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tv   Generation Change Kenya  Al Jazeera  May 8, 2024 5:30am-6:01am AST

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main, a search operations because of the large amount of people they still have to find under that problem. let me double oh, to 0, george the wisdom tape. so that for some oh, spend wells all communicating in a way that's more complex than previously expected. it's the conclusion by scientists who have been studying the animals in the caribbean, or such as say that vocalizations. so what they say is a phonetic alphabet. alex bed has the story of these just clicks or are we listening to a complex language? that's the question sides as the graphing with which could change our understanding of the joint lorayne metals room. we'll communicate with each other using little bursts of clicking noise. is something called co does that sound a little bit like morse code or research shows that these coders have a complex internal structure with similarities, similarities to aspects of some other animal communication systems. and even some
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aspects of human language research as a part of the project stacy dissertation translation initiative, machine learning team. we've examines move in the 8700 audio snippets of spend while clicks known as coaches. scientists have been trying for decades to understand what those clicks might mean. the walls, i still don't know, they now sing 0 states of clicks that make up of the music else, abuse that the wilds. mites used to build the rough equivalence of woods and phrases. project studies really focused on listening right now. this is an incredibly vulnerable population, especially transmitted communication system that we really don't want to disturb. and so right, we're just at the very beginning of this process and i think there's a lot more research that we have to do before we know whether it's a good idea to try to communicate with them or really even they have
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a sense of whether that will be possible this experience safety miles seem to have sophisticated social ties and deciphering their communication systems could reveal parallels with human language and society. those some believe the cliques may be more akin to music if they are indeed speaking. the big question is, what are they saying? and could we learn to speak back alex bid, which is there a nice thing. okay, that's it. from the money side. lots more information on web sign out is there a dot com is coming up next generation change? the i love that thing you would 14 years of enforced and separation,
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they missed their children growing up in missed all of the things that i'm doing my teeth. some fault for his parents freed them from incarceration for their role in a rather cool black revolutionary group. of anything that's worth fighting for you by for the thing you attempt is worth it. growing together, a witness documentary on the jersey to the east africa largest economy, kenya is an applicant, our house, and home to a will be in the texas. that was 75 percent of the population under $35.00. it's also facing high youth on employment, sewing living costs and a whitening gap between rich and poor. i'm in a variety and it comes to kenya to meet to activate from the countries capital. and i re be from fighting to social justice to come back to me please sided,
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the 1st one to empower the communities and make them safe. that well, permanency generation change a global series attempt to understand i'm challenge the idea. is that mobilized? be around the world the so it's sunday i'm going ahead and try to come here in times or which is where you're from, right? that's. and this is an informal customer, but it will say the country by the center site. what was it like for you growing up there? so one of the challenges the getting them not just on initially mean my buddies, and i'm going to find those that time slot in our philosophy lands and falls into okay, so that's way too much of safety because she was in gauge getting in trouble. i'm
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use of the stress and all that time. so any chevy? i ended up dying that let's go for when it was laptops. so however you and your mother passed away, i was 16. and what happened to uh, i ended up doing that, don't say to make it for 4000000 t. it's a place where when comes anyone who doesn't have a place to go or scrubbing jean i will collecting such so so that they can on that i get something for each now you're right there. and that's the, what was the transition like from, you know, being on the dumps. i am working that to be an artist and doing what you do now. so uh, windows are the dumb, say those us tricks up, leaving people are calling me. that's the problem. please that up for us. do they gave me some of that in the day before. so i notified this digitally and at that
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time he was very popular. i was going out on the bundle and obviously doing the places and people didn't need to find the stop listening to that. but we need to find that you need to find that. okay, so the came the, the phone to me i'm to transition was such, i'd seen and it came up with that different. i'm not able to find it. that's where the transitions for me, but they've done since that is getting on the the, the, the cloud is working on it on site and it says eyes whenever they don't say to feel like you are popular is getting a place where people don't appreciate, you don't have a voice that nobody gets that much when we walk. so initially for me, it was like, uh, i mean the ones where i'm facing a lot of stuff sort of vices when, if i'm sick, nobody guess if i, if i have a good solid,
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nobody get this nobody to share what, what they have those performing their buds video in the mornings, you find them on just the so i was seeing them as the, as the reload in front of the car to a theater. he's because the new a country equals. so i wanted to talk to you about you, larry, you've done prior to something about extrajudicial cleanings and the police can. and people who live had the last 3 friends. our in our center done the site because of its security from killing. they was beaten after the stronger phone was still mind. there was, i was hungry and so that's where i i, i started becoming moving to social issues on the, not anything the one the one that day. but you will not. okay. we're not out dying
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to, to bump in or you when and there's also an organization quote that you can. yeah. which you work in and you do these projects with young people. can you tell me that that what you do with them? okay, so of course, and it was, it is a community based organization that works with kids from the age of 5 to 17, to ensure that, that, that seems and easy. so that don't end up day society special vices. he's coming the dates we to use class days, drama, class this point. see we play games, the kids forget to be a monday straight into find over 100 plus the new times. of course the and someone is he does be moved off and then even in yeah, that's the
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going theory. you corresponded them. it's our social justice center which aims at tactical forms of structural vine. and can you explain a bit about what made you want to start the organization? i was born in my battery and i grew up in my address phase. the simply because, i mean, okay, now i love my that, you know, i was a happy child. and when i became an adult is when i could see now the violence, i think people in my community while going through the cold, let's see the police brutality. the police came in, the law of clean water. so growing up in mother is like growing up in a village, but everybody knows everybody. so when something happens to one of us really seen it. so the killings in particular too much. it was just too much. so to challenge that, we formed, but that is social justice center. and were there any past experiences that you
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live in? sorry, that made you want to start the organization? yes. um, my own brother was killed by a police in to a 7 to void for selection violence. and ken and that with a lot of other young people that i am grown up sweet being killed. and this is not just my story, and this is a story of many young people in my day do a to have a friend, a cousin, a brother, a neighbor that was killed by police. the winter when no, i was fired them. it's our research assistance. i can you tell me a bit about the why fi g day today? it every day receive cases from the community on difference of it is that to be a lucky one to bring justice to the community members mostly receive cases of when these mortality of people who have been arrested with not enough reason,
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i guess as of the end of this violence, but we have a community engagement, like watching film planting, trees, community cleanup meetings have been on stations. and every time we meet a, this sensor, we have to sing because the southern energy that comes when we things together and to just i just on to continue watching this 5 of speaking justice and dignity for our people. the, i wanted to ask you about the time in 2020, when you were a pretest against police brutality and you resisted arrest from 3 of police offices . and it was a huge reaction because the video of his happening went viral and lots of people. so read how was that experience to you and were you surprised by the
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reaction in a car? yes, i was surprised that he even went viral. i didn't know it was going to be that impossible. i thought that i a woman that was able to stand up for myself, made the young man and mike with me teeth more emboldened to sign up for themselves . it made them feel more powerful. i also have to say that at that very moment, it is the pain of every month i have walked with in seeking justice for the sun. every case i have documented every single person i have seen lose that lives in my community. i've given me this trend to say that this was enough and this feeling how much are still the
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so 10 dash, thank you so much for being here today. when we think about the issues of face and young people, it's interesting that 75 percent of the people in kenya under the age of $35.00, but only 40 percent of youth at registered to vote in the recent elections. why do you think it is that so few people are registered to vote here in kenya, under the age of 35. i think it was a or one of the form of the existence from the people from the 8000000 tenants who did not come on towards. i think they was saying that they did not want to be a part of this. they wanted a system that works for them. and on the other hand, i think one thing is important because it's the only way we are going to put someone who could walk for us. but i think it was very loud that they use that side
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of the system of oppression. and what do you think this? how did you feel about the election and how did young people that you know, speak about the election? remember before left, so new, i mean we were in a crisis of course the 19 and of course even the death i'm into uh, previously there one not even doing a lot of the people it, they would just, uh, making the people just off i lot because the, there was not a lot of coffee, was people people not going to job. so when it comes to people now being told is devoted, they were like, and on the same government, they didn't gamble with us. why are they getting now? they don't respect the voices, they don't hear what they say, but they one task to do what they see. and that's, that's how we feel like it's what is not possible. it doesn't change anything. the fullest, i feel that sense of accuracy towards the system. i do because women void, see, says the country, good independence with little change, look at the community to where i come from. it's still the same poverty from before
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. so people are beginning to relate with, i mean, why do i even go towards it doesn't change my life in any way. how did you bring about change if you withdraw from the system is that exists now? how can you amplify the issues that matches he mice? i think we need another tentative system that sense as please pull at the very call of the issues we have trying to address. how we need to bring about changes organize ourselves as the youth. an advocate with one voice as one girl about the issues that much i to us. i feel like we shouldn't take a box it and watch and complain and say this system doesn't work for us. these people are corrupt. it's and we actively organized against that system together. i know that you both care about extrajudicial headings in kenya, around the world. they were conversations around police brutality, and that's at the hands of the police. could you explain to me what it is like in
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kenya in regards to the extra judicial kennings, the americans typed in the hash tag blacklist, martha? i think it, it might the most in can because a personality of low spend t plus friends. most of them was killed by police and more justice and initially this is just specific on the vendor. so if you imagine how many happens each end every day in my died and keep that in, in, in, in that the streets. so it's quite a very, very big issue that hasn't been happening and we haven't been getting that solution . and wonder how would you explain it? now, as i'm british colony, when we go to independence, the police service that was serving the colonial government did the change. what did you do, martinez? i became president. ok now. he continued with the same police force that the colonial government was using. and therefore, pressing on that,
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they have practices that they told me they would cost up on the people to present the chance, leaving and in for most instruments. when judge floyd was killed by 10, the earliest and miles to the non community. and when we applied the protest, it was this last time i saw canyon's soul invested in calculating methods of exciting to show things in the country. usually we will hold our demos, the 9 foremost settlements. i think good slater hills can connect said this trouble in the us and us from without hand came out in the large numbers to stay with them . and i need to explain additional documents. so police officers have justified 72 percent of the kennings that have happened alleging that they were result of anti crime operations. and i wanted to ask when in the communities, is that a slight tension that just some people maybe not have sympathy when somebody who was committing a crime dies at the hands of the police and how do you respond to that?
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yes, that happens. but i think it's um, we live in a country that appliance itself and upholding visual. what do we have? well, let's say is, if someone has been found doing something wrong, can we have a little before? not can we have them arrested and taken to court and prosecuted instead of the police this id to be the judge and the judy and the executor shawna. because this is what happens most of the time. and this is a crime not just in can no, but everyone else. i do not think police have a right to take away anybody's life when they law that can be followed. for me, the biggest issue has been the quality. they are not treating people the same. like we have been having news like a southern pass on let's go to a 2 commodity for the, for the government to the se in these governors on news. but they're not being killed. why is it that in where we leave and then the someone on just the phone?
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it was my dad, a cleaning on this, a cleaning all according to the, the little so the, we need to, we need to put it clear that it needs to be an, an important thing that we feel like it's not if it's not try and equally on to a new dash uh there was the case of calls in being in this like some people in government and stolen dealings made so many tickets. they fits, of course with names and in the country. and during this period, there was also a lot of pull the tea in the communities and actually the police did not as waste their club india, nance, despite having been a protest, it is the people protesting against this school would be an as that's what i actually already said, so what she's saying is there's a distinction between people who are stealing to survive. and people who are stealing from the people. because the governments told from the poor in that
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particular incent which led them to lingering is when you say that you're fighting for justice, what does justice look like? fear? so for me, justice means uh this, this consistent lake of people shifted. same uh this, that this list is like following the little when the boys killed with the police. uh, one. do you mean by that? $600.00 additional kidding. to you are not given upon me to be the by the police to conduct a fundraising. so as can get funds to do the body in which, why don't you have incandescence? because that, that's almost game then it's wrong to, you know, given a, find me. so for this no, just sit there. so if i fight, i guess is that people shouldn't be treated equally. that's what does this mean school. and what about you wonder at what is just a sick lie to you and when you're fighting for that, what is it that you were thinking about? my brother was killed by police. justice ideally would look like me getting boss, my brother. but that is not possible. so injustice would look like preventing
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people from losing their loved ones. still the same that would make sense for me. the only reason we i'm fighting that disconnect needs to solve so can, is do not have to go through unnecessary paid costs, bite the bullet. so has that ever been a time that you have seen just as an action in kenya with regard to, you know, police kennings. if there was a case to offer lane as the office of commanding station was over a company station who killed someone in the police station who drowned them in a drum full of water. and as the inmates could see that. and when we documented this case together with the international justice mission, we took it to court and we attended court sessions. we are going to show a certain justice for my team call me and that enlightment when he was sentenced to life imprisonment. and that was the 1st day i saw justice in action in this country
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. and i want to move the conversation a little bit and says, all the areas i know you care about. i want to specifically also talk to you guys about music. it feels like it is really a lifeline view. so for me, music is life. uh, i feel like uh, the way the way people have a power like the police have the gun and they feed ball fully done. so for me it's in buffalo and they have music because it's part of my life. last year we had the case of very beginning to end, or we had a police list looking for a site. and then the southern thief, when dining, he, he went to, he's friends on some of the defense or not the so the police ended up getting everybody and they did this all. it was all about stuff. it's like you're just really getting, we need coincides to the community just to send something like that is social justice centers and all that. and we be good justice to do. they follow the ad and
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we've got new new police. and are there any other names of people or any other examples of cultural or music the you have found to be powerful or inspiring? and can you listen to me as a mon and the song, mississippi, and good them about police brutality, the full gus that identify and became a big issue for the black people over there. they went to a protest singing that song, but then few full pa, full, and nina, hassle of felt like how do i find more relevance? we should see to advance the struggle of last people what you're saying about then it's still very rel of lunch today in the us. and also we know communities in countries back home and i wanted to ask social media. it's done a lot in terms of sharing messages to do with activities and how important do you think that has been for you and can you're more generally in terms of i'm to find messages like the ones you care about. most. mostly i've been using social media as
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well as sort of like a proof and whenever you have so, so maybe it's easier to even tell people like this. these are part of the things that they have done. so indeed, a decent time she had issues with the police when they wanted to like that is how they force i knew we also that because social media. so this means that when we did send, it would be to move off. and so many people are inspired by high that's because of the story. and this is because of the social media, it has even happened both even industry to someone is being that if they've done this using social media to tell people that he hasn't been, that has been done, he hasn't done anything. so i have said that social media have played a very, very big role in terms of documenting issues. one very easy use youtube to teach that kind of alternative history. and i wanted, if you could speak to me a little bit about why you've done that, i love history. i think history is very liberating. when you get to see me know and
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understand. i think present a generation is quite disconnected with our very closely as history of the past. for example, my communities, my, my home in my diary has been around for a 100 years. it's been a century of survival and resistance since 1920 of my daughter has been existing. think it's the oldest, get to him can now. so we've had presidents from 91063 who have done something to change the faith of the people of my life. but they did not. this is we have structural violence comes in that the people in my life continue to be neglected and continue to be exposed to system systemic violence of social injustice this. so when we understand as young people where we are coming from, it will be very easy to, to create like i know future. we want to know for children's children and simon,
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any best i know you care a lot about your community. and i want to hear from you directly. what is it that you're proud of in terms of where you are from, and what your identity is? so uh, of course i'm proud of myself if cit, from, from where i've come from. and where am i managed to to both of a 1010000 kids have identified their new talents among the successful stories that they have is that about 50 young guys do not end up being and dropping out of school. i live pregnancies, but we have monday to get them out of such issue so. so most of a proud of the defies that i've gone through in interesting that the things that right this sounds that they have done and all that as a final notes. what is it, despite all of the issues that you have seen that makes you get up every morning? so 5 for a bed today. why is it that you can see needs to do what you are doing? well, it's just me going is knowing that i'm on the right 5 and i'm doing my little thing
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and towards contributing to the betterment of society. like one guy mother. i said to everybody around there was a little thing towards making so all over the place. so that is my initial thing and i'm happy doing it. there is a now let's wake up every morning to ensure that what i'm being the, i'm not even paid or anything is just because i need to see a good future. i need to see a bit and or i need to see a bit of canyon. i need people to not leave the lives that i have left so that so let's wake up every morning for me to check kids with foods. if i'm really i know, so for the future i can examine
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today's headlines. i wish i had word word to describe what setting the agenda for tomorrow's discussions right now. if you're on campus talking about the site, you are being called anti semitic and a supporter of care international film makers and will cross journalist bring programs to enforce and inspire to options a way to the immediate future climate crisis or climate revolution. on alger 0, we look at the world's top business stories. how much is the rebuilding going to
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starting march 1st. to may. 30 fast nominations are made on the award official website, w, w, w dot h t a dot q a forward slash e m. the a warning that palestinians in gauze will soon run out of water, food, and medical aid. as israel closes the rest of border crossing with each one, carrie jones, this is i'll just say we're a lot from also coming up making a mistake. a full scale assault on vasa would be a human capacitor. un secretary general contends that.

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