Scan date : 02/07/2025 15:35
DayHourType Event Name LangEvent nameShort EventExtended LangExtended Event
02/0702h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0702h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
02/0702h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTourism and mobility: from Earth to orbitengOvertourism sparks protests in Tenerife. Global travel surges, EU funds Moldova’s railways, drones deliver samples, and India joins the new space race.
02/0703h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0703h15>04h00 (0x00) ?engSwitzerland’s GoldengSwitzerland is the international hub for gold. Between 50 and 70 percent of the gold mined globally is melted down and processed in these refineries. Once it has been melted down, no one can trace where the gold originally came from.  In 2023, the United Nations sent a letter to the Swiss government. The accusation: Their laws were too lax. As a result, Switzerland was becoming a gateway for gold sullied by human rights violations, child labor, mercury poisoning, environmental destruction or involved in the financing of illegal groups. Industry representatives and the Swiss government claim that great efforts are being made to make supply chains transparent.  The film examines how successful these efforts are. Can supply chains be fully traced and monitored? A trip to the largest gold producers in Africa shows the chasm between Switzerland’s claims and the reality on the ground.
02/0704h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0704h02>04h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
02/0704h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsLimits of freedom: tourism, tradition, identityengTourism boom, pressure to get married, and identity struggles: a journey from Santorini to Indonesia to New York.
02/0705h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0705h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engHER Women in Asiaeng
02/0705h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaGreen fixes for modern food crisesengAquaponics and seed sovereignty tackle food insecurity and even the mafia. Also: equipping young women with tools to adapt to climate change.
02/0706h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0706h15>07h00 (0x00) ?engSwitzerland’s GoldengSwitzerland is the international hub for gold. Between 50 and 70 percent of the gold mined globally is melted down and processed in these refineries. Once it has been melted down, no one can trace where the gold originally came from.  In 2023, the United Nations sent a letter to the Swiss government. The accusation: Their laws were too lax. As a result, Switzerland was becoming a gateway for gold sullied by human rights violations, child labor, mercury poisoning, environmental destruction or involved in the financing of illegal groups. Industry representatives and the Swiss government claim that great efforts are being made to make supply chains transparent.  The film examines how successful these efforts are. Can supply chains be fully traced and monitored? A trip to the largest gold producers in Africa shows the chasm between Switzerland’s claims and the reality on the ground.
02/0707h00>07h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0707h02>07h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
02/0707h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTourism and mobility: from Earth to orbitengOvertourism sparks protests in Tenerife. Global travel surges, EU funds Moldova’s railways, drones deliver samples, and India joins the new space race.
02/0708h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0708h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engHER Women in Asiaeng
02/0708h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeMemory - how does it work and how can we help it?engOur memory functions best when we have enough sleep, use the correct learning methods, avoid distractions and reduce anxiety. Digital resources can help too.
02/0709h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0709h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engAll That GlittersMass-Produced Fashion JewelryengChinese e-commerce giants Shein and Temu supply the world with trendy jewelry - chunky chains, sparkling earrings, and gold bracelets. Some 6,000 new lines are added every day to the Shein range alone. But behind the glossy façade lies a harsh reality. In the factories where these pieces are produced, grueling 60-hour workweeks are the norm, encapsulated in China’s infamous "9-9-6” culture: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week. While the jewelry is dirt cheap, the workers bear the cost. The risks aren’t limited to factory conditions; the products themselves often endanger customers. Testing frequently reveals toxic heavy metals and harmful chemicals. Scientists featured in the film unpack the health implications, shedding light on the hidden dangers of this booming industry.  Two German family businesses, Bijou Brigitte and the Beeline Group, are making significant sales across Europe. Their sustainability reports offer vague promises and little transparency about supply chains, leaving customers in the dark about where and how their trendy jewelry is produced. The film crew traces the steps of the supply chain all the way to China to find out more.
02/0710h00>10h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0710h30>11h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaHow we live with water — crisis and comebackengCostal erosion in Tamil Nadu, climate-hit floating schools in Cambodia, and urban water fixes in Berlin and Maharashtra.
02/0711h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0711h15>12h00 (0x00) ?engCape VerdeThe Reality Behind the ResortsengBut virtually none of this benefits the island. Indeed, a lack of opportunities, coupled with a severe drought, mean that some women have to resort to stealing sand from the sea floor in order to survive.  The islands are on the frontline of global warming. It has hardly rained in the past seven years. While tourists enjoy numerous huge swimming pools and are unaware of the crisis, families in Cape Verde are restricted to a few 25-liter containers of water per day. All food and supplies for the hotels are imported from wherever they can be sourced cheapest, providing no benefit to the local economy.  On many of the island’s beaches, the sand has completely disappeared. All that remains are shores strewn with pebbles. For years, the women of Ribeira da Barca have been stealing sand to sell to the construction industry. They collected all the sand that covered the beach long ago. Now they have to fetch it from the bottom of the sea. The sand thieves operate at low tide. These women carry no fewer than 50 kilograms of sand on their heads each trip. Most of them can’t swim so, every time they enter the sea, they are risking their lives. For this, they are paid approximately €10 a week.
02/0712h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0712h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engAll That GlittersMass-Produced Fashion JewelryengChinese e-commerce giants Shein and Temu supply the world with trendy jewelry - chunky chains, sparkling earrings, and gold bracelets. Some 6,000 new lines are added every day to the Shein range alone. But behind the glossy façade lies a harsh reality. In the factories where these pieces are produced, grueling 60-hour workweeks are the norm, encapsulated in China’s infamous "9-9-6” culture: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week. While the jewelry is dirt cheap, the workers bear the cost. The risks aren’t limited to factory conditions; the products themselves often endanger customers. Testing frequently reveals toxic heavy metals and harmful chemicals. Scientists featured in the film unpack the health implications, shedding light on the hidden dangers of this booming industry.  Two German family businesses, Bijou Brigitte and the Beeline Group, are making significant sales across Europe. Their sustainability reports offer vague promises and little transparency about supply chains, leaving customers in the dark about where and how their trendy jewelry is produced. The film crew traces the steps of the supply chain all the way to China to find out more.
02/0713h00>13h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0713h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTourism and mobility: from Earth to orbitengOvertourism sparks protests in Tenerife. Global travel surges, EU funds Moldova’s railways, drones deliver samples, and India joins the new space race.
02/0714h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0714h15>15h00 (0x00) ?engCan't Feel NothingHow the Internet Warps Our EmotionsengA man lies in bed, illuminated by the blue-white light of his smartphone screen. As he scrolls through endless social media feeds, he sees adorable pets, outraged opinion pieces, and haunting images from conflict zones - but he feels absolutely nothing. With curiosity and humor, director David Borenstein travels to Europe, Asia, the U.S., and Russia to investigate how bad things really are. Who is pulling the strings when the internet makes us angry, sad, horny or just plain indifferent? Is there any way to reclaim our emotions? Borenstein portrays a range of perspectives, including an American internet troll, a burnt-out star from the Asian influencer industry, a Russian state propagandist, and an online dominatrix. Scientific research into human emotions sheds light on how our emotional responses are being manipulated. The result is an alarming diagnosis of our digital era — paired with a bold attempt to search for solutions.
02/0715h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0715h15>15h30 (0x00) ?engTransforming BusinessengThe picture is complicated by Latin America’s geography. Yet, its geography and climate are the very reasons why it's so rich in geo-strategic assets. So can trade be improved - infrastructure built - while protecting the region’s biodiversity?
02/0715h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaGreen fixes for modern food crisesengAquaponics and seed sovereignty tackle food insecurity and even the mafia. Also: equipping young women with tools to adapt to climate change.
02/0716h00>16h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0716h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTourism and mobility: from Earth to orbitengOvertourism sparks protests in Tenerife. Global travel surges, EU funds Moldova’s railways, drones deliver samples, and India joins the new space race.
02/0717h00>17h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0717h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaHow we live with water — crisis and comebackengCostal erosion in Tamil Nadu, climate-hit floating schools in Cambodia, and urban water fixes in Berlin and Maharashtra.
02/0718h00>18h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0718h15>19h00 (0x00) ?engCape VerdeThe Reality Behind the ResortsengBut virtually none of this benefits the island. Indeed, a lack of opportunities, coupled with a severe drought, mean that some women have to resort to stealing sand from the sea floor in order to survive.  The islands are on the frontline of global warming. It has hardly rained in the past seven years. While tourists enjoy numerous huge swimming pools and are unaware of the crisis, families in Cape Verde are restricted to a few 25-liter containers of water per day. All food and supplies for the hotels are imported from wherever they can be sourced cheapest, providing no benefit to the local economy.  On many of the island’s beaches, the sand has completely disappeared. All that remains are shores strewn with pebbles. For years, the women of Ribeira da Barca have been stealing sand to sell to the construction industry. They collected all the sand that covered the beach long ago. Now they have to fetch it from the bottom of the sea. The sand thieves operate at low tide. These women carry no fewer than 50 kilograms of sand on their heads each trip. Most of them can’t swim so, every time they enter the sea, they are risking their lives. For this, they are paid approximately €10 a week.
02/0719h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0719h15>19h30 (0x00) ?engTransforming BusinessengThe picture is complicated by Latin America’s geography. Yet, its geography and climate are the very reasons why it's so rich in geo-strategic assets. So can trade be improved - infrastructure built - while protecting the region’s biodiversity?
02/0719h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engAll That GlittersMass-Produced Fashion JewelryengChinese e-commerce giants Shein and Temu supply the world with trendy jewelry - chunky chains, sparkling earrings, and gold bracelets. Some 6,000 new lines are added every day to the Shein range alone. But behind the glossy façade lies a harsh reality. In the factories where these pieces are produced, grueling 60-hour workweeks are the norm, encapsulated in China’s infamous "9-9-6” culture: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., six days a week. While the jewelry is dirt cheap, the workers bear the cost. The risks aren’t limited to factory conditions; the products themselves often endanger customers. Testing frequently reveals toxic heavy metals and harmful chemicals. Scientists featured in the film unpack the health implications, shedding light on the hidden dangers of this booming industry.  Two German family businesses, Bijou Brigitte and the Beeline Group, are making significant sales across Europe. Their sustainability reports offer vague promises and little transparency about supply chains, leaving customers in the dark about where and how their trendy jewelry is produced. The film crew traces the steps of the supply chain all the way to China to find out more.
02/0720h00>20h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0720h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engNew Perspectives Through ProthesesengIn Uganda, people with disabilities not only often live in great poverty, there’s also hardly any medical care available to them. For more than 10 years now, an organization from Usingen in the German state of Hesse has been providing people with prostheses and other orthopedic aids. In the small town of Kiyunga near the capital Kampala, ProUganda has set up a center with a modern orthopedic workshop and treatment rooms. But not everyone can get there: The roads are uneven and it’s difficult for poor families to get to Kiyunga with their children. That’s why the team travels to rural areas in minibuses. In the trunk: wheelchairs, some delivered second-hand from Germany, some bought with donations. The film accompanies members of the aid organization as they work with patients in Kiyunga, in the workshop and on missions in the region.
02/0721h00>21h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0721h02>21h30 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeMemory - how does it work and how can we help it?engOur memory functions best when we have enough sleep, use the correct learning methods, avoid distractions and reduce anxiety. Digital resources can help too.
02/0721h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's YouthengThe 25th of June marks a year since thousands of young Kenyans took to the streets protesting the controversial finance bill. When Kenya’s president William Ruto passed the bill, protesters stormed parliament and police opened fire on protesters. Currently, 60 deaths related to police violence during these protests are being investigated.
02/0722h00>22h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0722h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
02/0723h00>23h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0723h02>23h15 (0x00) ?engTransforming BusinessengThe picture is complicated by Latin America’s geography. Yet, its geography and climate are the very reasons why it's so rich in geo-strategic assets. So can trade be improved - infrastructure built - while protecting the region’s biodiversity?
02/0723h15>00h00 (0x00) ?engCape VerdeThe Reality Behind the ResortsengBut virtually none of this benefits the island. Indeed, a lack of opportunities, coupled with a severe drought, mean that some women have to resort to stealing sand from the sea floor in order to survive.  The islands are on the frontline of global warming. It has hardly rained in the past seven years. While tourists enjoy numerous huge swimming pools and are unaware of the crisis, families in Cape Verde are restricted to a few 25-liter containers of water per day. All food and supplies for the hotels are imported from wherever they can be sourced cheapest, providing no benefit to the local economy.  On many of the island’s beaches, the sand has completely disappeared. All that remains are shores strewn with pebbles. For years, the women of Ribeira da Barca have been stealing sand to sell to the construction industry. They collected all the sand that covered the beach long ago. Now they have to fetch it from the bottom of the sea. The sand thieves operate at low tide. These women carry no fewer than 50 kilograms of sand on their heads each trip. Most of them can’t swim so, every time they enter the sea, they are risking their lives. For this, they are paid approximately €10 a week.
02/0700h00>00h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0700h02>00h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
02/0700h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTourism and mobility: from Earth to orbitengOvertourism sparks protests in Tenerife. Global travel surges, EU funds Moldova’s railways, drones deliver samples, and India joins the new space race.
02/0701h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
02/0701h15>01h30 (0x00) ?engTransforming BusinessengThe picture is complicated by Latin America’s geography. Yet, its geography and climate are the very reasons why it's so rich in geo-strategic assets. So can trade be improved - infrastructure built - while protecting the region’s biodiversity?
02/0701h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengFollowing far-right attacks on queer events in eastern Germany, police showed up in force to secure the Pride march in Eberswalde. +++ More green, less grey: In Switzerland, activists want to bring nature back to urban areas covered in concrete.
03/0702h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0702h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
03/0702h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledConnecting WorldsengBerlin’s Museum Island is turning 200. Time for a look back at its storied past. And a look at the present: How do we live? 240 photos show the state of our world. Plus: A light artist makes structures shine. And: A trip along Germany’s Main Streets.
03/0703h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0703h15>04h00 (0x00) ?engWhere Are You?Missing Between Belarus and PolandengThe migration route through Belarus to Poland is an established one, despite the presence of a border fence, heavily armed guards and reports of increasing brutality in what is effectively an exclusion zone. Although it may be considered safer than trying to cross the Mediterranean or the Atlantic, people following this route to Europe are also dying with increasing regularity.   They perish in the forests and swamps between Poland and Belarus, thousands of kilometers away from their home countries and desperate families who often have no idea what’s happened to their loved ones. But one group of people living in the Podlaskie border region is concerned with the fate of the dead and missing. They try to help the relatives to identify their family members. The film follows the story of Mohammed Sabah’s family, as they try to find what’s happened to him.  Mohammed left his home in Erbil, the capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan in Iraq, in the fall of 2021. In November 2021, he got held up in the neutral zone between Poland and Belarus and after a few weeks, was pushed back to Belarus by Polish border guards. Mohammed contacted his family for the last time at the beginning of December. He kept in touch through his uncle Rekaut, who’s lived in London for 15 years. There was no sign of life from Mohammed until October 2022, when a video emerged, allegedly showing Mohammed crossing the border fence into Poland.   All hope now lies with Mohammed's uncle Rekaut, who maintains contact with the authorities and NGOs on behalf of the family and goes to Poland whenever he can. In Erbil, Mohammed's family desperately hopes he’s still alive - but at the very least, they just want to know his fate.
03/0704h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0704h02>04h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
03/0704h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTourism and mobility: from Earth to orbitengOvertourism sparks protests in Tenerife. Global travel surges, EU funds Moldova’s railways, drones deliver samples, and India joins the new space race.
03/0705h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0705h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engTransforming BusinessengThe picture is complicated by Latin America’s geography. Yet, its geography and climate are the very reasons why it's so rich in geo-strategic assets. So can trade be improved - infrastructure built - while protecting the region’s biodiversity?
03/0705h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaHow we live with water — crisis and comebackengCostal erosion in Tamil Nadu, climate-hit floating schools in Cambodia, and urban water fixes in Berlin and Maharashtra.
03/0706h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0706h15>07h00 (0x00) ?engWhere Are You?Missing Between Belarus and PolandengThe migration route through Belarus to Poland is an established one, despite the presence of a border fence, heavily armed guards and reports of increasing brutality in what is effectively an exclusion zone. Although it may be considered safer than trying to cross the Mediterranean or the Atlantic, people following this route to Europe are also dying with increasing regularity.   They perish in the forests and swamps between Poland and Belarus, thousands of kilometers away from their home countries and desperate families who often have no idea what’s happened to their loved ones. But one group of people living in the Podlaskie border region is concerned with the fate of the dead and missing. They try to help the relatives to identify their family members. The film follows the story of Mohammed Sabah’s family, as they try to find what’s happened to him.  Mohammed left his home in Erbil, the capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan in Iraq, in the fall of 2021. In November 2021, he got held up in the neutral zone between Poland and Belarus and after a few weeks, was pushed back to Belarus by Polish border guards. Mohammed contacted his family for the last time at the beginning of December. He kept in touch through his uncle Rekaut, who’s lived in London for 15 years. There was no sign of life from Mohammed until October 2022, when a video emerged, allegedly showing Mohammed crossing the border fence into Poland.   All hope now lies with Mohammed's uncle Rekaut, who maintains contact with the authorities and NGOs on behalf of the family and goes to Poland whenever he can. In Erbil, Mohammed's family desperately hopes he’s still alive - but at the very least, they just want to know his fate.
03/0707h00>07h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0707h02>07h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
03/0707h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengFollowing far-right attacks on queer events in eastern Germany, police showed up in force to secure the Pride march in Eberswalde. +++ More green, less grey: In Switzerland, activists want to bring nature back to urban areas covered in concrete.
03/0708h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0708h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engTransforming BusinessengThe picture is complicated by Latin America’s geography. Yet, its geography and climate are the very reasons why it's so rich in geo-strategic assets. So can trade be improved - infrastructure built - while protecting the region’s biodiversity?
03/0708h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTourism and mobility: from Earth to orbitengOvertourism sparks protests in Tenerife. Global travel surges, EU funds Moldova’s railways, drones deliver samples, and India joins the new space race.
03/0709h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0709h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengFollowing far-right attacks on queer events in eastern Germany, police showed up in force to secure the Pride march in Eberswalde. +++ More green, less grey: In Switzerland, activists want to bring nature back to urban areas covered in concrete.
03/0710h00>10h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0710h30>11h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengThe smallest building blocks of matter and the huge impact they have on our future. A special show on nuclear power - its growing potential and drawbacks.
03/0711h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0711h15>12h00 (0x00) ?engSwitzerland’s GoldengSwitzerland is the international hub for gold. Between 50 and 70 percent of the gold mined globally is melted down and processed in these refineries. Once it has been melted down, no one can trace where the gold originally came from.  In 2023, the United Nations sent a letter to the Swiss government. The accusation: Their laws were too lax. As a result, Switzerland was becoming a gateway for gold sullied by human rights violations, child labor, mercury poisoning, environmental destruction or involved in the financing of illegal groups. Industry representatives and the Swiss government claim that great efforts are being made to make supply chains transparent.  The film examines how successful these efforts are. Can supply chains be fully traced and monitored? A trip to the largest gold producers in Africa shows the chasm between Switzerland’s claims and the reality on the ground.
03/0712h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0712h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaHow we live with water — crisis and comebackengCostal erosion in Tamil Nadu, climate-hit floating schools in Cambodia, and urban water fixes in Berlin and Maharashtra.
03/0713h00>13h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0713h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengFollowing far-right attacks on queer events in eastern Germany, police showed up in force to secure the Pride march in Eberswalde. +++ More green, less grey: In Switzerland, activists want to bring nature back to urban areas covered in concrete.
03/0714h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0714h15>15h00 (0x00) ?engCape VerdeThe Reality Behind the ResortsengBut virtually none of this benefits the island. Indeed, a lack of opportunities, coupled with a severe drought, mean that some women have to resort to stealing sand from the sea floor in order to survive.  The islands are on the frontline of global warming. It has hardly rained in the past seven years. While tourists enjoy numerous huge swimming pools and are unaware of the crisis, families in Cape Verde are restricted to a few 25-liter containers of water per day. All food and supplies for the hotels are imported from wherever they can be sourced cheapest, providing no benefit to the local economy.  On many of the island’s beaches, the sand has completely disappeared. All that remains are shores strewn with pebbles. For years, the women of Ribeira da Barca have been stealing sand to sell to the construction industry. They collected all the sand that covered the beach long ago. Now they have to fetch it from the bottom of the sea. The sand thieves operate at low tide. These women carry no fewer than 50 kilograms of sand on their heads each trip. Most of them can’t swim so, every time they enter the sea, they are risking their lives. For this, they are paid approximately €10 a week.
03/0715h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0715h15>15h30 (0x00) ?engREVeng
03/0715h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengREV tests BYD's new low-cost city car: the Dolphin Surf. We also look at Ukrainian women taking on traditional men's jobs and training as e.g. mechanics. And: what explains Uruguay's rich classic car heritage?
03/0716h00>16h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0716h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengFollowing far-right attacks on queer events in eastern Germany, police showed up in force to secure the Pride march in Eberswalde. +++ More green, less grey: In Switzerland, activists want to bring nature back to urban areas covered in concrete.
03/0717h00>17h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0717h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeMemory - how does it work and how can we help it?engOur memory functions best when we have enough sleep, use the correct learning methods, avoid distractions and reduce anxiety. Digital resources can help too.
03/0718h00>18h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0718h15>19h00 (0x00) ?engSwitzerland’s GoldengSwitzerland is the international hub for gold. Between 50 and 70 percent of the gold mined globally is melted down and processed in these refineries. Once it has been melted down, no one can trace where the gold originally came from.  In 2023, the United Nations sent a letter to the Swiss government. The accusation: Their laws were too lax. As a result, Switzerland was becoming a gateway for gold sullied by human rights violations, child labor, mercury poisoning, environmental destruction or involved in the financing of illegal groups. Industry representatives and the Swiss government claim that great efforts are being made to make supply chains transparent.  The film examines how successful these efforts are. Can supply chains be fully traced and monitored? A trip to the largest gold producers in Africa shows the chasm between Switzerland’s claims and the reality on the ground.
03/0719h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0719h15>19h30 (0x00) ?engREVeng
03/0719h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
03/0720h00>20h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0720h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsLimits of freedom: tourism, tradition, identityengTourism boom, pressure to get married, and identity struggles: a journey from Santorini to Indonesia to New York.
03/0721h00>21h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0721h02>21h30 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTourism and mobility: from Earth to orbitengOvertourism sparks protests in Tenerife. Global travel surges, EU funds Moldova’s railways, drones deliver samples, and India joins the new space race.
03/0721h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
03/0722h00>22h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0722h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
03/0723h00>23h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0723h02>23h15 (0x00) ?engREVeng
03/0723h15>00h00 (0x00) ?engSwitzerland’s GoldengSwitzerland is the international hub for gold. Between 50 and 70 percent of the gold mined globally is melted down and processed in these refineries. Once it has been melted down, no one can trace where the gold originally came from.  In 2023, the United Nations sent a letter to the Swiss government. The accusation: Their laws were too lax. As a result, Switzerland was becoming a gateway for gold sullied by human rights violations, child labor, mercury poisoning, environmental destruction or involved in the financing of illegal groups. Industry representatives and the Swiss government claim that great efforts are being made to make supply chains transparent.  The film examines how successful these efforts are. Can supply chains be fully traced and monitored? A trip to the largest gold producers in Africa shows the chasm between Switzerland’s claims and the reality on the ground.
03/0700h00>00h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0700h02>00h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
03/0700h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
03/0701h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
03/0701h15>01h30 (0x00) ?engREVeng
03/0701h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engBest of DW Podcastseng
04/0702h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0702h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
04/0702h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
04/0703h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0703h15>04h00 (0x00) ?engThe Imported CaregiverFrom South America to Germany’s Jungle of Red Tapeeng"German bureaucracy really isn’t kind,” says Yanileidy. The Colombian pediatric nurse left her two small children at home in the hope of being able to lead a better life as a nurse in Germany. The plan was that after her first few months, her family would follow her. But bureaucratic hurdles turned those months into years. In the end, her marriage didn’t survive the long wait. "We can't afford such complicated bureaucracy,” says Isabell Halletz, head of the German Employers’ Association of Care Providers. Nursing staff are already dropping out in droves and choosing to go to the US or Canada.
04/0704h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0704h02>04h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
04/0704h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengFollowing far-right attacks on queer events in eastern Germany, police showed up in force to secure the Pride march in Eberswalde. +++ More green, less grey: In Switzerland, activists want to bring nature back to urban areas covered in concrete.
04/0705h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0705h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engREVeng
04/0705h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engMade in GermanyTourism and mobility: from Earth to orbitengOvertourism sparks protests in Tenerife. Global travel surges, EU funds Moldova’s railways, drones deliver samples, and India joins the new space race.
04/0706h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0706h15>07h00 (0x00) ?engThe Imported CaregiverFrom South America to Germany’s Jungle of Red Tapeeng"German bureaucracy really isn’t kind,” says Yanileidy. The Colombian pediatric nurse left her two small children at home in the hope of being able to lead a better life as a nurse in Germany. The plan was that after her first few months, her family would follow her. But bureaucratic hurdles turned those months into years. In the end, her marriage didn’t survive the long wait. "We can't afford such complicated bureaucracy,” says Isabell Halletz, head of the German Employers’ Association of Care Providers. Nursing staff are already dropping out in droves and choosing to go to the US or Canada.
04/0707h00>07h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0707h02>07h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
04/0707h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
04/0708h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0708h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engREVeng
04/0708h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engBest of DW Podcastseng
04/0709h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0709h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
04/0710h00>10h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0710h30>11h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
04/0711h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0711h15>12h00 (0x00) ?engWhere Are You?Missing Between Belarus and PolandengThe migration route through Belarus to Poland is an established one, despite the presence of a border fence, heavily armed guards and reports of increasing brutality in what is effectively an exclusion zone. Although it may be considered safer than trying to cross the Mediterranean or the Atlantic, people following this route to Europe are also dying with increasing regularity.   They perish in the forests and swamps between Poland and Belarus, thousands of kilometers away from their home countries and desperate families who often have no idea what’s happened to their loved ones. But one group of people living in the Podlaskie border region is concerned with the fate of the dead and missing. They try to help the relatives to identify their family members. The film follows the story of Mohammed Sabah’s family, as they try to find what’s happened to him.  Mohammed left his home in Erbil, the capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan in Iraq, in the fall of 2021. In November 2021, he got held up in the neutral zone between Poland and Belarus and after a few weeks, was pushed back to Belarus by Polish border guards. Mohammed contacted his family for the last time at the beginning of December. He kept in touch through his uncle Rekaut, who’s lived in London for 15 years. There was no sign of life from Mohammed until October 2022, when a video emerged, allegedly showing Mohammed crossing the border fence into Poland.   All hope now lies with Mohammed's uncle Rekaut, who maintains contact with the authorities and NGOs on behalf of the family and goes to Poland whenever he can. In Erbil, Mohammed's family desperately hopes he’s still alive - but at the very least, they just want to know his fate.
04/0712h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0712h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engBest of DW Podcastseng
04/0713h00>13h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0713h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
04/0714h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0714h15>15h00 (0x00) ?engSwitzerland’s GoldengSwitzerland is the international hub for gold. Between 50 and 70 percent of the gold mined globally is melted down and processed in these refineries. Once it has been melted down, no one can trace where the gold originally came from.  In 2023, the United Nations sent a letter to the Swiss government. The accusation: Their laws were too lax. As a result, Switzerland was becoming a gateway for gold sullied by human rights violations, child labor, mercury poisoning, environmental destruction or involved in the financing of illegal groups. Industry representatives and the Swiss government claim that great efforts are being made to make supply chains transparent.  The film examines how successful these efforts are. Can supply chains be fully traced and monitored? A trip to the largest gold producers in Africa shows the chasm between Switzerland’s claims and the reality on the ground.
04/0715h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0715h15>15h30 (0x00) ?engTraveleng
04/0715h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeThe key to your immune and lymphatic systemengHow to boost your immune system with a plant-based diet, exercise and dirt. In Good Shape explains the role of the lymphatic system in keeping us healthy.
04/0716h00>16h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0716h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaThe planet's health concerns all of usengFishers and experts protecting India’s coastline, a Bangladesh women’s group helping with extreme heat, a Tamil Nadu man saving trees — and Antarctica at risk.
04/0717h00>17h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0717h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
04/0718h00>18h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0718h15>19h00 (0x00) ?engWhere Are You?Missing Between Belarus and PolandengThe migration route through Belarus to Poland is an established one, despite the presence of a border fence, heavily armed guards and reports of increasing brutality in what is effectively an exclusion zone. Although it may be considered safer than trying to cross the Mediterranean or the Atlantic, people following this route to Europe are also dying with increasing regularity.   They perish in the forests and swamps between Poland and Belarus, thousands of kilometers away from their home countries and desperate families who often have no idea what’s happened to their loved ones. But one group of people living in the Podlaskie border region is concerned with the fate of the dead and missing. They try to help the relatives to identify their family members. The film follows the story of Mohammed Sabah’s family, as they try to find what’s happened to him.  Mohammed left his home in Erbil, the capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan in Iraq, in the fall of 2021. In November 2021, he got held up in the neutral zone between Poland and Belarus and after a few weeks, was pushed back to Belarus by Polish border guards. Mohammed contacted his family for the last time at the beginning of December. He kept in touch through his uncle Rekaut, who’s lived in London for 15 years. There was no sign of life from Mohammed until October 2022, when a video emerged, allegedly showing Mohammed crossing the border fence into Poland.   All hope now lies with Mohammed's uncle Rekaut, who maintains contact with the authorities and NGOs on behalf of the family and goes to Poland whenever he can. In Erbil, Mohammed's family desperately hopes he’s still alive - but at the very least, they just want to know his fate.
04/0719h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0719h15>19h30 (0x00) ?engTraveleng
04/0719h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engAfrimaxxModern African LifestyleengThis time, host Zimingonaphakade Mabunzi welcomes you from the RMB Latitudes Art Fair in Johannesburg, South Africa. Plus: fair trade Ethiopian coffee, Cameroonian architect Hermann Kamte and a Nigerian to burn canvases.
04/0720h00>20h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0720h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engBest of DW Podcastseng
04/0721h00>21h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0721h02>21h30 (0x00) ?engFocus on EuropeSpotlight on PeopleengFollowing far-right attacks on queer events in eastern Germany, police showed up in force to secure the Pride march in Eberswalde. +++ More green, less grey: In Switzerland, activists want to bring nature back to urban areas covered in concrete.
04/0721h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaSoil-free farming & drought-resilient plantsengFinding new ways to farm and grow plants as the climate changes, like hydroponics. Plus: Gambia's illegal dumpsites and 3D printing tools from waste in Senegal.
04/0722h00>22h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0722h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
04/0723h00>23h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0723h02>23h15 (0x00) ?engTraveleng
04/0723h15>00h00 (0x00) ?engWhere Are You?Missing Between Belarus and PolandengThe migration route through Belarus to Poland is an established one, despite the presence of a border fence, heavily armed guards and reports of increasing brutality in what is effectively an exclusion zone. Although it may be considered safer than trying to cross the Mediterranean or the Atlantic, people following this route to Europe are also dying with increasing regularity.   They perish in the forests and swamps between Poland and Belarus, thousands of kilometers away from their home countries and desperate families who often have no idea what’s happened to their loved ones. But one group of people living in the Podlaskie border region is concerned with the fate of the dead and missing. They try to help the relatives to identify their family members. The film follows the story of Mohammed Sabah’s family, as they try to find what’s happened to him.  Mohammed left his home in Erbil, the capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan in Iraq, in the fall of 2021. In November 2021, he got held up in the neutral zone between Poland and Belarus and after a few weeks, was pushed back to Belarus by Polish border guards. Mohammed contacted his family for the last time at the beginning of December. He kept in touch through his uncle Rekaut, who’s lived in London for 15 years. There was no sign of life from Mohammed until October 2022, when a video emerged, allegedly showing Mohammed crossing the border fence into Poland.   All hope now lies with Mohammed's uncle Rekaut, who maintains contact with the authorities and NGOs on behalf of the family and goes to Poland whenever he can. In Erbil, Mohammed's family desperately hopes he’s still alive - but at the very least, they just want to know his fate.
04/0700h00>00h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0700h02>00h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
04/0700h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaThe planet's health concerns all of usengFishers and experts protecting India’s coastline, a Bangladesh women’s group helping with extreme heat, a Tamil Nadu man saving trees — and Antarctica at risk.
04/0701h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
04/0701h15>01h30 (0x00) ?engTraveleng
04/0701h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
05/0702h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0702h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
05/0702h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengBYD, the world's largest EV manufacturer, is expanding into Pakistan. Chile’s hydrogen-powered train: Does hydrogen for rail have a future? And Tanzania hopes e-transport will boost its economy and help the climate.
05/0703h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0703h15>03h30 (0x00) ?engPlanet Aeng
05/0703h30>04h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengThe human body is made up of many different kinds of cells, and there are trillions of them. Now a major international project is mapping how they are distributed. And: Viruses can infect those cells. We look at what’s being done to fight pathogens like HIV.
05/0704h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0704h02>04h15 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
05/0704h15>05h00 (0x00) ?engSwitzerland’s GoldengSwitzerland is the international hub for gold. Between 50 and 70 percent of the gold mined globally is melted down and processed in these refineries. Once it has been melted down, no one can trace where the gold originally came from.  In 2023, the United Nations sent a letter to the Swiss government. The accusation: Their laws were too lax. As a result, Switzerland was becoming a gateway for gold sullied by human rights violations, child labor, mercury poisoning, environmental destruction or involved in the financing of illegal groups. Industry representatives and the Swiss government claim that great efforts are being made to make supply chains transparent.  The film examines how successful these efforts are. Can supply chains be fully traced and monitored? A trip to the largest gold producers in Africa shows the chasm between Switzerland’s claims and the reality on the ground.
05/0705h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0705h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engTraveleng
05/0705h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engTo the PointInternational Debate from Berlineng
05/0706h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0706h15>06h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
05/0706h30>07h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
05/0707h00>07h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0707h02>07h30 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
05/0707h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's Youtheng
05/0708h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0708h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engTraveleng
05/0708h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengBYD, the world's largest EV manufacturer, is expanding into Pakistan. Chile’s hydrogen-powered train: Does hydrogen for rail have a future? And Tanzania hopes e-transport will boost its economy and help the climate.
05/0709h00>09h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0709h15>09h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeBlind TrustengStefan Orben is a marathon enthusiast and completely blind. To pursue his passion, he needs another person to guide him all along the 42.195 kilometers. Luckily his fiancé Nico is happy to run with him. And that is not all. Stefan and Nico love helping others run. They hope more people will train to become running guides - so that sport becomes open to all.
05/0709h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengThe human body is made up of many different kinds of cells, and there are trillions of them. Now a major international project is mapping how they are distributed. And: Viruses can infect those cells. We look at what’s being done to fight pathogens like HIV.
05/0710h00>10h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0710h15>11h00 (0x00) ?engCape VerdeThe Reality Behind the ResortsengBut virtually none of this benefits the island. Indeed, a lack of opportunities, coupled with a severe drought, mean that some women have to resort to stealing sand from the sea floor in order to survive.  The islands are on the frontline of global warming. It has hardly rained in the past seven years. While tourists enjoy numerous huge swimming pools and are unaware of the crisis, families in Cape Verde are restricted to a few 25-liter containers of water per day. All food and supplies for the hotels are imported from wherever they can be sourced cheapest, providing no benefit to the local economy.  On many of the island’s beaches, the sand has completely disappeared. All that remains are shores strewn with pebbles. For years, the women of Ribeira da Barca have been stealing sand to sell to the construction industry. They collected all the sand that covered the beach long ago. Now they have to fetch it from the bottom of the sea. The sand thieves operate at low tide. These women carry no fewer than 50 kilograms of sand on their heads each trip. Most of them can’t swim so, every time they enter the sea, they are risking their lives. For this, they are paid approximately €10 a week.
05/0711h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0711h15>11h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeBlind TrustengStefan Orben is a marathon enthusiast and completely blind. To pursue his passion, he needs another person to guide him all along the 42.195 kilometers. Luckily his fiancé Nico is happy to run with him. And that is not all. Stefan and Nico love helping others run. They hope more people will train to become running guides - so that sport becomes open to all.
05/0711h30>12h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeThe key to your immune and lymphatic systemengHow to boost your immune system with a plant-based diet, exercise and dirt. In Good Shape explains the role of the lymphatic system in keeping us healthy.
05/0712h00>12h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0712h15>12h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
05/0712h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engNicaraguaA Dream of RevolutionengFollowing the victory of the Sandinistas in the 1980s, tens of thousands of mostly young people from all over the world traveled to Nicaragua to help rebuild the country. Some 15,000 people traveled here from West Germany alone. They wanted to support the young government and rebuild the plundered country. In small groups, or brigades, they harvested coffee and cotton, and built schools, kindergartens and health stations. The purchase of "Nica coffee” became a symbol of international solidarity with the country.   Director Petra Hoffmann was also present during this intense period. The situation became increasingly dangerous as the "Contra” forces, supported by Somoza supporters and the US, sought to restore the old balance of power. In this civil war 50,000 Nicaraguans were killed. German brigades were also kidnapped and killed by the Contra.   In April 2018, students protested against the former revolutionary hero and current president Daniel Ortega. Over 400 people were shot dead by paramilitaries as a result. The country became a bloodbath. Ortega's international supporters were also increasingly targeted. They have been collecting money for projects in Nicaragua for 45 years. Today, they fear for their lives and are fleeing the country. Those who remain no longer dare to raise their voices against the former revolutionary hero.  This is documentary film about the eventful period following the victory of the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua and the commitment of thousands of West German supporters who traveled to Nicaragua in the 1980s. What has become of their dreams, wishes and hopes 45 years later?
05/0714h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0714h15>14h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
05/0714h30>15h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
05/0715h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0715h15>16h00 (0x00) ?engThe Imported CaregiverFrom South America to Germany’s Jungle of Red Tapeeng"German bureaucracy really isn’t kind,” says Yanileidy. The Colombian pediatric nurse left her two small children at home in the hope of being able to lead a better life as a nurse in Germany. The plan was that after her first few months, her family would follow her. But bureaucratic hurdles turned those months into years. In the end, her marriage didn’t survive the long wait. "We can't afford such complicated bureaucracy,” says Isabell Halletz, head of the German Employers’ Association of Care Providers. Nursing staff are already dropping out in droves and choosing to go to the US or Canada.
05/0716h00>16h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0716h15>16h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
05/0716h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's Youtheng
05/0717h00>17h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0717h15>17h30 (0x00) ?engHER Women in Asiaeng
05/0717h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
05/0718h00>18h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0718h15>18h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeBlind TrustengStefan Orben is a marathon enthusiast and completely blind. To pursue his passion, he needs another person to guide him all along the 42.195 kilometers. Luckily his fiancé Nico is happy to run with him. And that is not all. Stefan and Nico love helping others run. They hope more people will train to become running guides - so that sport becomes open to all.
05/0718h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
05/0719h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0719h15>19h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
05/0719h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's Youtheng
05/0720h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0720h15>20h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
05/0720h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
05/0721h00>21h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0721h15>22h00 (0x00) ?engWhere Are You?Missing Between Belarus and PolandengThe migration route through Belarus to Poland is an established one, despite the presence of a border fence, heavily armed guards and reports of increasing brutality in what is effectively an exclusion zone. Although it may be considered safer than trying to cross the Mediterranean or the Atlantic, people following this route to Europe are also dying with increasing regularity.   They perish in the forests and swamps between Poland and Belarus, thousands of kilometers away from their home countries and desperate families who often have no idea what’s happened to their loved ones. But one group of people living in the Podlaskie border region is concerned with the fate of the dead and missing. They try to help the relatives to identify their family members. The film follows the story of Mohammed Sabah’s family, as they try to find what’s happened to him.  Mohammed left his home in Erbil, the capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan in Iraq, in the fall of 2021. In November 2021, he got held up in the neutral zone between Poland and Belarus and after a few weeks, was pushed back to Belarus by Polish border guards. Mohammed contacted his family for the last time at the beginning of December. He kept in touch through his uncle Rekaut, who’s lived in London for 15 years. There was no sign of life from Mohammed until October 2022, when a video emerged, allegedly showing Mohammed crossing the border fence into Poland.   All hope now lies with Mohammed's uncle Rekaut, who maintains contact with the authorities and NGOs on behalf of the family and goes to Poland whenever he can. In Erbil, Mohammed's family desperately hopes he’s still alive - but at the very least, they just want to know his fate.
05/0722h00>22h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0722h15>22h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
05/0722h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engAfrimaxxModern African LifestyleengThis time, host Zimingonaphakade Mabunzi welcomes you from the RMB Latitudes Art Fair in Johannesburg, South Africa. Plus: fair trade Ethiopian coffee, Cameroonian architect Hermann Kamte and a Nigerian to burn canvases.
05/0723h00>23h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0723h15>23h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
05/0723h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engNicaraguaA Dream of RevolutionengFollowing the victory of the Sandinistas in the 1980s, tens of thousands of mostly young people from all over the world traveled to Nicaragua to help rebuild the country. Some 15,000 people traveled here from West Germany alone. They wanted to support the young government and rebuild the plundered country. In small groups, or brigades, they harvested coffee and cotton, and built schools, kindergartens and health stations. The purchase of "Nica coffee” became a symbol of international solidarity with the country.   Director Petra Hoffmann was also present during this intense period. The situation became increasingly dangerous as the "Contra” forces, supported by Somoza supporters and the US, sought to restore the old balance of power. In this civil war 50,000 Nicaraguans were killed. German brigades were also kidnapped and killed by the Contra.   In April 2018, students protested against the former revolutionary hero and current president Daniel Ortega. Over 400 people were shot dead by paramilitaries as a result. The country became a bloodbath. Ortega's international supporters were also increasingly targeted. They have been collecting money for projects in Nicaragua for 45 years. Today, they fear for their lives and are fleeing the country. Those who remain no longer dare to raise their voices against the former revolutionary hero.  This is documentary film about the eventful period following the victory of the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua and the commitment of thousands of West German supporters who traveled to Nicaragua in the 1980s. What has become of their dreams, wishes and hopes 45 years later?
05/0701h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
05/0701h15>01h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeBlind TrustengStefan Orben is a marathon enthusiast and completely blind. To pursue his passion, he needs another person to guide him all along the 42.195 kilometers. Luckily his fiancé Nico is happy to run with him. And that is not all. Stefan and Nico love helping others run. They hope more people will train to become running guides - so that sport becomes open to all.
05/0701h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengThe human body is made up of many different kinds of cells, and there are trillions of them. Now a major international project is mapping how they are distributed. And: Viruses can infect those cells. We look at what’s being done to fight pathogens like HIV.
06/0702h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0702h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engTomatoesIndulgence With an AftertasteengAlmería, Spain, supplies Europe with fresh vegetables all year round. But the place known as the vegetable garden of Europe looks more like a sea of plastic: greenhouse plantations cover an area the size of 45,000 soccer pitches, stretching to the horizon. The tomato is a diva: it can’t get too warm, or too cold and doesn’t like too much direct sunlight.  Watering must also be carefully controlled and the plastic coverings help with this. A blessing for tomato lovers, but a curse for others: Marcos Diéguez from the Spanish environmental protection organization "Ecologistas en Acción” has been fighting the flood of plastic for years. Only around a third of the plastic is disposed of properly, he explains. The rest ends up in one of the many illegal garbage dumps in the region.  And plastic isn’t the only problem: Tomato farming is labor-intensive and corners are often cut on wages. In the morning hours, the streets of Almería are full. Men, mainly from North Africa, stand on the roadsides hoping for work. For these people, every day is a struggle, says Miguel Carmona from the SOC-SAT Almería trade union. The harvest workers often have no documents or employment contracts. They live in makeshift shelters, built from scraps of wood and discarded greenhouse tarpaulins. No electricity, no running water, no sanitary facilities. In the middle of Europe.  The documentary explores the question of how tomato production can become more sustainable. New, more robust varieties should help. Some tomato producers are also trying to use geothermal energy in greenhouses for climate-friendly cultivation.
06/0702h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeThe key to your immune and lymphatic systemengHow to boost your immune system with a plant-based diet, exercise and dirt. In Good Shape explains the role of the lymphatic system in keeping us healthy.
06/0703h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0703h15>03h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0703h30>04h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
06/0704h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0704h02>04h15 (0x00) ?engSports LifeBlind TrustengStefan Orben is a marathon enthusiast and completely blind. To pursue his passion, he needs another person to guide him all along the 42.195 kilometers. Luckily his fiancé Nico is happy to run with him. And that is not all. Stefan and Nico love helping others run. They hope more people will train to become running guides - so that sport becomes open to all.
06/0704h15>05h00 (0x00) ?engWhere Are You?Missing Between Belarus and PolandengThe migration route through Belarus to Poland is an established one, despite the presence of a border fence, heavily armed guards and reports of increasing brutality in what is effectively an exclusion zone. Although it may be considered safer than trying to cross the Mediterranean or the Atlantic, people following this route to Europe are also dying with increasing regularity.   They perish in the forests and swamps between Poland and Belarus, thousands of kilometers away from their home countries and desperate families who often have no idea what’s happened to their loved ones. But one group of people living in the Podlaskie border region is concerned with the fate of the dead and missing. They try to help the relatives to identify their family members. The film follows the story of Mohammed Sabah’s family, as they try to find what’s happened to him.  Mohammed left his home in Erbil, the capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan in Iraq, in the fall of 2021. In November 2021, he got held up in the neutral zone between Poland and Belarus and after a few weeks, was pushed back to Belarus by Polish border guards. Mohammed contacted his family for the last time at the beginning of December. He kept in touch through his uncle Rekaut, who’s lived in London for 15 years. There was no sign of life from Mohammed until October 2022, when a video emerged, allegedly showing Mohammed crossing the border fence into Poland.   All hope now lies with Mohammed's uncle Rekaut, who maintains contact with the authorities and NGOs on behalf of the family and goes to Poland whenever he can. In Erbil, Mohammed's family desperately hopes he’s still alive - but at the very least, they just want to know his fate.
06/0705h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0705h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0705h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engTomatoesIndulgence With an AftertasteengAlmería, Spain, supplies Europe with fresh vegetables all year round. But the place known as the vegetable garden of Europe looks more like a sea of plastic: greenhouse plantations cover an area the size of 45,000 soccer pitches, stretching to the horizon. The tomato is a diva: it can’t get too warm, or too cold and doesn’t like too much direct sunlight.  Watering must also be carefully controlled and the plastic coverings help with this. A blessing for tomato lovers, but a curse for others: Marcos Diéguez from the Spanish environmental protection organization "Ecologistas en Acción” has been fighting the flood of plastic for years. Only around a third of the plastic is disposed of properly, he explains. The rest ends up in one of the many illegal garbage dumps in the region.  And plastic isn’t the only problem: Tomato farming is labor-intensive and corners are often cut on wages. In the morning hours, the streets of Almería are full. Men, mainly from North Africa, stand on the roadsides hoping for work. For these people, every day is a struggle, says Miguel Carmona from the SOC-SAT Almería trade union. The harvest workers often have no documents or employment contracts. They live in makeshift shelters, built from scraps of wood and discarded greenhouse tarpaulins. No electricity, no running water, no sanitary facilities. In the middle of Europe.  The documentary explores the question of how tomato production can become more sustainable. New, more robust varieties should help. Some tomato producers are also trying to use geothermal energy in greenhouses for climate-friendly cultivation.
06/0706h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0706h15>06h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeBlind TrustengStefan Orben is a marathon enthusiast and completely blind. To pursue his passion, he needs another person to guide him all along the 42.195 kilometers. Luckily his fiancé Nico is happy to run with him. And that is not all. Stefan and Nico love helping others run. They hope more people will train to become running guides - so that sport becomes open to all.
06/0706h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engNicaraguaA Dream of RevolutionengFollowing the victory of the Sandinistas in the 1980s, tens of thousands of mostly young people from all over the world traveled to Nicaragua to help rebuild the country. Some 15,000 people traveled here from West Germany alone. They wanted to support the young government and rebuild the plundered country. In small groups, or brigades, they harvested coffee and cotton, and built schools, kindergartens and health stations. The purchase of "Nica coffee” became a symbol of international solidarity with the country.   Director Petra Hoffmann was also present during this intense period. The situation became increasingly dangerous as the "Contra” forces, supported by Somoza supporters and the US, sought to restore the old balance of power. In this civil war 50,000 Nicaraguans were killed. German brigades were also kidnapped and killed by the Contra.   In April 2018, students protested against the former revolutionary hero and current president Daniel Ortega. Over 400 people were shot dead by paramilitaries as a result. The country became a bloodbath. Ortega's international supporters were also increasingly targeted. They have been collecting money for projects in Nicaragua for 45 years. Today, they fear for their lives and are fleeing the country. Those who remain no longer dare to raise their voices against the former revolutionary hero.  This is documentary film about the eventful period following the victory of the Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua and the commitment of thousands of West German supporters who traveled to Nicaragua in the 1980s. What has become of their dreams, wishes and hopes 45 years later?
06/0708h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0708h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0708h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
06/0709h00>09h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0709h15>09h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
06/0709h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
06/0710h00>10h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0710h15>11h00 (0x00) ?engSwitzerland’s GoldengSwitzerland is the international hub for gold. Between 50 and 70 percent of the gold mined globally is melted down and processed in these refineries. Once it has been melted down, no one can trace where the gold originally came from.  In 2023, the United Nations sent a letter to the Swiss government. The accusation: Their laws were too lax. As a result, Switzerland was becoming a gateway for gold sullied by human rights violations, child labor, mercury poisoning, environmental destruction or involved in the financing of illegal groups. Industry representatives and the Swiss government claim that great efforts are being made to make supply chains transparent.  The film examines how successful these efforts are. Can supply chains be fully traced and monitored? A trip to the largest gold producers in Africa shows the chasm between Switzerland’s claims and the reality on the ground.
06/0711h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0711h15>11h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
06/0711h30>12h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's Youtheng
06/0712h00>12h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0712h15>12h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0712h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengBYD, the world's largest EV manufacturer, is expanding into Pakistan. Chile’s hydrogen-powered train: Does hydrogen for rail have a future? And Tanzania hopes e-transport will boost its economy and help the climate.
06/0713h00>13h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0713h15>13h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeBlind TrustengStefan Orben is a marathon enthusiast and completely blind. To pursue his passion, he needs another person to guide him all along the 42.195 kilometers. Luckily his fiancé Nico is happy to run with him. And that is not all. Stefan and Nico love helping others run. They hope more people will train to become running guides - so that sport becomes open to all.
06/0713h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's Youtheng
06/0714h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0714h15>14h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0714h30>15h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
06/0715h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0715h15>16h00 (0x00) ?engCape VerdeThe Reality Behind the ResortsengBut virtually none of this benefits the island. Indeed, a lack of opportunities, coupled with a severe drought, mean that some women have to resort to stealing sand from the sea floor in order to survive.  The islands are on the frontline of global warming. It has hardly rained in the past seven years. While tourists enjoy numerous huge swimming pools and are unaware of the crisis, families in Cape Verde are restricted to a few 25-liter containers of water per day. All food and supplies for the hotels are imported from wherever they can be sourced cheapest, providing no benefit to the local economy.  On many of the island’s beaches, the sand has completely disappeared. All that remains are shores strewn with pebbles. For years, the women of Ribeira da Barca have been stealing sand to sell to the construction industry. They collected all the sand that covered the beach long ago. Now they have to fetch it from the bottom of the sea. The sand thieves operate at low tide. These women carry no fewer than 50 kilograms of sand on their heads each trip. Most of them can’t swim so, every time they enter the sea, they are risking their lives. For this, they are paid approximately €10 a week.
06/0716h00>16h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0716h15>16h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
06/0716h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engTomatoesIndulgence With an AftertasteengAlmería, Spain, supplies Europe with fresh vegetables all year round. But the place known as the vegetable garden of Europe looks more like a sea of plastic: greenhouse plantations cover an area the size of 45,000 soccer pitches, stretching to the horizon. The tomato is a diva: it can’t get too warm, or too cold and doesn’t like too much direct sunlight.  Watering must also be carefully controlled and the plastic coverings help with this. A blessing for tomato lovers, but a curse for others: Marcos Diéguez from the Spanish environmental protection organization "Ecologistas en Acción” has been fighting the flood of plastic for years. Only around a third of the plastic is disposed of properly, he explains. The rest ends up in one of the many illegal garbage dumps in the region.  And plastic isn’t the only problem: Tomato farming is labor-intensive and corners are often cut on wages. In the morning hours, the streets of Almería are full. Men, mainly from North Africa, stand on the roadsides hoping for work. For these people, every day is a struggle, says Miguel Carmona from the SOC-SAT Almería trade union. The harvest workers often have no documents or employment contracts. They live in makeshift shelters, built from scraps of wood and discarded greenhouse tarpaulins. No electricity, no running water, no sanitary facilities. In the middle of Europe.  The documentary explores the question of how tomato production can become more sustainable. New, more robust varieties should help. Some tomato producers are also trying to use geothermal energy in greenhouses for climate-friendly cultivation.
06/0717h00>17h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0717h15>17h30 (0x00) ?engTransforming BusinessengThe picture is complicated by Latin America’s geography. Yet, its geography and climate are the very reasons why it's so rich in geo-strategic assets. So can trade be improved - infrastructure built - while protecting the region’s biodiversity?
06/0717h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
06/0718h00>18h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0718h15>18h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0718h30>19h00 (0x00) ?engAfrimaxxModern African LifestyleengThis time, host Zimingonaphakade Mabunzi welcomes you from the RMB Latitudes Art Fair in Johannesburg, South Africa. Plus: fair trade Ethiopian coffee, Cameroonian architect Hermann Kamte and a Nigerian to burn canvases.
06/0719h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0719h15>19h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeBlind TrustengStefan Orben is a marathon enthusiast and completely blind. To pursue his passion, he needs another person to guide him all along the 42.195 kilometers. Luckily his fiancé Nico is happy to run with him. And that is not all. Stefan and Nico love helping others run. They hope more people will train to become running guides - so that sport becomes open to all.
06/0719h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
06/0720h00>20h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0720h15>20h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
06/0720h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengBYD, the world's largest EV manufacturer, is expanding into Pakistan. Chile’s hydrogen-powered train: Does hydrogen for rail have a future? And Tanzania hopes e-transport will boost its economy and help the climate.
06/0721h00>21h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0721h15>22h00 (0x00) ?engThe Imported CaregiverFrom South America to Germany’s Jungle of Red Tapeeng"German bureaucracy really isn’t kind,” says Yanileidy. The Colombian pediatric nurse left her two small children at home in the hope of being able to lead a better life as a nurse in Germany. The plan was that after her first few months, her family would follow her. But bureaucratic hurdles turned those months into years. In the end, her marriage didn’t survive the long wait. "We can't afford such complicated bureaucracy,” says Isabell Halletz, head of the German Employers’ Association of Care Providers. Nursing staff are already dropping out in droves and choosing to go to the US or Canada.
06/0722h00>22h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0722h15>22h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeBlind TrustengStefan Orben is a marathon enthusiast and completely blind. To pursue his passion, he needs another person to guide him all along the 42.195 kilometers. Luckily his fiancé Nico is happy to run with him. And that is not all. Stefan and Nico love helping others run. They hope more people will train to become running guides - so that sport becomes open to all.
06/0722h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engDW NewsAfricaeng
06/0723h00>23h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0723h15>23h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0723h30>00h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengThe human body is made up of many different kinds of cells, and there are trillions of them. Now a major international project is mapping how they are distributed. And: Viruses can infect those cells. We look at what’s being done to fight pathogens like HIV.
06/0700h00>00h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0700h02>00h30 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
06/0700h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
06/0701h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
06/0701h15>01h30 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
06/0701h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengBYD, the world's largest EV manufacturer, is expanding into Pakistan. Chile’s hydrogen-powered train: Does hydrogen for rail have a future? And Tanzania hopes e-transport will boost its economy and help the climate.
07/0702h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0702h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
07/0702h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
07/0703h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0703h15>03h45 (0x00) ?engTomatoesIndulgence With an AftertasteengAlmería, Spain, supplies Europe with fresh vegetables all year round. But the place known as the vegetable garden of Europe looks more like a sea of plastic: greenhouse plantations cover an area the size of 45,000 soccer pitches, stretching to the horizon. The tomato is a diva: it can’t get too warm, or too cold and doesn’t like too much direct sunlight.  Watering must also be carefully controlled and the plastic coverings help with this. A blessing for tomato lovers, but a curse for others: Marcos Diéguez from the Spanish environmental protection organization "Ecologistas en Acción” has been fighting the flood of plastic for years. Only around a third of the plastic is disposed of properly, he explains. The rest ends up in one of the many illegal garbage dumps in the region.  And plastic isn’t the only problem: Tomato farming is labor-intensive and corners are often cut on wages. In the morning hours, the streets of Almería are full. Men, mainly from North Africa, stand on the roadsides hoping for work. For these people, every day is a struggle, says Miguel Carmona from the SOC-SAT Almería trade union. The harvest workers often have no documents or employment contracts. They live in makeshift shelters, built from scraps of wood and discarded greenhouse tarpaulins. No electricity, no running water, no sanitary facilities. In the middle of Europe.  The documentary explores the question of how tomato production can become more sustainable. New, more robust varieties should help. Some tomato producers are also trying to use geothermal energy in greenhouses for climate-friendly cultivation.
07/0703h45>04h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
07/0704h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0704h02>04h30 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaThe planet's health concerns all of usengFishers and experts protecting India’s coastline, a Bangladesh women’s group helping with extreme heat, a Tamil Nadu man saving trees — and Antarctica at risk.
07/0704h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeThe key to your immune and lymphatic systemengHow to boost your immune system with a plant-based diet, exercise and dirt. In Good Shape explains the role of the lymphatic system in keeping us healthy.
07/0705h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0705h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engSports LifeBlind TrustengStefan Orben is a marathon enthusiast and completely blind. To pursue his passion, he needs another person to guide him all along the 42.195 kilometers. Luckily his fiancé Nico is happy to run with him. And that is not all. Stefan and Nico love helping others run. They hope more people will train to become running guides - so that sport becomes open to all.
07/0705h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engEuromaxxLifestyle Europeeng
07/0706h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0706h15>06h45 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
07/0706h45>07h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
07/0707h00>07h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0707h02>07h30 (0x00) ?engTomatoesIndulgence With an AftertasteengAlmería, Spain, supplies Europe with fresh vegetables all year round. But the place known as the vegetable garden of Europe looks more like a sea of plastic: greenhouse plantations cover an area the size of 45,000 soccer pitches, stretching to the horizon. The tomato is a diva: it can’t get too warm, or too cold and doesn’t like too much direct sunlight.  Watering must also be carefully controlled and the plastic coverings help with this. A blessing for tomato lovers, but a curse for others: Marcos Diéguez from the Spanish environmental protection organization "Ecologistas en Acción” has been fighting the flood of plastic for years. Only around a third of the plastic is disposed of properly, he explains. The rest ends up in one of the many illegal garbage dumps in the region.  And plastic isn’t the only problem: Tomato farming is labor-intensive and corners are often cut on wages. In the morning hours, the streets of Almería are full. Men, mainly from North Africa, stand on the roadsides hoping for work. For these people, every day is a struggle, says Miguel Carmona from the SOC-SAT Almería trade union. The harvest workers often have no documents or employment contracts. They live in makeshift shelters, built from scraps of wood and discarded greenhouse tarpaulins. No electricity, no running water, no sanitary facilities. In the middle of Europe.  The documentary explores the question of how tomato production can become more sustainable. New, more robust varieties should help. Some tomato producers are also trying to use geothermal energy in greenhouses for climate-friendly cultivation.
07/0707h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengThe human body is made up of many different kinds of cells, and there are trillions of them. Now a major international project is mapping how they are distributed. And: Viruses can infect those cells. We look at what’s being done to fight pathogens like HIV.
07/0708h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0708h15>08h30 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
07/0708h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaSoil-free farming & drought-resilient plantsengFinding new ways to farm and grow plants as the climate changes, like hydroponics. Plus: Gambia's illegal dumpsites and 3D printing tools from waste in Senegal.
07/0709h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0709h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's Youtheng
07/0710h00>10h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0710h30>10h45 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
07/0710h45>11h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
07/0711h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0711h15>12h00 (0x00) ?engThe Imported CaregiverFrom South America to Germany’s Jungle of Red Tapeeng"German bureaucracy really isn’t kind,” says Yanileidy. The Colombian pediatric nurse left her two small children at home in the hope of being able to lead a better life as a nurse in Germany. The plan was that after her first few months, her family would follow her. But bureaucratic hurdles turned those months into years. In the end, her marriage didn’t survive the long wait. "We can't afford such complicated bureaucracy,” says Isabell Halletz, head of the German Employers’ Association of Care Providers. Nursing staff are already dropping out in droves and choosing to go to the US or Canada.
07/0712h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0712h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaSoil-free farming & drought-resilient plantsengFinding new ways to farm and grow plants as the climate changes, like hydroponics. Plus: Gambia's illegal dumpsites and 3D printing tools from waste in Senegal.
07/0713h00>13h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0713h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
07/0714h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0714h15>15h00 (0x00) ?engWhere Are You?Missing Between Belarus and PolandengThe migration route through Belarus to Poland is an established one, despite the presence of a border fence, heavily armed guards and reports of increasing brutality in what is effectively an exclusion zone. Although it may be considered safer than trying to cross the Mediterranean or the Atlantic, people following this route to Europe are also dying with increasing regularity.   They perish in the forests and swamps between Poland and Belarus, thousands of kilometers away from their home countries and desperate families who often have no idea what’s happened to their loved ones. But one group of people living in the Podlaskie border region is concerned with the fate of the dead and missing. They try to help the relatives to identify their family members. The film follows the story of Mohammed Sabah’s family, as they try to find what’s happened to him.  Mohammed left his home in Erbil, the capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan in Iraq, in the fall of 2021. In November 2021, he got held up in the neutral zone between Poland and Belarus and after a few weeks, was pushed back to Belarus by Polish border guards. Mohammed contacted his family for the last time at the beginning of December. He kept in touch through his uncle Rekaut, who’s lived in London for 15 years. There was no sign of life from Mohammed until October 2022, when a video emerged, allegedly showing Mohammed crossing the border fence into Poland.   All hope now lies with Mohammed's uncle Rekaut, who maintains contact with the authorities and NGOs on behalf of the family and goes to Poland whenever he can. In Erbil, Mohammed's family desperately hopes he’s still alive - but at the very least, they just want to know his fate.
07/0715h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0715h15>15h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
07/0715h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's Youtheng
07/0716h00>16h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0716h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengThe human body is made up of many different kinds of cells, and there are trillions of them. Now a major international project is mapping how they are distributed. And: Viruses can infect those cells. We look at what’s being done to fight pathogens like HIV.
07/0717h00>17h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0717h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
07/0718h00>18h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0718h15>19h00 (0x00) ?engThe Imported CaregiverFrom South America to Germany’s Jungle of Red Tapeeng"German bureaucracy really isn’t kind,” says Yanileidy. The Colombian pediatric nurse left her two small children at home in the hope of being able to lead a better life as a nurse in Germany. The plan was that after her first few months, her family would follow her. But bureaucratic hurdles turned those months into years. In the end, her marriage didn’t survive the long wait. "We can't afford such complicated bureaucracy,” says Isabell Halletz, head of the German Employers’ Association of Care Providers. Nursing staff are already dropping out in droves and choosing to go to the US or Canada.
07/0719h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0719h15>19h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
07/0719h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
07/0720h00>20h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0720h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
07/0721h00>21h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0721h02>21h30 (0x00) ?engAfrimaxxModern African LifestyleengThis time, host Zimingonaphakade Mabunzi welcomes you from the RMB Latitudes Art Fair in Johannesburg, South Africa. Plus: fair trade Ethiopian coffee, Cameroonian architect Hermann Kamte and a Nigerian to burn canvases.
07/0721h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
07/0722h00>22h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0722h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
07/0723h00>23h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0723h02>23h15 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
07/0723h15>00h00 (0x00) ?engThe Imported CaregiverFrom South America to Germany’s Jungle of Red Tapeeng"German bureaucracy really isn’t kind,” says Yanileidy. The Colombian pediatric nurse left her two small children at home in the hope of being able to lead a better life as a nurse in Germany. The plan was that after her first few months, her family would follow her. But bureaucratic hurdles turned those months into years. In the end, her marriage didn’t survive the long wait. "We can't afford such complicated bureaucracy,” says Isabell Halletz, head of the German Employers’ Association of Care Providers. Nursing staff are already dropping out in droves and choosing to go to the US or Canada.
07/0700h00>00h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0700h02>00h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
07/0700h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engTomatoesIndulgence With an AftertasteengAlmería, Spain, supplies Europe with fresh vegetables all year round. But the place known as the vegetable garden of Europe looks more like a sea of plastic: greenhouse plantations cover an area the size of 45,000 soccer pitches, stretching to the horizon. The tomato is a diva: it can’t get too warm, or too cold and doesn’t like too much direct sunlight.  Watering must also be carefully controlled and the plastic coverings help with this. A blessing for tomato lovers, but a curse for others: Marcos Diéguez from the Spanish environmental protection organization "Ecologistas en Acción” has been fighting the flood of plastic for years. Only around a third of the plastic is disposed of properly, he explains. The rest ends up in one of the many illegal garbage dumps in the region.  And plastic isn’t the only problem: Tomato farming is labor-intensive and corners are often cut on wages. In the morning hours, the streets of Almería are full. Men, mainly from North Africa, stand on the roadsides hoping for work. For these people, every day is a struggle, says Miguel Carmona from the SOC-SAT Almería trade union. The harvest workers often have no documents or employment contracts. They live in makeshift shelters, built from scraps of wood and discarded greenhouse tarpaulins. No electricity, no running water, no sanitary facilities. In the middle of Europe.  The documentary explores the question of how tomato production can become more sustainable. New, more robust varieties should help. Some tomato producers are also trying to use geothermal energy in greenhouses for climate-friendly cultivation.
07/0701h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
07/0701h15>01h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
07/0701h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
08/0702h00>02h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0702h02>02h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
08/0702h30>03h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaSoil-free farming & drought-resilient plantsengFinding new ways to farm and grow plants as the climate changes, like hydroponics. Plus: Gambia's illegal dumpsites and 3D printing tools from waste in Senegal.
08/0703h00>03h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0703h15>04h00 (0x00) ?engLie To MeThe OneCoin ScandalengBjørn Bjercke is a blockchain expert. Blockchain is a decentralized database that records transactions in a network and stores them, unalterably. All cryptocurrencies in the world are operated on blockchains. OneCoin also claimed to have one. But Bjørn Bjercke knew better.   The creators of OneCoin tried to recruit him. They offered him a tempting salary, a large car and various apartments. In return, he would set up a blockchain for the cryptocurrency.   But all this was months after OneCoin launched. It was clear to Bjercke from the start that this had to be a scam. He went public. By this time, however, the international OneCoin community had already grown considerably, thanks to a snowball system. OneCoin devotees felt threatened by Bjercke's revelations and tried to silence him.   In the meantime, the creators of OneCoin have been put out of business. Founder Ruja Ignatova has disappeared and is wanted by the German authorities, among others. Bjørn Bjercke is working with authorities around the world to uncover new scams. But for those who lost money, all this comes too late.
08/0704h00>04h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0704h02>04h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
08/0704h30>05h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengBYD, the world's largest EV manufacturer, is expanding into Pakistan. Chile’s hydrogen-powered train: Does hydrogen for rail have a future? And Tanzania hopes e-transport will boost its economy and help the climate.
08/0705h00>05h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0705h15>05h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
08/0705h30>06h00 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
08/0706h00>06h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0706h15>07h00 (0x00) ?engLie To MeThe OneCoin ScandalengBjørn Bjercke is a blockchain expert. Blockchain is a decentralized database that records transactions in a network and stores them, unalterably. All cryptocurrencies in the world are operated on blockchains. OneCoin also claimed to have one. But Bjørn Bjercke knew better.   The creators of OneCoin tried to recruit him. They offered him a tempting salary, a large car and various apartments. In return, he would set up a blockchain for the cryptocurrency.   But all this was months after OneCoin launched. It was clear to Bjercke from the start that this had to be a scam. He went public. By this time, however, the international OneCoin community had already grown considerably, thanks to a snowball system. OneCoin devotees felt threatened by Bjercke's revelations and tried to silence him.   In the meantime, the creators of OneCoin have been put out of business. Founder Ruja Ignatova has disappeared and is wanted by the German authorities, among others. Bjørn Bjercke is working with authorities around the world to uncover new scams. But for those who lost money, all this comes too late.
08/0707h00>07h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0707h02>07h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
08/0707h30>08h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaThe planet's health concerns all of usengFishers and experts protecting India’s coastline, a Bangladesh women’s group helping with extreme heat, a Tamil Nadu man saving trees — and Antarctica at risk.
08/0708h00>08h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
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08/0708h30>09h00 (0x00) ?engArts UnveiledExperiencing and understanding the art worldeng
08/0709h00>09h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0709h30>10h00 (0x00) ?engTomatoesIndulgence With an AftertasteengAlmería, Spain, supplies Europe with fresh vegetables all year round. But the place known as the vegetable garden of Europe looks more like a sea of plastic: greenhouse plantations cover an area the size of 45,000 soccer pitches, stretching to the horizon. The tomato is a diva: it can’t get too warm, or too cold and doesn’t like too much direct sunlight.  Watering must also be carefully controlled and the plastic coverings help with this. A blessing for tomato lovers, but a curse for others: Marcos Diéguez from the Spanish environmental protection organization "Ecologistas en Acción” has been fighting the flood of plastic for years. Only around a third of the plastic is disposed of properly, he explains. The rest ends up in one of the many illegal garbage dumps in the region.  And plastic isn’t the only problem: Tomato farming is labor-intensive and corners are often cut on wages. In the morning hours, the streets of Almería are full. Men, mainly from North Africa, stand on the roadsides hoping for work. For these people, every day is a struggle, says Miguel Carmona from the SOC-SAT Almería trade union. The harvest workers often have no documents or employment contracts. They live in makeshift shelters, built from scraps of wood and discarded greenhouse tarpaulins. No electricity, no running water, no sanitary facilities. In the middle of Europe.  The documentary explores the question of how tomato production can become more sustainable. New, more robust varieties should help. Some tomato producers are also trying to use geothermal energy in greenhouses for climate-friendly cultivation.
08/0710h00>10h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0710h30>11h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaSoil-free farming & drought-resilient plantsengFinding new ways to farm and grow plants as the climate changes, like hydroponics. Plus: Gambia's illegal dumpsites and 3D printing tools from waste in Senegal.
08/0711h00>11h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0711h15>11h45 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
08/0711h45>12h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
08/0712h00>12h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0712h30>13h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengThe human body is made up of many different kinds of cells, and there are trillions of them. Now a major international project is mapping how they are distributed. And: Viruses can infect those cells. We look at what’s being done to fight pathogens like HIV.
08/0713h00>13h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0713h30>14h00 (0x00) ?engIn Good ShapeThe key to your immune and lymphatic systemengHow to boost your immune system with a plant-based diet, exercise and dirt. In Good Shape explains the role of the lymphatic system in keeping us healthy.
08/0714h00>14h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
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08/0714h45>15h00 (0x00) ?engShiftLiving in the Digital Ageeng
08/0715h00>15h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
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08/0715h30>16h00 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaThe planet's health concerns all of usengFishers and experts protecting India’s coastline, a Bangladesh women’s group helping with extreme heat, a Tamil Nadu man saving trees — and Antarctica at risk.
08/0716h00>16h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0716h30>17h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng
08/0717h00>17h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0717h30>18h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaSoil-free farming & drought-resilient plantsengFinding new ways to farm and grow plants as the climate changes, like hydroponics. Plus: Gambia's illegal dumpsites and 3D printing tools from waste in Senegal.
08/0718h00>18h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0718h15>18h45 (0x00) ?engClose upeng
08/0718h45>19h00 (0x00) ?engReporterOn Locationeng
08/0719h00>19h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0719h15>19h30 (0x00) ?engBest of DW-online Contenteng
08/0719h30>20h00 (0x00) ?engREVThe Global Auto and Mobility ShowengBYD, the world's largest EV manufacturer, is expanding into Pakistan. Chile’s hydrogen-powered train: Does hydrogen for rail have a future? And Tanzania hopes e-transport will boost its economy and help the climate.
08/0720h00>20h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0720h30>21h00 (0x00) ?engEco AfricaSoil-free farming & drought-resilient plantsengFinding new ways to farm and grow plants as the climate changes, like hydroponics. Plus: Gambia's illegal dumpsites and 3D printing tools from waste in Senegal.
08/0721h00>21h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0721h02>21h30 (0x00) ?engEco IndiaThe planet's health concerns all of usengFishers and experts protecting India’s coastline, a Bangladesh women’s group helping with extreme heat, a Tamil Nadu man saving trees — and Antarctica at risk.
08/0721h30>22h00 (0x00) ?engTomorrow TodayThe Science MagazineengThe human body is made up of many different kinds of cells, and there are trillions of them. Now a major international project is mapping how they are distributed. And: Viruses can infect those cells. We look at what’s being done to fight pathogens like HIV.
08/0722h00>22h30 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
08/0722h30>23h00 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
08/0723h00>23h02 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
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08/0700h02>00h30 (0x00) ?engThe DayNews in Revieweng
08/0700h30>01h00 (0x00) ?engThe 77 PercentThe Magazine for Africa's Youtheng
08/0701h00>01h15 (0x00) ?engDW NewsNewseng
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08/0701h30>02h00 (0x00) ?engGlobal UsWhat connects us alleng