affordable MRI for the global market. And how popular are e-bikes worldwide?
22/0517h00>17h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0517h15>18h00 (0x00) ?engThe Renewable RevolutionPioneering the Energy TransitionengThe documentary explores the question of what needs to happen in terms of politics, policies, and society to implement what is technically possible, when it comes to renewable energy. To do this, the film visits two completely different places. One is in the US and the other, in Bavaria. These localities have two things in common: Both have completely converted their energy supply to renewables and as a result, both now have more money in their coffers today than before.  The documentary provides a global overview of the solutions that already exist for a worldwide energy transition. And it asks what challenges still need to be overcome -- not only in the laboratories and power plants, but also among the movers and shakers who must drive the change today.
22/0518h00>18h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaTech and Tradition: The future of farmingengFarmers feed the world. But from Europe to India, farmers are burdened by high costs, low prices, and climate change. Technologies like an AI crop-doctor app and drones can help. But there’s a wellspring of anger among farmers worldwide. Why is that?
22/0519h00>19h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0519h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engAt the Ready with NATOSoldiers from Thuringia Secure Eastern Flankeng"The squad can fight any opponent. But I hope it’ll never have to do that.” This is how the commander of the 10th Armored Division of the Bundeswehr, Major General Ruprecht von Butler, assessed the performance of the Thuringian armored unit after inspecting their exercises on Lüneburg Heath.  The armored battalion 393 from Bad Frankenhausen carried out a combat shooting exercise over several days, here. They used 30 modern Leopard 2 main battle tanks, supported by 14 Puma infantry fighting vehicles from a Bavarian battalion. The General’s praise was aimed at the core fighting force of NATO’s Very High Readiness Joint Task Force (VJTF). This must be ready for fast deployment: They have two to seven days to be ready to counter a potential aggressor anywhere in the Alliance’s territory. The task force numbers some 10,000 soldiers from eight NATO states - among them many from Thuringia and Saxony.  The film observes the task force during their training exercises in Germany. The film also records a NATO maneuver in May 2023, on the Italian island of Sardinia. But attention is being drawn to eastern Europe . That region is the focus for NATO strategists. This is due to Russia’s war in Ukraine, a conflict that’s now been going on for more than two years. Here on the eastern flank - NATO’s official name for the region - armored infantry from Bad Salzungen in Thuringia have been deployed since mid-2023. They’re part of NATO’s Enhanced Forward Presence or EFP battlegroup responsible for defending the Baltic country of Lithuania.
22/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0520h15>21h00 (0x00) ?engBirdsAdapting to a Changing WorldengTheir flying skills, their endurance and their adaptability have always fascinated mankind - birds are astonishing survivalists. New research is giving us thrilling insights into the world of these feathered sky-dwellers. How do they manage to soar kilometers up into the air? How do they cope with those long-haul flights over continents and oceans? And what about the complexity of their sex lives, not to mention their intelligence?  The film explores some of the latest findings about birds by leading scientists. Exciting facts are revealed with the help of modern technology. But the research also sheds light on a darker aspect: many species of birds are threatened with extinction, not least due to urban development.
22/0521h00>21h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0521h15>21h30 (0x00) ?engHER Women in AsiaengFatima Ali Haider, a doctor from Pakistan, lost her husband and son in a terror attack in 2013. Her personal experience of the tragedy made her aware of those suffering in similar situations. She co-founded an initiative called ‘The Grief Directory’. It aims to be a bridge of compassion between victims of terrorism in Pakistan in need of support and those willing to give it. Radhika Dalvie in India suffered unimaginable grief when she lost her son in a traffic accident shortly before his 18th birthday. But instead of giving up hope, she managed to channel her love for her son into creating a small orphanage. Now, Radhika Dalvie has rescued more than/over 100 children. And they all call her ‘Ma’. Alyssa Reinoso of Singapore was widowed shortly after her wedding. Her husband committed suicide. He suffered from bipolar II disorder, and she was the only one who knew of his struggle. People are ashamed to talk about mental health. She founded Calm Collective Asia to encourage conversations on mental health and to facilitate healing and stop stigmatization.
22/0521h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiatorengTim Sebastian interviews Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiator.
22/0522h00>22h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0522h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
22/0523h00>23h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0523h15>00h00 (0x00) ?engThe Renewable RevolutionPioneering the Energy TransitionengThe documentary explores the question of what needs to happen in terms of politics, policies, and society to implement what is technically possible, when it comes to renewable energy. To do this, the film visits two completely different places. One is in the US and the other, in Bavaria. These localities have two things in common: Both have completely converted their energy supply to renewables and as a result, both now have more money in their coffers today than before.  The documentary provides a global overview of the solutions that already exist for a worldwide energy transition. And it asks what challenges still need to be overcome -- not only in the laboratories and power plants, but also among the movers and shakers who must drive the change today.
22/0500h00>00h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0500h02>00h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
22/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyYesterday’s technology, tomorrow’s progressengAn energy revolution is underway in the Arctic. Russia returns to old Soviet times; pneumatic tube transport celebrates a comeback with high-tech; a smart, light and affordable MRI for the global market. And how popular are e-bikes worldwide?
22/0501h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
22/0501h15>01h30 (0x00) ?engHER Women in AsiaengFatima Ali Haider, a doctor from Pakistan, lost her husband and son in a terror attack in 2013. Her personal experience of the tragedy made her aware of those suffering in similar situations. She co-founded an initiative called ‘The Grief Directory’. It aims to be a bridge of compassion between victims of terrorism in Pakistan in need of support and those willing to give it. Radhika Dalvie in India suffered unimaginable grief when she lost her son in a traffic accident shortly before his 18th birthday. But instead of giving up hope, she managed to channel her love for her son into creating a small orphanage. Now, Radhika Dalvie has rescued more than/over 100 children. And they all call her ‘Ma’. Alyssa Reinoso of Singapore was widowed shortly after her wedding. Her husband committed suicide. He suffered from bipolar II disorder, and she was the only one who knew of his struggle. People are ashamed to talk about mental health. She founded Calm Collective Asia to encourage conversations on mental health and to facilitate healing and stop stigmatization.
22/0501h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengRight-wing populists could make strong gains in the European elections at the beginning of June.
23/0502h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0502h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
23/0502h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiatorengTim Sebastian interviews Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiator.
23/0503h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0503h15>04h00 (0x00) ?engHow Do We Want to Die?engMost people want to die at home. But only very few manage to fall asleep peacefully with their family. Take Ingrid L., who’d been in a coma for three months following a cardiac arrest and was on a ventilator. Her husband was desperately fighting for the doctors to follow her living will and let her die. "It's a horror! She never wanted to live hooked up to machines for months on end, like that," he said.   Modern medicine is making it possible to keep people alive for longer and longer. However, hospitals can also earn a lot of money by treating the seriously ill, especially in intensive care units. Intensive care physician Uwe Janssens believes that, when it comes to death and dying, economics often play a key role. People die almost every day in Janssens' intensive care unit at St. Antonius Hospital in Eschweiler. More and more elderly patients are on ventilators for an indefinite period of time. Doctors, nurses and the hospital's chaplain meet regularly to discuss ethics: Should a critically ill patient be assisted in dying, or kept alive artificially? What is the aim of therapy? What is the patient's will? What is medically feasible, what makes sense? Even for doctors, decisions at the end of a patient's life are never easy.  The film touches on a taboo in Western society. How can people be protected from artificially extended morbid illness, yet still receive the medical help they need and want?
23/0504h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0504h02>04h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
23/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyYesterday’s technology, tomorrow’s progressengAn energy revolution is underway in the Arctic. Russia returns to old Soviet times; pneumatic tube transport celebrates a comeback with high-tech; a smart, light and affordable MRI for the global market. And how popular are e-bikes worldwide?
23/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0505h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engHER Women in AsiaengFatima Ali Haider, a doctor from Pakistan, lost her husband and son in a terror attack in 2013. Her personal experience of the tragedy made her aware of those suffering in similar situations. She co-founded an initiative called ‘The Grief Directory’. It aims to be a bridge of compassion between victims of terrorism in Pakistan in need of support and those willing to give it. Radhika Dalvie in India suffered unimaginable grief when she lost her son in a traffic accident shortly before his 18th birthday. But instead of giving up hope, she managed to channel her love for her son into creating a small orphanage. Now, Radhika Dalvie has rescued more than/over 100 children. And they all call her ‘Ma’. Alyssa Reinoso of Singapore was widowed shortly after her wedding. Her husband committed suicide. He suffered from bipolar II disorder, and she was the only one who knew of his struggle. People are ashamed to talk about mental health. She founded Calm Collective Asia to encourage conversations on mental health and to facilitate healing and stop stigmatization.
23/0505h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiatorengTim Sebastian interviews Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiator.
23/0506h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0506h15>07h00 (0x00) ?engHow Do We Want to Die?engMost people want to die at home. But only very few manage to fall asleep peacefully with their family. Take Ingrid L., who’d been in a coma for three months following a cardiac arrest and was on a ventilator. Her husband was desperately fighting for the doctors to follow her living will and let her die. "It's a horror! She never wanted to live hooked up to machines for months on end, like that," he said.   Modern medicine is making it possible to keep people alive for longer and longer. However, hospitals can also earn a lot of money by treating the seriously ill, especially in intensive care units. Intensive care physician Uwe Janssens believes that, when it comes to death and dying, economics often play a key role. People die almost every day in Janssens' intensive care unit at St. Antonius Hospital in Eschweiler. More and more elderly patients are on ventilators for an indefinite period of time. Doctors, nurses and the hospital's chaplain meet regularly to discuss ethics: Should a critically ill patient be assisted in dying, or kept alive artificially? What is the aim of therapy? What is the patient's will? What is medically feasible, what makes sense? Even for doctors, decisions at the end of a patient's life are never easy.  The film touches on a taboo in Western society. How can people be protected from artificially extended morbid illness, yet still receive the medical help they need and want?
23/0507h00>07h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0507h02>07h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
23/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengRight-wing populists could make strong gains in the European elections at the beginning of June.
23/0508h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0508h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engHER Women in AsiaengFatima Ali Haider, a doctor from Pakistan, lost her husband and son in a terror attack in 2013. Her personal experience of the tragedy made her aware of those suffering in similar situations. She co-founded an initiative called ‘The Grief Directory’. It aims to be a bridge of compassion between victims of terrorism in Pakistan in need of support and those willing to give it. Radhika Dalvie in India suffered unimaginable grief when she lost her son in a traffic accident shortly before his 18th birthday. But instead of giving up hope, she managed to channel her love for her son into creating a small orphanage. Now, Radhika Dalvie has rescued more than/over 100 children. And they all call her ‘Ma’. Alyssa Reinoso of Singapore was widowed shortly after her wedding. Her husband committed suicide. He suffered from bipolar II disorder, and she was the only one who knew of his struggle. People are ashamed to talk about mental health. She founded Calm Collective Asia to encourage conversations on mental health and to facilitate healing and stop stigmatization.
23/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyYesterday’s technology, tomorrow’s progressengAn energy revolution is underway in the Arctic. Russia returns to old Soviet times; pneumatic tube transport celebrates a comeback with high-tech; a smart, light and affordable MRI for the global market. And how popular are e-bikes worldwide?
23/0509h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0509h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengRight-wing populists could make strong gains in the European elections at the beginning of June.
23/0510h00>10h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0510h30>11h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiatorengTim Sebastian interviews Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiator.
23/0511h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0511h15>12h00 (0x00) ?engBirdsAdapting to a Changing WorldengTheir flying skills, their endurance and their adaptability have always fascinated mankind - birds are astonishing survivalists. New research is giving us thrilling insights into the world of these feathered sky-dwellers. How do they manage to soar kilometers up into the air? How do they cope with those long-haul flights over continents and oceans? And what about the complexity of their sex lives, not to mention their intelligence?  The film explores some of the latest findings about birds by leading scientists. Exciting facts are revealed with the help of modern technology. But the research also sheds light on a darker aspect: many species of birds are threatened with extinction, not least due to urban development.
23/0512h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaTech and Tradition: The future of farmingengFarmers feed the world. But from Europe to India, farmers are burdened by high costs, low prices, and climate change. Technologies like an AI crop-doctor app and drones can help. But there’s a wellspring of anger among farmers worldwide. Why is that?
23/0513h00>13h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0513h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengRight-wing populists could make strong gains in the European elections at the beginning of June.
23/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0514h15>15h00 (0x00) ?engThe Renewable RevolutionPioneering the Energy TransitionengThe documentary explores the question of what needs to happen in terms of politics, policies, and society to implement what is technically possible, when it comes to renewable energy. To do this, the film visits two completely different places. One is in the US and the other, in Bavaria. These localities have two things in common: Both have completely converted their energy supply to renewables and as a result, both now have more money in their coffers today than before.  The documentary provides a global overview of the solutions that already exist for a worldwide energy transition. And it asks what challenges still need to be overcome -- not only in the laboratories and power plants, but also among the movers and shakers who must drive the change today.
23/0515h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0515h15>15h30 (0x00) ?engMapped Outeng
23/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiatorengTim Sebastian interviews Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiator.
23/0516h00>16h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0516h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengRight-wing populists could make strong gains in the European elections at the beginning of June.
23/0517h00>17h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0517h15>18h00 (0x00) ?engBirdsAdapting to a Changing WorldengTheir flying skills, their endurance and their adaptability have always fascinated mankind - birds are astonishing survivalists. New research is giving us thrilling insights into the world of these feathered sky-dwellers. How do they manage to soar kilometers up into the air? How do they cope with those long-haul flights over continents and oceans? And what about the complexity of their sex lives, not to mention their intelligence?  The film explores some of the latest findings about birds by leading scientists. Exciting facts are revealed with the help of modern technology. But the research also sheds light on a darker aspect: many species of birds are threatened with extinction, not least due to urban development.
23/0518h00>18h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiatorengTim Sebastian interviews Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiator.
23/0519h00>19h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0519h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
23/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0520h15>21h00 (0x00) ?engHow Do We Want to Die?engMost people want to die at home. But only very few manage to fall asleep peacefully with their family. Take Ingrid L., who’d been in a coma for three months following a cardiac arrest and was on a ventilator. Her husband was desperately fighting for the doctors to follow her living will and let her die. "It's a horror! She never wanted to live hooked up to machines for months on end, like that," he said.   Modern medicine is making it possible to keep people alive for longer and longer. However, hospitals can also earn a lot of money by treating the seriously ill, especially in intensive care units. Intensive care physician Uwe Janssens believes that, when it comes to death and dying, economics often play a key role. People die almost every day in Janssens' intensive care unit at St. Antonius Hospital in Eschweiler. More and more elderly patients are on ventilators for an indefinite period of time. Doctors, nurses and the hospital's chaplain meet regularly to discuss ethics: Should a critically ill patient be assisted in dying, or kept alive artificially? What is the aim of therapy? What is the patient's will? What is medically feasible, what makes sense? Even for doctors, decisions at the end of a patient's life are never easy.  The film touches on a taboo in Western society. How can people be protected from artificially extended morbid illness, yet still receive the medical help they need and want?
23/0521h00>21h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0521h15>21h30 (0x00) ?engMapped Outeng
23/0521h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
23/0522h00>22h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0522h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
23/0523h00>23h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0523h15>00h00 (0x00) ?engBirdsAdapting to a Changing WorldengTheir flying skills, their endurance and their adaptability have always fascinated mankind - birds are astonishing survivalists. New research is giving us thrilling insights into the world of these feathered sky-dwellers. How do they manage to soar kilometers up into the air? How do they cope with those long-haul flights over continents and oceans? And what about the complexity of their sex lives, not to mention their intelligence?  The film explores some of the latest findings about birds by leading scientists. Exciting facts are revealed with the help of modern technology. But the research also sheds light on a darker aspect: many species of birds are threatened with extinction, not least due to urban development.
23/0500h00>00h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0500h02>00h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
23/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
23/0501h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
23/0501h15>01h30 (0x00) ?engMapped Outeng
23/0501h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiatorengTim Sebastian interviews Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiator.
24/0502h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0502h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
24/0502h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
24/0503h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0503h15>04h00 (0x00) ?engUmojaWhere Women RuleengMen have no access to Umoja. The village, which is located in Samburu County, is an oasis for women. Umoja means "connectedness" in Swahili; most of the 50 or so women living here are experiencing this feeling for the first time in their lives. They founded their village because they were abused by men. They fled from forced marriage or genital mutilation. They no longer wanted to accept that being a woman among the Samburu means having no choice.   Because here, the man rules over the family. He owns the land, he eats first, he is allowed to marry several women and beat them. Rebecca Lolosoli was fed up with all this. She founded Umoja in 1990 with Jane Leng'ope. At the time, the two did not know whether they would survive on their own. Today, the village is a functioning cooperative. The women's pride and joy is the Umoja school. Their greatest hope is the next generation: the children learn about their rights and that respect and solidarity are the most valuable social assets. Every year, Umoja also enables a handful of girls from outside the village to attend school. It's a barter deal: the child receives free lessons and food. In return, the father undertakes not to marry his daughter off early or to circumcise her. Both are officially forbidden in Kenya but are still practiced among the Samburu. Six-year-old Samella is to get the last spot in the school. But will her father agree to the conditions?
24/0504h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0504h02>04h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
24/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengRight-wing populists could make strong gains in the European elections at the beginning of June.
24/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0505h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engMapped Outeng
24/0505h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engFlipping the Scripteng
24/0506h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0506h15>07h00 (0x00) ?engUmojaWhere Women RuleengMen have no access to Umoja. The village, which is located in Samburu County, is an oasis for women. Umoja means "connectedness" in Swahili; most of the 50 or so women living here are experiencing this feeling for the first time in their lives. They founded their village because they were abused by men. They fled from forced marriage or genital mutilation. They no longer wanted to accept that being a woman among the Samburu means having no choice.   Because here, the man rules over the family. He owns the land, he eats first, he is allowed to marry several women and beat them. Rebecca Lolosoli was fed up with all this. She founded Umoja in 1990 with Jane Leng'ope. At the time, the two did not know whether they would survive on their own. Today, the village is a functioning cooperative. The women's pride and joy is the Umoja school. Their greatest hope is the next generation: the children learn about their rights and that respect and solidarity are the most valuable social assets. Every year, Umoja also enables a handful of girls from outside the village to attend school. It's a barter deal: the child receives free lessons and food. In return, the father undertakes not to marry his daughter off early or to circumcise her. Both are officially forbidden in Kenya but are still practiced among the Samburu. Six-year-old Samella is to get the last spot in the school. But will her father agree to the conditions?
24/0507h00>07h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0507h02>07h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
24/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
24/0508h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0508h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engMapped Outeng
24/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engConflict ZoneGuest: Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiatorengTim Sebastian interviews Dennis Ross, former US Middle East peace negotiator.
24/0509h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0509h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
24/0510h00>10h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0510h30>11h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
24/0511h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0511h15>12h00 (0x00) ?engHow Do We Want to Die?engMost people want to die at home. But only very few manage to fall asleep peacefully with their family. Take Ingrid L., who’d been in a coma for three months following a cardiac arrest and was on a ventilator. Her husband was desperately fighting for the doctors to follow her living will and let her die. "It's a horror! She never wanted to live hooked up to machines for months on end, like that," he said.   Modern medicine is making it possible to keep people alive for longer and longer. However, hospitals can also earn a lot of money by treating the seriously ill, especially in intensive care units. Intensive care physician Uwe Janssens believes that, when it comes to death and dying, economics often play a key role. People die almost every day in Janssens' intensive care unit at St. Antonius Hospital in Eschweiler. More and more elderly patients are on ventilators for an indefinite period of time. Doctors, nurses and the hospital's chaplain meet regularly to discuss ethics: Should a critically ill patient be assisted in dying, or kept alive artificially? What is the aim of therapy? What is the patient's will? What is medically feasible, what makes sense? Even for doctors, decisions at the end of a patient's life are never easy.  The film touches on a taboo in Western society. How can people be protected from artificially extended morbid illness, yet still receive the medical help they need and want?
24/0512h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engFlipping the Scripteng
24/0513h00>13h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0513h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
24/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0514h15>15h00 (0x00) ?engBirdsAdapting to a Changing WorldengTheir flying skills, their endurance and their adaptability have always fascinated mankind - birds are astonishing survivalists. New research is giving us thrilling insights into the world of these feathered sky-dwellers. How do they manage to soar kilometers up into the air? How do they cope with those long-haul flights over continents and oceans? And what about the complexity of their sex lives, not to mention their intelligence?  The film explores some of the latest findings about birds by leading scientists. Exciting facts are revealed with the help of modern technology. But the research also sheds light on a darker aspect: many species of birds are threatened with extinction, not least due to urban development.
24/0515h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0515h15>15h30 (0x00) ?engREVeng
24/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeThe Health Showeng
24/0516h00>16h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
24/0516h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaHow can we build sustainably?engAs the climate changes and architecture is having to rethink form and function, eco-friendly building practices that have been used for centuries in India are proving inspirational.
25/0508h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0508h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engREVeng
25/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengEuropean carmakers are thinking of cooperating with their competitors to address the challenge of affordable e-mobility. And Paris is undertaking bold initiatives to make the city friendlier to pedestrians and cyclists.
25/0509h00>09h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0509h15>09h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
25/0509h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengVegan egg substitutes that look and taste almost like the real thing. Renewable fuels based on biowaste. How farmland soils can absorb and store carbon dioxide. The tricky business of recycling solar panels. And: What is plasma, and how is it made?
25/0510h00>10h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0510h15>11h00 (0x00) ?engThe Renewable RevolutionPioneering the Energy TransitionengThe documentary explores the question of what needs to happen in terms of politics, policies, and society to implement what is technically possible, when it comes to renewable energy. To do this, the film visits two completely different places. One is in the US and the other, in Bavaria. These localities have two things in common: Both have completely converted their energy supply to renewables and as a result, both now have more money in their coffers today than before.  The documentary provides a global overview of the solutions that already exist for a worldwide energy transition. And it asks what challenges still need to be overcome -- not only in the laboratories and power plants, but also among the movers and shakers who must drive the change today.
25/0511h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0511h15>11h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
25/0511h30>12h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeThe Health Showeng
25/0512h00>12h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0512h15>12h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
25/0512h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engMusic under the SwastikaThe Maestro and the Cellist of AuschwitzengThe film centers around two people who represent musical culture during the Third Reich - albeit in very different ways. Wilhelm Furtwängler was a star conductor; Anita Lasker-Wallfisch, the cellist of the infamous Women’s Orchestra of Auschwitz. Both shared a love for the classical German music. The world-famous conductor made a pact with Hitler and his henchmen. The young woman, brought to Auschwitz for being Jewish, was spared death for her musical talent. While Furtwängler decided to stay in Germany and make a deal with the devil, Lasker-Wallfisch struggled to survive the brutality of the death camp, with a cello as her only defense. Why did gifted artists like Furtwängler make a pact with evil? Why was classical music played in extermination camps? And how did this change the way victims saw music? German music was used to justify the powerful position the Third Reich claimed in the world, and to distract listeners from Nazi crimes. In addition to Beethoven, Bach and Brucker, Richard Wagner was highly valued, because he was Hitler’s personal favorite. Hitler understood the power of music, and his chief propagandist Joseph Goebbels was in charge of music in the Nazi-controlled state. This music documentary by Christian Berger features interviews with musicians like Daniel Barenboim and Christian Thielemann; the children of Wilhelm Furtwängler; and of course 97-year-old survivor Anita Lasker-Wallfisch. Her memories are chilling. Archive film footage, restored and colorized, brings the story to life, and bears witness to an agonizing chapter in history.
25/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0514h15>14h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
25/0514h30>15h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
25/0515h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0515h15>16h00 (0x00) ?engUmojaWhere Women RuleengMen have no access to Umoja. The village, which is located in Samburu County, is an oasis for women. Umoja means "connectedness" in Swahili; most of the 50 or so women living here are experiencing this feeling for the first time in their lives. They founded their village because they were abused by men. They fled from forced marriage or genital mutilation. They no longer wanted to accept that being a woman among the Samburu means having no choice.   Because here, the man rules over the family. He owns the land, he eats first, he is allowed to marry several women and beat them. Rebecca Lolosoli was fed up with all this. She founded Umoja in 1990 with Jane Leng'ope. At the time, the two did not know whether they would survive on their own. Today, the village is a functioning cooperative. The women's pride and joy is the Umoja school. Their greatest hope is the next generation: the children learn about their rights and that respect and solidarity are the most valuable social assets. Every year, Umoja also enables a handful of girls from outside the village to attend school. It's a barter deal: the child receives free lessons and food. In return, the father undertakes not to marry his daughter off early or to circumcise her. Both are officially forbidden in Kenya but are still practiced among the Samburu. Six-year-old Samella is to get the last spot in the school. But will her father agree to the conditions?
25/0516h00>16h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0516h15>16h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
25/0516h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's YouthengThe 77 Percent is in South Africa to take the pulse of the country as it prepares for this year’s elections. We ask young people what they expect of their next leader. In our street debate, Edith Kimani finds out how corruption scandals, inequality, and injustice have impacted confidence in South Africa’s democracy. Later we meet an artist who shows us his home city of Soweto.
25/0517h00>17h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0517h15>17h30 (0x00) ?engUnseenengSometimes it seems like a bad dream: floods, air pollution, traffic jams. Sometimes it feels like we’re surrounded by eco-monsters. But they can be defeated. YouTuber Alex Lin presents state-of-the-art devices. Arthur Zhang builds machines for upcycling plastics. And Japanese researchers are even working on mirrors in space.
25/0517h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
25/0518h00>18h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0518h15>18h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
25/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
25/0519h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0519h15>19h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
25/0519h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's YouthengThe 77 Percent is in South Africa to take the pulse of the country as it prepares for this year’s elections. We ask young people what they expect of their next leader. In our street debate, Edith Kimani finds out how corruption scandals, inequality, and injustice have impacted confidence in South Africa’s democracy. Later we meet an artist who shows us his home city of Soweto.
25/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0520h15>20h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
25/0520h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
25/0521h00>21h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0521h15>22h00 (0x00) ?engHow Do We Want to Die?engMost people want to die at home. But only very few manage to fall asleep peacefully with their family. Take Ingrid L., who’d been in a coma for three months following a cardiac arrest and was on a ventilator. Her husband was desperately fighting for the doctors to follow her living will and let her die. "It's a horror! She never wanted to live hooked up to machines for months on end, like that," he said.   Modern medicine is making it possible to keep people alive for longer and longer. However, hospitals can also earn a lot of money by treating the seriously ill, especially in intensive care units. Intensive care physician Uwe Janssens believes that, when it comes to death and dying, economics often play a key role. People die almost every day in Janssens' intensive care unit at St. Antonius Hospital in Eschweiler. More and more elderly patients are on ventilators for an indefinite period of time. Doctors, nurses and the hospital's chaplain meet regularly to discuss ethics: Should a critically ill patient be assisted in dying, or kept alive artificially? What is the aim of therapy? What is the patient's will? What is medically feasible, what makes sense? Even for doctors, decisions at the end of a patient's life are never easy.  The film touches on a taboo in Western society. How can people be protected from artificially extended morbid illness, yet still receive the medical help they need and want?
25/0522h00>22h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0522h15>22h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
25/0522h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engAfrimaxxModern African LifestyleengIn this episode, the fabulous Miss Grande is welcoming you from the Zomba City Festival in Malawi. Plus, the secret of Ghanaian fufu, what pain has to do with black inclusion and how to change slum life with a board.
25/0523h00>23h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0523h15>23h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
25/0523h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engMusic under the SwastikaThe Maestro and the Cellist of AuschwitzengThe film centers around two people who represent musical culture during the Third Reich - albeit in very different ways. Wilhelm Furtwängler was a star conductor; Anita Lasker-Wallfisch, the cellist of the infamous Women’s Orchestra of Auschwitz. Both shared a love for the classical German music. The world-famous conductor made a pact with Hitler and his henchmen. The young woman, brought to Auschwitz for being Jewish, was spared death for her musical talent. While Furtwängler decided to stay in Germany and make a deal with the devil, Lasker-Wallfisch struggled to survive the brutality of the death camp, with a cello as her only defense. Why did gifted artists like Furtwängler make a pact with evil? Why was classical music played in extermination camps? And how did this change the way victims saw music? German music was used to justify the powerful position the Third Reich claimed in the world, and to distract listeners from Nazi crimes. In addition to Beethoven, Bach and Brucker, Richard Wagner was highly valued, because he was Hitler’s personal favorite. Hitler understood the power of music, and his chief propagandist Joseph Goebbels was in charge of music in the Nazi-controlled state. This music documentary by Christian Berger features interviews with musicians like Daniel Barenboim and Christian Thielemann; the children of Wilhelm Furtwängler; and of course 97-year-old survivor Anita Lasker-Wallfisch. Her memories are chilling. Archive film footage, restored and colorized, brings the story to life, and bears witness to an agonizing chapter in history.
25/0501h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
25/0501h15>01h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
25/0501h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengVegan egg substitutes that look and taste almost like the real thing. Renewable fuels based on biowaste. How farmland soils can absorb and store carbon dioxide. The tricky business of recycling solar panels. And: What is plasma, and how is it made?
26/0502h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0502h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engFrom Gray to GreenBuilding a Better Urban ClimateengThai landscape architect Kotchakorn Voraarkhom demonstrates how this can be achieved. Her home city of Bangkok is suffering greatly from climate change. For years, the metropolitan region with around 15 million inhabitants has been threatened by heavy rainfall and flooding.   The risk of more flooding is constantly increasing: The megacity, located just above sea level, is sinking every year. To counteract this, Kotchakorn Voraarkhom is focusing on sustainable architecture and trying to bring nature back into the concrete jungle. Her approach is groundbreaking and has set an example for other regions.   Georg Hofer, a pioneer of natural building materials, hails from Lower Bavaria. In times of climate change, he has turned to a centuries-old building material: clay. The list of clay‘s positive properties is long. Clay requires little energy to produce, produces hardly any CO2 and is free of pollutants. Used as a building material, clay can also regulate the temperature. In extreme heat, clay houses stay cool, while in winter clay houses benefit from a robust heat storage capacity.
26/0502h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeThe Health Showeng
26/0503h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0503h15>03h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
26/0503h30>04h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
26/0504h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0504h02>04h15 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
26/0504h15>05h00 (0x00) ?engHow Do We Want to Die?engMost people want to die at home. But only very few manage to fall asleep peacefully with their family. Take Ingrid L., who’d been in a coma for three months following a cardiac arrest and was on a ventilator. Her husband was desperately fighting for the doctors to follow her living will and let her die. "It's a horror! She never wanted to live hooked up to machines for months on end, like that," he said.   Modern medicine is making it possible to keep people alive for longer and longer. However, hospitals can also earn a lot of money by treating the seriously ill, especially in intensive care units. Intensive care physician Uwe Janssens believes that, when it comes to death and dying, economics often play a key role. People die almost every day in Janssens' intensive care unit at St. Antonius Hospital in Eschweiler. More and more elderly patients are on ventilators for an indefinite period of time. Doctors, nurses and the hospital's chaplain meet regularly to discuss ethics: Should a critically ill patient be assisted in dying, or kept alive artificially? What is the aim of therapy? What is the patient's will? What is medically feasible, what makes sense? Even for doctors, decisions at the end of a patient's life are never easy.  The film touches on a taboo in Western society. How can people be protected from artificially extended morbid illness, yet still receive the medical help they need and want?
26/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0505h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
26/0505h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engFrom Gray to GreenBuilding a Better Urban ClimateengThai landscape architect Kotchakorn Voraarkhom demonstrates how this can be achieved. Her home city of Bangkok is suffering greatly from climate change. For years, the metropolitan region with around 15 million inhabitants has been threatened by heavy rainfall and flooding.   The risk of more flooding is constantly increasing: The megacity, located just above sea level, is sinking every year. To counteract this, Kotchakorn Voraarkhom is focusing on sustainable architecture and trying to bring nature back into the concrete jungle. Her approach is groundbreaking and has set an example for other regions.   Georg Hofer, a pioneer of natural building materials, hails from Lower Bavaria. In times of climate change, he has turned to a centuries-old building material: clay. The list of clay‘s positive properties is long. Clay requires little energy to produce, produces hardly any CO2 and is free of pollutants. Used as a building material, clay can also regulate the temperature. In extreme heat, clay houses stay cool, while in winter clay houses benefit from a robust heat storage capacity.
26/0506h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0506h15>06h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
26/0506h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engMusic under the SwastikaThe Maestro and the Cellist of AuschwitzengThe film centers around two people who represent musical culture during the Third Reich - albeit in very different ways. Wilhelm Furtwängler was a star conductor; Anita Lasker-Wallfisch, the cellist of the infamous Women’s Orchestra of Auschwitz. Both shared a love for the classical German music. The world-famous conductor made a pact with Hitler and his henchmen. The young woman, brought to Auschwitz for being Jewish, was spared death for her musical talent. While Furtwängler decided to stay in Germany and make a deal with the devil, Lasker-Wallfisch struggled to survive the brutality of the death camp, with a cello as her only defense. Why did gifted artists like Furtwängler make a pact with evil? Why was classical music played in extermination camps? And how did this change the way victims saw music? German music was used to justify the powerful position the Third Reich claimed in the world, and to distract listeners from Nazi crimes. In addition to Beethoven, Bach and Brucker, Richard Wagner was highly valued, because he was Hitler’s personal favorite. Hitler understood the power of music, and his chief propagandist Joseph Goebbels was in charge of music in the Nazi-controlled state. This music documentary by Christian Berger features interviews with musicians like Daniel Barenboim and Christian Thielemann; the children of Wilhelm Furtwängler; and of course 97-year-old survivor Anita Lasker-Wallfisch. Her memories are chilling. Archive film footage, restored and colorized, brings the story to life, and bears witness to an agonizing chapter in history.
26/0508h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0508h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
26/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
26/0509h00>09h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0509h15>09h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
26/0509h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
26/0510h00>10h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0510h15>11h00 (0x00) ?engBirdsAdapting to a Changing WorldengTheir flying skills, their endurance and their adaptability have always fascinated mankind - birds are astonishing survivalists. New research is giving us thrilling insights into the world of these feathered sky-dwellers. How do they manage to soar kilometers up into the air? How do they cope with those long-haul flights over continents and oceans? And what about the complexity of their sex lives, not to mention their intelligence?  The film explores some of the latest findings about birds by leading scientists. Exciting facts are revealed with the help of modern technology. But the research also sheds light on a darker aspect: many species of birds are threatened with extinction, not least due to urban development.
26/0511h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0511h15>11h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
26/0511h30>12h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's YouthengThe 77 Percent is in South Africa to take the pulse of the country as it prepares for this year’s elections. We ask young people what they expect of their next leader. In our street debate, Edith Kimani finds out how corruption scandals, inequality, and injustice have impacted confidence in South Africa’s democracy. Later we meet an artist who shows us his home city of Soweto.
26/0512h00>12h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0512h15>12h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
26/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengEuropean carmakers are thinking of cooperating with their competitors to address the challenge of affordable e-mobility. And Paris is undertaking bold initiatives to make the city friendlier to pedestrians and cyclists.
26/0513h00>13h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0513h15>13h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
26/0513h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's YouthengThe 77 Percent is in South Africa to take the pulse of the country as it prepares for this year’s elections. We ask young people what they expect of their next leader. In our street debate, Edith Kimani finds out how corruption scandals, inequality, and injustice have impacted confidence in South Africa’s democracy. Later we meet an artist who shows us his home city of Soweto.
26/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0514h15>14h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
26/0514h30>15h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
26/0515h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0515h15>16h00 (0x00) ?engThe Renewable RevolutionPioneering the Energy TransitionengThe documentary explores the question of what needs to happen in terms of politics, policies, and society to implement what is technically possible, when it comes to renewable energy. To do this, the film visits two completely different places. One is in the US and the other, in Bavaria. These localities have two things in common: Both have completely converted their energy supply to renewables and as a result, both now have more money in their coffers today than before.  The documentary provides a global overview of the solutions that already exist for a worldwide energy transition. And it asks what challenges still need to be overcome -- not only in the laboratories and power plants, but also among the movers and shakers who must drive the change today.
26/0516h00>16h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0516h15>16h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
26/0516h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engFrom Gray to GreenBuilding a Better Urban ClimateengThai landscape architect Kotchakorn Voraarkhom demonstrates how this can be achieved. Her home city of Bangkok is suffering greatly from climate change. For years, the metropolitan region with around 15 million inhabitants has been threatened by heavy rainfall and flooding.   The risk of more flooding is constantly increasing: The megacity, located just above sea level, is sinking every year. To counteract this, Kotchakorn Voraarkhom is focusing on sustainable architecture and trying to bring nature back into the concrete jungle. Her approach is groundbreaking and has set an example for other regions.   Georg Hofer, a pioneer of natural building materials, hails from Lower Bavaria. In times of climate change, he has turned to a centuries-old building material: clay. The list of clay‘s positive properties is long. Clay requires little energy to produce, produces hardly any CO2 and is free of pollutants. Used as a building material, clay can also regulate the temperature. In extreme heat, clay houses stay cool, while in winter clay houses benefit from a robust heat storage capacity.
26/0517h00>17h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0517h15>17h30 (0x00) ?engHER Women in AsiaengFatima Ali Haider, a doctor from Pakistan, lost her husband and son in a terror attack in 2013. Her personal experience of the tragedy made her aware of those suffering in similar situations. She co-founded an initiative called ‘The Grief Directory’. It aims to be a bridge of compassion between victims of terrorism in Pakistan in need of support and those willing to give it. Radhika Dalvie in India suffered unimaginable grief when she lost her son in a traffic accident shortly before his 18th birthday. But instead of giving up hope, she managed to channel her love for her son into creating a small orphanage. Now, Radhika Dalvie has rescued more than/over 100 children. And they all call her ‘Ma’. Alyssa Reinoso of Singapore was widowed shortly after her wedding. Her husband committed suicide. He suffered from bipolar II disorder, and she was the only one who knew of his struggle. People are ashamed to talk about mental health. She founded Calm Collective Asia to encourage conversations on mental health and to facilitate healing and stop stigmatization.
26/0517h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
26/0518h00>18h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0518h15>18h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
26/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engAfrimaxxModern African LifestyleengIn this episode, the fabulous Miss Grande is welcoming you from the Zomba City Festival in Malawi. Plus, the secret of Ghanaian fufu, what pain has to do with black inclusion and how to change slum life with a board.
26/0519h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0519h15>19h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
26/0519h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
26/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0520h15>20h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
26/0520h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengEuropean carmakers are thinking of cooperating with their competitors to address the challenge of affordable e-mobility. And Paris is undertaking bold initiatives to make the city friendlier to pedestrians and cyclists.
26/0521h00>21h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0521h15>22h00 (0x00) ?engUmojaWhere Women RuleengMen have no access to Umoja. The village, which is located in Samburu County, is an oasis for women. Umoja means "connectedness" in Swahili; most of the 50 or so women living here are experiencing this feeling for the first time in their lives. They founded their village because they were abused by men. They fled from forced marriage or genital mutilation. They no longer wanted to accept that being a woman among the Samburu means having no choice.   Because here, the man rules over the family. He owns the land, he eats first, he is allowed to marry several women and beat them. Rebecca Lolosoli was fed up with all this. She founded Umoja in 1990 with Jane Leng'ope. At the time, the two did not know whether they would survive on their own. Today, the village is a functioning cooperative. The women's pride and joy is the Umoja school. Their greatest hope is the next generation: the children learn about their rights and that respect and solidarity are the most valuable social assets. Every year, Umoja also enables a handful of girls from outside the village to attend school. It's a barter deal: the child receives free lessons and food. In return, the father undertakes not to marry his daughter off early or to circumcise her. Both are officially forbidden in Kenya but are still practiced among the Samburu. Six-year-old Samella is to get the last spot in the school. But will her father agree to the conditions?
26/0522h00>22h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0522h15>22h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
26/0522h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
26/0523h00>23h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0523h15>23h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
26/0523h30>00h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengVegan egg substitutes that look and taste almost like the real thing. Renewable fuels based on biowaste. How farmland soils can absorb and store carbon dioxide. The tricky business of recycling solar panels. And: What is plasma, and how is it made?
26/0500h00>00h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0500h02>00h30 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
26/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
26/0501h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
26/0501h15>01h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
26/0501h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengEuropean carmakers are thinking of cooperating with their competitors to address the challenge of affordable e-mobility. And Paris is undertaking bold initiatives to make the city friendlier to pedestrians and cyclists.
27/0502h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0502h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
27/0502h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
27/0503h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0503h15>03h45 (0x00) ?engFrom Gray to GreenBuilding a Better Urban ClimateengThai landscape architect Kotchakorn Voraarkhom demonstrates how this can be achieved. Her home city of Bangkok is suffering greatly from climate change. For years, the metropolitan region with around 15 million inhabitants has been threatened by heavy rainfall and flooding.   The risk of more flooding is constantly increasing: The megacity, located just above sea level, is sinking every year. To counteract this, Kotchakorn Voraarkhom is focusing on sustainable architecture and trying to bring nature back into the concrete jungle. Her approach is groundbreaking and has set an example for other regions.   Georg Hofer, a pioneer of natural building materials, hails from Lower Bavaria. In times of climate change, he has turned to a centuries-old building material: clay. The list of clay‘s positive properties is long. Clay requires little energy to produce, produces hardly any CO2 and is free of pollutants. Used as a building material, clay can also regulate the temperature. In extreme heat, clay houses stay cool, while in winter clay houses benefit from a robust heat storage capacity.
27/0503h45>04h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
27/0504h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0504h02>04h30 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaHow can we build sustainably?engAs the climate changes and architecture is having to rethink form and function, eco-friendly building practices that have been used for centuries in India are proving inspirational.
27/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeThe Health Showeng
27/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0505h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeOvercoming Challenges with Sportseng
27/0505h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
27/0506h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0506h15>06h45 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
27/0506h45>07h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
27/0507h00>07h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0507h02>07h30 (0x00) ?engFrom Gray to GreenBuilding a Better Urban ClimateengThai landscape architect Kotchakorn Voraarkhom demonstrates how this can be achieved. Her home city of Bangkok is suffering greatly from climate change. For years, the metropolitan region with around 15 million inhabitants has been threatened by heavy rainfall and flooding.   The risk of more flooding is constantly increasing: The megacity, located just above sea level, is sinking every year. To counteract this, Kotchakorn Voraarkhom is focusing on sustainable architecture and trying to bring nature back into the concrete jungle. Her approach is groundbreaking and has set an example for other regions.   Georg Hofer, a pioneer of natural building materials, hails from Lower Bavaria. In times of climate change, he has turned to a centuries-old building material: clay. The list of clay‘s positive properties is long. Clay requires little energy to produce, produces hardly any CO2 and is free of pollutants. Used as a building material, clay can also regulate the temperature. In extreme heat, clay houses stay cool, while in winter clay houses benefit from a robust heat storage capacity.
27/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengVegan egg substitutes that look and taste almost like the real thing. Renewable fuels based on biowaste. How farmland soils can absorb and store carbon dioxide. The tricky business of recycling solar panels. And: What is plasma, and how is it made?
27/0508h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0508h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
27/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengCôte d'Ivoire’s green jobs boom. Why indoor wheat could be a solution to food security. Tackling pollution in Nairobi with data. And the Congolese artists' collective helping revive depleted forests with the help of repatriated art.
27/0509h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0509h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's YouthengThe 77 Percent is in South Africa to take the pulse of the country as it prepares for this year’s elections. We ask young people what they expect of their next leader. In our street debate, Edith Kimani finds out how corruption scandals, inequality, and injustice have impacted confidence in South Africa’s democracy. Later we meet an artist who shows us his home city of Soweto.
27/0510h00>10h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0510h30>10h45 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
27/0510h45>11h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
27/0511h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0511h15>12h00 (0x00) ?engUmojaWhere Women RuleengMen have no access to Umoja. The village, which is located in Samburu County, is an oasis for women. Umoja means "connectedness" in Swahili; most of the 50 or so women living here are experiencing this feeling for the first time in their lives. They founded their village because they were abused by men. They fled from forced marriage or genital mutilation. They no longer wanted to accept that being a woman among the Samburu means having no choice.   Because here, the man rules over the family. He owns the land, he eats first, he is allowed to marry several women and beat them. Rebecca Lolosoli was fed up with all this. She founded Umoja in 1990 with Jane Leng'ope. At the time, the two did not know whether they would survive on their own. Today, the village is a functioning cooperative. The women's pride and joy is the Umoja school. Their greatest hope is the next generation: the children learn about their rights and that respect and solidarity are the most valuable social assets. Every year, Umoja also enables a handful of girls from outside the village to attend school. It's a barter deal: the child receives free lessons and food. In return, the father undertakes not to marry his daughter off early or to circumcise her. Both are officially forbidden in Kenya but are still practiced among the Samburu. Six-year-old Samella is to get the last spot in the school. But will her father agree to the conditions?
27/0512h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengCôte d'Ivoire’s green jobs boom. Why indoor wheat could be a solution to food security. Tackling pollution in Nairobi with data. And the Congolese artists' collective helping revive depleted forests with the help of repatriated art.
27/0513h00>13h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0513h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
27/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0514h15>15h00 (0x00) ?engHow Do We Want to Die?engMost people want to die at home. But only very few manage to fall asleep peacefully with their family. Take Ingrid L., who’d been in a coma for three months following a cardiac arrest and was on a ventilator. Her husband was desperately fighting for the doctors to follow her living will and let her die. "It's a horror! She never wanted to live hooked up to machines for months on end, like that," he said.   Modern medicine is making it possible to keep people alive for longer and longer. However, hospitals can also earn a lot of money by treating the seriously ill, especially in intensive care units. Intensive care physician Uwe Janssens believes that, when it comes to death and dying, economics often play a key role. People die almost every day in Janssens' intensive care unit at St. Antonius Hospital in Eschweiler. More and more elderly patients are on ventilators for an indefinite period of time. Doctors, nurses and the hospital's chaplain meet regularly to discuss ethics: Should a critically ill patient be assisted in dying, or kept alive artificially? What is the aim of therapy? What is the patient's will? What is medically feasible, what makes sense? Even for doctors, decisions at the end of a patient's life are never easy.  The film touches on a taboo in Western society. How can people be protected from artificially extended morbid illness, yet still receive the medical help they need and want?
27/0515h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0515h15>15h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
27/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's YouthengThe 77 Percent is in South Africa to take the pulse of the country as it prepares for this year’s elections. We ask young people what they expect of their next leader. In our street debate, Edith Kimani finds out how corruption scandals, inequality, and injustice have impacted confidence in South Africa’s democracy. Later we meet an artist who shows us his home city of Soweto.
27/0516h00>16h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0516h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengVegan egg substitutes that look and taste almost like the real thing. Renewable fuels based on biowaste. How farmland soils can absorb and store carbon dioxide. The tricky business of recycling solar panels. And: What is plasma, and how is it made?
27/0517h00>17h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0517h15>18h00 (0x00) ?engUmojaWhere Women RuleengMen have no access to Umoja. The village, which is located in Samburu County, is an oasis for women. Umoja means "connectedness" in Swahili; most of the 50 or so women living here are experiencing this feeling for the first time in their lives. They founded their village because they were abused by men. They fled from forced marriage or genital mutilation. They no longer wanted to accept that being a woman among the Samburu means having no choice.   Because here, the man rules over the family. He owns the land, he eats first, he is allowed to marry several women and beat them. Rebecca Lolosoli was fed up with all this. She founded Umoja in 1990 with Jane Leng'ope. At the time, the two did not know whether they would survive on their own. Today, the village is a functioning cooperative. The women's pride and joy is the Umoja school. Their greatest hope is the next generation: the children learn about their rights and that respect and solidarity are the most valuable social assets. Every year, Umoja also enables a handful of girls from outside the village to attend school. It's a barter deal: the child receives free lessons and food. In return, the father undertakes not to marry his daughter off early or to circumcise her. Both are officially forbidden in Kenya but are still practiced among the Samburu. Six-year-old Samella is to get the last spot in the school. But will her father agree to the conditions?
27/0518h00>18h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
27/0519h00>19h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0519h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
27/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0520h15>20h45 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
27/0520h45>21h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
27/0521h00>21h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0521h15>21h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
27/0521h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
27/0522h00>22h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0522h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
27/0522h45>23h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0523h00>23h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0523h15>00h00 (0x00) ?engUmojaWhere Women RuleengMen have no access to Umoja. The village, which is located in Samburu County, is an oasis for women. Umoja means "connectedness" in Swahili; most of the 50 or so women living here are experiencing this feeling for the first time in their lives. They founded their village because they were abused by men. They fled from forced marriage or genital mutilation. They no longer wanted to accept that being a woman among the Samburu means having no choice.   Because here, the man rules over the family. He owns the land, he eats first, he is allowed to marry several women and beat them. Rebecca Lolosoli was fed up with all this. She founded Umoja in 1990 with Jane Leng'ope. At the time, the two did not know whether they would survive on their own. Today, the village is a functioning cooperative. The women's pride and joy is the Umoja school. Their greatest hope is the next generation: the children learn about their rights and that respect and solidarity are the most valuable social assets. Every year, Umoja also enables a handful of girls from outside the village to attend school. It's a barter deal: the child receives free lessons and food. In return, the father undertakes not to marry his daughter off early or to circumcise her. Both are officially forbidden in Kenya but are still practiced among the Samburu. Six-year-old Samella is to get the last spot in the school. But will her father agree to the conditions?
27/0500h00>00h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0500h02>00h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
27/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engFrom Gray to GreenBuilding a Better Urban ClimateengThai landscape architect Kotchakorn Voraarkhom demonstrates how this can be achieved. Her home city of Bangkok is suffering greatly from climate change. For years, the metropolitan region with around 15 million inhabitants has been threatened by heavy rainfall and flooding.   The risk of more flooding is constantly increasing: The megacity, located just above sea level, is sinking every year. To counteract this, Kotchakorn Voraarkhom is focusing on sustainable architecture and trying to bring nature back into the concrete jungle. Her approach is groundbreaking and has set an example for other regions.   Georg Hofer, a pioneer of natural building materials, hails from Lower Bavaria. In times of climate change, he has turned to a centuries-old building material: clay. The list of clay‘s positive properties is long. Clay requires little energy to produce, produces hardly any CO2 and is free of pollutants. Used as a building material, clay can also regulate the temperature. In extreme heat, clay houses stay cool, while in winter clay houses benefit from a robust heat storage capacity.
27/0501h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
27/0501h15>01h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
27/0501h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
28/0502h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0502h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
28/0502h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengCôte d'Ivoire’s green jobs boom. Why indoor wheat could be a solution to food security. Tackling pollution in Nairobi with data. And the Congolese artists' collective helping revive depleted forests with the help of repatriated art.
28/0503h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0503h15>04h00 (0x00) ?engSwitzerlandA Haven for Russian Money?engPrivate jets and villas, bank accounts and financial assets: Switzerland is coming under criticism from the international community. Have Swiss asset managers and well-known institutions circumvented sanctions against wealthy Russians with good connections to the Kremlin? When the Russian army invaded Ukraine in February 2022, the European Union responded with sanctions against Russia. Russian oligarchs who did business in Europe were also affected. Many of them keep their assets in Swiss private banks. Switzerland joined the sanctions, albeit hesitantly and only under pressure from abroad.  However, it appears that some Russian citizens are still managing to circumvent the sanctions. This is indicated by internal documents from a Zurich-based asset manager that were published on the darknet for a short time in 2023. How extensive are the concealed Russian assets? How seriously did the Swiss authorities take the sanctions? And by what means are the US and Europe trying to force the hand of the Swiss banks?
28/0504h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0504h02>04h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
28/0504h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengEuropean carmakers are thinking of cooperating with their competitors to address the challenge of affordable e-mobility. And Paris is undertaking bold initiatives to make the city friendlier to pedestrians and cyclists.
28/0505h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0505h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
28/0505h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
28/0506h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0506h15>07h00 (0x00) ?engSwitzerlandA Haven for Russian Money?engPrivate jets and villas, bank accounts and financial assets: Switzerland is coming under criticism from the international community. Have Swiss asset managers and well-known institutions circumvented sanctions against wealthy Russians with good connections to the Kremlin? When the Russian army invaded Ukraine in February 2022, the European Union responded with sanctions against Russia. Russian oligarchs who did business in Europe were also affected. Many of them keep their assets in Swiss private banks. Switzerland joined the sanctions, albeit hesitantly and only under pressure from abroad.  However, it appears that some Russian citizens are still managing to circumvent the sanctions. This is indicated by internal documents from a Zurich-based asset manager that were published on the darknet for a short time in 2023. How extensive are the concealed Russian assets? How seriously did the Swiss authorities take the sanctions? And by what means are the US and Europe trying to force the hand of the Swiss banks?
28/0507h00>07h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0507h02>07h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
28/0507h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaHow can we build sustainably?engAs the climate changes and architecture is having to rethink form and function, eco-friendly building practices that have been used for centuries in India are proving inspirational.
28/0508h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0508h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
28/0508h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
28/0509h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0509h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engFrom Gray to GreenBuilding a Better Urban ClimateengThai landscape architect Kotchakorn Voraarkhom demonstrates how this can be achieved. Her home city of Bangkok is suffering greatly from climate change. For years, the metropolitan region with around 15 million inhabitants has been threatened by heavy rainfall and flooding.   The risk of more flooding is constantly increasing: The megacity, located just above sea level, is sinking every year. To counteract this, Kotchakorn Voraarkhom is focusing on sustainable architecture and trying to bring nature back into the concrete jungle. Her approach is groundbreaking and has set an example for other regions.   Georg Hofer, a pioneer of natural building materials, hails from Lower Bavaria. In times of climate change, he has turned to a centuries-old building material: clay. The list of clay‘s positive properties is long. Clay requires little energy to produce, produces hardly any CO2 and is free of pollutants. Used as a building material, clay can also regulate the temperature. In extreme heat, clay houses stay cool, while in winter clay houses benefit from a robust heat storage capacity.
28/0510h00>10h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0510h30>11h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengCôte d'Ivoire’s green jobs boom. Why indoor wheat could be a solution to food security. Tackling pollution in Nairobi with data. And the Congolese artists' collective helping revive depleted forests with the help of repatriated art.
28/0511h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0511h15>11h45 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
28/0511h45>12h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
28/0512h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0512h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengVegan egg substitutes that look and taste almost like the real thing. Renewable fuels based on biowaste. How farmland soils can absorb and store carbon dioxide. The tricky business of recycling solar panels. And: What is plasma, and how is it made?
28/0513h00>13h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0513h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeThe Health Showeng
28/0514h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0514h15>14h45 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
28/0514h45>15h00 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
28/0515h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0515h15>15h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
28/0515h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaHow can we build sustainably?engAs the climate changes and architecture is having to rethink form and function, eco-friendly building practices that have been used for centuries in India are proving inspirational.
28/0516h00>16h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0516h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
28/0517h00>17h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0517h15>17h45 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
28/0517h45>18h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
28/0518h00>18h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0518h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaThe Environment MagazineengCôte d'Ivoire’s green jobs boom. Why indoor wheat could be a solution to food security. Tackling pollution in Nairobi with data. And the Congolese artists' collective helping revive depleted forests with the help of repatriated art.
28/0519h00>19h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0519h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengEuropean carmakers are thinking of cooperating with their competitors to address the challenge of affordable e-mobility. And Paris is undertaking bold initiatives to make the city friendlier to pedestrians and cyclists.
28/0520h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
28/0520h15>21h00 (0x00) ?engSwitzerlandA Haven for Russian Money?engPrivate jets and villas, bank accounts and financial assets: Switzerland is coming under criticism from the international community. Have Swiss asset managers and well-known institutions circumvented sanctions against wealthy Russians with good connections to the Kremlin? When the Russian army invaded Ukraine in February 2022, the European Union responded with sanctions against Russia. Russian oligarchs who did business in Europe were also affected. Many of them keep their assets in Swiss private banks. Switzerland joined the sanctions, albeit hesitantly and only under pressure from abroad.  However, it appears that some Russian citizens are still managing to circumvent the sanctions. This is indicated by internal documents from a Zurich-based asset manager that were published on the darknet for a short time in 2023. How extensive are the concealed Russian assets? How seriously did the Swiss authorities take the sanctions? And by what means are the US and Europe trying to force the hand of the Swiss banks?
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28/0500h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's YouthengThe 77 Percent is in South Africa to take the pulse of the country as it prepares for this year’s elections. We ask young people what they expect of their next leader. In our street debate, Edith Kimani finds out how corruption scandals, inequality, and injustice have impacted confidence in South Africa’s democracy. Later we meet an artist who shows us his home city of Soweto.
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