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Russia: With God’s Help Against Speeders
Now playingNew episodeEvery two weeks, the priest Pavel Rakhlin goes out and stands on the street. In the Yaroslav region about 200 kilometers east of Moscow, he helps the traffic police carry out their controls.The officers wave speeders and rowdies off the road. Father Pavel appeals to their consciences. Last year, 30,000 people died on Russian roads. Now the traffic police are hoping for divine assistance. Traffic priest Pavel Rakhlin consecrates streets and cars and converts driving students to a Christian style of driving.
Now playingNew episodeArtist Daniel Josefsohn works in an idyllic Berlin back courtyard. His parents moved from Israel to Germany in the 1960s. And yet Daniel has just one passport - an Israeli one. His artistic themes usually have to do with the Israel-Palestine conflict.In a photo series titled “Jewing Gum”, he shows female Israeli soldiers who carry their submachine guns like fashion accessories. His answer to life as constant struggle – the life his friends in Israel live – is his peace perfume “Unifaith”. A scent aimed at reconciling the religions. Or as Josefsohn puts it: “So we can stand the smell of each other.”
France: Farewell to Corporal Punishment
Now playingNew episodeMany French parents still feel that if you spare the rod, you spoil the child, and that a swat on the rear every now and again does no lasting damage. But now the state is stepping in.A parliamentarian from the ruling conservative UMP party is trying to pass a law making the corporal punishment of children illegal, as it is in Germany and many other EU member states. The Enlightenment might have had its roots in France, but when it comes to raising children, many parents seem to prefer a strict line. Even Astrid Lindgren's "Pippi Longstocking" books were censored for many years, because the red-haired protagonist was a little too anarchistic for French taste. The planned ban on corporal punishment still hasn't gained wide acceptance, because many people in France think it goes too far.
Turkey: Preventing Honor Killings
Now playingNew episodeIn parts of Turkey where archaic codes of honor still dominate, murders of women are commonplace - even today. Last year saw 220 such 'honor killings'. Laws designed to prevent them have been tightened mainly in response to pressure from the EU, which has made improved women's rights a condition for the country's accession.Raised public awareness of the issue has already proved constructive: Increasingly, women who feel under threat are turning to women's groups for support, before it's too late. Our report from Diyarbakir shows how women can be saved from certain death.
Germany: When the Church Apologizes
Now playingNew episodeSome half a million children were abused in children’s homes run by the church in Germany in the 1950s and 60s. Beatings, psychological mistreatment and physical abuse were commonplace, and many victims are still dealing with the after-effects of the experience today.They’re calling on the church to recognize the injustice inflicted upon them and for adequate compensation. The church has been slow to respond. One of the first apologies has come from the Protestant-Lutheran Church in Lower Saxony.
Now playingNew episodeEuropeans are getting bigger: According to scientists, that's because their standards of living are improving. But not all Europeans are the same size - and nor are their clothes sizes.Apparently the Dutch are the tallest people in Europe, and sometimes they have a tough time finding clothes that fit. We went shopping in Amsterdam with a man who's 2 meters tall and visited a German designer in Antwerp who thinks that five clothes sizes are more than enough.
Italy: Controlling the Schengen Border
Now playingNew episodeItaly's finance minister Giulio Tremonti is ready to drain the banking city of Lugano, Switzerland dry. There's a lot of Italian money there, including an estimated 125 billion euros in illegal earnings. The financial authorities have installed video cameras at the border to record Italian license plate numbers.The authorities then identify the owners and investigate their tax records. But it's all for nothing, because Italy, like Switzerland, is under the Schengen Agreement, which forbids the systematic checking of personal data. In Ticino, Switzerland, some politicians are fighting back. If money's going to flow out of Switzerland, they say, Italians should not be let in.
Now playingNew episodeThe European Union is unhappy about how Greece deals with refugees, and treatment some consider inhumane. Critics say there's not even a proper asylum process in place, which undermines the Dublin treaty which states that refugees must apply for asylum in the first EU country they enter. But many refugees are afraid of being sent back to Greece because Greek authorities often return refugees back to their own countries, where they have to fear for their lives.
Now playingNew episodeAny time a classy wine is offered online below market price, be suspicious: the wines are often stolen. In France, owners of many a chateau are complaining about wine thievery. More and more often the gendarmerie are called to investigate when wine cellars suddenly go empty. Even big-name shops like Hédiard have been hit; just recently, someone tried to get their hands on some costly Grand Crus. More and more wine shops are turning to elaborate security procedures such surveillance cameras and heavy security doors.
Switzerland: Debate on the Minaret Ban
Now playingNew episodeThe right-wing populist Swiss People's Party (SVP) hopes to enact a building ban on minarets. In the run-up to the referendum on November 29, the SVP is campaigning with a provocative placard depicting a veiled Muslim woman in front of missile-like minarets casting a shadow on the Swiss flag. According to polls, a majority of Swiss voters oppose the ban. But the 400,000 Muslims living in Switzerland are outraged by the campaign, voicing their protest in online forums. Both the Swiss government and the country's churches are criticizing the SVP's attempt and worried about the potential harm to Switzerland's international reputation.
Belgium: Brussels, the Capital of Crime
Now playingNew episodeBrussels is not just the capital of the European Union -- it's also a center for crime. Officials and members of parliament alike have been robbed and beaten in the middle of the city's European quarter. Criminals know that many people here carry a laptop, a pricey cell-phone and a full wallet. Often, the lawbreakers hail from the city's immigrant neighborhoods, home to 40 percent of the population in Brussels. One out of every two young people here is unemployed. The police here are poorly equipped and poorly paid -- and feel they're fighting a losing battle.
Turkey: Author in Search of Justice
Now playingNew episodeIt’s a dying profession, but legal writers are still in demand in Turkey. Rain or shine, they sit at the side of the street with folding table and portable typewriter and offer their services, typing witness depositions, applications for guardianship, and legal complaints.Such writers were already a feature of the Ottoman Empire, and their services were valued even by the literate. But as educational levels rose and with the advent of the laptop and Internet, the profession is threatened with extinction even in Turkey.
Slovenia: The Innovators (Inventors' Trade Show iENA in Nuremberg, November 5- 8)
Now playingNew episodeInventors from all over the world get together in Nuremberg at the beginning of November for the iENA - the world's most important innovation trade fair. Peter Floriancic is an elder in the field. The 90-year-old Slovenian invented practical gadgets like the plastic zipper, slide frames or mini perfume bottles with pumps. His recent inventions have brought him wealth and fame. Floriancic is not a shy and retiring inventor. He socializes with film stars and maharadjas. He is still bubbling with ideas - one of his last inventions was a fitness bed. The star of the promotional video is himself.
Romania: The Long Arm of the Securitate
Now playingNew episodeRomania’s dictator Nicolae Ceaucescu was executed 20 years ago. But his infamous secret service is still around. The old cliques manipulate the old files, intimidate journalists, and take key positions in the economy.Herta Müller, the ethnic German Literature Nobel Prize winner from Romania, has described the machinations of the Securitate. After she emigrated to Germany in 1987, it spread rumors that she herself was a communist agent. Even today, when she goes on reading tours through her old homeland, the Securitate shadows her.
The Netherlands: Boycott on Shellfish
Now playingNew episodeBelgians love shellfish from the Dutch province of Zeeland. But Belgian politicians have called on the nation to boycott the delicacies to protest the Netherlands’ refusal to dredge the Western Scheldt estuary. The Netherlands say its refusal is based on environmental concerns. But the Belgians say the real reason is to prevent Belgian competition with the port at Rotterdam. Only if the estuary is deepened again can the next generation of heavy container ships dock in Antwerp, Belgium.
Belgium: From the Street to the Catwalk
Now playingNew episodeMiss Homeless Belgium 2009 - a private initiative with the power to provoke and draw public attention to those living on the sidelines of society.There are 11 finalists, including Leonie Reniers, who is in her early 40s. She was homeless for many years, living at a railway station in Brussels. But entering this contest has paid off. Thanks to the project she's found an apartment and is slowly getting her life back on track.
Mainstream Parties in Crisis: Courting German Voters Abroad
Now playingNew episodeSome 55,000 Germans living abroad have registered to vote, and increasingly politicians are paying visits to woo these voters. This summer the Social Democrats' Ulla Schmidt did some campaigning amongst the 60,000 Germans living in Alicante, on the Spanish Costa Blanca.Her visit ended in scandal, after her official car was stolen there. We also paid a visit to Germans living in Spain to see how they view Germany's two main parties -- the Social Democrats and the Christian Democrats.
Now playingNew episodeGermany is the largest country in the European Union and the biggest contributor to the EU's budget. So no matter who is chosen the country's next chancellor on September 27, his or her voice will carry weight in Europe.Many European observers have the feeling that, when it comes to the EU, Germans are becoming less euphoric and more pragmatic. In EU jargon, the "German answer" effectively means "no answer". Observers say the Germans' constitutional reservations about the Lisbon Treaty are just one indication of this. Is Germany the motor driving the EU or the brakes holding it back?
The CDU and the FDP: The Election and the Economic Crisis
Now playingNew episodeIn the race to become Germany's next chancellor, recent polls put incumbent Angela Merkel of the Christian Democrats clearly ahead of her challenger Frank-Walter Steinmeier of the Social Democrats.So some people are predicting the elections will result in a coaltion between the CDU and the Free Democrats -- two parties that tout themselves as experts in economic policy. We examine whether current coalitions between the CDU and the FDP have been successful, such as the one in the German state of Baden-Württemberg.
Viewed from the Outside: A Search for the Past and the Present
Now playingNew episode200 youths from around the world gathered to take a train ride through Poland. During the trip they searched for traces of German-Polish history: from the "Westerplatte" where the first shots were fired in what became the Second World War, to the memorial at the Auschwitz concentration camp.Reconciling with Poland has been an important -- and often difficult -- issue for Germany's foreign ministers. Heated debate about flight and expulsion show that this topic is still very current. We asked the youths who travelled to Poland what they expect from German foreign policy.
Nuclear Power - Why not? The Greens at an Impasse
Now playingNew episodeGermany has traditionally been the home of the anti-nuclear movement and a role model for Green parties in other European countries. While they were in office, the Greens fought successfully to have Germany phase out its nuclear reactors.But now Germans are considering getting back into the atomic energy business. Advocates say it's a reliable source of energy and even claim that it's environmentally-friendly. So have the Greens lost their way? And how are they being viewed abroad?
Greece: Mountain Village Survives Thanks to Ecological Park
Now playingNew episodeJust a few years ago, everyone wanted to leave the Greek mountain village of Anavra and its unpaved roads, where villagers would be ankle deep in the wastes of the animals kept there. Now the mayor has transformed the community. He’s banking on ecology – and EU subsidies. In countless town council meetings, he has persuaded the villagers to move the cattle stalls out of the village and to buy expensive cattle from France so they can produce organic meat. Revenues from a wind park have funded a school. No one is leaving Anavra anymore.
Now playingNew episodeOn October 2, the Irish will vote for the second time on the European Union’s Treaty of Lisbon. Last summer, 53 percent of the votes cast were against the agreement. In the economic crisis, many citizens of Ireland want closer ties to the EU, but the outcome is still uncertain. The Irish government has made only halfhearted efforts to fight the crisis, so the vote could be seen as a referendum on national politics. In Moyross, a district in the city of Limerick, the EU seems faraway. Unemployment here is at 50 percent and gang violence is widespread. But at the University of Limerick, support for the EU is strong.
Chechnya: Families Sue for Damages for Human Rights Violations
Now playingNew episodeDozens of Chechen families are suing Russia before the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. They are the relatives of victims of the Chechen War, and they want justice at long last.They’re winning their fight: Moscow loses almost every case. The judges in Strasbourg impose fines of up to 100,000 euros. The Russian government is under pressure. So now it wants to pass its own compensation law in order to stop the flood of lawsuits in Strasbourg.
Croatia: Living in a Minefield
Now playingNew episodeThe Balkan conflict has been over for 14 years, but Croatia is still struggling with its legacy. There are around two million still buried somewhere in the ground.They've killed some 1,400 people and maimed thousands more since the end of the war. In the northeastern provinces of Baranja and Slavonia, the existence of the mines is hitting the farming and the tourist industry. But the government in Zagreb is not overly concerned. Tourists continue to flock to the coastline -- where there is no threat. The residents of the region are now hoping Brussels will help.
Poland: the Polanski controversy
Now playingNew episodeFilm director Roman Polanski faces trial in the US for statutory rape committed 32 years ago. The case has polarized people in his native country of Poland. Initially the media there blasted the Americans for wanting to make an example of Polanski, a famous Pole, an Oscar winner.Politicians like foreign minister Radoslaw Sikorski have called for the director to be freed. But some conservative elements in Poland have been using the case to warm up some old anti-Semitic prejudices.
European Journal | The Netherlands: Fight for Sustainable Fishing
Now playingNew episodeFishermen often throw half of their catch back into the sea -- because the fish are small and therefore not as profitable as their larger counterparts and because the fishermen want to keep within their EU fishing quotes. Slowly, it is now becoming accepted wisdom that this is also one reason for the dwindling fish stocks. At fish auctions in the Netherlands a seal of approval has been introduced to indicate the use of sustainable fishing practices. We visit a Dutch fisherman who is currently in the process of modifying his fishing equipment so that less small fry gets caught up in his nets.
European Journal | Belgium: Fight of the Festivals
Now playingNew episodeBelgium is a country that loves its arts and culture - from major concerts that attract audiences of 80,000 to festivals hosted by just about every city in the country - designed to boost its image and the economy. 'Les Ardentes' in Liège is only four years old but it's already a highlight of the annual arts calendar - much to the dismay of the town of Spa in the Ardennes, just 30 kilometers away. It also hosts a festival that takes place at exactly the same time. The two events are now competing for visitors and artistes.
European Journal | France: Run on Cake
Now playingNew episodeOn 9.9.2009, register offices all over the world are booked solid. Lovers see the date's symmetry as auspicious to their future union. But a decent wedding cake is also important.In Paris, wedding couples can now also order Anglo-American style cakes, multi-tiered and colorfully decorated. An American woman and a Frenchwoman joined transatlantic forces to set up Wedding Cake Avenue and realize their wildest sweet dreams. And not even the price of 850 euros a cake has been deterring would-be customers.
European Journal | Ukraine: Miners, but no Paydirt
Now playingNew episodeThe coal mines in eastern Ukraine are among the world’s most dangerous mines. The kilometer-deep shafts are full of poisonous, explosive methane gas.But there is no money for security measures. The profits flow into the pockets of the new steel barons and the state, which still operates many mines itself. In the crisis, the bosses aren’t firing anyone, but they are cutting wages. With less than 300 euros a month, the miners can no longer feed their families.
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