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Transcripts For DW Racism Down Under 20220905

w. ah. on march on the streets of sydney. these native australians are protesting against the death of a member of their community in prison. they want those responsible to face justice course concrete. restart the dice. the numbers are back to that right. good. talk in less than 30 years. 474. aboriginal australians have died in detention or police custody 6 and a half times more than white people over the same period. the relatives of those killed want closure. lay tony dungy has been fighting for 5 years for justice for her son david, who was serving a sentence for robbery and assault. december 29th, 2015. this body cam footage shows guards trying to transfer david to another cell. he resists the letters, served to identify the guards. i go to one level is with with david is taken to the cell and placed on a bed. then a nurse at ministers, a sedative. yeah. just he did. oh. his breathing becomes labor seconds later, david loses consciousness and never wakes up again. to me. please even yeah. now you know how it took family lawyers months to obtain this video? no one has yet been held accountable. now that god, oh, at a surprise, surprise tre. flag what they do every don't label. it wasn't fighting. they just ram denali. all 6 of them fall verizon, a slice squashed in when he come, i'm to man above him, and i bright upon that i shall be john. the death of an indigenous australians in prison has never resulted in a conviction historian and human rights activist. padraic gibson says this is due to systemic racism within australian authorities. so actually justify that sort of, of sanely, unjust situation you made today. humanize the paypal you made to make out, you know, as die that die less than, than everyone else. and that plays out every die in all facets of society. more than 200 years after colonization by the british. many 1st australians still lived like outsiders in their own nation. the hidden face of a country viewed by many as a paradise. a dream destination for immigrants. every year, 200000 applicants are granted a visa. but the adela postcards conceal a drama that's been playing out or 2 centuries. the tragedy of native australians, the countries modern indigenous communities are descended from the world's oldest civilization. they've been marginalized since the arrival of white settlers in the early 19th century. they were massacred in the thousands or forcibly assimilated into white society, placed in convents or foster families. indigenous children were taught to behave like good little white children. governments of used assimilation policies to try and create a single uniform white society for decades. many indigenous people to day have pale skin as a result, but whatever their color, they remain. second class citizens. i got no family, got no address live in a long garage. yeah, that's right. people come into this into a started thinking that it's selected country. that way, living as person a few people will live and i said, well, i'm for you. and they are lane as the conservative right wing has risen to power in australia, other minorities have felt increasingly marginalized. immigration policies have been tightened. australians of african and h, and heritage, or those who are muslims, are worried there, unsettled by increasing anti immigrant sentiment in certain sectors of society. many toys i've been told to go back to my country ash. and i love because i said on this is my country i was born here. the far right has gained traction in australia . in recent years. new xenophobic parties openly express their hatred of foreigners . china looks like china because it's full of chinese people. you know, what will australia look like when it is no white people that it won't look like australia? the muslim community is also a target of the radical right ban. muslim immigration? i may personally, i would. i identify them. on march 15th 2019 and australian white supremacist murdered, 51 muslims. that a mosque in christ church. new zealand, 49 others were seriously injured. australia's minorities live in fear their especially critical of the countries justice system. it's notoriously repressive with young people and children in particular despite his white skin. dylan is of native australian heritage. he's already spent 8 of his 21 years in prison for theft and armed robbery and went out to toby's all of the judges made an example. adam, the expenses made it 23 months ago. i've told y'all keep on my with it. it's not no more. i think it's ruined my law for i was able to get any of my, of my luck, childhood and stuff like that back. and that childhood was difficult marred by poverty, drugs, and bad influences. he ran afoul of the law as a minor prison was hell. this is in october 2010 being told and this is the thing, right. and that this is the 1st and that a so to me was another indigenous male officer. we exchanged words, a charged santa spat on in and fixing up by the show. it takes him into the room and slams me down on my shoulder onto the mattress. and that was one of the 1st time that really had to go scared me and he was 16, frustrated for about 2 and a half, 3 hours. i'm because bad i'm a police are better prison officers before being manhandled from bigger people than me. i couldn't far back, i couldn't push them off me thing that i wanted to. i knew ways that i could really get back to them, make them angry, make them feel the way i'm feeling while they're doing that sort of stuff. to me. i'm alice being treated like an animal this footage was published in 2016 by an independent commission of inquiry. it cast dylan as the symbol of a last written off youth. why would you definitely think there is a right if she i, my father does go to indigenous people with the really, with nothing about rehabilitating to charm. my gosh young people are better people with more met shannon, brake, us and john upon us. that's what we've done. one of the guards was made the subject of a criminal investigation. but to date, none have been convicted. other minorities also suffer discrimination in australia . nationalist xenophobic groups agitate against muslims. first and foremost, fraser adding is the country's most controversial politician in the wake of the christ church attack. his comments trigger a way of outrage. this video goes viral. they sort of things happen when people are getting attacked, you know, a frequent grabanko tour, fraser ending became widely known in australia after he reference the holocaust in his 1st speech as senator for queensland the final solution to the immigration problem of course is a popular vote the senator is campaigning for his reelection. he has always denied referencing the nazi regime in his speeches. final solution taken out of context in the 9 years leading up to that 22 other politicians in parliament and use the same 2 words in speeches, night and no one got upset about it. they'll put labels on you like me or not see what's the premises prices, all those things. they're all lawyers. i can tell you in the i mean i fight hard for the jewish community, particularly the israelis it's election day. and the senator has come to support his candidate and a district just outside brisbin. disappointed by the other far right, political parties, fraser, and founded his own nationalist movement. to day, he hopes to win a few more seats in parliament. and he has an unambiguous program to drastically reduce immigration fans to permanently ban muslim from entering the country. that hasn't been a country on this planet that embrace the muslims and had them come in here that is not male file style or a muslim nation. i don't believe that aside, and people want to become a minority in their own country and i'm speaking about it so that i'm being called a racist. and i'm happy to be called rice if that's what they want to call me. that's fine. what's the band muslim? immigration, me personally, i would identify them because they're killing us in the street. like we do with any other criminals who are trying to kill you. you want to know where they're going to be. otherwise we're just going to lose more. going to stride is not i think we need to proposals rooted in hatred and fake news. only 4 people in australia have ever been killed in attacks by islamist terrorists . very good endings program fines residence only north america. just like very much immigration policy and shaken, tied into that. this is a strike you 1st and then it needs to be yes, estrada and not the rest of the world. but we need to solve our problem, space, riser, any which is dry and astrology, and space. that's more in the election results come in a few days later. unfortunately for fraser and none of his candidates are elected and he even loses his own seat in the senate to his former more moderate party. nevertheless, xenophobic political parties have proliferated and consolidated voter support in recent years. in order to understand this trend, we have set up a meeting with one of the foremost observers of australian politics and tim. so parmesan is a professor at the university of sydney. he also served as the countries race discrimination commissioner. problem of racism in australia has historical roots. it goes all the way back to the history of colonization, of the struggling continent by the british. remember, that is strangely when it became a political nation in 19 o one. this was a place that was defined by ideas of, of white racial integrity, the advent of a multicultural society and astray, lead dykes back early to the 19 seventy's. it has been a successful society when it comes to multiculturalism and mass immigration. but there are still remnants of old attitudes about race. and unfortunately, we're seeing more and more political actors becoming emboldened to vent racist ideas in public in a way that we haven't seen for some time in an irony of history. these xenophobic ideas are often defended by australians who are themselves, descendants of immigrants. melbourne, in southern australia. in this small suburban church, the service is conducted by a pastor of sri lankan origin. here they pray to god and ask him to protect the country's borders. in may, i, me may, following the national elections aster daniel ny leah and his congregation are in 7th heaven. the conservatives have just won a large majority, and the new prime minister is a devout christian, and an advocate of stricter immigration controls. he's also says that there was again, private ah, a man of god. the pastor is 1st and foremost, a politician. he has founded a party to defend a christian australia in the face of what he calls a muslim invasion to day. all 30. christina, his dad islam is growing. why is it because people are struggling to judge and texas, i've been sold and they have gone into mosque all over europe. we see them if you get the message, then what a standing go to watch. you don't watch. they knew your destination. this did the enemy office, does it that says ungodliness, not his style. i'm going to this. have you go to come against that attack right? no. only for something to have been offered schooling. daniel, ny. leah was persecuted in sri lanka for belonging to a christian minority and sought refuge in australia 22 years ago. he soon became an ardent nationalist. he says he's not against the presence of different ethnic groups, but claims islam is incompatible with the values of his adopted nation. the pastor is conducting a religious war world. this is lloyd with his love gone and lead us northeast. and their consent was supposed to been cut after saying this as well as this in that regard with my skin color was an advantage for me. i thought a thing i would've sat upon to have body, like we satirized people strip on the split up us to attack a full smile to god jalisa and keep australia, australia. he has made his skin color, the banner of his own unrestrained opinion. since the early 2 thousands, he's appeared on many television programs heavily his anti islam message. we have a choice nation of what's rally. i read again foiled of koran and follow. he saw me shot me a lot and be placing this nation. all one of the bible and be a free and democratic society. every most is potentia, police force that is known to breed, unfortunately destitute. chill, who opposed to mosque looting? us? be pushing the field, the dose, no need for more. moscow abused in australia, i despite pastor ny leah and his message. there are now several 100 mosques in australia. most of australia's 600000 muslims live in sydney. or more precisely in la camber, a suburb of the city, the largest mosque and australia is here. oh, during ramadan, it can accommodate a 10000 people a night. but more recently, prayers have been tinge with fear. friday prayers are coming to an end at the la tampa mosque. off mont, and australian of lebanese heritage, ensures the safety of the congregation play. how are you? how's it going? good, good. will you praying here tonight? yes. yeah. his father was then i could come here every night. yes. okay, good on was on love. some household hoffman has called upon australian politicians to put a stop to the stigmatization of muslims. we hope that it would open the eyes and minds of people in the hearts to steer away from any definitive language. and that can lead to acts that people willing to act upon these while acts. everyone has their own agenda and sometimes they play into that rhetoric for the sake of the political gains. ah, and unfortunately sometimes they just got overboard in the face of such hatred. some muslims have decided to act with a few kilometers from downtown sydney and association, is working to dismantle that cliches that have become synonymous with the muslim community. founded by sure and australian of lebanese origin, this citizens initiative group comes to the aid of the impoverished. i was born in the country. my parents came here in i you gotta make me choke. my parents came here in the seventy's and um they came from a one time country. the fact that i was allowed to be born in a public hospital for free. i went to a public school for free, you know, i was able to have my children. a stranger gave us so much. i wanted me and the muslims that have migrated to his country, bonnie's country to give back to this beautiful country quarter stria like shoves parents, many of australia's muslims arrived in the 1970s. but for them and subsequent generations, integration remains difficult. dealing with prejudice is part of everyday life. for sure, many times, many times i've been told to go back to my country ash and i love because i said on this is my country. i was born here. oh, where do you want me to go? when we get to our grocery shopping, we got a lot of people say a very racist remark out loud. like i don't blow us up. or you terrorists? oh sama, what we're hoping that we break in that barrier and reducing his them a phobia in this country. steve is a christian, he became a volunteer for the association a year ago before that he too was prejudiced against muslims. i want you to think what a lot of us are assigned to and 9 understand that not all of those women gone, no christian, the better a positive example that counters the slogans of a racist minority. the christ church attack was perpetrated by brenton tarrant, a white australian supremacist. his actions were unanimously condemned by all political parties in australia. public outrage has since forced the most radical extremists to keep a low profile. we have an appointment in melbourne with a man who knew the terrorist. tom sewell is the founder of a small, far right extremist group called the lads society, as he's being closely monitored by intelligent services. sewell asked to meet us in the street. he didn't choose the place by chance. well, if you look around, you'll see that there is not so many australians. ah, if you had a family home, how would you feel about so all these people living in your basement like it was some share house. you know, before i was born, this was a white working class of, you know, and now while we've been almost the only white people in this entire sub, you know? so it shows that the colonization is almost complete. authorities have been watching the group since christ church sewell had actually tried to recruit brenton tarrant several years ago. i had conversations with him online because i noticed that he displayed similar beliefs to us. he didn't want to be involved in what we're doing. and he said that he was moving to new zealand, and that was the last communication that i had with him. this was several years ago . and the government considers that enough of an association that we're to be treated as terrors. we have to keep our meetings and our locations secret. this is where the lads society usually meets. in this video, the organization is presented as an ordinary private sports club for men only. in reality, it's a secret society with very clear political objectives. so fearing what they call the great replacement sewell and his group dream of an all white state. our goal is to create an ether state. our goal is to create what australia used to be, and we need to organize ourselves so that we have our own parallel institutions, our own land around cities. so that when the conflict does come, when the geopolitical instability does come, we're safe and preserved. and we have all of our things already in place to create a new nation, like sewell, the australian, far right aspires to create in apartheid state based on racial segregation. although australia has never actually seen such extremes, whites and indigenous australians have lived a part for years. the district of red vern and sydney is home to indigenous and migrant communities. it has long grappled with poverty, crime, and drugs. it's also experienced police violence and riots. the streets of redfern became a bloody battlefield on the 14th of february, 2004, a 17 year old aboriginal boy had died earlier that afternoon. he was impaled on a fence, laying police on his bike. hundreds of protesters took to the streets, armed with paving stones and molotov cocktails. they battled officers all night long. the situation in redfern has improved in recent years. partly thanks to the efforts of shane phillips, one of its community leaders. this former boxer collects his protege at 5 in the morning 3 times a week. he believes discipline will keep them on the straight and narrow. musk is going to be a slave to 7 got in the morning. if i could definitely up fourish 3 a to be picked up at 1 o'clock. we want them to learn about the strength of one of the lawn, routine and discipline and focus and doing this early in the morning. a lot of government, graham's also the progress i've driven by deficit to what's wrong of athletes. our program is designed by us and it's driven by strength. that's what these kids get with. many of them have a police record. the hope is that mutual respect and resilience will prevent relapses. with james joined the program a week ago. but 21 year old has just served a 2 year sentence for robbery. atmosphere with a few years ago. police and indigenous youngsters would regularly clash in redbird . so to ease tensions, shane invited the chief of police to put gloves on superintendent andrew holland and his men now come every week to train with local youngsters. with what was found out with i talked with crime has dropped 70 percent in redfern since 2010. sidney's. former slum is slowly getting back on it's feet, while many indigenous people struggled to find a place in society, others have achieved success. miriam corolla is a prime example, the daughter of an aboriginal mother and an english father. she has become a household name as a journalist, how line they miriam presents the t. v. news for a b, c, one of the biggest australian broadcasters. her program is regularly watched by more than 1000000 australians. i still pinch myself when i think about what i do and where i am, can have an idea of what you want to day. but sometimes you might be reluctant to give it a guy, so it's always nice to think that you can help people understand that it's not impossible deny it is still unusual to see aboriginal people on tv, craig, her director has worked for a b, c for 20 years, but he has rarely worked with native australians these days. so we are seeing a lot more diversity. i. miriam is still very much an exception. i ah, it, it is getting better. and certainly it's getting better in the media as opposed to say drama french since, which is still very much a typical more to stride. yeah. look, miriam is a respected journalist to day, but her career has been an uphill struggle. if i hadn't this person need even to find that discrimination at school, bullying, racism and things like that. i wouldn't have gone on to finish high school because i wouldn't have gone on to universe. and without those things, then my options for even having in korea would really, really limited censor divorce. miriam has been raising her 6 year old son alone. he like his mother is growing up between 2 cultures. his father is a white australian, and i mean he knows he's aboriginal, it was quite funny. and it just shows how innocent children are because he was asked about it last year. he said, yes, i'm a regional my dad's aboriginal and you in studies background in irish and german, so it's quite fair with blue eyes and everything. i just saw all a funny way. that's kind of cute. you know, cuz he doesn't associate with a particular appearance. miriam grew up in the 1970s. in those days, it was uncommon to see mixed couples in australia. for a long time, she grappled with her own identity. hi, this is may with my sister and my mom will little little little little. this is my mom when she was go for a long time, i really struggled with this idea of i'm not accepted by mainstream society, but i am i am really aboriginal because, you know, i am highly educated. i've been teen of as fi a work in the media. you know, i don't leave necessarily in a community such and those are the things that people typically associated weeping and personal. i'm not necessarily fitting that box, but some united times gone on. we realize that, you know, you can be aboriginal and all the rest miriam hopes her story will inspire other young, aboriginal people. how people a think what you and she's optimistic about the future stories now. no, we still have extraordinary problems. we've in our economic disadvantage, we've incarceration, and we have one of the world twist rates of youth suicide in indigenous communities . i'm sorry, it goes to show that it's something very wrong. do i have heart? yeah, i do. yeah. already my life is a world away from that of my mom and my grandmother. i'm able to have trains and great size goals, and i think for my son, even more say so. yeah, there is heart. we'll see how he gary, ah, miriam grew up in sidney. a large urban area full of opportunities. but the further you get from the big cities, it's a totally different picture. primarily in the north of the continent, over 4000 kilometers from sydney beyond the australian bush and the wild plains lies darwin. it's the capital of the northern territory. the country's most northerly state. darwin is the drop off point for native australians hoop left the bush and come to the city often without work or a place to stay hundreds and up on the streets. there looked after by an aid organization called lira key, a nation after the regions largest tribe kyle and his partner patrol the streets every day. i guess coming from the communities and sometimes on the house. you know, they come here which city area. well, my wallclear over there. yeah. morning. how are you, brother? i'm well, thank you mark you nation. you ok on the streets today. he wants to get it in just for $11.00, that that money will come back in a bus more better for you to get it back. the wagon with us, the organization can only offer emergency health. it doesn't have the means to provide shelter for all of the cities homeless. we've been here, we've really seen in years in dallas when the day's over kyle and his partner, head back to their base in the early morning. another leora key, a team takes over its mission, is to find those who spent the night in custody and bring them back to a safe place. good morning, america, available soon as we stop taking them away. we'll come and pick you up in and thank you for on just a point where you are bra. kevin has been doing this for 20 years. it will. he's watched his community gradually deteriorate. some of them bad drugs now that i've come here like arson, stop law, that some of them are taking that stuff to in this part of to, for them to get back to normal or what month with ones that are being taken away from her as well. still running away from well for screens. arrests are most often made for the public consumption of drugs or alcohol. and most of those are native australians that we're ready to go. critics say the darwin, police unfairly target aboriginal people with drugs, alcohol, misery in darwin. many aboriginal people seem to be lost between 2 worlds, between their own and the one imposed on them by white settlers colonizing their lands. in the late 18th century, the new arrivals from britain tried to eradicate the aboriginal people. first, they used weapons, then they organized a breed out policy. for decades, ruling powers tried to sometimes quite literally whiten the black population. aboriginal children were also forcefully taken from their parents, placed in convents or foster families. they were taught to live like good little white children. this practice continued until the early 19 seventy's. more than 100000 children are believed to have suffered this fate. these young victims are called the stolen generation. and history is repeating itself. why? why do we want hundreds of people take to the streets of sydney to protest the actions of the authorities? they're demanding their children back. why don't we want? why don't we? why? today, aboriginal children are 10 times are likely to be removed from their families than white children. half of them are placed in institutions or in white families, far away from their own community. hazel collins is a victim of such forced removals. why don't we, why she organized this demonstration outside the regional parliament? this aboriginal grandmother is battling what she considers to be cultural genocide . what do you know what clinical setting up they did chiding do us as this. c nation, paypal. what is best for us? how we should live? well then law side. oh thank goodwood ever you big land that are going to ignore a not like us drill our children. want that they call jo. tiger, why they heritage takes them to read something that they're not ah, like thousands of other aboriginal families, hazel hollins has been separated from her grandchildren. one of them, ryan was placed with different white families. why? i hoping he'd never mind. a guy, sorry, audio or lima, mobile adam originally my mom had everything kinda well and it all the happy kid until then. no, i come in to fight you from region. are everyone you know it was your complete joint nottingham fuel? not i did shocked me. there's a light on very hard for them because they're drawing up non non in warriors aboriginal. they do repair differently. rivera and non just just mom and dad. back as a community. i bride that god the children grow up. losing their i didn't that i know they're related to when i come from, holla did, he stole in just 10 years. the number of aboriginal children placed in foster families has doubled to 18000 across the country. to get a better understanding of the reality. behind these figures, we're meeting a mother who has been separated from her children for 6 years. she lives in new castle. a coastal town northeast of sydney were not allowed to show her face that forbidden by australian law. her anonymity preserves the identity of her children. so they pitches of my youngest son and this is one of my daughters when, when she lived with me. and this is my daughter that actual father was taken. the very last contact that i had with the full kids, it sort of makes me sad because even though my daughter's quite happy with the last memory that i had to say my kids together, i and i know that they were happy to say me and i when they did say me, her children were all taken away from her because at the time she had a drug problem. that was 6 years ago. now she leads a normal life as a job and a house. yet she still forbidden any contact with her children. my children live 20 minutes from me up the road, so i know where my children live. i know what school like to so the system will not let me see. my children will not let me speak to my children on the phone. they have completely ostracized me. from my children's life completely, the foster care's had convinced the children that i'm afraid to them. so this is the image that my children have of me, even though i work in child protection. i'm a social work. um. so, you know, a lot of completely turned off around and it has major no answer difference. like many aboriginal mothers, you know, she was herself removed from her family as a child none of my mother's children were removed. we were all separated in the system. we all ended up with addiction problems, all ended up with incarceration problems at children removed. so the cycle has not been broken. just put under a different policy and called a different 9. but it's the same generational genocide practices happening. basically, we have no decision making power in this country at all. so we are completely vulnerable to these institutions to exploit our rights. she could very well lose her children forever. their foster families have started adoption proceeding. a law was passed in 2018, allowing them to do so after 5 years of custody and denying the mother an opportunity to appeal i ah ego africa. you can only protect what you know is the motto for an and maybe as in giraffe conservation with many people know are too little about these animals and doesn't get into 15th. and when they see any more example it's, you can use an infant that your rob conservation foundation wants to change this eco africa in 30 minutes on d. w. parched soil. as far as the i can see in east africa, millions of people are suffering from famine and drought. in their desperation, farmers are slaughtering their weekend animals. if it does not rain soon, their livelihood will be lost forever. global 3000. 90 minutes on d. w. a by going to have it in the glistening place of longing, mediterranean sea, a star, and to far a dual career drift along with exploring modern lifestyles and the mediterranean meeting. people on hearing their dreams ready to re journey this week on d. w. ah . ah. is this date of any news live from berlin? at least 10 paypal a dead following a stabbing rampage in canada's statue and province the laser hunting to suspect the victims were found in a remote indigenous community. and a nearby town. prime minister trudeau is colon.

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Transcripts For DW Racism Down Under 20220904

a special country. she land from above. start september 16th on d, w. o. on march on the streets of sydney, these native australians are protesting against the death of a member of their community in prison. they want those responsible to face justice course the contrary. to start the numbers back to that right, good. talk in less than 30 years. 474. aboriginal australians have died in detention or police custody. 6 and a half times more than white people over the same period. the relatives of those killed want closure. late tony dungy has been fighting for 5 years for justice for her son david, who was serving a sentence for robbery and assault. december 29th 2015. this body cam footage shows guards trying to transfer david to another cell. he resists the letters, served to identify the guards. i got them on the phone with with david is taken to the cell and placed on a bed. then a nurse at ministers, a sedative, directv oh, his breathing becomes labor. seconds later, david loses consciousness and never wakes up again. to me, please, even now you know how it took family lawyers months to obtain this video. no one has yet been held accountable. now they con, i'll edit the proof, savoy trade flag when they do aboriginal label. it wasn't fighting, they just rammed in only all 6 of them. fall varosti is vice a squashed in. when he come on to me and above him and i broke the belt upon them, i shall be tod. the death of an indigenous australians in prison has never resulted in a conviction historian and human rights activist. by drake gibson says, this is due to systemic racism within australian authorities to actually justify that sort of obscene leon. just situation you need to day humanize the paypal you made to make out, you know, as die that die less than, than everyone else. and that plays out every die in all facets of society. more than 200 years after colonization by the british. many 1st australians still lived like outsiders in their own nation. the hidden face of a country viewed by many as a paradise. australia has a population of 26000000. its territory is $21.00 times the size of germany, a nation with a booming economy, a dream destination for immigrants. every year, 200000 applicants are granted a visa. but the a deli postcards conceal a drama that's been playing out or 2 centuries. the tragedy of native australians, the countries modern indigenous communities are descended from the world's oldest civilization. they've been marginalized since the arrival of white settlers in the early 19th century. they were massacred in the thousands or forcibly assimilated into white society, placed in convents or foster families. indigenous children were taught to behave like good little white children. governments of used assimilation policies to try and create a single uniform white society for decades. many indigenous people to day have pale skin as a result, but whatever their color, they remain 2nd class citizens. i've got no family address live in a garage and yeah, that's right. people come into this into a start. you think that it's a lucky country, but we're living at 1st now. people will live in that 3rd world country, you know, on land. as the conservative right wing has risen to power in australia, other minorities have felt increasingly marginalized. immigration policies have been tightened. australians of african and asian heritage, or those who are muslims, are worried. they're unsettled by increasing anti immigrant sentiment and certain sectors of society. many stories i've been told to go back to my country and i love because i don't, this is my country all the on the far right has gained attraction in australia. in recent years, new xenophobic parties openly expressed their hatred of foreigners. china looks like china because it's full of chinese people. what will is charlie? it looks like when it, there's no white people that, you know, it won't look like australia. the muslim community is also a target of the radical right. the band muslim immigration may personally i would identify them on march 15, 2019 and australian white supremacist murdered. 51 muslims. that a mosque in christ church. new zealand, 49. others were seriously injured. australia's minorities live in fear. they're especially critical of the country's justice system. it's notoriously repressive with young people and children in particular. despite his white skin, dylan of native australian heritage. he's already spent 8 of his 21 years in prison for theft and armed robbery. when i was 12 years old and just made an example out of the incentives made it 22 months ago. i was at it. it's not no more. i think it's real. my law for i was yeah, any of my luck, childhood and stuff like that. back goes in and that childhood was difficult, marked by poverty, drugs, and bad influences. he ran afoul of the law as a minor prison was hell. it was in october, 2010. i would have been in that 12 years. and this is the most heart breaking that this is the person that is telling me with another indigenous male officer. we exchanged words a charge and i sped on him and he picked me up by the show and take him into the room and slams me down on my shoulder unto the mattress. mm. and i was one of the 1st time that really a scare in and then we are fixing restraints here for about 2 and a half, 3 hours because i'm please spell prison officers before being manhandled from bigger people than me. i couldn't far back. i couldn't push them off me. this is the only way that i could really get back to them, like in language, make them feel the way i'm feeling while they're doing that sort of stuff to me out on this being treated like an animal. this footage was published in 2016 by an independent commission of inquiry. it cast dillon as the symbol of a lost written off youth flags, which i definitely think there is a right. if she and my son, it doesn't go to indigenous people with the really, with nothing and that rehabilitating to make us young people better. people with more about trying to break us. and it's drawn upon us as to what we've done. one of the guards was made the subject of a criminal investigation, but to date none have been convicted. other minorities and also suffer discrimination in australia. nationalist xenophobic groups agitate against muslims, 1st and foremost, fraser adding is the country's most controversial politician. in the wake of the christ church attack, his comments trigger a wave of outrage. this video goes viral. they sort of things happen when, when people are getting attacked in their own frequented, provocative tour fraser and became widely known in australia after he reference the holocaust. in his 1st speech as senator for queensland fall solution to the immigration problem, of course is a popular vote. the senator is campaigning for his reelection. he has always denied referencing the nazi regime in his speeches. final voice was taken out of context in the 9 years leading up to that 22 other politicians in parliament and use the same 2 words in speeches by night. and no one got upset about it. they'll put labels on you like me. i see white supremacist races, all those things, they're all law is. i can tell you in the i mean i fight hard for the jewish community, particularly the israelis it's election day. and the senator has come to support his candidates in a district just outside brisbin. disappointed by the other far right, political parties, fraser, and founded his own nationalist movement. to day, he hopes to win a few more seats in parliament. and he has an unambiguous program to drastically reduce immigration and to permanently ban muslims from entering the country. there hasn't been a country on this planet that embrace the muslims and had them come in here that is not male file site or a muslim nation. i don't believe that aside, and people want to become a minority in their own country and i'm speaking about it so that i'm being called a racist. and i'm happy to be called rice if that's what they want to call me. that's fine. what's the band muslim? immigration, me personally, i would identify them because they killing us in the street. like we do with any other criminals who are trying to kill you. you want to know where they're going to be. otherwise we're just going to lose more good. a strain is not, i think we need to proposals, rooted in hatred and fake news only for people in australia have ever been killed in attacks by islamist terrorists. very endings program find residence. nice, amazing. usually they like very much immigration policy and 2nd tied into that is, this is try you 1st and it needs to be yes. is trying to vote the rest of the world, but we need to solve a one problems 1st, surprise, or any will destroy your industry. that's mind on the election results come in a few days later. unfortunately, for fraser and none of his candidates are elected. and he even loses his own seat in the senate to his former more moderate party. nevertheless, xenophobia political parties have proliferated and consolidated voter support in recent years. in order to understand this trend, we have set up a meeting with one of the foremost observers of australian politics and tim. so parmesan is a professor at the university of sydney. he also served as the countries race discrimination commissioner. problem of racism in australia has historical roots. it goes all the way back to the history of colonization, of the streaming continent by the british. remember, that is strangely when it became a political nation in 19 o one. this was a place that was defined by d 's of, of white racial integrity, the advent of a multicultural society, and his railey dates back only to the 19 seventy's. it has been a successful society when it comes to multiculturalism and mass immigration, but they were still remnants of old attitudes about race. and unfortunately, we're seeing more and more political actors becoming emboldened to vent racist ideas in public, in a way that we haven't seen for some time in an irony of history. these xenophobic ideas are often defended by australians who are themselves, descendants of immigrants. melbourne in southern australia in this small suburban church. the service is conducted by a pastor of sri lankan origin. here they pray to god and ask him to protect the country's borders. in may, i, me may, following the national elections aster daniel ny leah and his congregation are in 7th heaven. the conservatives have just won a large majority, and the new prime minister is a devout christian, and an advocate of stricter immigration controls. he's also says one again, private ah, a man of god. the pastor is 1st and foremost a politician. he has founded a party to defend a christian australia in the face of what he calls a muslim invasion today, audrey, arab cuz his dad islam is growing. why is it because people are struggling to judge and texas, i've been sold and they have gone into mosque all over europe. we see them if you get the message, then what a standing go to watch. if you don't watch the new destination and this to the enemy office does it with that says ungodliness, not a style. i'm going to this as the come against it deck, right? no, don't read for something to happen. often school late daniel ny leah was persecuted in sri lanka for belonging to a christian minority and sought refuge in australia 22 years ago. he soon became an ardent nationalist. he says he's not against the presence of different ethnic groups, but claims islam is incompatible with the values of his adopted nation. the pastor is conducting a religious war world. this is wally with his loudly gone would lead us northeast and their consent was supposed to been cut after saying it isn't as well as the st . andrews godrays. my skin color was an advantage for me. i thought a thing i would have thought upon to have body to satirize up australia on this particular publish deck. oh my god. so lisa, and keep australia, australia. he has made his skin color, the banner of his own unrestrained opinion. since the early 2 thousands, he's appeared on many television programs, huddling his anti islam message. we have a choice nation up. what's rally a read again, follow the code on how to follow. you saw me shot me a lot and be placing this nation. all one of the bible and be a free and democratic society. every most is put in show police force that is known to breed unfortunate destitute chill, who opposed to mosque looting, thus be pushing. they felt that there was no need for mo, most who abused in australia. i despite pastor ny leah and his message, there are now several 100 mosques in australia. most of australia's 600000 muslims live in sydney or more precisely in la camber, a suburb of the city, the largest mosque and australia is here. oh ah, during ramadan, it can accommodate 10000 people a night. but more recently, prayers have been tinge with fear. friday prayers are coming to an end at the la tampa mosque. off mont, and australian of lebanese heritage. ensures the safety of the congregation plan. how are you? how's it going? good. good. were you praying here tonight? yes. yeah, his father was then i could come here every night. yes, i got on it was a lump sum awful to hoffman has called upon australian politicians to put a stop to the stigmatization of muslims. we hope that it would open the eyes and minds of people in the hearts to steer away from any defensive language. and that can lead to acts that people willing to act upon these while acts. everyone has their own agenda and sometimes they play into that rhetoric for the sake of the political gains. unfortunately, sometimes they just got overboard. in the face of such hatred, some muslims have decided to act a few kilometers from downtown. sidney and association is working to dismantle that cliches that have become synonymous with the muslim community. founded by sure and australian of lebanese origin, this citizens initiative group comes to the aid of the impoverished ha. i was born in the country. my parents came here in. i you gotta make me choke. my parents came here in the seventy's and um they came from a one time country. the fact that all was announced not to be born in a public hospital for free. i went to a public school for free. you know, i was able to have my children. i strongly gave us so much. i wanted me and the muslims that have migrated to his country, bonnie's country to give back to this beautiful country court astray like selves, parents, many of australia's muslims arrived in the 1970s. but for them and subsequent generations, integration remains difficult. dealing with prejudice is part of everyday life for show of many times, many times i've been told to go back to my country ash and i love because i said on this is my country. i was born here. oh, where do you want me to go? when we got to grocery shopping, we got a lot of people say a very racist remark out loud. like i dont blow us up all you terrorists? oh sama. we're hoping that that will break in that barrier and reducing his them a phobia in this country. steve is a christian, he became a volunteer for the association a year ago before that he too was prejudiced against muslims. i want to think what, what about are throwing through and 9 understand that not all of them on the bed in a positive example that counters the slogans of a racist minority. the christ church attack was perpetrated by brenton tarrant, a white australian supremacist. his actions were unanimously condemned by all political parties in australia. public outrage has since forced the most radical extremists to keep a low profile. we have an appointment in melbourne with a man who knew the terrorist. tom sewell is the founder of a small, far right extremist group called the lads society, as he's being closely monitored by intelligent services. sewell asked to meet us in the street. he didn't choose the place by chance. well, if you look around, you'll see that there is not so many australians. if you had a family home, how would you feel about all these people living in your basement? like it was some share house. you know, before i was born, this was a white working class, you know, and now, while we've been almost the only white people in this entire sub, you know? so it shows that the colonization is almost complete. authorities have been watching the group since christ church sewell had actually tried to recruit brandt and terence. several years ago, i had conversations with him online because i noticed that he displayed similar beliefs to us. he didn't want to be involved in what we're doing. and he said that he was moving to new zealand and that was the last communication that i had with him. this was several years ago. the government considers that enough of an association that we're to be treated as terrorist. we have to keep our meetings and locations secret. this is where the land society usually meets. in this video, the organization is presented as an ordinary private sports club for men only. in reality, it's a secret society with very clear political objectives. so we need fearing what they call the great replacement sewell and his group dream of an all white state. our goal is to create an ethnic state. our goal is to create what australia used to be, and we need to organize ourselves so that we have our own parallel institutions, our own land around cities. so that when the conflict does come, when the geopolitical instability does come, we're safe and preserved. and we have all about things already in place to create a new nation, like soule, the australian, far right aspires to create in apartheid state based on racial segregation. although australia has never actually seen such extremes, whites and indigenous australians have lived a part for years. the district of red vern and sydney is home to indigenous and migrant communities. it has long grappled with poverty, crime, and drugs. it's also experienced police violence and riots. the streets of redfern became a bloody battlefield on the 14th of february, 2004, a 17 year old aboriginal boy had died earlier that afternoon. he was impaled on a fence, laying police on his bike. hundreds of protesters took to the streets, armed with paving stones and molotov cocktails. they battled officers all night long. the situation in redfern has improved in recent years. partly, thanks to the efforts of shane phillips, one of its community leaders. this former boxer collects his protege at 5 in the morning 3 times a week. he believes discipline will keep them on the straight and narrow mosque is going to be a slave to 7 got in the morning, which kids have to be up fourish 3 to be picked up at 5 o'clock. we want them to learn about the strength of lp, one of the lawn, routine and discipline, and focus and doing this early in the morning. a lot of government, graham's also the progress i've driven by deficit to what's wrong with athletes. our program is designed by us and it's driven by strength. that's what these kids get with. many of them have a police record. the hope is that mutual respect and resilience will prevent relapses. with james joined the program a week ago. but 21 year old has just served a 2 year sentence for robbery atmosphere with a title bundle with a few years ago. police and indigenous youngsters would regularly clash in redbird . so to ease tensions, shane invited the chief of police to put gloves on. superintendent andrew holland and his men now come every week to train with local youngsters with i, my wife with crime has dropped 70 percent in redfern since 2010. sidney's. former slum is slowly getting back on its feet. while many indigenous people struggled to find a place in society, others have achieved success. miriam corolla is a prime example. the daughter of an aboriginal mother and an english father. she has become a household name as a journalist, how line they miriam presents the t. v. news for a b, c, one of the biggest australian broadcasters. her program is regularly watched by more than 1000000 australians. i so pinched myself when i think about what i do and where i am, can have an idea of what you want a day. but sometimes he might be reluctant to give it a guy, so it's always nice to think that you can help people understand that it's not impossible deny it is still unusual to see aboriginal people on tv, craig, her director has worked for a b, c for 20 years, but he has rarely worked with native australians these days. so we are seeing a lot more diversity. i. miriam is still very much an exception. i ah, it, it is getting better. and certainly it's getting better in the media as opposed to say drama french since, which is still very much a typical more to strider. look, miriam is a respected journalist to day, but her career has been an uphill struggle. if i hadn't read even to find that discrimination at school and bullying, racism and things like that, i wouldn't have gone on to finish high school because i wouldn't have gone on to university. and without those things, then my options for even having in korea would be really, really limited. sensor divorce. miriam has been raising her 6 year old son alone. he like his mother is growing up between 2 cultures. his father is a white australian, and i mean he knows he's aboriginal, it was quite funny. and it just shows how innocent children are because he was asked about it last year. he said, yes, i'm aboriginal, my dad's aboriginal and you instead in fact founding irish and german, so it's quite fair with blue eyes and everything. i just all, it's funny why that's kind of cure, you know, because he doesn't associate a particular apparent miriam grew up in the 1970s. in those days it was uncommon to see mixed couples in australia for a long time. she grappled with her own identity. hi, this is may with my sister. my mom will little, little little little. this is my mom when she was a go for a long time, i really struggled with this idea of i'm not accepted by mainstream society, but am i really aboriginal because, you know, i am highly educated, a faint university. i work in the media. you know, i don't leave necessarily in a community is such and those sorts of things that people typically associate weeping ambridge hall. i'm not necessarily fitting that box. but um, you know, as time's gone on, we realize that, you know, you can be aboriginal and all the rest miriam hopes her story will inspire other young, aboriginal people. how people think what you and she's optimistic about the future stories now? no, we still have extraordinary problems. we've in our economic disadvantage, we've incarceration. we have one of the world's worst rights of youth suicide in indigenous communities. so it goes to show that it's something very wrong. do i have heard? yeah, i do. yeah. already my life is a world away from that of my mom and my grandmother. i'm able to have dreams and great size goals, and i think for my son, even more sorry. so yes, there is heart. we'll see how he gary for miriam, grew up in sidney. a large urban area full of opportunities. but the further you get from the big cities, it's a totally different picture, primarily in the north of the continent, over 4000 kilometers from sydney beyond the australian bush and the wild plains lies darwin. it's the capital of the northern territory. the country's most northerly state darwin is the drop off point for native australians hoop left the bush and come to the city. often without work or a place to stay hundreds and up on the streets. they're looked after by an 8 organization called lira key, a nation after the regions largest tribe kyle and his partner patrol the streets every day. like it's coming from the communities and sometimes it you know, they come here which will put city area. well, my wallclear over there. yeah. i morning. how i rather well, thank you mark you nation. you ok on the streets today. he wants to get it in just for $11.00. 50 that that money. bob will come back in a bus more better for you. you can check it back, the wagon with us. the organization can only offer emergency health. it doesn't have the means to provide shelter for all of the cities homeless. we've been here, we've really, since he's been years, that's how we live. in down when the day's over kyle and his partner head back to their base. in the early morning, another leora key a team takes over its mission is to find those who spent the night in custody and bring them back to a safe place. good morning, america, available soon as we start taking them away. we'll come and pick you up in and thank you for on just a point where you are bra. kevin has been doing this for 20 years. well, he's watched his community gradually deteriorate. some of them bad drugs now that i've come here like arson, stop law. some of them are taking that stuff to in this part of to, for them to get back to normal or what month with, well ones that are being taken away from her as well. still running away from well clear screens. arrests are most often made for the public consumption of drugs or alcohol. and most of those are native australians that we're ready to go. critics say the darwin, police fun fairly target. aboriginal people with with drugs. alcohol misery. in darwin, many aboriginal people seem to be lost between 2 worlds, between their own and the one imposed on them by white settlers colonizing their lands. in the late 18th century, the new arrivals from britain tried to eradicate the aboriginal people. first, they used weapons, then they organized a breed out policy. for decades, ruling powers tried to sometimes quite literally whiten the black population. aboriginal children were also forcefully taken from their parents, placed in convents or foster families. they were taught to live like good little white children. this practice continued until the early 19 seventy's. more than 100000 children are believed to have suffered this fate. these young victims are called the stolen generation. and history is repeating itself. why, why do we want hundreds of people take to the streets of sydney to protest the actions of the authorities? they're demanding their children back. why don't we want? why don't we, why? today, aboriginal children are 10 times more likely to be removed from their families than white children. half of them are placed in institutions or in white families, far away from their own community. hazel collins is a victim of such forced removals. why don't we, why she organized this demonstration outside the regional parliament? this aboriginal grandmother is battling what she considers to be cultural genocide . we have more clinical setting up. they did. c chiding do us as this. c nation paypal. what is best for us? how we should leave? well then law side. oh thank goodwood ever you babe land that are going to well, a not like us through our children want that they called jo tiger why they heritage takes them to read something that they're not ah, like thousands of other aboriginal families, hazel collins has been separated from her grandchildren, one of them, ryan, was placed with different white families. why? i hoping he'd never mind. a guy, sorry, audio or lima, mobile adam originally my mom had everything kinda well and it all the happy kid until then. no, i come into thank you from region. are everyone you know? it was a complete join? how do you mean have through them? not i just me there's a light on very hard for them because they're drawing up non non engaging warriors. aboriginal. they do repair differently. they are and non just just mom and dad. but as a community i bride that thought the children grow up, losing their identity. that i know they're related to. when i come from, how long did he stole? in just 10 years, the number of aboriginal children placed in foster families has doubled to 18000 across the country to get a better understanding of the reality. behind these figures, we're meeting a mother who has been separated from her children for 6 years. she lives in new castle, a coastal town northeast of sydney were not allowed to show her face. that's forbidden by australian law. her anonymity preserves the identity of her children. so these pitches of my youngest son and this is one of my daughters when, when she lived with me. and this is my daughter, the actual father was taken. the very last contact that i had with the full kids. it sort of makes me sad because even though my daughter's quite happy with the last memory that i had saying my kids together and i know that they were happy to say me and i, when they did say me, her children were all taken away from her because at the time she had a drug problem that was 6 years ago. now she leads a normal life as a job and a house. yet she still forbidden any contact with her children. my children live 20 minutes from me up the road. so i know where my children leave and what school i go to. so the system will not let me see. my children will not let me speak to my children on the phone. they have completely, ostracize me from my children's life completely. the foster carers have convinced the children that i'm afraid to them. so this is the image that my children have of me. even though i work in child protection. i'm a social worker, i'm so you know, a lot of completely turn my life around and it has made no answer difference. like many aboriginal mothers, you know, she was herself removed from her family as a child. no one of my mother's children were removed. we were all separated in the system. we all ended up with addiction problems, all ended up with incarceration problems as children removed. so the cycle has not been broken, just put under a different policy and called a different name, but it's the same generational genocidal practices happening. and basically we have no decision making power in this country at all. so we are completely vulnerable to these institutions to exploit our right. she could very well lose her children forever. their foster families have started adoption proceeding. a law was passed in 2018, allowing them to do so after 5 years of custody. and denying the mother an opportunity to appeal i ah, cheer and be man. we take a trip through scotland with the whisky vicar, the catholic priest, boyfriend who is a self proclaimed church rebel fighting for progress and change in his church. and when he is not working, the question, do understand no holiness who, whiskey in 30 minutes on d. w. with departure be to the today, this meas, flying to a foreign planet. in the 16th century, it meant being a captain and setting sail to discover a route the world famous c. voyage of ferdinand magellan. i'd rather erase linked to military interests, erase links to political lead to military christie. but it was sort of linked to many financial interests and adventure full of hardships, dangers and death 3 years, and that will change the world forever. but jillions journey around the world, starting september 7th on d. w. ah ah facility to be news live from berlin, ukraine's prime minister visits berlin on a mission for bigger weapons. germany says it's boosting support for keep sending more money and arms as diplomatic relations warm up. also coming up to lands vote in a referendum on a new car.

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Transcripts For DW Racism Down Under 20220903

dominance. good is step ahead with the w business beyond on march on the streets of sydney. these native australians are protesting against the death of a member of their community in prison. they want those responsible to face justice course. the contrary, restart the dice. the numbers are back that he got that right. good. talk in less than 30 years. 474. aboriginal australians have died in detention or police custody. 6 and a half times more than white people over the same period. the relatives of those killed warrant closure. lay tony dungy has been fighting for 5 years for justice for her son david, who was serving a sentence for robbery and assault. december 29th, 2015. this body cam footage shows guards trying to transfer david to another cell. he resists the letters served to identify the guards. a young with david is taken to the cell and placed on a bed. then a nurse administers a sedative with his breathing becomes labored. seconds later, david loses consciousness and never wakes up again. neighborhood? easy, yeah, no hell, you know, it took family lawyers months to obtain this video. no one has yet been held accountable. now i got a letter that broke up for a trade flag when they do every don't label. it wasn't fighting. i just ram denali all 6 of them, pulverized a slice squashed in when he come, i'm demand above him and i brought it upon them. i shall be josh. the death of an indigenous australians in prison has never resulted in a conviction historian and human rights activists. by drake gibson says, this is due to systemic racism within australian authorities to actually justify that sort of, of sanely, unjust situation. you made to day humanize the paypal you made to make out, you know, as die that die less than, than everyone else. and that plays out every die in all facets of society. more than 200 years after colonization by the british. many 1st australians still live like outsiders in their own nation. the hidden face of a country viewed by many as a paradise. australia has a population of 26000000. its territory is $21.00 times the size of germany, a nation with a booming economy, a dream destination for immigrants. every year, 200000 applicants are granted a visa. but the idyllic postcards conceal a drama that's been playing out or 2 centuries. the tragedy of native australians, the countries modern indigenous communities are descended from the world's oldest civilization. they've been marginalized since the arrival of white settlers and the early 19th century. they were massacred in the thousands or forcibly assimilated into white society, placed in convents or foster families. indigenous children were taught to behave like good little white children. governments of used assimilation policies to try and create a single uniform white society for decades. many indigenous people to day have pale skin as a result, but whatever their color, they remain. second class citizens. i got no family and got my address live in a long garage. yep. that threatened people come into this into a started thinking that it's a lucky country. that way, living has 1st nice people will, it will as dad well, country even a why lane as the conservative right wing has risen to or in australia, other minorities have felt increasingly marginalized. immigration policies have been tightened. australians of african and asian heritage, or those who are muslim are worried. they're unsettled by increasing anti immigrant sentiment in certain sectors of society. many times i've been told to go back to my country ash, and i love, because i said on this is my country. i was born he off the far right has gained traction in australia. in recent years, new xenophobic parties openly express their hatred of foreigners. china looks like china because it's full of chinese people. you know, what will this charlie look like when it is no white people that it won't look like australia? the muslim community is also a target of the radical right. ah. ban muslim immigration, i'm may personally, i would identify them. on march 15th 2019 and australian white supremacist murdered, 51 muslims. that a mosque in christ church. new zealand, 49 others were seriously injured. australia's minorities live in fear. they're especially critical of the country's justice system. it's notoriously repressive with young people and children in particular despite his white skin. dylan is a native australian heritage. he's already spent 8 of his 21 years in prison for theft and armed robbery. and when i told me all the judges laden example of me extension submitted 22 months ago, i listen. it's not no more. i think it's really my last for i was i wouldn't get any of my. my last child was and stuff like that back goes in. and that childhood was difficult, marred by poverty, drugs, and bad influences. he ran afoul of the law as a minor prison was hell in october, 2010 would be 12 years old. and this is the thing my thought, right. and that this is the person that is telling me was another indigenous male officer. we exchanged words a chart about on and he picks him out by the shorts and takes him into the room and slams me down on my shoulder unto the mattress. mm. and that was one of the 1st times i really i just phone now go to scare me. and he are fixing restaurants here for about 2 and a half, 3 hours because i'm a police prison offices before being manhandled from bigger people than me. i couldn't far back, i couldn't push them off me. that's the only way that i could really get back to them like them language, make them feel the way i'm feeling while they're doing that sort of stuff to me out on this being treated like an animal this footage was published in 2016 by an independent commission of inquiry it cast dylan as the symbol of a last written off youth with definitely think there is a right that she and my father does go to indigenous people with the really, with nothing about rehabilitating to try and make us young people better. people with more met trying to break us and john punish us for what we've done. one of the guards was made the subject of a criminal investigation. but to date, none have been convicted. other minorities also suffer discrimination in australia . nationalist xenophobic groups agitate against muslims. first and foremost, fraser adding is the country's most controversial politician in the wake of the christ church attack. his comments trigger a wave of outrage. this video goes by. they sort of things happen when, when people are getting attacked in their own a frequency for a blanket tour fraser and became widely known in australia after he reference the holocaust in his 1st speech as senator for queensland, a final solution to the immigration problem. of course is a popular vote the senator is campaigning for his reelection. he has always denied referencing the nazi regime and his speeches. final voice was taken out of context in the 9 years leading up to that 22 other politicians in parliament and use the same 2 words in speeches by night. and no one got upset about it. they'll put labels on you like me or not see white supremacist races, all those things. they're all lawyers. i can tell you in the, i mean i fight hard for the jewish community, particularly the israelis it's election day. and the senator has come to support his candidate in a district just outside brisbin. disappointed by the other far right, political parties, fraser, and founded his own nationalist movement. to day, he hopes to win a few more seats in parliament. and he has an unambiguous program to drastically reduce immigration and to permanently ban muslim from entering the country. that hasn't been a country on this planet that embrace the muslims and had them come in here that is not male file style or a muslim nation. i don't believe that aside, and people want to become a minority in their own country and i'm speaking about so that i'm being called a racist. and i'm happy to be called rice if that's what they want to call me. that's fine. what's the band muslim? immigration, me personally, i would identify for them because they are killing us in the straits like we do with any other criminals who are trying to kill you. you want to know where they're gonna bay, otherwise we're just going to lose more. good. astride is not, i'm think we need to proposals, rooted in hatred and fake news only for people in australia have ever been killed in attacks by islamist terrorists. a very, very lot endings program binds residency only like the made the just leave it like i 1st and foremost, immigration policy and 2nd, 8 tied into that is it is, is try you. good and, and it needs to be yes, it's dr. you know, the rest of the well, but we need to solve a wine problem, space i for ice or any which is dry and astrology and space. that's more and the election results come in a few days later. unfortunately for fraser and none of his candidates are elected and he even loses his own seat in the senate to his former more moderate party. nevertheless, xenophobic political parties have proliferated and consolidated voter support in recent years. in order to understand this trend, we have set up a meeting with one of the foremost observers of australian politics and tim. so parmesan is a professor at the university of sydney. he also served as the countries race discrimination commissioner. problem of racism in australia has historical roots. it goes all the way back to the history of colonization, of the streaming continent by the british. remember, that is strangely when it became a political nation in 19 o one. this was a place that was defined by ideas of, of white racial integrity. the advent of a multicultural society in a strange dates back only to the 1970s. it has been a successful society when it comes to multiculturalism and mass immigration. but there are still remnants of old attitudes about race. and unfortunately, we're seeing more and more political actors becoming emboldened to vent racist ideas in public in a way that we haven't seen for some time in an irony of history. these xenophobic ideas are often defended by australians who are themselves, descendants of immigrants. melbourne, in southern australia. in this small suburban church, the service is conducted by a pastor of sri lankan origin. here they pray to god and ask him to protect the country's borders. in may, i, me may, following the national elections, aster daniel nie leah and his congregation are in 7th heaven. the conservatives have just won a large majority, and the new prime minister is a devout christian, and an advocate of stricter immigration control. he's also says one again, private ah, a man of god. the pastor is 1st and foremost a politician. he has bounded a party to defend a christian australia in the face of what he calls a muslim invasion to day. all 30 christine his dad. islam is growing. why is it because people are struggling to judge and texas. i've been sol and they have gone into mosque all over europe. we see them if you get the message, then what a standing go to watch. if you don't watch, say new destination, this to the enemy office, does it with that says i'm godliness, artist. all i'm going to this and that will come against it. tank right now. don't read for something to happen. often. school late daniel nie leo was persecuted in sri lanka for belonging to a christian minority and sought refuge in australia 22 years ago. he soon became an ardent nationalist. he says he's not against the presence of different ethnic groups, but claims islam is incompatible with the values of his adopted nation. the pastor is conducting a religious war world. this is lloyd with his lovely, gotten ready. that's ne, a nick on say, we're supposed to call you guys to saying it isn't as well as this. it would be called races. my skin color was an advantage for me. i thought a thing i would have thought upon to help body to satirize upholstered f one, split up us a deck. oh my god. so lisa, and keep australia, australia he has made his skin color, the banner of his own unrestrained opinion. since the early 2 thousands, he's appeared on many television programs handling his anti islam message. we have a choice nation of what's rally a read again for the koran and follow he's got me shot me a law and be slaves in this nation. all follow the bible and be a free and democratic society. every most is potentia, place for denison to breed. unfortunate destiny drooped, shall who oppose to mos looting, thus be personally felt that there was no need for mo, most who abused in australia. well, i despite pastor ny leah and his message, there are now several 100 mosques in australia. most of australia's 600000 muslims live in sydney or more precisely in la camber, a suburb of the city, the largest mosque and australia is here. during ramadan, it can accommodate 10000 people a night, but more recently, prayers have been tinge with beer. friday prayers are coming to an end at the la camber mosque. ah mont, and australian of lebanese heritage, ensures the safety of the congregation. boy, how are you? how's going good, good. when you praying here tonight? yeah. oh his you father. then i could come here every night. yes. okay, good on was a lump sum household. my mom has called upon australian politicians to put a stop to the stigmatization of muslims. we hope that it would open the eyes and minds of people in the hearts to steer away from any defensive language. and that can lead to acts that people willing to act upon these while acts. everyone has their own agenda and sometimes they play into that rhetoric for the sake of their political gains. ah, and unfortunately, sometimes they just got everybody in the face of such hatred. some muslims have decided to act tough. you kilometers from downtown, sidney and association is working to dismantle the cliches that have become synonymous with the muslim community. founded by sure and australian of lebanese origin, this citizens initiative group comes to the aid of the impoverished. i was born in this country. my parents came here in i, you gotta make me choke on. my parents came here in the seventy's and dumb. i came from a once home country. the fact that i was announced not to be born in a public hospital for free. i went to a public school for free, you know, i was able to have my children. a stranger gave us so much. i wanted me and the muslims that have migrated to his country, bonnie's country to give back to this beautiful country called history. like shoves parents, many of australia's muslims arrived in the 1970s. but for them and subsequent generations. integration remains difficult. dealing with prejudice is part of everyday life. for sure. many times, many times i've been told to go back to my country ash and i laugh because i said on this is my country. i was born here. oh, where do you want me to go? when we get to our grocery shopping, we got a lot of people say a very racist remark out loud. like i don't blow us up. or you terrorists? oh sama, what we're hoping that we break in that barrier and reducing his them a phobia in this country. steve is a christian, he became a volunteer for the association a year ago before that he too was prejudiced against muslims. i want you to think what, what about are trying to do on 9 understand that not old good old. gone for a little bit better. a positive example that counters the slogans of a racist minority. the christ church attack was perpetrated by brenton tarrant, a white australian supremacist. his actions were unanimously condemned by all political parties in australia. public outrage has since forced the most radical extremists to keep a low profile. we have an appointment in melbourne with a man who knew the terrorist. tom sewell is the founder of a small, far right extremist group, called the lad's society. as he's being closely monitored by intelligent services, sewell asked to meet us in the street. he didn't choose the place by chance. well, if you look around, you'll see that there is not so many australians i. if you had a family home, how would you feel about all these people living in your basement? like it was some share house. you know, before i was born, this was a white working class suburb. you know, and now while we've been almost the only white people in this entire suburb, you know, so it shows that the colonization is almost complete. authorities have been watching the group since christ church sewell had actually tried to recruit brenton tarrant several years ago. i had conversations with him online because i noticed that he displayed similar beliefs to us. he didn't want to be involved in what we're doing. and he said that he was moving to new zealand, and that was the last communication that i had with him. this was several years ago . and the government considers that enough of an association that we're to be treated as terrors. we have to keep our meetings and our locations secret. this is where the lads society usually meets. in this video, the organization is presented as an ordinary private sports club for men only. in reality, it's a secret society with very clear political objectives so searing what they call the great replacement sewell and his group dream of an all white state. our goal is to create an ether state. our goal is to create what australia used to be. and we need to organize ourselves so that we have our own parallel institutions, our own land around cities. so that when the conflict does come, when the geopolitical instability does come, we're safe and preserved. and we have all of our things already in place to create a new nation, like sewell, the australian, far right aspires to create in apartheid state based on racial segregation. although australia has never actually seen such extremes, whites and indigenous australians have lived a part for years. the district of red vern and sydney is home to indigenous and migrant communities. it has long grappled with poverty, crime, and drugs. it's also experienced police violence and riots. the streets of redfern became a bloody battlefield on the 14th of february, 2004, a 17 year old aboriginal boy had died earlier that afternoon. he was impaled on a fence, laying police on his bike. hundreds of protesters took to the streets, armed with paving stones and molotov cocktails. they battled officers all night long. the situation in redfern has improved in recent years. partly, thanks to the efforts of shane phillips, one of its community leaders. this former boxer collects his protege at 5 in the morning 3 times a week. he believes discipline will keep them on the straight and narrow mosque is going to be a slave to 7 got in the morning if you definitely fourish 3 a to be picked up at 1 o'clock. we want them to learn about the strength of lp. one of the lawn, routine and discipline and focus and doing this early in the morning. lots of government, graham's also the progress driven by deficit to what's wrong of athletes. our program is designed by us and it's driven by strength. and that's what these kids get with many of them have a police record. the hope is that mutual respect and resilience will prevent relapse is james joined the program a week ago. but 21 year old has just served a 2 year sentence for robbery. atmosphere with a few years ago. police and indigenous youngsters would regularly clash in redfern . so to ease tensions. shane invited the chief of police to put gloves on superintendent andrew holland and his men now come every week to train with local youngsters. with what with crime has dropped 70 percent in redfern since 2010. sidney's former slump is slowly getting back on its feet. while many indigenous people struggled to find a place in society, others have achieved success. miriam corolla is a prime example. daughter of an aboriginal mother and an english father. she has become a household name as a journalist, how long miriam presents the t v news for a b c, one of the biggest australian broadcasters. her program is regularly watched by more than 1000000 australians. i so pinch myself when i think about what i do and where i am, can have an idea of what you want to do. but sometimes you might be reluctant to give it a go. so it's always nice to think that you can help people understand that it's not impossible. it is still unusual to see average people on t. v. craig, her director has worked for a b, c for 20 years. but he has rarely worked with native australia these days. we are seeing a little more diversity. miriam is still very much an exception. known it, it is getting better. and certainly it's getting better in the media as opposed to so drama, for instance, which is still very much a typical more to strike. yeah. look, miriam is a respected journalist to day, but her career has been an uphill struggle. if i hadn't this person need even to find that discrimination at school, bullying, racism and things like that. i wouldn't have gone on to finish high school because i wouldn't have gone on to universe. and without those things, then my options for even having in korea, we're really, really limited censor, divorce. miriam has been raising her 6 year old son alone. he like his mother is growing up between 2 cultures. his father is a white australian, and i mean, he knows he's an aboriginal, it was quite funny. and it just shows how innocent children are because he was asked about it last year. he said, yes, i'm aboriginal my dad's aboriginal. and you instead inspect founding irish and german, so it's quite fair with blue eyes and everything. i just thought i was funny why? that's kind of cute, you know, because he doesn't associate with a particular appearance. miriam grew up in the 1970s. in those days, it was uncommon to see mixed couples in australia. for a long time, she grappled with her own identity. hi, this is may with my sister and my mom will little little little little. this is my mom when she was go. for a long time, i really struggled with this idea of i'm not accepted by mainstream society, but i am i am really aboriginal because, you know, i am highly educated. i've been to universe fee of working the media. you know, i don't leave necessarily in a community such and those sorts of things that people typically associated we, thing and personal. i'm not necessarily fitting that box. but some united times gone on. we realize that, you know, you can be aboriginal and all the rest miriam hopes her story will inspire other young, aboriginal people. how people a think what you and she's optimistic about the future stories. damn. no, we still have extraordinary problems. we've in our economic disadvantage with incarceration, and we have one of the world twist rates of youth suicide in indigenous communities . i'm sorry, it goes to show that it's something very wrong. do i have heart? yeah, i do hope. yeah. already my life is a world away from that of my mom and my grandmother. i'm able to have drains and great size goals, and i think for my son, even more say so. yeah, there is heart. we'll see how he gary, ah, miriam grew up in sidney. a large urban area full of opportunities. but the further you get from the big cities, it's a totally different picture. primarily in the north of the continent, over 4000 kilometers from sydney beyond the australian bush and the wild plains lies darwin. it's the capital of the northern territories. the country's most northerly state. darwin is the drop off point for native australians hoop left the bush and come to the city often without work or a place to stay hundreds and up on the streets. there looked after by an aid organization called lira key, a nation after the regions largest tribe kyle and his partner patrol the streets every day. i guess come in from the communities and sometimes on the house. you know they come here. so rich city area. well, my wallclear over there. yeah. morning. how are you, brother? i'm well, thank you. mark nation. you ok. right on the streets today. he wants to get it. you know, just for $11.50 that that money will come back in a bunch more because you can check it back. the wagon with the organization can only offer emergency health. it doesn't have the means to provide shelter for all of the cities homeless. we've been here, we've really been years. that's how we live in down when the day's over kyle and his partner head back to their base. in the early morning, another leora key a team takes over its mission is to find those who spent the night in custody and bring them back to a safe place. good morning with soon as we start taking them away, we'll come and pick you up in texas and just start, what were you out? run kevin has been doing this for 20 years with well, he's watched his community gradually deteriorate some of them bad drugs. now that i've come here like arson, stop law, some of them now taking that stuff to in this part of to, for them to can i get back to normal or what month with the ones that are being taken away from her as well. still running way from well clear screens, a rests are most often made for the public consumption of drugs or alcohol. and most of those are native australians that we're ready to go. critics say the darwin, police fun fairly target. aboriginal people with drugs, alcohol, misery, in darwin, many aboriginal people seem to be lost between 2 worlds, between their own and the one imposed on them by white settlers colonizing their lands. in the late 18th century, the new arrivals from britain tried to eradicate the aboriginal people. first, they used weapons, then they organized a breed out policy. for decades, ruling powers tried to sometimes quite literally whiten the black population. aboriginal children were also forcefully taken from their parents, placed in convents or foster families. they were taught to live like good little white children. this practice continued until the early 19 seventy's, more than 100000 children are believed to have suffered this fate. these young victims are called the stolen generation and history is repeating itself. why? why don't we want hundreds of people take to the streets of sydney to protest the actions of the authorities. they're demanding their children back. why don't we want? why don't we? why? today, aboriginal children are 10 times more likely to be removed from their families than white children. half of them are placed in institutions or in white families, far away from their own community. hazel collins is a victim of such forced removals. why don't we see organized this demonstration outside the regional parliament? this aboriginal grandmother is battling what she considers to be cultural genocide . what do you know what clinical setting up they did. c hiding do us as this. c now jim paypal, what is best for us? how we should live? well then law side. oh, thank goodness ever you babe layout that are going to move a not like us through our children. want that they call jo tiger, why they heritage takes them to read something that they're not dr. ah, with like thousands of other aboriginal families, hazel hollands has been separated from her grandchildren. one of them, ryan was placed with different white families. why? i say hoping he'd never mind a guy, sorry, audio or lame, a mobile. i'm originally my mom had everything kinda well and it all the happy kid until then. no, i come in to fight you from region. are everyone you know, that would your complaints join nottingham through them not. i just chucked me. there's a light on very hard for them because they're drawing up non non engaging warriors. aboriginal. they do repair differently. rivera and non just just mom and dad. but as a community i bride that thought the children grow up, losing their i didn't that i know they're related to when i come from hall on did he stole in just 10 years. the number of aboriginal children placed in foster families has doubled to 18000 across the country to get a better understanding of the reality. behind these figures, we're meeting a mother who has been separated from her children for 6 years. she lives in new castle, a coastal town northeast of sydney were not allowed to show her face that forbidden by australian law. her anonymity preserves the identity of her children. so they pitches of my youngest son, and this is one of my daughters when, when she lived with me. and this is my daughter, the actual father was taken. the very last contact that i had with the full kids. it sort of makes me sad because even though my daughter's quite happy with the last memory that i had to say my kids together and i know that they were happy to see me and i, when they did say me, her children were all taken away from her because at the time she had a drug problem that was 6 years ago. now she lead to normal life as a job and a house. yet she still forbidden any contact with her children. my children live 20 minutes from me up the road. so i know where my children live, why not what school like to. so the system will not let me see, my children will not let me speak to my children on the phone. they have completely, ostracize me from my children's life completely. the foster care's had convinced the children that i'm afraid to them. so this is the image that my children have of me. even though i work in child protection. i'm a social worker. so you know, a lot of completely turn my life around and it has major no answer difference. like many aboriginal mothers, you know, she was herself removed from her family as a child none of my mother's children were removed. we were all separated in the system. we all ended up with addiction problems, all ended up with incarceration problems at children removed. so the cycle has not been broken. just put under a different policy and called a different 9. but it's the same generational genocide practices happening. basically, we have no decision making power in this country at all. so we are completely vulnerable to these institutions to exploit our rights. she could very well lose her children forever. their foster families have started adoption proceeding. a law was passed in 2018, allowing them to do so after 5 years of custody, and denying the mother an opportunity to appeal i blue. oh, there is an old saying show me how you live, and i'll tell you when you are visiting king lou 5th. the 2nd over very f noise fun shine castle were given an exclusive tour by his great, great grand nephew, and get to see what remains hidden. to most your romance. 30 minute d w. o. departure . be to the to day this meet flying to a foreign planet. in the 16th century, it meant lena captain and setting sail to discover a route the world famous c. voyage of ferdinand of magellan. i'd rather erase linked to military interests, erase linked to political and military. christy that it was sort of linked to many financial interests and adventure full of hardships, dangers and death 3 years. and that will change the world forever. but jillions journey around the world starts september 7th on d, w. ah, ah, this is, did you use live from berlin? russia bid farewell to former leader mikhail gorbachev. crowds lined up in moscow to see the lost leader of the soviet union laid to rest. but there was no full state funeral for the men. some russians reject as a traitor. also coming up a tennis.

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Transcripts For DW Racism Down Under 20220903

a special country. he land from above. start september 16th on d, w. ah ah, march on the streets of sydney. these native australians are protesting against the death of a member of their community in prison. they want those responsible to face justice course the contrary. who starts the numbers off by 15, is that right? good. talk in less than 30 years, 474. aboriginal australians have died in detention or police custody. 6 and a half times more than white people over the same period. the relatives of those killed warrant closure lay tony dungy has been fighting for 5 years for justice for her son david, who was serving a sentence for robbery and assault. december 29th 2015. this body cam footage shows guards, trying to transfer david to another cell. he resists. the letters served to identify the guards, a nurse at ministers, a sedative with his breathing becomes labor. seconds later, david loses consciousness and never wakes up again. okay, good. we see the gap will help you. mm hm. it took family lawyers months to obtain this video. no one has yet been held accountable. now i got a letter that broke separate to reflect what they do every don't label. it wasn't fighting. i just rammed in olean. all 6 of them, pulverized him is flies the squashed in. when he come, i'm to man above him and i brought upon them. i shall be josh. the death of an indigenous australians in prison has never resulted in a conviction historian and human rights activist. by drake gibson, says, this is due to systemic racism within australian authorities to actually justify that sort of obscene leon. just situation, you need to day humanize the people you need to make out, you know, as die that die less than, than everyone else. and that plays out every die in all facets of society. more than 200 years after colonization by the british. many 1st australians still live like outsiders in their own nation. the hidden face of a country viewed by many as a paradise. australia has a population of 26000000. it's territory is $21.00 times the size of germany. a nation with a booming economy, a dream destination for immigrants. every year, 200000 applicants are granted a visa font. the idyllic postcards conceal a drama that's been playing out or 2 centuries. the tragedy of native australians, the countries modern indigenous communities are descended from the world's oldest civilization. they've been marginalized since the arrival of white settlers and the early 19th century. they were massacred in the thousands or forcibly assimilated into white society, placed in convents or foster families. indigenous children were taught to behave like good little white children. governments of used assimilation policies to try and create a single uniform white society for decades. many indigenous people to day have pale skin as a result, but whatever their color, they remain. second class citizens. i got no family who got my address live in a long garage. yeah, that's right. people come into this into a star, you think another to lucky country that way, living as person i believe, and i said well can for you and i are late as the conservative right wing has risen to or in australia. other minorities have felt increasingly marginalized. immigration policies have been tightened. australians of african and asian heritage, or those who are muslims, are worried. they're unsettled by increasing anti immigrant sentiment in certain sectors of society. many times i've been told to go back to my country ash and i love because i said on this is my country i was born he off the far right has gained traction in australia. in recent years, new xenophobic parties openly express their hatred of foreigners. china looks like china because it's full of chinese people. you know, what will this, charlie look like when it is no white people that it won't look like australia? the muslim community is also a target of the radical right ah. ban. muslim immigration. i may personally, i would a identify them. on march 15th, 2019 and australian white supremacist murdered. 51 muslims at a mosque in christ church. new zealand. 49. others were seriously injured. australia's minorities live in fear. they're especially critical of the country's justice system. it's notoriously repressive with young people and children in particular. despite his white skin, dylan is of native australian heritage. he's already spent 8 of his 21 years in prison for theft and armed robbery and went us to all these. all of the judges made an example. adam in sentence made it 22 months ago as a 12 year old kid. i've written it. it's not no more, i think it's really my law for i was able to get any of my of my luck, childhood and stuff like that that goes in and that childhood was difficult, marked by poverty, drugs, and bad influences. he ran afoul of the law as a minor prison was hell. this was in october 2010. i would have been let 12 years so and this is setting up my thought, right. and that this is the person that is telling me with another indigenous male officer, we exchanged words, a charged santa spot on him, and he fixing up by the show and takes him into the room and the flames, coming down on my shoulder onto the mattress. and i was one of the 1st time that i really had to go care and i have 16 restaurants here for about 2 and a half, 3 hours because that i'm asleep spent on prison officers before being manhandled from big people with me. i couldn't fight back, i couldn't push them off me. one of the ways that i could really get back to them, make them angry, make them feel of the way i'm feeling while they're doing that sort of stuff to me . i'm just being treated like an animal this footage was published in 2016 by an independent commission of inquiry. it tasks dylan as the symbol of a lot written off youth switching. i definitely think there is a rice issue and my son it does go to indigenous people with the really, with nothing and that rehabilitating to make us young people better. people with more about trying to break us. and it's drawn upon us as to what we've done. one of the guards was made the subject of a criminal investigation. but to date, none have been convicted. other minorities and also suffer discrimination in australia. nationalist xenophobic groups agitate against muslims. first and foremost, fraser adding is the country's most controversial politician in the wake of the christ church attack. his comments trigger a wave of outrage. this video goes by. they sort of things happen when, when people are getting attacked in their own frequency, rebecca tour fraser and became widely known in australia after he reference the holocaust in his 1st speech as senator for queensland, a final solution to the immigration problem, of course is a popular vote the senator is campaigning for his reelection. he has always denied referencing the nazi regime and his speeches. voice was taken out of context in the 9 years leading up to that 22 other politicians in parliament and use the same 2 words in speeches night and no one got upset about it. they'll put labels on you like me. i see white supremacist races, all those things, they're all law is. i can tell you now. i mean i fight hard for the jewish community, particularly the israelis it's election day. and the senator has come to support his candidate in a district just outside brisbin. disappointed by the other far right, political parties, fraser, and founded his own nationalist movement to day, he hopes to win a few more seats in parliament. and he has an unambiguous program to drastically reduce immigration and to permanently ban muslims from entering the country. it hasn't been a country on this planet that embrace the muslims and had them come in here that is not male file site or a muslim nation. i don't believe that aside, and people want to become a minority in their own country. and i'm speaking about it so that i'm being called a racist and i'm happy to be called rice if that's what they want to call me. that's fine. what's the band muslim? immigration? me personally, i would identify for them because they killing us in the streets like we do with any other criminals who are trying to kill you. you want to know where they're gonna me otherwise we're just going to lose more good. a strain is not, i think we need to proposals, rooted in hatred and fake news. only 4 people in australia have ever been killed and attacked by islamist terrorists. the very guy, lot endings program fines residency only like the many digits i 1st and foremost, immigration policy and 2nd, 8 tied into that is it is, is try you 1st and it needs to be yes, has tried it, not the rest of the world, but we need to solve our problems 1st, surprise, or any which is try you and astrology and space. that's more and the election results come in a few days later. unfortunately for fraser and none of his candidates are elected and he even loses his own seat in the senate to his former more moderate party. nevertheless, xenophobic political parties have proliferated and consolidated voter support in recent years. in order to understand this trend, we have set up a meeting with one of the foremost observers of australian politics and tim. so parmesan is a professor at the university of sydney. he also served as the countries race discrimination commissioner. problem of racism in australia has historical roots. it goes all the way back to the history of colonization, of the streaming continent by the british. remember the destroyer, when it became a political nation in 19 o one. this was a place that was defined by ideas of, of white racial integrity, the advent of a multicultural society and astray, lead dykes back only to the 1970s. it has been a successful society when it comes to multiculturalism and mass immigration. but there are still remnants of old attitudes about race. and unfortunately, we're seeing more and more political actors becoming emboldened to vent racist ideas in public in a way that we haven't seen for some time in an irony of history. these xenophobic ideas are often defended by australians who are themselves, descendants of immigrants. melbourne, in southern australia. in this small suburban church, the service is conducted by a pastor of sri lankan origin. here they pray to god and ask him to protect the country's borders. in may, i, me may, following the national elections, aster daniel nie leah and his congregation are in 7th heaven. the conservatives have just won a large majority, and the new prime minister is a devout christian, and an advocate of stricter immigration control. he's also says that there was again, private ah, a man of god. the pastor is 1st and foremost, a politician. he has founded a party to defend a christian australia in the face of what he calls a muslim invasion to day. all 307. his dad islam is growing. why is it because people are struggling to judge and texas, i've been sold and they have gone into mosque all over europe. we see them if you get the message, then what a standing go to watch. we don't watch any of your did the nation and this to the enemy office does it with that? says ungodliness, not a style. i'm going to this as little come against it. that right now. don't read for something to happen. often. school late daniel ny leah was persecuted in sri lanka for belonging to a christian minority and sought refuge in australia 22 years ago. he soon became an ardent nationalist. he says he's not against the presence of different ethnic groups, but claims islam is incompatible with the values of his adopted nation. the pastor is conducting a religious war world. this is wally with his love gone ranita northeast. and their consent was supposed to been cut after saying this as well as this, it would be called races. my skin color was an advantage for me. i thought a thing i would have thought upon to have body to satirize upholstered f one, split up us to attack a poet, montgomery, sam, and keep australia, australia he has made his skin color, the banner of his own unrestrained opinion. since the early 2 thousands, he's appeared on many television programs, peddling his anti islam message. we have a choice nation of what's rally, a read again, foil the code on how to follow. you saw me shot me a lot of be placing this nation. all one of the bible and be a free and democratic society. every most is potentia police force that is him to breed, unfortunately destitute. chill, who opposed to mosque looting, thus be personally felt that there was no need for more moscow abuse in australia. i despite pastor ny leah and his message, there are now several 100 mosques in australia. most of australia's 600000 muslims live in sydney or more precisely in la camber, a suburb of the city, the largest mosque and australia is here. ah, during ramadan, it can accommodate 10000 people a night. but more recently, prayers have been tinge with fear. friday prayers are coming to an end at the la tampa mosque. off mont, and australian of lebanese heritage, ensures the safety of the congregation. boy, how are you? how's going? good, good. when you're praying here tonight, yet i was you, father was then i could come here. every night i got on was a lump sum household. the hoffman has called upon australian politicians to put a stop to the stigmatization of muslims. we hope that it would open the eyes and minds of people in the hearts to steer away from any defensive language. and that can lead to acts that people willing to act upon these while acts. everyone has their own agenda and sometimes they play into that rhetoric for the sake of their political gains. unfortunately, sometimes they just got overboard in the face of such hatred. some muslims have decided to act with a few kilometers from downtown sydney and association, is working to dismantle that cliches that have become synonymous with the muslim community. founded by sure, and australian of lebanese origin, this citizens initiative group comes to the aid of the impoverished ha. i was born in the country. my parents came here in, i, you gotta make me choke. my parents came here in the seventy's. and um, like insulin, once on country, the fact that i was allowed in i to be born in a public hospital for free. i went to a public school for free. ah, you know, i was able to have my children. australia gave us so much. i wanted me and the muslims that have migrated to his country upon his country to give back to this beautiful country cottage trail like selves, parents, many of australia's muslims arrived in the 1970s. but for them and subsequent generations, integration remains difficult. dealing with prejudice is part of everyday life for show of many times, many times i've been told to go back to my country ash and i love because i said on this is my country. i was born here. oh, where do you want me to go? when we got to grocery shopping, we got a lot of people say a very racist remark out loud. like i don't blow us up. all you terrorists? oh sama, what we're hoping that we break can that barrier and reducing his them a phobia in this country. steve is a christian, he became a volunteer for the association a year ago before that he too was prejudiced against muslims. i want to think what, what about are throwing through and 9 understand that not all of them on the bed in a positive example that counters the slogans of a racist minority. the christ church attack was perpetrated by brenton tarrant, a white australian supremacist. his actions were unanimously condemned by all political parties in australia. public outrage has since forced the most radical extremists to keep a low profile. we have an appointment in melbourne with a man who knew the terrorist. tom sewell is the founder of a small, far right extremist group, called the lad's society, as he's being closely monitored by intelligent services. sewell asked to meet us in the street. he didn't choose the place by chance. well, if you look around, you'll see that there is not so many australians. if you had a family home, how would you feel about all these people living in your basement? like it was some share house. you know, before i was born, this was a white working class, you know, and now, while we've been almost the only white people in this entire sub, you know? so it shows that the colonization is almost complete. authorities have been watching the group since christ church sewell had actually tried to recruit. brandt and terrence. several years ago, i had conversations with him online because i noticed that he displayed similar beliefs to us. he didn't want to be involved in what we're doing. and he said that he was moving to new zealand and that was the last communication that i had with him. this was several years ago. the government considers that enough of an association that were to be treated as terrorist. we have to keep our meetings and locations secret. this is where the land society usually meets. in this video, the organization is presented as an ordinary private sports club for men only. in reality, it's a secret society with very clear political objectives. so we need fearing what they call the great replacement sewell and his group dream of an all white state. our goal is to create an ethno state. our goal is to create what australia used to be, and we need to organize ourselves so that we have our own parallel institutions around land, around cities. so that when the conflict does come, when the geopolitical instability does come, we're safe and preserved. and we have all of our things already in place to create a new nation, like soule, the australian, far right aspires to create in apartheid state based on racial segregation. although australia has never actually seen such extremes, whites and indigenous australians have lived a part for years. the district of red vern and sydney is home to indigenous and migrant communities. it has long grappled with poverty, crime, and drugs. it's also experienced police violence and riots. the streets of redfern became a bloody battlefield on the 14th of february, 2004, a 17 year old aboriginal boy had died earlier that afternoon. he was impaled on a fence, leading police on his bike. hundreds of protesters took to the streets, armed with paving stones and molotov cocktails. they battled officers all night long. the situation in redfern has improved in recent years. partly thanks to the efforts of shane phillips, one of its community leaders. this former boxer collects his protege at 5 in the morning 3 times a week. he believes discipline will keep them on the straight and narrow. musk is going to be asleep for them. got in the morning. if you definitely fourish 3 a to be picked up at 1 o'clock. we want them to learn about the strength of lp, one of the lawn, routine and discipline, and focus and doing this early in the morning. lots of government. graham's also the program. i've driven by deficits to what's wrong with athletes programmes designed by us. and it's driven by strength as what these kids with many of them have a police record. the hope is that mutual respect and resilience will prevent relapse is james joined the program a week ago. but 21 year old has just served a 2 year sentence for robbery. atmosphere with a a few years ago. police and indigenous youngsters would regularly clash in redfern . so to ease tensions, shane invited the chief of police to put gloves on superintendent andrew holland and his men now come every week to train with local youngsters. with what with crime has dropped 70 percent in redfern since 2010. sidney's former slump is slowly getting back on its feet. while many indigenous people struggled to find a place in society, others have achieved success. miriam corolla is a prime example, daughter of an aboriginal mother and an english father. she has become a household name as a journalist, how long miriam presents the t v news for a b c, one of the biggest australian broadcasters. her program is regularly watched by more than 1000000 australians. i still pinch myself when i think about what i do and where i am, can have an idea of what you want to do. but sometimes you might be reluctant to give it a go, so it's always nice to think that you can help people understand that it's not impossible. it is still unusual to see average and people on t v. craig, her director, has worked for a b, c for 20 years, but he has rarely worked with native australia these days. we are seeing a little more diversity. miriam is still very much an exception. 9 it is getting better and certainly it's getting better in the media as opposed to say drama for instance, which is still very much a typical morning to strike. yeah. look, miriam is a respected journalist to day, but her career has been an uphill struggle. if i hadn't read even despise discrimination at school, bullying, racism and things like that, i wouldn't have gone on to finish high school because i wouldn't have gone on to university. and without those things, then my options for even having in korea would be really, really limited. sensor divorce. miriam has been raising her 6 year old son alone. he like his mother, is growing up between 2 cultures. his father is a white australian, and i mean he knows he's aboriginal, it was quite funny. and it just shows how innocent children are because he was asked about it last year. he said, yes, i'm abberation, my dad's aboriginal and you in studies background in irish and german. so it's quite fair with blue eyes and everything. i just all it's funny while it's kind of cure because he doesn't associate with a particular appearance. miriam grew up in the 1970s. in those days, it was uncommon to see mixed couples in australia. for a long time, she grappled with her own identity. hi, this is mae with my sister. my mom will little little little little. this is my mom when she was go for a long time, i really struggled with this idea of i'm not accepted by mainstream society, but i am i am really aboriginal because, you know, i am highly educated. i've been teen of as fee a work in the media. you know, i don't leave necessarily in a community such and those sorts of things that people typically associated weeping operational. i'm not necessarily fitting that box, but some united times gone on. we realize that, you know, you can be aboriginal and all the rest miriam hopes her story will inspire other young, aboriginal people. how people a think what you and she's optimistic about the future stories. damn. no, we still have extraordinary problems. we've in our economic disadvantage, we've incarceration, and we have one of the world twist rates of youth suicide in indigenous communities . i'm sorry, it goes to show that it's something very wrong to have high. yeah, i do. yeah. already my life is a world away from that of my mom and my grandmother. i'm able to have drains and great size goals, and i think for my son, even more say so. yeah, there is heart. we'll see how we guy for miriam, grew up in sidney. a large urban area full of opportunities. but the further you get from the big cities, it's a totally different picture, primarily in the north of the continent. over 4000 kilometers from sydney beyond the australian bush and the wild plains lies darwin. it's the capital of the northern territories. the country's most northerly state darwin is the drop off point for native australians hoop left the bush and come to the city. often without work or a place to stay hundreds and up on the streets. there looked after by an aid organization called lira key, a nation after the regions largest tribe kyle and his partner patrol the streets every day. i guess come in from the communities and sometimes on the house. you know they come here so which city area? well, my wallclear over there. yeah. morning. how are you, brother? i'm well, thank you. from mark nation. you ok. right on the streets today. he wants to get it in just for the $911.50. that that money will come back in a bunch more better for you. if you can check it back, the wagon with the organization can only offer emergency health. it doesn't have the means to provide shelter for all of the cities homeless. we've been here with us and years and that's how we live in dallas. when the day's over kyle and his partner head back to their base in the early morning, another leora key a team takes over its mission is to find those who spent the night in custody and bring them back to a safe place. good morning with soon as we start taking them away, we'll come and pick you up in texas. and deborah are just like, what were you out right now? kevin has been doing this for 20 years with well, he's watched his community gradually deteriorate. some of them bad drugs now that i've come here like arson, stop lover, some of them now taking that stuff to in this part of to, for them to get back to normal or what month with the ones that are being taken away from what it was still running way from well clear freeze rests are most often made for the public consumption of drugs or alcohol. and most of those are native australians that we're ready to go. critics say the darwin, police fun fairly target. aboriginal people with drugs, alcohol, misery, in darwin, many aboriginal people seem to be lost between 2 worlds, between their own and the one imposed on them by white settlers colonizing their lands. in the late 18th century, the new arrivals from britain tried to eradicate the aboriginal people. first, they used weapons, then they organized a breed out policy. for decades, ruling powers tried to sometimes quite literally whiten the black population. aboriginal children were also forcefully taken from their parents, placed in convents or foster families. they were taught to live like good little white children. this practice continued until the early 19 seventy's, more than 100000 children are believed to have suffered this fate. these young victims are called the stolen generation and history is repeating itself. why? why don't we want hundreds of people take to the streets of sydney to protest the actions of the authorities. they're demanding their children back. why don't we want? why don't we? why? today, aboriginal children are 10 times more likely to be removed from their families than white children. half of them are placed in institutions or in white families, far away from their own community. hazel collins is a victim of such forced removals. why don't we see organized this demonstration outside the regional parliament? this aboriginal grandmother is battling what she considers to be cultural genocide . what do you have? what clinical setting up they. c dictating to us as this. c nation paypal. what is best for us? how we should live? well, they must say, oh, thank goodwood ever you babe land that are doing well, i'm not like, oh, certainly our children want that they call jo. tiger, why they heritage takes them to read something that they're not ah, like thousands of other aboriginal families, hazel hollands has been separated from her grandchildren. one of them, ryan was placed with different white families. why? i hoping he'd never mind. i guys are already more label mobile. i had my recently my mom had everything in the well and it all to have a kid until then. no, i come in to fight you from reading. are everyone you know that would your complaints join nottingham fuel not. i do chuck me, there's a light on no, very hard for them because they're drawing up non non infringing warriors aboriginal visual repair differently. we. they are non just as mom and dad . but as a community i bride that got all the children grow up, losing their identity, that i know they're relied to where they come from and how long did you stolen? in just 10 years, the number of aboriginal children placed in foster families has doubled to 18000 across the country to get a better understanding of the reality. behind these figures, we're meeting a mother who's been separated from her children for 6 years. she lives in newcastle, a coastal town northeast of sydney were not allowed to show her face. that's forbidden by australian law. her anonymity preserves the identity of her children. so these pitches of my youngest son and this is one of my daughters when, when she lived with me. and this is my daughter, the actual father was taken. the very last contact that i had with the full kids. it sort of makes me sad because even though my daughter's quite happy with the last memory that i had to say my kids together. and i know that they were happy to say me and i, when they did say me, her children were all taken away from her because at the time she had a drug problem. that was 6 years ago. now she leads a normal life as a job and a house. yet she still forbidden any contact with her children. my children live 20 minutes from me up the road, so i know where my children leave. i know what school i go to. so the system will not let me see, my children will not let me speak to my children on the phone. they have completely, ostracize me from my children's life completely. the foster carers have convinced the children that i'm afraid to them. so this is the image that my children have of me. even though i work in child protection. i'm a social worker, i'm so you know, a lot of completely turn my life around and it has made no answer difference. like many aboriginal mothers, you know, she was herself removed from her family as a child none of my mother's children were removed, we were all separated in the system. we all ended up with addiction problems, all ended up with incarceration problems at children removed. so the cycle has not been broken, just put under a different policy and called a different 9, but it's the same generational genocidal practices happening. basically we have no decision making power in this country at all. so we are completely vulnerable to these institutions to exploit our rights. she could very well lose her children forever. their foster families have started adoption proceeding. a law was passed in 2018, allowing them to do so after 5 years of custody. and denying the mother an opportunity to appeal i with making the headlights and what's behind them. dw news africa. they show that the issues in the continent life is slowly getting back to normal. yeah. on the street to give you enough reports on the inside our cars on the ground reporting from across the continent and all the trend stuff. my talk to you in 30 minutes on the w o. a is just a thought say well, crazy for no one has no limit. no love is for everybody. love is life. i love matters and that's my new podcast. i'm evelyn char, mom and i really think we need to talk about all the topics that more divide and deny that this i have invited many deer and well known guests. and i would like to invite you to 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Transcripts For DW Racism Down Under 20220902

our mission. to analyze the flight for market dominance. get a step ahead with d. w. business beyond on march on the streets of sydney. these native australians are protesting against the death of a member of their community in prison. they want those responsible to face justice course. concrete numbers are back that he got that right. good talk in less than 30 years. 474. aboriginal australians have died in detention or police custody. 6 and a half times more than white people over the same period. the relatives of those killed want closure. late tony dungy has been fighting for 5 years for just as for her son david, who was serving a sentence for robbery and assault. december 29th, 2015. this body cam footage shows guards trying to transfer david to another cell. he resists the letters, served to identify the guards. a with david is taken to the cell and placed on a bed. then a nurse at ministers, a sedative with his breathing becomes labor. seconds later, david loses consciousness and never wakes up again. so we see the gap will help you. mm hm. it took family lawyers months to obtain this video. no one has yet been held accountable. now they've gone all it is that right? separate traits like when they do every label, wasn't fighting by just ram denali. all 6 of them pulverized is vice, squashed in when he come, i'm demand above him that i brought upon them. i shall be god. the death of an indigenous australians in prison has never resulted in a conviction historian and human rights activist. padraic gibson says this is due to systemic racism within australian authorities to actually justify that sort of obscene leon. just situation you need to day humanize the paypal. you made to mike out, you know, as die that die less than, than everyone else. and that plays out every die in all facets of society. more than 200 years after colonization by the british. many 1st australians still live like outsiders in their own nation. the hidden face of a country viewed by many as a paradise. australia has a population of 26000000. its territory is $21.00 times the size of germany. a nation with a booming economy. a dream destination for immigrants. every year, 200000 applicants are granted a visa fund. the adela postcards conceal a drama that's been playing out or 2 centuries. the tragedy of native australians, the countries modern indigenous communities are descended from the world's oldest civilization. they've been marginalized since the arrival of white settlers in the early 19th century. they were massacred in the thousands or forcibly assimilated into white society, placed in convents or foster families. indigenous children were taught to behave like good little white children. governments of used assimilation policies to try and create a single uniform white society for decades. many indigenous people to day have pale skin as a result, but whatever their color, they remain. second class citizens. i got no family, got no address live in ross and yeah, that's right. i come into this into a start. you think that it's like a country, but we're living at 1st now. people will live in that 3rd world country, you know, on land. as the conservative right wing has risen to power in australia, other minorities have felt increasingly marginalized. immigration policies have been tightened. australians of african and asian heritage, or those who are muslims, are worried. they're unsettled by increasing anti immigrants sentiment in certain sectors of society. many stories i've been told to go back to my country. and i love because i don't, this is my country all the on the far right have gained attraction in australia. in recent years, new xenophobic parties openly expressed their hatred of foreigners. china looks like china because it's full of chinese people. what will is charlie look like when it is no white people? you know, it won't look like a stretch of the muslim community is also a target of the radical right. the band muslim immigration may personally, i would identify them. on march 15, 2019 and australian white supremacist murdered, 51 muslims at a mosque in christ church. new zealand. 49. others were seriously injured. australia's minorities live in fear. they're especially critical of the country's justice system. it's notoriously repressive with young people and children in particular despite his white skin. dylan is of native australian heritage. he's already spent 8 of his 21 years in prison for theft and armed robbery and went out to toby's all of the judges made an example on the expenses made it 22 months ago. i've told y'all keep on my vision at it. it's not no more. i think it's really my law for i was yeah, really. yeah. any along off my luck, childhood and stuff like that back goes and that childhood was difficult marked by poverty, drugs and bad influences. he ran afoul of the law as a minor prison was hell. it was in october 2010, no to be let 12 years. so and this is the thing that most heartbreaking, that this is the person that is selling me was another indigenous male officer. we exchanged words a charge and and he picks him out by the shorts and takes him into the room and slams me down on my shoulder onto the mattress. and that was one of the 1st times i really i just you know, go to scare me and, and he, i think staying frustrated here for about 2 and a half, 3 hours because i'm please spell prison offices before being manhandled from bigger people than me. i couldn't fall back, i couldn't push them off me that i wanted to. i knew ways that i could really get back at them like them angry, make them feel the way i'm feeling while they're doing that sort of stuff to me and i was being treated like an animal. this footage was published in 2016 by an independent commission of inquiry. it cast dylan as the symbol of a last written off youth for switching. i definitely think there is a right issue. my father does go to indigenous people with the really, with nothing about rehabilitating to try and make us young people better. people with more met trying to break us and john upon us. that's what we've done. one of the guards was made the subject of a criminal investigation, but to date, none have been convicted. other minorities also suffer discrimination in australia . nationalist xenophobic groups agitate against muslims. first and foremost, fraser adding is the country's most controversial politician in the wake of the christ church attack. his comments trigger a wave of outrage. this video goes by. they sort of things happen when, when people are getting attacked in their own frequency for a blanket tour fraser, and became widely known in australia after he reference the holocaust. in his 1st speech as senator or queensland, the final solution to the immigration problem of course is a popular vote. the senator is campaigning for his reelection. he has always denied referencing the nazi regime and his speeches. final voice was taken out of context in the 9 years leading up to that 22 other politicians in parliament and use the same 2 words in speeches night and no one got upset about it. they'll put labels on you like me. i see white supremacist races, all those things, they're all law is. i can tell you in the i mean i fight hard for the jewish community, particularly the israelis it's election day. and the senator has come to support his candidate and a district just outside brisbin. disappointed by the other far right, political parties, fraser, and founded his own nationalist movement to day, he hopes to win a few more seats in parliament. and he has an unambiguous program to drastically reduce immigration and to permanently ban muslims from entering the country. that hasn't been a country on this planet that embrace the muslims and had them come in here that is not male file site or a muslim nation. i don't believe that aside, and people want to become a minority in their own country. and i'm speaking about it so that i'm being called a racist and i'm happy to be called rice if that's what they want to call me. that's fine. what's the band muslim? immigration? me personally, i would identify for them because they killing us in the straight. like we do with any other criminals who are trying to kill you. you want to know where they're gonna bay, otherwise we're just going to lose more. good. astride is not. i'm think we need 2 proposals, rooted in hatred and fake news. only 4 people in australia have ever been killed in attacks by islamist terrorists. the very very lot endings program binds residency only like the many digits i. first and foremost, immigration policy and 2nd, 8, tied into that is it is, is try you 1st. and it needs to be yes, it's dried it and note the rest of the well. but we need to solve a wine problem space, as i fries or any which is dry, your industry, williamsburg. that's more and the election results come in a few days later. unfortunately for fraser and none of his candidates are elected. and he even loses his own seat in the senate to his former more moderate party. nevertheless, xenophobic political parties have proliferated and consolidated voter support in recent years. in order to understand this trend, we have set up a meeting with one of the foremost observers of australian politics and tim, so pa, my son is a professor at the university of sydney. he also served as the countries race discrimination commissioner, problem of racism in australia has historical roots. it goes all the way back to the history of colonization, of the streaming continent by the british. remember that is strangely when it became a political nation in 19 o one. this was a place that was defined by ideas of, of white racial integrity. the advent of a multicultural society and his railey dykes back only to the 1970s. it has been a successful society when it comes to multiculturalism and mass immigration, but there are still remnants of old attitudes about race. and unfortunately, we're seeing more and more political actors becoming emboldened to vent racist ideas in public, in a way that we haven't seen for some time in an irony of history. these xenophobic ideas are often defended by australians who are themselves, descendants of immigrants. melbourne in southern australia in this small suburban church. the service is conducted by a pastor of sri lankan origin. here they pray to god and ask him to protect the country's borders. may i me may, following the national elections, aster daniel nie leah and his congregation are in 7th heaven. the conservatives have just won a large majority, and the new prime minister is a devout christian, and an advocate of stricter immigration controls. he's also says one again, private ah, a man of god. the pastor is 1st and foremost a politician. he has founded a party to defend a christian australia in the face of what he calls a muslim invasion to day. all 307. his dad islam is growing. why is it because people are struggling to judge and texas, i've been sold and they have gone into mosque all over europe. we see them if you get the message, then what a standing go to watch. you don't watch any of your destination. this did the enemy office, does it that says ungodliness, not his style. i'm going to this as though come against it back right now. don't read for something to happen. often school late daniel nie leo was persecuted in sri lanka for belonging to a christian minority and sought refuge in australia 22 years ago. he soon became an ardent nationalist. he says he's not against the presence of different ethnic groups, but claims islam is incompatible with the values of his adopted nation. the pastor is conducting a religious war world. this is lloyd with his lovely gone readiness northeast. and their consent was supposed to been cut after saying this as soon as this it would be got raised. my skin color wasn't advantage for me. i thought a thing i would have thought upon to have body to satirize upholstered f one, split up us a deck. oh my god to lisa and keep australia, australia he has made his skin color, the banner of his own unrestrained opinion. since the early 2 thousands, he's appeared on many television programs handling his anti islam message. we have a choice nation of what's rally. i read again for the koran and follow, he saw me shot me a lot and be placing this nation all follow the bible. and be a free and democratic society, every most is potentia. place for dennis and to breed. unfortunate, destiny drooped, shall who oppose to mos looting, thus be pushing the field the dose, no need for mo most who abused in australia. well, i despite pastor ny leah and his message, there are now several 100 mosques in australia. most of australia's 600000 muslims live in sydney, or more precisely in la camber, a suburb of the city, the largest mosque and australia is here. ah, during ramadan, it can accommodate 10000 people a night. but more recently, prayers have been tinge with beer. friday prayers are coming to an end at the la camber mosque. ah mont, and australian of lebanese heritage, ensures the safety of the congregation plan. how are you? how's it going? good. good. when you praying here tonight yet? no. oh his you father. was then i could come here every night. yes. okay, good on. was a lump sum household. the hoffman has called upon australian politicians to put a stop to the stigmatization of muslims. we hope that it would open the eyes and minds of people in the hearts to steer away from any defensive language. and that can lead to acts that people willing to act upon these while acts. everyone has their own agenda and sometimes they play into that rhetoric for the sake of their political gains. unfortunately, sometimes they just got everybody in the face of such hatred. some muslims have decided to act a few kilometers from downtown. sidney and association is working to dismantle that cliches that have become synonymous with the muslim community. founded by sure and australian of lebanese origin, this citizens initiative group comes to the aid of the impoverished ha. i was born in this country. my parents came here in i, you gotta make me choke on. my parents came here in the seventy's and dom like insulin, once on country. the fact that i was allowed in i to be born in a public hospital for free. i went to a public school for free. ah, you know, i was able to have my children. a trailer gave us so much. i wanted me and the muslims that have migrated to this country of bonnie's country to give back to this beautiful country cottage trail like selves, parents, many of australia's muslims arrived in the 1970s. but for them and subsequent generations, integration remains difficult. dealing with prejudice is part of every day life for show of many times, many times i've been told to go back to my country ash and i love because i said on this is my country. i was born here. oh, where do you want me to go? when we got to grocery shopping, we got a lot of people say a very racist remarked out loud. like i dont blow us up all you terrorists? oh sama. we're hoping that that we break in that barrier and reducing his them a phobia in this country. steve is a christian. he became a volunteer for the association a year ago before that he too was prejudiced against muslims. i want you to think what, what about are throwing through and 9 understand that not all of them on the bed in a positive example that counters the slogans of a racist minority. the christ church attack was perpetrated by brenton tarrant, a white australian supremacist. his actions were unanimously condemned by all political parties in australia. public outrage has since forced the most radical extremists to keep a low profile. we have an appointment in melbourne with a man who knew the terrorist. tom sewell is the founder of a small, far right extremist group, called the lad's society, as he's being closely monitored by intelligent services. sewell asked to meet us in the street. he didn't choose the play by chance. well, if you look around, you'll see that there's not so many australians. if you had a family home, how would you feel about all these people living in your basement? like it was some share house. you know, before i was born, this was a white working class. you know, and now while we've been almost the only white people in this entire sub, you know? so it shows that the colonization is almost complete. the authorities have been watching the group since christ church sewell had actually tried to recruit. brent and terrence several years ago, i had conversations with him online because i noticed that he displayed similar beliefs to us. he didn't want to be involved in what we're doing. and he said that he was moving to new zealand, and that was the last communication that i had with him. this was several years ago . the government considers that enough of an association that we're to be treated as terrorist. we have to keep our meetings and our locations secret. this is where the land society usually meets. in this video, the organization is presented as an ordinary private sports club for men only. in reality, it's a secret society with very clear political objectives. so we need to fearing what they call the great replacement sewell and his group dream of an all white state. our goal is to create an ethnic state. our goal is to create what australia used to be, and we need to organize ourselves so that we have our own parallel institutions around land, around cities. so that when the conflict does come, when the geopolitical instability does come, we're safe and preserved. and we have all of our things already in place to create a new nation, like sewell, the australian, far right aspires to create in apartheid state based on racial segregation. although australia has never actually seen such extremes, whites and indigenous australians have lived a part for years. the district of red vern and sydney is home to indigenous and migrant communities. it has long grappled with poverty, crime, and drugs. it's also experienced police violence and riots. the streets of redfern became a bloody battlefield on the 14th of february, 2004, a 17 year old aboriginal boy had died earlier that afternoon. he was impaled on a fence, laying police on his bike. hundreds of protesters took to the streets, armed with paving stones and molotov cocktails. they battled officers all night long. the situation in redfern has improved in recent years. partly thanks to the efforts of shane phillips, one of its community leaders. this former boxer collects his protege at 5 in the morning 3 times a week. he believes discipline will keep them on the straight and narrow. musk is going to be a slip for them. got in the morning with kids that would be up fourish, 3 a to be picked up at 1 o'clock. we want them to learn about the strength of lp, one of the lawn, routine and discipline, and focus and doing this early in the morning. lots of government grabs also the progress i've driven by deficits to what's wrong with athletes. our program is designed by us and it's driven by strength. that's what these kids get with many of them have a police record. the hope is that mutual respect and resilience will prevent relapses with james joined the program a week ago. but 21 year old has just served a 2 year sentence for robbery atmosphere with a few years ago. oh, lease and indigenous youngsters would regularly clash in redbird. so to ease tensions, shane invited the chief of police to put gloves on superintendent andrew holland and his men now come every week to train with local youngsters. with what was found out with a scott with crime has dropped 70 percent in redfern since 2010. sidney's former slump is slowly getting back on its feet. while many indigenous people struggled to find a place in society, others have achieved success. miriam corolla is a prime example, the daughter of an aboriginal mother and an english father. she has become a household name as a journalist, how line miriam presents the t. v news for a b c, one of the biggest australian broadcasters. her program is regularly watched by more than 1000000 australians. i still pinch myself when i think about what i do and where i am can have an idea of what you want a day. but sometimes he might be reluctant to give it a guy, so it's always nice to think that you can help people understand that it's not impossible deny it is still unusual to see aboriginal people on t. v. craig, her director, has worked for a b, c for 20 years, but he has rarely worked with native australians these days. so we are seeing a little more diversity. i. miriam is still very much an exception though. ah, it, it is getting better. and certainly it's getting better in the media as opposed to say drama french since, which is still very much a typical more to stride. yeah. look, miriam is a respected journalist to day, but her career has been an uphill struggle. if i hadn't read even to find that discrimination at school, bullying, racism and things like that, i wouldn't have gone on to finish high school because i wouldn't have gone onto university. and without those things, then my options for even having in korea would be really, really limited. sensor divorce. miriam has been raising her 6 year old son alone. he like his mother, is growing up between 2 cultures. his father is a white australian, and i mean he knows he's aboriginal, it was quite funny. and it just shows how innocent children are because he was asked about it last year. he said, yes, i'm abberation my dad's aboriginal and you and daddy's background in irish in german. so it's quite fair with blue eyes and everything. i just saw. all it's funny why that's kind of cure because he doesn't associate with a particular appearance. miriam grew up in the 1970s. in those days, it was uncommon to see mixed couples in australia. for a long time, she grappled with her own identity. hi, this is may with my sister. my mom will little little little little. this is my mom when she was go for a long time i really struggled with besides arrows, i'm not accepted by mainstream society, but i am i am really aboriginal because, you know, i am highly educated. i've been teen of as fee a work in the media. you know, i don't live necessarily in a community such and those sorts of things that people typically associated weeping and personal. i'm not necessarily fitting that box. but you know, i've times gone on. we realize that, you know, you can be aboriginal and all the rest miriam, hope her story will inspire other young, aboriginal people. how people think what you and she's optimistic about the future doors, ma'am? now, we still have extraordinary problems. we've, in our economy, cous advantage. we've incarceration, we have one of the world worst rights of youth suicide in indigenous communities. so it goes to show that something very wrong. do i have heart? yeah, i do. yeah. already my life is a world away from that of my mom and my grandmother. i'm able to have dreams and goals, and i think for my son, even more sorry. so yeah, there is heart. we'll see how we guy i, miriam grew up in sidney a large urban area full of opportunities. but the further you get from the big cities, it's a totally different picture for i merrily in the north of the continent. over 4000 kilometers from sydney beyond the australian bush and the wild plains lies darwin. it's the capital of the northern territory. the country's most northerly state darwin is the drop off point for native australians who left the bush and come to the city. often without work or a place to stay hundreds and up on the streets. there looked after by an aid organization called lira key, a nation after the regions largest tribe kyle and his partner patrol the streets every day. else i guess come in from the communities sometimes. you know, they come here that will be city area. well, my wallclear over there. yeah. i morning. how i rather well, thank you. mark you nation. you ok on the streets that i he wants to get it. you know, just for $3.50, that the money will come back in the bus mo, better for you to get it back. the wagon with the organization can only offer emergency health. it doesn't have the means to provide shelter for all of the cities homeless. we've been here, we've really since he's been years, that's how we live in dallas. when the day's over kyle and his partner head back to their base in the early morning, another leora key a team takes over its mission is to find those who spent the night in custody and bring them back to a safe place. good morning. okay, available soon as we start taking them away, we'll come and pick you up in texas for an hour on just like what were you out? run? kevin has been doing this for 20 years with well, he's watched his community gradually deteriorate. some of them bad drugs now that i've come here like arson, stop law, some of them now taking that stuff to in this part of to, for them to when i get back to normal or what month with the ones that are being taken away from it. whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, clear. a risks are most often made for the public consumption of drugs or alcohol. and most of those are native australians that we're ready to go. critics say the darwin, police fun fairly target. aboriginal people with drugs, alcohol, misery, in darwin, many aboriginal people seem to be lost between 2 worlds, between their own and the one imposed on them by white settlers colonizing their lands. in the late 18th century, the new arrivals from britain tried to eradicate the aboriginal people. first, they used weapons, then they organized a breed out policy. for decades, ruling powers tried to sometimes quite literally whiten the black population. aboriginal children were also forcefully taken from their parents, placed in convents or foster families. they were taught to live like good little white children. this practice continued until the early 19 seventy's, more than 100000 children are believed to have suffered this fate. these young victims are called the stolen generation and history is repeating itself. wow, why don't we want hundreds of people take to the streets of sydney to protest the actions of the authorities? they're demanding their children back. why don't we want? why don't we? why? today, aboriginal children are 10 times more likely to be removed from their families than white children. half of them are placed in institutions or in white families, far away from their own community. hazel collins is a victim of such forced removals. why don't we, why she organized this demonstration outside the regional parliament. this aboriginal grandmother is battling what she considers to be cultural genocide or clinical setting up they. c dictating to us as this. c nation paypal. what is best for us? how we should live? well, they must say, oh, thank goodwood ever you big layout that are going to ignore a not like us drill our children, want that they call jo. tiger, why they heritage takes them to read something that they're not ah, like thousands of other aboriginal families, hazel hollins has been separated from her grandchildren. one of them, ryan was placed with different white families. why fi fi hoping? he'd never mind. a guy, so audio or lame, a mobile, i'm originally mobile. i had everything kinda well and it all the happy kid until then. now i come in to fight you from region. are everyone you know that would your complaints join nottingham? feudal not i did just a light on no, very hard for them because they're drawing up non non engine warriors. aboriginal, they do repair differently. rivera and non just just mom and dad. but as a community i bride that thought the children grow up losing their i didn't that i know they're relying. busy when i come from, holla did, he stole in just 10 years. the number of aboriginal children placed in foster families has doubled to 18000 across the country to get a better understanding of the reality. behind these figures we're meeting a mother who has been separated from her children for 6 years. she lives in new castle. a coastal town northeast of sydney were not allowed to show her face that forbidden by australian law. her anonymity preserves the identity of her children. so these pitches of my youngest son and this is one of my daughters when, when she lived with me. and this is my daughter that actual father was taken. the very last contact that i had with the 4 kids. it sort of makes me sad because even though my daughter's quite happy with the last memory that i had to say my kids together and i know that they were happy to see me and i, when they did say me, her children were all taken away from her because at the time she had a drug problem that was 6 years ago. now she leads to normal life as a job and a house. yet she still forbidden any contact with her children. my children live 20 minutes from me up the road. so i know where my children live, i know what school i go to, so the system will not let me see. my children will not let me speak to my children on the fine day. i have completely ostracize me from my children's life completely . the foster care is have convinced the children that i'm afraid to them. so this is the image that my children have of me. even though i work in child protection. i'm a social worker. so you know, a lot of completely turn my life around and it has made no answer difference. like many aboriginal mothers, you know, she was herself removed from her family as a child. no one of my mother's children were removed. we were all separated in the system. we all ended up with addiction problems, all ended up with incarceration problems of children removed. so the cycle has not been broken. just put under a different policy and called a different name, but it's the same generational genocide practices happening. and basically we have no decision making power in this country at all. so we are completely vulnerable to these institutions to exploit our right. she could very well lose her children forever. their foster families have started adoption proceeding. a law was passed in 2018, allowing them to do so after 5 years of custody. and denying the mother an opportunity to appeal i russia ended artist russia and its dissident artist. russia. ah, it's blacklist for diffident, pardon me, to focus on europe. in 30 minutes on d. w. is the end of the pandemic in site. we show what it could look like will return to normal and we visit those who are finding it difficult with successes and in our weekly coping 19 special in 90 minutes on d. w. o. 50 years ago, the international gathering of peace and co operation becomes the scene of a horrible tragedy. arab terrorists, armed with sub machine guns, went to the headquarters of the israeli team and immediately killed one man. and that this will be the last time i saw him life or worse, fears realized tonight, they're all gone. how i witnesses experienced the terrible events and this the world shouldn't forget the long shuttle, the $972.00 olympic massacre start september 3rd on d. w. ah, this is d w news and these are our top stories u. s. president joe biden has said us democracy faces an existential threat from supporters of former president donald trump. in a fiery speech biden's.

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Transcripts For DW Racism Down Under 20220902

we still have time to go. i'm going all with a march on the streets of sydney. these native australians are protesting against the death of a member of their community in prison. they want those responsible to face justice course with dr. restart the dice. the numbers are back different. is that right? good talk in less than 30 years. 474. aboriginal australians have died in detention or police custody. 6 and a half times more than white people over the same period. the relatives of those killed warn't closure. late tony dungy has been fighting for 5 years for just as for her son david, who was serving a sentence for robbery and assault. december 29th, 2015. this body cam footage shows guards trying to transfer david to another cell. he resists the letters, served to identify the guards. i didn't do them on the phone with with david is taken to the cell and placed on a bed. then a nurse at ministers, a sedative. yeah. did he did. oh, this is his breathing becomes labor. seconds later, david loses consciousness and never wakes up again. to me. please, even yeah, no hell, you know how it took family lawyers months to obtain this video? no one has yet been held accountable. now they've gone all, it is the bright separate tre flag when they do every don't label. it wasn't fighting by just ram denali, all 6 of them fall, their eyes is flies, the squashed in. when he come, i'm to man above him and i brought upon them. i shall be john. the death of an indigenous australian in prison has never resulted in a conviction historian and human rights activist. padraic gibson says this is due to systemic racism within australian authorities to actually justify that sort of obscene leon. just situation you need to day humanize the paypal you made to make out, you know, as die that die less than, than everyone else. and that plays out every die in all facets of society. more than 200 years after colonization by the british. many 1st australians still live like outsiders in their own nation. the hidden face of a country viewed by many as a paradise. australia has a population of 26000000. its territory is $21.00 times the size of germany. a nation with a booming economy, a dream destination for immigrants. every year, 200000 applicants are granted a visa fund. the a dell like postcards, conceal a drama that's been playing out or 2 centuries. the tragedy of native australians, the countries modern indigenous communities are descended from the world's oldest civilization. they've been marginalized since the arrival of white settlers in the early 19th century. they were massacred in the thousands or forcibly assimilated into white society, placed in convents or foster families. indigenous children were taught to behave like good little white children. governments of used assimilation policies to try and create a single uniform white society for decades. many indigenous people to day have pale skin as a result, but whatever their color, they remain 2nd class citizens. i got no family. now is this live in the long grass and yeah, that's right. people come into this into a star. you think that it's a lucky country? that way living has breath nice. people will live in that 3rd world country. even a wine lane as the conservative right wing has risen to power in australia. other minorities have felt increasingly marginalized. immigration policies have been tightened. australians of african and asian heritage, or those who are muslims, are worried. they're unsettled by increasing anti immigrant sentiment in certain sectors of society. many toys i've been told to go back to my country ash, and i love, because i said on this is my country. i was born he off the far right has gained traction in australia. in recent years. new xenophobic parties openly express their hatred of foreigners. china looks like china because it's full of chinese people. you know, what will it, charlie look like when it is no white people that it won't look like australia the muslim community is also a target of the radical right. ah. ban moslem immigration, i may personally, i would a identify them on march 15th, 2019. and australian white supremacist murdered, 51 muslims that a mosque in christ church. new zealand, 49 others were seriously injured. australia's minorities live in fear their especially critical of the countries justice system. it's notoriously repressive with young people and children in particular despite his white skin, dylan of native australian heritage. he's already spent 8 of his 21 years in prison for theft and armed robbery. when i told me all of the judges laid an example of me extension submitted 22 months ago. i was in no, i think it's really my last for i was i wouldn't get any of my. my last child was and stuff like that back goes in. and that childhood was difficult, marred by poverty, drugs, and bad influences. he ran afoul of the law as a minor prison was hell. this was in october 2010 or 12 years old. and this is the thing, right. and that this isn't the person that is helping me with another indigenous male officer. we exchanged words, a child saying a spot on him, and he fixing up by the show and takes him into the room and slams me down on my shoulder onto the mattress. and that was one of the 1st times i really had to go care in and then he was 16, frustrated for about 2 and a half, 3 hours. i'm because bad, i'm a police us better prison officers before being manhandled from bigger people than me. i couldn't far back, i couldn't push them off me thing that i wanted to. i knew ways that i could really get back to them like them language, make them feel the way i'm feeling while they're doing that sort of stuff. to me, i'm alice being treated like an animal this footage was published in 2016 by an independent commission of inquiry. it cast dillon as the symbol of a last written off youth. definitely think there is a right. if she, i, my father does go to indigenous people with the really, with nothing about rehabilitating to chat. my gosh young people are better people with more met trying to break us. and john upon us as for what we've done, one of the guards was made the subject of a criminal investigation. but to date, none have been convicted. other minorities also suffer discrimination in australia . nationalist xenophobic groups agitate against muslims. first and foremost, fraser adding is the country's most controversial politician in the wake of the christ church attack. his comments trigger a way of outrage. this video goes viral. they sort of things happen when people are getting attacked, you know, a frequent to pro bucket tour fraser ending became widely known in australia after he reference the holocaust in his 1st speech as senator for queensland the final solution to the immigration problem of course is a popular vote, the senator is campaigning for his reelection. he has always denied referencing the nazi regime in his speeches. final solution taken out of context in the 9 years leading up to that 22 other politicians in parliament and use the same 2 words in speeches by night. and no one got upset about it. they'll put labels on you like me, i not see why supremacist races all those things. they're all law is. i can tell you in the i mean i fight hard for the jewish community, particularly the israelis it's election day. and the senator has come to support his candidate in a district just outside brisbin. disappointed by the other far right, political parties, fraser, and founded his own nationalist movement. to day, he hopes to win a few more seats in parliament. and he has an unambiguous program to drastically reduce immigration and to permanently ban muslims from entering the country. there hasn't been a country on this planet that embrace the muslims and had them come in here that is not male file style or muslim nation. i don't believe that aside, and people want to become a minority in their own country and i'm speaking about it so that i'm being called a racist. and i'm happy to be called rice if that's what they want to call me. that's fine. what's the band muslim? immigration, me personally, i would identify them because they're killing us in the street. like we do with any other criminals who are trying to kill you. you want to know where they're going to be. otherwise we're just going to lose more. good. astride is not, i think we need to proposals, rooted in hatred and fake news. only 4 people in australia have ever been killed in attacks by islamist terrorists. very endings program fines residence only north america. just like very much immigration policy and 2nd tied into that. this is a strike you 1st and it needs to be yes, estrada and not the rest of the world. but we need to solve our problem. space riser. any which is dry and astrology and space. that's mind. the election results come in a few days later. unfortunately for fraser and none of his candidates are elected. and he even loses his own seat in the senate to his former more moderate party. nevertheless, xenophobic political parties have proliferated and consolidated voter support in recent years. in order to understand this trend, we have set up a meeting with one of the foremost observers of australian politics. tim, so parmesan is a professor at the university of sydney. he also served as the countries race discrimination commissioner, problem of racism in australia has historical roots. it goes all the way back to the history of colonization, of the streaming continent by the british. remember that is strangely when it became a political nation in 19 o one. this was a place that was defined by d's of, of white racial integrity, the adventure of a multicultural society, and his railey dates back only to the 1970s. it has been a successful society when it comes to multiculturalism and mass immigration, but they were still remnants of old attitudes about race. and unfortunately, we're seeing more and more political actors becoming emboldened to vent racist ideas in public, in a way that we haven't seen for some time in an irony of history. these xenophobic ideas are often defended by australians who are themselves, descendants of immigrants. melbourne in southern australia in this small suburban church. the service is conducted by a pastor of sri lankan origin. here they pray to god and ask him to protect the country's borders. i me following the national elections aster daniel nie leah and his congregation are in 7th heaven. the conservatives have just won a large majority, and the new prime minister is a devout christian, and an advocate of stricter immigration controls. he's also says one again for the a man of god. the pastor is 1st and foremost a politician. he has founded a party to defend a christian australia in the face of what he calls a muslim invasion to day. all 30 said his dad. islam is growing. why is it because people are struggling to judge and texas? i've been sol and they have gone into mosque all over europe. we see them if you get the message in what a standing go to watch. you don't watch say new. you take the nation, this to the enemy office, does it with that says i'm godliness, not his style. i'm going to this and you go to come against that attack, right? no, no lead for something to happen. often schooling, daniel nie leah was persecuted in sri lanka for belonging to a christian minority and sought refuge in australia 22 years ago. he soon became an ardent nationalist. he says he's not against the presence of different ethnic groups, but claims islam is incompatible with the values of his adopted nation. the pastor is conducting a religious war world. this is lloyd with his love gone, ranita ne, their consent was supposed to been cut after saying this as well as this in that regard with my skin color was an advantage for me. i thought a thing i would have thought upon to have body to satirize up australia for the split up of us who, dec. oh my god. so lisa, and keep australia, australia. he has made his skin color, the banner of his own unrestrained opinion. since the early 2 thousands, he's appeared on many television programs, huddling his anti islam message. we have a choice nation of what's rally a read again, follow the code on and follow you saw me shot me a lot. i'd be placing this nation all follow the bible, and be a free and democratic society. every most is potentia, place for terrorism to breed. unfortunately destitute, chill, who opposed to mosque looting, thus be pushing. they felt that there was no need for mo, most who abused in australia. i despite pastor ny leah and his message, there are now several 100 mosques in australia. most of australia's 600000 muslims live in sydney or more precisely in la camber, a suburb of the city, the largest mosque and australia is here. oh, during ramadan, it can accommodate a 10000 people a night. but more recently, prayers have been tinge with fear. friday prayers are coming to an end at the la tampa mosque. off mont, and australian of lebanese heritage. ensures the safety of the congregation funded by how are you? how's it going? good, good. we're praying here tonight yet. i was you, father was then i could come here every night. yes. i got on was on love, some household hoffman has called upon australian politicians to put a stop to the stigmatization of muslims. we hope that it would open the eyes and minds of people in the hearts to steer away from any defensive language. and that can lead to acts that people willing to act upon these while acts. everyone has their own agenda and sometimes they play into that rhetoric for the sake of the political gains. ah, and unfortunately sometimes they just got overboard in the face of such hatred, some muslims have decided to act a few kilometers from downtown sydney. an association is working to dismantle that cliches that have become synonymous with the muslim community. founded by sure, and australian of lebanese origin, this citizens initiative group comes to the aid of the impoverished ha. i was born in the country. my parents came here in i, you gotta make me choke. my parents came here in the seventy's. and um they came from a one time country. the fact that all was announced, you know, to be born in a public hospital for free. i went to a public school for free, you know, i was able to have my children. i was trailer, gave us so much. i wanted me and the muslims that have migrated to his country, bonnie's country to give back to this beautiful country quarter stria like shoves parents, many of australia's muslims arrived in the 1970s. but for them and subsequent generations, integration remains difficult. dealing with prejudice is part of everyday life for show many times, many times i've been told to go back to my country ash and i love because i said on this is my country. i was born here. oh, where do you want me to go? what we got to grocery shopping. we got a lot of people say a very racist remark out loud. like don't blow us up. or you terrorists. oh sama, what we're hoping that we break in that barrier and reducing is them a phobia in this country. steve is a christian, he became a volunteer for the association a year ago before that he too was prejudiced against muslims. i want you to think what a lot of us are assigned to a 9. understand that not all of them on no christians, the better a positive example that counters the slogans of a racist minority. the christ church attack was perpetrated by breton tarrant, a white australian supremacist. his actions were unanimously condemned by all political parties in australia. public outrage has since forced the most radical extremists to keep a low profile. we have an appointment in melbourne with a man who knew the terrorist. tom sewell is the founder of a small, far right extremist group called the lads society, as he's being closely monitored by intelligent services. sewell asked to meet us in the street. he didn't choose the place by chance. well, if you look around, you'll see that there is not so many australians ah, if you had a family home, how would you feel about all these people living in your basement? like it was some share house. you know, before i was born, this was a white working class suburb. you know, and now while we've been almost the only white people in this entire suburb, you know, so it shows that the colonization is almost complete. authorities have been watching the group since christ church sewell had actually tried to recruit brenton tarrant several years ago. i had conversations with him online because i noticed that he displayed similar beliefs to us. he didn't want to be involved in what we're doing. and he said that he was moving to new zealand, and that was the last communication that i had with him. this was several years ago . and the government considers that enough of an association that we're to be treated as terrors. ah, we have to keep our meetings and our locations secret. this is where the lads society usually meets. in this video, the organization is presented as an ordinary private sports club for men only. in reality, it's a secret society with very clear political objectives so searing what they call the great replacement sewell and his group dream of an all white state. our goal is to create an ethno state. our goal is to create what australia used to be. and we need to organize ourselves so that we have our own parallel institutions around land, around cities. so that when the conflict does come, when the geopolitical instability does come with safe and preserved and we have all of our things already in place to create a new nation, like soule, the australian, far right aspires to create in apartheid state based on racial segregation. although australia has never actually seen such extremes, whites and indigenous australians have lived a part for years. the district of red vern and sydney is home to indigenous and migrant communities. it has long grappled with poverty, crime, and drugs. it's also experienced police violence and riots. the streets of redfern became a bloody battlefield on the 14th of february, 2004, a 17 year old aboriginal boy had died earlier that afternoon. he was impaled on a fence, leading police on his bike. hundreds of protesters took to the streets, armed with paving stones and molotov cocktails. they battled officers all night long. the situation in redfern has improved in recent years. partly thanks to the efforts of shane phillips, one of its community leaders. this former boxer collects his protege at 5 in the morning 3 times a week. he believes discipline will keep them on the straight and narrow. musk is going to be a slip for them. got in the morning. if kids have to be up fourish 3 a to be picked up at 1 o'clock. we want them to learn about the strength of lp, one of the lawn, routine and discipline, and focus and doing this early in the morning. a lot of government, graham's also the program i've driven by deficits to what's wrong with athletes programmes designed by us. and it's driven by strength as what these kids with . many of them have a police record. the hope is that mutual respect and resilience will prevent relapse. it with james joined the program a week ago, but 21 year old has just served a 2 year sentence for robbery atmosphere with a few years ago. oh lease and indigenous youngsters would regularly clash in redfern. so to ease tensions, shane invited the chief of police to put gloves on. superintendent andrew holland and his men now come every week to train with local youngsters. with what with i talked with crime has dropped 70 percent in redfern since 2010. sidney's. former slum is slowly getting back on its beat. while many indigenous people struggled to find a place in society, others have achieved success. miriam corolla is a prime example. the daughter of an aboriginal mother and an english father. she has become a household name as a journalist. hello. miriam presents the t v. news for a b c, one of the biggest australian broadcasters. her program is regularly watched by more than 1000000 australians. i still pinch myself when i think about what i do and where i am, can have an idea of what you want a day. but sometimes he might be reluctant to give it a guy, so it's always nice to think that you can help people understand that it's not impossible deny it is still unusual to see aboriginal people on tv, craig, her director has worked for a b, c for 20 years, but he has rarely worked with native australians these days. so we are seeing a lot more diversity. i. miriam is still very much an exception. i ah, it, it is getting better. and certainly it's getting better in the media as opposed to say drama french since, which is still very much a typical more to strider. look, miriam is a respected journalist to day, but her career has been an uphill struggle. if i hadn't read even to find that discrimination at school, bullying, racism and things like that, i wouldn't have gone on to finish high school because i wouldn't have gone on to universe city. and without those things, then my options for even having in korea would be really, really limited. sensor divorce. miriam has been raising her 6 year old son alone. he like his mother, is growing up between 2 cultures. his father is a white australian, and i mean, he knows he's aboriginal, it was quite funny. and it just shows how innocent children are because he was asked about it last year. he said, yes, i'm aboriginal my dad's aboriginal. and you instead inspect grounding irish and german so it's quite fair with blue eyes and everything. i just, all, it's funny why that's kind of cure, you know, because he doesn't associate with a particular appearance. miriam grew up in the 1970s. in those days, it was uncommon to see mixed couples in australia. for a long time, she grappled with her own identity. hi, this is may with my sister. my mom will little little little little. this is my mom when she was go. for a long time, i really struggled with this idea of i'm not accepted by mainstream society, but i am, i am really aboriginal because, you know, i am highly educated. i've been to universe fee a, working the media. you know, i don't leave necessarily in a community such and those sorts of things that people typically associated. we thing i'm personal, i'm not necessarily fitting that box. but some united times gone on, we realize that, you know, you can be aboriginal and all the rest miriam hopes her story will inspire other young, aboriginal people. how people a think what you and she's optimistic about the future stories now? no, we still have extraordinary problems. we've in our economic disadvantage, we'd incarceration and we have one of the world twist rates of youth suicide in indigenous communities. i'm sorry, it goes to show that it's something very wrong. do i have heart? yeah, i do. yeah. already my life is a world away from that of my mom and my grandmother. i'm able to have drains and great size goals, and i think for my son, even more say so. yeah, there is heart. we'll see how we gary. ah, miriam grew up in sidney a large urban area full of opportunities. but the further you get from the big cities, it's a totally different picture, primarily in the north of the continent. over 4000 kilometers from sydney beyond the australian bush and the wild plains lies darwin. it's the capital of the northern territory. the country's most northerly state. darwin is the drop off point for native australians hoop left the bush and come to the city. often without work or a place to stay hundreds and up on the streets. there looked after by an aid organization called lira key, a nation after the regions largest tribe. kyle and his partner patrol the streets every day that i guess coming from the communities and sometimes on the house. you know they come here so we'll put city area. well my wallclear over there. yeah. i morning. how are you brother? i'm well, thank you from mark nation. you ok. right on the streets today. he wants to get a diesel. you know, just for the $3.00 that that money will come back in a bunch more better for you. taking it back into the organization can only offer emergency health. it doesn't have the means to provide shelter for all of the cities homeless. we've been here, we've really been years. that's how we live in down when the day's over kyle and his partner head back to their base. in the early morning, another leora key a team takes over its mission, is to find those who spent the night in custody and bring them back to a safe place. good morning, america, available soon as we start taking them away will come and pick you up in and take your friend debra on just a point where you are bra. kevin has been doing this for 20 years with what he's watched, his community gradually deteriorate. some of them bad drugs now that i've come here like arson, stop law. some of them are taking that stuff to in this part of to, for them to can i get back to normal or what month with the ones that are being taken away from her as well. still running away from well clear arrests are most often made for the public consumption of drugs or alcohol. and most of those are native australians were ready to go. critics say the darwin, police unfairly target aboriginal people with drugs, alcohol, misery in darwin. many aboriginal people seem to be lost between 2 worlds, between their own and the one imposed on them by white settlers colonizing their lands. in the late 18th century, the new arrivals from britain tried to eradicate the aboriginal people. first, they used weapons, then they organized a breed out policy. for decades, ruling powers tried to sometimes quite literally whiten the black population. aboriginal children were also forcefully taken from their parents, placed in convents or foster families. they were taught to live like good little white children. this practice continued until the early 19 seventy's. more than 100000 children are believed to have suffered this fate. these young victims are called the stolen generation. and history is repeating itself. why? why don't we want hundreds of people take to the streets of sydney to protest the actions of the authorities. they're demanding their children back. why don't we want? why don't we? why? today, aboriginal children are 10 times more likely to be removed from their family than white children. half of them are placed in institutions or in white families, far away from their own community. hazel collins is a victim of such forced removals. why don't we, why she organized this demonstration outside the regional parliament? this aboriginal grandmother is battling what she considers to be cultural genocide . we are an award clinical setting up they did. c chiding do us as this. c nation paypal. what is best for us? how we should? well, did they ma sites? oh, thank goodwood ever. you babe layout that are doing well. a not like us lad, children. why that they called jo tiger, why they heritage takes them to read something that they're not ah, like thousands of other aboriginal families, hazel collins has been separated from her grandchildren. one of them, ryan was placed with different white families. why fight to play? hoping he'd never, australia, i guys are audio or lima mobile adam originally. my mom had everything kinda well and it all the happy kid. until then. no, i come in to fight you from region. are everyone you know? it was a complete join. how do you mean have through them? not i just me, there's a light on very hard for them because they're drawing up non non engaging warriors, aboriginal visual repair differently. we parent, non just just mom and dad. but as a community i bride that thought the children grow up, losing their i didn't that i know they're related to when i come from, how long did he stole? in just 10 years, the number of aboriginal children placed in foster families has doubled to 18000 across the country to get a better understanding of the reality. behind these figures, we're meeting a mother who's been separated from her children for 6 years. she lives in new castle for coastal town. northeast of sydney were not allowed to show her face that's forbidden by australian law. her anonymity preserves the identity of her children. so these pitches of my youngest son and this is one of my daughters when, when she lived with me and this is my daughter, the actual father was taken. the very last contact that i had with the full kids. it sort of makes me sad because even though my daughter's quite happy with the last memory that i had to say my kids together. and i know that they were happy to say me and i, when they did say me, her children were all taken away from her because at the time she had a drug problem. that was 6 years ago. now she leads a normal life as a job and a house. yet she still forbidden any contact with her children. my children live 20 minutes from me up the road, so i know where my children leave. i know what school i go to. so the system will not let me see, my children will not let me speak to my children on the phone. they have completely, ostracize me from my children's life completely. the foster carers have convinced the children that i'm afraid to them. so this is the image that my children have of me. even though i work in child protection. i'm a social worker, i'm so you know, lock up completely turn my life around and it has made no answer difference. like many aboriginal mothers, you know, she was herself removed from her family as a child none of my mother's children were removed, we were all separated in the system. we all ended up with addiction problems, all ended up with incarceration problems as children removed. so the cycle has not been broken, just put under a different policy and called a different name, but it's the same generational genocide practices happening. and basically we have no decision making power in this country at all. so we are completely vulnerable to these institutions to exploit our rights. she could very well lose her children forever. their foster families have started adoption proceeding. a law was passed in 2018, allowing them to do so after 5 years of custody. and denying the mother an opportunity to appeal i with to the point strong opinions, clear positions, international perspectives. ukraine says its forces had broken through moscow's frontline defenses at several points in the southern region near san ukraine counter offensive. kennedy pushed the russians back. find out on to the point to the point in 30 minutes on d. w is the end of the pandemic in sight. we show what it could look like. return to normal. and we visit those who are finding it difficult exceeds his successes in our weekly coping 19 special in 90 minutes on d. w. o. listen carefully. don't know how those 2 things you miss today. ah feel the magic discover the world around you. subscribe to d w documentary on youtube. ah, this is d w. news, and these are our top stories. u. s. president joe biden has said us democracy faces an existential threat from supporters of former president donald trump. in a fiery speech biden said that.

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Transcripts For DW Eco Africa 20220902

a party to defend a christian australia in the face of what he calls a muslim invasion today. all 307, his dad islam is growing. why is it because people are struggling to judge and texas. i've been sold and they have gone into mosque all over europe. we see the rest. you get the message did was a standing go to watch. if you don't watch a new destination, this did the enemy office does it with that says i'm gotten this, not his style. i'm going to this. have you go to come against that attack right now? glad for something to have been offered schooling. daniel nie leah was persecuted in sri lanka for belonging to a christian minority and sought refuge in australia 22 years ago. he soon became an ardent nationalist. he says he's not against the presence of different ethnic groups, but claims is long, is incompatible with the values of his adopted nation. the pastor is conducting a religious war world. this is wally with his love gone ranita northeast. and their consent was supposed to been cut off the same isn't as well as this in that regard with my skin color was an advantage for me. i thought a thing i would have found upon to have body to satirize upholstery on the split up of us who deck a false mind to god's lisa and keep australian australia. he has made his skin color the banner of his own unrestrained opinion. since the early 2 thousands, he's appeared on many television programs, huddling his anti islam message. we have a choice nation of what's rally a read again, follow the code on how to follow. you saw me shabby a law and be placing this nation, all follow the bible, and be a free and democratic society. every most is potentia. please for edison to breed. unfortunately destitute, shall who oppose to mos looting, thus, be personally felt that there was no need for mo, most who abused in australia. i despite pastor ny leah and his message, there are now several 100 mosques in australia. most of australia's 600000 muslims live in sidney or more precisely in la camber, a suburb of the city, the largest mosque and australia is here. oh, during ramadan, it can accommodate a 10000 people a night. but more recently, prayers have been tinge with fear. friday prayers are coming to an end at the la tampa mosque. ah mont, and australian of lebanese heritage, ensures the safety of the congregation. boy, how are you? how's it going? good. good. we're praying here tonight. yeah. whose you father was then i come here every night i got on was on love. some household hoffman has called upon australian politicians to put a stop to the stigmatization of muslims. we hope that it would open the eyes and minds of people in the hearts to steer away from any defensive language. and that can lead to acts that people willing to act upon these while acts. everyone has their own agenda and sometimes they play into that rhetoric for the sake of the political gains. ah, and unfortunately sometimes they just got overboard. in the face of such hatred, some muslims have decided to act with a few kilometers from downtown sydney and association is working to dismantle that cliches that have become synonymous with the muslim community. founded by sure, and australian of lebanese origin, this citizens initiative group comes to the aid of the impoverished ha. i was born in the country. my parents came here in i, you gotta make me choke on. my parents came here in the seventy's. and um i came from a once home country, the fact that i was allowed in a to be born in a public hospital for free. i went to a public school for free arm. you know, i was able to have my children. australia gave us so much, i wanted me and the muslims that have migrated to his country upon his country to give back to this beautiful country cottage trail like serves parents, many of australia's muslims arrived in the 1970s. but for them and subsequent generations, integration remains difficult. dealing with prejudice is part of every day life for show. many times, many times i've been told to go back to my country ash. and i love because i said on this is my country. i was born here. oh, where do you want me to go? we got to grocery shopping. we got a lot of people say a very racist remark out loud. like i don't blow us up. all you terrorists? oh sama! what we're hoping that we break in that barrier and reducing his them a phobia in this country. steve is a christian. he became a volunteer for the association a year ago before that he too was prejudiced against muslims. i want you to think what, what about a 9 understand that not old on no christians, a better a positive example that counters the slogans of a racist minority. the christ church attack was perpetrated by brenton tarrant, a white australian supremacist. his actions were unanimously condemned by all political parties in australia. public outrage has since forced the most radical extremists to keep a low profile. we have an appointment in melbourne with a man who knew the terrorist. tom sewell is the founder of a small, far right extremist group, called the lad's society, as he's being closely monitored by intelligent services. sewell asked to meet us in the street, didn't choose the place by chance. well, if you look around, you'll see that there's not so many australians. if you had a family home, how would you feel about all these people living in your basement? like it was some share house, you know, before i was born, this was the white working class. you know, and now while we've been almost the only white people in this entire sub, you know, so it shows that the colonization is almost complete. the authorities have been watching the group since christ church sewell had actually tried to recruit brandt and terence several years ago, i had conversations with him online because i noticed that he displayed similar beliefs to us. he didn't want to be involved in what we're doing. and he said that he was moving to new zealand, and that was the last communication that i had with him. this was several years ago . the government considers that enough of an association that we're to be treated as terrorist. we have to keep our meetings and locations secret. this is where the lad society usually meets. in this video, the organization is presented as an ordinary private sports club for men only. in reality, it's a secret society with very clear political objectives. so we need to searing what they call the great replacement sewell and his group dream of an all white state. our goal is to create an ethno state. our goal is to create what australia used to be, and we need to organize ourselves so that we have our own parallel institutions, our own land around cities. so that when the conflict does come, when the geopolitical instability does come, we're safe and preserved. and we have all of our things already in place to create a new nation, like soule, the australian, far right aspires to create in apartheid state based on racial segregation. although australia has never actually seen such extremes, whites and indigenous australians have lived a part for years. the district of red vern and sydney is home to indigenous and migrant communities. it has long grappled with poverty, crime, and drugs. it's also experienced police violence and riots. the streets of redfern became a bloody battlefield on the 14th of february, 2004, a 17 year old aboriginal boy had died earlier that afternoon. he was impaled on a fence, leading police on his bike. hundreds of protesters took to the streets, armed with paving stones and molotov cocktails. they battled officers all night long. the situation in redfern has improved in recent years. partly thanks to the efforts of shane phillips, one of its community leaders. this former boxer collects his protege at 5 in the morning 3 times a week. he believes discipline will keep them on the straight and narrow. musk is going to be a slave to 7 got in the morning. if kids have to be up fourish 3 a to be picked up at 1 o'clock. we want them to learn about the strength of lp. one of the long routine and discipline and focus and doing this early in the morning. lots of government, graham's also the progress driven by deficit to what's wrong of athletes. our program is designed by us and it's driven by strength as what these kids with many of them have a police record. the hope is that mutual respect and resilience will prevent relapse. it james joined the program a week ago, but 21 year old has just served a 2 year sentence for robbery. atmosphere with dissipated types of model from outside and with a a few years ago. police and indigenous youngsters would regularly clash in redfern . so to ease tensions, shane invited the chief of police to put gloves on. superintendent andrew holland and his men now come every week to train with local youngsters. with crime has dropped 70 per cent in redfern since 2010. sidney's. former slum is slowly getting back on its feet, while many indigenous people struggled to find a place in society, others have achieved success. miriam corolla is a prime example daughter of an aboriginal mother and an english father. she has become a household name as a journalist, how long miriam presents the t v news for a b c, one of the biggest australian broadcasters. her program is regularly watched by more than 1000000 australians. i so pinch myself when i think about what i do and where i am, can have an idea of what you want to do. but sometimes you might be reluctant to give it a go, so it's always nice to think that you can help people understand that it's not impossible. it is still unusual to see average people on t. v. craig, her director, has worked for a b, c for 20 years, but he has rarely worked with native australia these days. we are seeing a little more diversity. miriam is still very much an exception known it is getting better and certainly it's getting better in the media as opposed to say drama for instance, which is still very much typical. more to strive to look. miriam is a respected journalist to day, but her career has been an uphill struggle. if i hadn't this person need even to find that discrimination at school, bullying, racism and things like that. i wouldn't have gone on to finish high school because i wouldn't have gone on to universe city. and without those things, then my options for even having a career was being really, really limited. censor, divorce. miriam has been raising her 6 year old son alone. he like his mother is growing up between 2 cultures. his father is a white australian, and i mean, he knows he's aboriginal, it was quite funny. and it just shows how innocent children are because he was asked about it last year. he said, yes, i'm average. no, my dad's aboriginal and you in studies background in irish, in german. so it's quite fair with blue eyes and everything. i just all, it's funny why it's kind of cure because he doesn't associate with a particular appearance. miriam grew up in the 1970s. in those days, it was uncommon to see mixed couples in australia. for a long time, she grappled with her own identity. hi, this is me with my sister, my mom will little little little little. this is my mom when she was go for a long come, i really struggled with this idea of i'm not accepted by mainstream society, but am i really aboriginal because, you know, i am highly educated. i've been to universe fee a work in the media. you know, i don't leave necessarily in a community such and those sorts of things that people typically associated weeping . i'm personal. i'm not necessarily fitting that box. but some united times gone on . we realize that, you know, you can be aboriginal and all the rest miriam hopes her story will inspire other young, aboriginal people. how people a think what you and she's optimistic about the future stores there? no, we still have extraordinary problems. we've in our economic disadvantage, we'd incarceration and we have one of the world's worst rights of youth suicide in indigenous communities. i'm sorry, it goes to show that it's something very wrong. do i have heart? yeah, i do. yeah. already my life is a world away from that of my mom and my grandmother. i'm able to have drains and great sized goals and i think for my son, even more say so. yeah, there is heart. we'll see how he gary, ah, miriam grew up in sidney. a large urban area full of opportunities. but the further you get from the big cities, it's a totally different picture, primarily in the north of the continent. over 4000 kilometers from sydney beyond the australian bush and the wild plains lies darwin. it's the capital of the northern territory. the country's most northerly state darwin is the drop off point for native australians hoop left the bush and come to the city. often without work or a place to stay hundreds and up on the streets. there looked after by an aid organization called lira key, a nation after the regions largest tribe kyle and his partner patrol the streets every day. i guess come in from the communities and sometimes it you know, they come here which will 1st city area. well, my wallclear over there. yeah. morning. what or how i rather well, thank you mark you nation. you ok on the streets that i want to get it in just for the $1.50 that my money bob will come back in a bus more better for you taking it back to the wagon with us. the organization can only offer emergency health. it doesn't have the means to provide shelter for all of the cities homeless. we've been here. we've really, since he's been years in down when the days over kyle and his partner head back to their base in the early morning, another leora key a team takes over its mission is to find those who spent the night in custody and bring them back to a safe place. good morning with soon as we start taking them away, we'll come and pick you up and then take your friend, deborah. i'm just i put you out bra. kevin has been doing this for 20 years. will he's watched his community gradually deteriorate some of them bad drugs now that i've come here like arson, stop law, that some of them now taking that stuff to in this part of to for them to can i get back to normal or what month with the ones that are being taken away from what it was still running away from well clear screens. a rests are most often made for the public consumption of drugs or alcohol. and most of those are native australians that we are ready to go. critics say the darwin, police unfairly target aboriginal people with drugs, alcohol, misery in darwin. many aboriginal people seem to be lost between 2 worlds between their own and the one imposed on them by white settlers colonizing their lands. in the late 18th century, the new arrivals from britain tried to eradicate the aboriginal people. first, they used weapons, then they organized a breed out policy. for decades, ruling powers tried to sometimes quite literally whiten the black population. aboriginal children were also forcefully taken from their parents, placed in convents or foster families. they were taught to live like good little white children. this practice continued until the early 1970 s. more than 100000 children are believed to have suffered this fate. these young victims are called the stolen generation and history is repeating itself. why do we want hundreds of people take to the streets of sydney to protest the actions of the authorities? they're demanding their children back. why don't we want? why don't we? why? today, aboriginal children are 10 times more likely to be removed from their families than white children. half of them are placed in institutions or in white families, far away from their own community. hazel collins is a victim of such forced removals. why do we, why she organized this demonstration outside the regional parliament? this aboriginal grandmother is battling what she considers to be cultural genocide . we have more clearly sitting up they did. c hiding do us as this. c now jim table, what is best for us? how we should live? well then moss: i go ah thank goodwood ever. you paid the land that are going to go a not like us through our children. why that they call jo. tiger, why they heritage takes them to be something that they're not ah, like thousands of other aboriginal families, hazel hollands has been separated from her grandchildren. one of them, ryan was placed with different white families. why? i hoping he'd never mind. i guys are audio or lima mobile adam. originally my mom had everything kinda well and it was a happy kid until then. now they come in to fight you from region. are everyone you know it was a complete join nottingham through them not. i mean, they later are very hard for them because they're growing up non non engaging warriors. aboriginal, they do repair differently. we. they are non just just mom and dad. but as a community i died right? that got all the children grow up, losing their identity that i know they're relying. busy where they come from, how long did you stolen? in just 10 years, the number of aboriginal children placed in foster families has doubled to 18000 across the country. to get a better understanding of the reality. behind these figures we're meeting a mother who's been separated from her children for 6 years. she lives in new castle. a coastal town northeast of sydney were not allowed to show her face that forbidden by australian law. her anonymity preserves the identity of her children. so they pitches of my youngest son, and this is one of my daughters when, when she lived with me. and this is my daughter, the actual father was taken. the very last contact that i had with the full kids. it sort of makes me sad because even though my daughter's quite happy if the last memory that i had to say my kids together, i and i know that they were happy to say me and i, when they did say me, her children were all taken away from her because at the time she had a drug problem that was 6 years ago. now she leads to normal life as a job and a house. yet she still forbidden any contact with her children. my children live 20 minutes from me up the road. so i know where my children live, i know what school like i go to. so the system will not let me see. my children will not let me speak to my children on the phone. they have completely, ostracize me from my children's life completely. the foster care's had convinced the children that i'm afraid to them. so this is the image that my children have of me, even though i work in child protection. i'm a social worker. so you know, a lot of completely turn my life around and it has major no answer difference. like many aboriginal mothers, you know, she was herself removed from her family as a child none of my mother's children were removed. we were all separated in the system. we all ended up with addiction problems, all ended up with incarceration problems as children removed. so the cycle has not been broken, just put under a different policy and called a different name. but it's the same generational genocide practices happening. and basically we have no decision making power in this country at all. so we are completely vulnerable to these institutions to exploit our rights. she could very well lose her children forever. their foster families have started adoption proceeding. a law was passed in 2018, allowing them to do so after 5 years of custody and denying the mother and opportunity to appeal i ah, what's making the headlines and what's behind them? dw news africa. the show that the issues have been the continent. life is slowly getting back to normal. yeah. where on the streets to give you in the reports on the inside our correspond with on the ground reporting from across the continent. all the trend stuff, my talk to you in the 90 minutes on d. w. o. niko is in germany to learn german hello pinnacle. why not learn with him? t w's e learning course. eco's faith. with the landscape. a reflection of a turbulent history. the cities, the mosaic of different people and languages. iran's mountains reveal unparalleled beauty. the scenery is magnificent, but people are warm in our position as optional. a special look at a special country. iran from above. start september 16th on d. w. it's with, ah ah, ah, this is the w news live from berlin tonight and nothing in the pipeline. russia turns off oil and natural gas headed to germany. russia's gas prong has indefinitely suspended operation of the north stream, one pipeline cutting off a direct energy link to germany and the rest of europe. also coming up tonight, g 7, finance ministers agree to cap the price for russian oil hoping to choke off a major source of funding for the kremlin.

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