00:00 News
00:02 News in Review
00:30 Lifestyle Europe
01:00 News
01:02 News
01:15 Monticello – A Concrete Utopia, USA
01:30 Bands, Trends and Events - the Best Music from Germany
02:00 News
02:02 News in Review
02:30 Lifestyle Europe
03:00 News
03:02 News
03:15 Secret Animal Transports – When the Law Fails to Protect
04:00 News
04:02 News in Review
05:00 News
05:02 News
05:15 Love and Sex in Japan
Japan has a problem: romantic relationships and sex are becoming a rarity. A quarter of all Japanese between the ages of 30 and 40 are virgins, and half...
Japan has a problem: romantic relationships and sex are becoming a rarity. A quarter of all Japanese between the ages of 30 and 40 are virgins, and half the population admit they rarely have sex. The social impact is enormous: birth rates are so low that the Japanese population could plunge by one-third by 2060.
06:00 News
06:02 News in Review
06:30 Confronting the Powerful
07:00 News
07:02 News
07:15 The Money Deluge – How the Rich Get Richer
08:00 News
08:30 Confronting the Powerful
09:00 News
09:30 The Science Magazine
10:00 News
10:30 Confronting the Powerful
11:00 News
11:15 Cahier Africain, Part 2
Filmmaker Heidi Specogna spent more than seven years accompanying Central African women who had suffered war atrocities. The focus of the film is a small...
Filmmaker Heidi Specogna spent more than seven years accompanying Central African women who had suffered war atrocities. The focus of the film is a small school exercise book filled with their courageous testimonies. In it they wrote down the crimes committed against them with the hope of bringing their testimony before the International Court of Justice in The Hague.
12:00 News
12:30 Lifestyle Europe
13:00 News
13:15 News
13:30 Spotlight on People
14:00 News
14:30 Confronting the Powerful
15:00 News
15:15 News
15:30 Lifestyle Europe
16:00 News
17:00 News
17:15 Secrets of the Stone Age – Part 1: From Hunters to Farmers
18:00 News
18:30 The Health Show
19:00 News
19:15 News
19:30 International Debate from Berlin
20:00 News
21:00 News
21:15 Secret Animal Transports – When the Law Fails to Protect
Millions of animals are transported across Europe every year, as far as North Africa and the Middle East. Sheep and cattle are often crammed into trucks...
Millions of animals are transported across Europe every year, as far as North Africa and the Middle East. Sheep and cattle are often crammed into trucks and ships for days or even weeks. Since 1991, filmmaker Manfred Karremann has been documenting the fate of animals on long-distance transports. Despite improvements in legislation, not much has changed over that time.
Manfred Karremann has already made an impact with his documentaries about the transport of animals across Europe. On several occasions the EU has responded to his reports by improving animal welfare regulations. But this still offers too little protection to the animals. An everyday occurrence: the brown and white cow in the truck is breathing heavily. It's down on the floor, where other animals can't avoid stepping on it. After 20 minutes the animal is dead. That is a scene shot at the end of August 2017 on the EU's external border with Turkey. An exception? Exports of cattle and sheep from the EU are on the rise again. Along with Turkey, most of the live animals are headed for the Middle East. Even young calves are transported over distances as great as 3,000 kilometers at a stretch. Arriving at their destination after days or weeks, the animals from Europe face an end with terrible suffering. Animal welfare activists are sounding the alarm again: They say that the laws are no longer obeyed once the animals leave the EU. They report dehydrated cattle at the Turkish border and unspeakable torment on old cattle freighters and after arrival in the Middle East and North Africa. More than one million signatures protesting this state of affairs were recently submitted to the EU Commission in Brussels. The background: The European Court of Justice decided that animal welfare rules apply up to the animals' final destination. The problem: nobody monitors the transports once they have left the EU, as filmmaker Manfred Karremann proves. Just outside the EU's borders, he encounters dehydrated cattle, and cows giving birth and dying on trucks. Karremann wanted to know: Are these images of animal suffering just exceptions? Or is the law being systematically broken? Karremann's months-long investigation takes him from German farms through Bulgaria and Turkey to Lebanon.
22:00 News
22:30 News in Review
23:00 News
23:15 The Movie Magazine
23:30 International Debate from Berlin
00:00 News
00:15 The Movie Magazine
01:00 News
01:15 News
01:30 The Church Program
02:00 News
02:02 News in Review
02:30 Lifestyle Europe
03:00 News
03:02 News
03:15 Metal Battle 2016
04:00 News
04:02 News in Review
04:30 The Church Program
05:00 News
05:02 News
05:15 Madness
06:00 News
06:02 News in Review
06:30 International Debate from Berlin
07:00 News
07:02 News
07:15 Secrets of the Stone Age – Part 1: From Hunters to Farmers
08:00 News
08:30 International Debate from Berlin
09:00 News
10:00 News
10:30 International Debate from Berlin
11:00 News
11:15 The Mobility of Tomorrow
Travel has always been a dream of humankind: to reach distant places or foreign countries in the shortest possible time. Even today, roads and rails are...
Travel has always been a dream of humankind: to reach distant places or foreign countries in the shortest possible time. Even today, roads and rails are overloaded and resources are scarce. The most innovative idea for a solution is the Hyperloop. This is a capsule that is supposed to glide through a steel tube at 1200 kilometers an hour. Will we travel from Berlin to Paris in less than an hour?
12:00 News
12:30 Lifestyle Europe
13:00 News
13:15 News
14:00 News
14:30 International Debate from Berlin
15:00 News
15:15 News
15:30 Lifestyle Europe
16:00 News
17:00 News
17:15 Secret Animal Transports – When the Law Fails to Protect
18:00 News
19:00 News
19:15 News
19:30 Spotlight on People
20:00 News
21:00 News
21:15 Metal Battle 2016
22:00 News
22:30 News in Review
23:00 News
23:15 Living in the Digital Age
23:30 Spotlight on People
00:00 News
00:15 Background and Analysis
00:30 The Travel Guide
01:00 News
01:15 The Week in Reports
01:30 Confronting the Powerful
02:00 News
02:15 The Movie Magazine
03:00 News
03:02 News
03:15 Truth Detectives – Part 2
04:00 News
04:02 Background and Analysis
04:15 Petra – The Nabataean Necropolis, Jordan
04:30 Bands, Trends and Events - the Best Music from Germany
05:00 News
05:02 News
05:15 Mexicans - Dying for Justice
Drug wars and crime are tearing Mexico apart. In recent years, more than 200,000 people have been murdered, tortured or simply disappeared without a trace....
Drug wars and crime are tearing Mexico apart. In recent years, more than 200,000 people have been murdered, tortured or simply disappeared without a trace. The responsibility lies not only with the drug cartels, but also with the police and armed forces. Three human rights activists collect testimony on the atrocities for submission to the International Criminal Court.
06:00 News
06:02 News in Review
06:30 The Globalization Program
07:00 News
07:02 News
07:15 Secret Animal Transports – When the Law Fails to Protect
08:00 News
08:02 The Travel Guide
09:00 News
09:02 On Location
09:15 The Money Deluge – How the Rich Get Richer
10:00 News
10:15 Contemporary Classical
"Sarah’s Music - Contemporary Classical†is DW’s weekly program dedicated to the rich diversity of classical music. Presenter Sarah...
"Sarah’s Music - Contemporary Classical†is DW’s weekly program dedicated to the rich diversity of classical music. Presenter Sarah Willis gets up close and personal with the stars of the classical music world.
10:30 Spotlight on People
11:00 News
11:15 Laura Mvula (Britain)
Laura Mvula is a British singer with Caribbean roots. She has studied music composition and plays several instruments. Her debut album, "Sing to the Moon", reached the Top 10 of UK charts in 2013.
12:00 News
12:15 On Location
12:30 Lifestyle Europe
13:00 News
13:15 News
13:30 The Motor Magazine
14:00 News
14:15 On Location
14:30 The Globalization Program
15:00 News
15:15 News
15:30 Lifestyle Europe
16:00 News
16:15 The Week in Reports
17:00 News
17:15 Metal Battle 2016
18:00 News
18:15 On Location
18:30 Bands, Trends and Events - the Best Music from Germany
19:00 News
19:15 News
19:30 The Health Show
20:00 News
20:15 Mexicans - Dying for Justice
Drug wars and crime are tearing Mexico apart. In recent years, more than 200,000 people have been murdered, tortured or simply disappeared without a trace....
Drug wars and crime are tearing Mexico apart. In recent years, more than 200,000 people have been murdered, tortured or simply disappeared without a trace. The responsibility lies not only with the drug cartels, but also with the police and armed forces. Three human rights activists collect testimony on the atrocities for submission to the International Criminal Court.
21:00 News
21:15 Truth Detectives – Part 2
More and more war crimes and human rights violations are brought to indictment. In almost all conflict and crisis regions in the world, people are now...
More and more war crimes and human rights violations are brought to indictment. In almost all conflict and crisis regions in the world, people are now using their smartphones to document events. And older crimes can be reconstructed using satellite imagery. The documentary shows how state-of-the-art technology helps uncover these crimes worldwide.
Lawyers and human rights activists around the world are gathering evidence of human rights abuses with the help of their victims. Atrocities committed in conflicts and crises around the world can be more easily detected and documented using the latest technologies. The chief prosecutor at the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Fatou Bensouda, for example, successfully used an interactive visualization tool for the first time in the trial of Islamist leader Ahmad al-Mahdi. He was sentenced in 2016 for the destruction of historic and religious sites in Mali. The organization Euromaidan SOS scours the net for YouTube videos, tweets and webcam images depicting the development of the conflict in Ukraine, checking the authenticity of the information directly on-site. After nearly half a century of civil war in Colombia, tens of thousands of people are still missing. With the help of relatives of the disappeared, the human rights organization Equitas is searching for the victims in remote regions. Satellite images, 3D mapping and algorithms are lending new momentum to the seemingly hopeless search. Using a 3D model of the city of Rafah, the research group Forensic Architecture has reconstructed the blackest day of the last Gaza war in 2014. By situating images, videos and witness testimony on the model, the Forensic Architecture team sought to provide a detailed reconstruction of the events of early August 2014. Equipped with just a cell phone camera, civilians today can call for justice. Networking through social networks makes the whole world witnesses - even to war crimes. Bottom-up surveillance by citizens and individuals - also known as ‘Sousveillance’ - is an effective weapon against abuses of power.
22:00 News
22:15 On Location
23:00 News
23:15 News
23:30 The Cultural Magazine
00:00 News
00:02 News in Review
00:30 Lifestyle Europe
01:00 News
01:02 News
01:15 Living in the Digital Age
02:00 News
02:15 Background and Analysis
02:30 The Health Show
03:00 News
03:02 On Location
03:15 The Love Commandos
04:00 News
04:02 The Week in Reports
04:15 Contemporary Classical
"Sarah’s Music - Contemporary Classical†is DW’s weekly program dedicated to the rich diversity of classical music. Presenter Sarah...
"Sarah’s Music - Contemporary Classical†is DW’s weekly program dedicated to the rich diversity of classical music. Presenter Sarah Willis gets up close and personal with the stars of the classical music world.
04:30 The Travel Guide
05:00 News
05:02 News
05:15 No Solidarity - Racism in Former East Germany
"Beat the Algerians to death!" cried mobs of young men rampaging through Erfurt for three days in August 1975. Assaults on foreigners did not fit into...
"Beat the Algerians to death!" cried mobs of young men rampaging through Erfurt for three days in August 1975. Assaults on foreigners did not fit into Communist East Germany's official self-image at all. Nevertheless, foreign contract workers were repeatedly hounded and subjected to violent attacks. Many of these crimes are still unsolved today.
06:00 News
06:02 Background and Analysis
06:15 Contemporary Classical
"Sarah’s Music - Contemporary Classical†is DW’s weekly program dedicated to the rich diversity of classical music. Presenter Sarah...
"Sarah’s Music - Contemporary Classical†is DW’s weekly program dedicated to the rich diversity of classical music. Presenter Sarah Willis gets up close and personal with the stars of the classical music world.
06:30 Spotlight on People
07:00 News
07:02 News
07:15 Metal Battle 2016
08:00 News
08:02 The Church Program
09:00 News
09:02 Background and Analysis
09:15 Truth Detectives – Part 2
10:00 News
10:15 The Movie Magazine
10:30 The Cultural Magazine
11:00 News
11:15 Love and Sex in Japan
Japan has a problem: romantic relationships and sex are becoming a rarity. A quarter of all Japanese between the ages of 30 and 40 are virgins, and half...
Japan has a problem: romantic relationships and sex are becoming a rarity. A quarter of all Japanese between the ages of 30 and 40 are virgins, and half the population admit they rarely have sex. The social impact is enormous: birth rates are so low that the Japanese population could plunge by one-third by 2060.
12:00 News
12:15 Background and Analysis
13:00 News
13:15 The Week in Reports
13:30 The Church Program
14:00 News
14:15 Background and Analysis
14:30 The Health Show
15:00 News
15:15 Contemporary Classical
"Sarah’s Music - Contemporary Classical†is DW’s weekly program dedicated to the rich diversity of classical music. Presenter Sarah...
"Sarah’s Music - Contemporary Classical†is DW’s weekly program dedicated to the rich diversity of classical music. Presenter Sarah Willis gets up close and personal with the stars of the classical music world.
16:00 News
16:15 Female Power in Saudi Arabia
What does the world really know about women in Saudi Arabia? Not much, apart from a few clichés: Saudi women "weren't allowed to drive," or they "have...
What does the world really know about women in Saudi Arabia? Not much, apart from a few clichés: Saudi women "weren't allowed to drive," or they "have to cover up completely when leaving the house." What's the truth? A German camera team was granted much sought-after permission to film there. Their report provides a unique glimpse into the lives of Saudi woman and their families.
Doors are opening: Saudi women are suddenly becoming business executives, university professors and members of parliament. Since February 2017, the Saudi stock exchange has had its first female chairperson, Sarah Al-Suhaimi. And then there's Dr. Reem Alfrayan: in her early 40s, married with four children, she received a doctorate in education in California before returning to Riyadh. Ten years ago, she as a woman would not have been allowed to enter the building of the Council of Saudi Chambers. Today she is its Assistant Secretary General and director of its businesswomen's division. Princess Reema bint Bandar Al Saud is both an entrepreneur with her own luxury department store in Riyadh and an official in the country's top sports federation. If a family has no sons, daughters can inherit large companies. And emancipation is filtering down into the middle classes as well. Education is the watchword. Saudi young women are pushing into the job market, and foreign companies are eager to hire them. "Female Saudi applicants are far fitter than their male competitors," says Thomas Dreiling from Thyssen-Krupp. Today, Saudi woman may also work as saleswomen or at supermarket checkouts. New laws and a new pragmatism in their application are making it possible. Companies are supposed to give their female employees their own 'compartment'. But, says Aljohara Almansour, personnel manager at Thyssen-Krupp, "Our office door is always open and we hold meetings together with the men." Saudi Arabia, whose state budget was in the red in 2015 for the first time in decades due to falling oil prices, can no longer afford to keep half the population shut up at home. The driving ban is already a thing of the past - but a more important goal for Saudi feminists is to do away with the system of male guardianship entirely.
17:00 News
17:15 Truth Detectives – Part 2
18:00 News
18:15 The Movie Magazine
18:30 The Church Program
19:00 News
19:15 The Week in Reports
19:30 The Cultural Magazine
20:00 News
20:15 Madness
21:00 News
21:15 The Love Commandos
A cultural shift is underway in India. Most young Indians are still married off by their families. But more and more young people are rebelling against...
A cultural shift is underway in India. Most young Indians are still married off by their families. But more and more young people are rebelling against arranged marriages and falling in love across the boundaries of caste and religion. Often the couples risk their lives when their relationships become known. They can get support from a New Delhi-based organization called Love Commandos.
The men of Love Commandos are the last hope for Indian couples that want to marry against the will of their parents. They offer the lovers shelter in their headquarters in New Delhi and protect them from angry relatives - sometimes with methods worthy of a spy film. India is undergoing a cultural upheaval that is shaking the country’s caste-riven society to its core and tearing families apart. It is the struggle between two different notions of love - arranged marriage vs. marriage for love. This report accompanies two couples on those different paths. Sahil and Dayita’s love has transcended caste boundaries. They met on Facebook and fled from Pune to Delhi because Dayita's parents wanted to marry her to another man. Meanwhile, Khasish found his future wife Sheenu through a professional matchmaker. Marriage broker Geeta Gupta is convinced that arranged marriages last longer because they are not based merely on sexual attraction. He describes them as a seed planted by the parents and raised in the nourishing soil of the extended family. So while Khasish and Sheenu are showered with gifts, Dayita and Sahil fear for their future. In India anyone who opposes their family is lost. There are no housing benefits and no social welfare - only a complex network of aunts and uncles, grandnieces and brothers-in-law that traditionally provides couples with jobs or an apartment. Does Dayita and Sahil’s love really stand a chance?
22:00 News
22:15 Background and Analysis
23:00 News
23:15 Contemporary Classical
"Sarah’s Music - Contemporary Classical†is DW’s weekly program dedicated to the rich diversity of classical music. Presenter Sarah...
"Sarah’s Music - Contemporary Classical†is DW’s weekly program dedicated to the rich diversity of classical music. Presenter Sarah Willis gets up close and personal with the stars of the classical music world.
23:30 The Science Magazine
00:00 News
00:02 News in Review
00:30 Lifestyle Europe
01:00 News
01:02 News
01:15 The Movie Magazine
01:30 The Motor Magazine
02:00 News
02:02 News in Review
02:30 Lifestyle Europe
03:00 News
03:02 News
03:15 The Current Affairs Documentary
The weekly half-hour program delivers in-depth reporting on topical political issues and newsworthy events. Revealing the story behind the stories, "Close...
The weekly half-hour program delivers in-depth reporting on topical political issues and newsworthy events. Revealing the story behind the stories, "Close up" is informative, gripping and visually powerful.
03:45 Living in the Digital Age
04:00 News
04:02 News in Review
05:00 News
05:02 The Movie Magazine
05:15 The Money Deluge – How the Rich Get Richer