Dirt
Beauty shot of boy trying to fly kite in dump. Overcast day with no wind, Mumbai.
El Salvador Poverty - Children search for food among garbage ahead of summit
TAPE: EF02/0716 IN_TIME: 22:44:49 DURATION: 3:08 SOURCES: APTN RESTRICTIONS: DATELINE: San Salvador - 22 August 2002 SHOTLIST: 1. Trucks carrying rubbish arrive at landfill 2. Adults and children searching rubbish 3. Wide shot people searching rubbish 4. Children at landfill 5. Woman and child 6. Women at landfill 7. Man and child moving rubbish 8. Same from different angle 9. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Guadalupe Mendez, Rubbish collector "We feel bad about not giving him schooling, but we just can't because of poverty." 10. Two shots of child moving rubbish 11. Birds over landfill 12. Children living at landfill 13. Children boarding truck entering area, carrying rubbish 14. Same of child on top of truck 15. Set up of Salvadorean official 16. Cutaway 17. SOUNDBITE (Spanish) Ismael Rodriguez Batres, Director of El Salvador's Office for the Protection of Children "According to our numbers, after the earthquakes of 2001, the number of children working at landfills increased by 10 per cent. Our objective regarding children working at the landfills is to stop it altogether and to reincorporate them into the formal education system." 18. Juan Carlos, a 10 year-old boy, following rubbish truck 19. Juan Carlos riding on the truck as it enters landfill 20. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Juan Carlos, 10-year-old rubbish collector "I come here to make a living so I and my family can eat. We don't have anyone to help us out." 21. SOUNDBITE: (Spanish) Rubbish collector (part overlaid with cutaway) "A normal life, the life of a child... well, to have education or something like it. When I grow up I will need it." 22. Child running in landfill STORYLINE: As Johannesburg prepares to host the largest environmental summit ever, El Salvador is one of the many developing countries determined to remind the world's wealthier nations of its progressive descent into poverty. The number of Salvadorean children living under the poverty line has gone up by 10 per cent since the devastating earthquakes of 2001. In the capital city of San Salvador hundreds of families, including the children, have no alternative but to search for food among the rubbish landfills. At the margins of a system where educational opportunities go to the select few, these children have been literally forced to scrape the bottle of the barrel. Their only commodity is waste. These children understand the value of education, but they also know how unlikely they are to receive it. The landfill appears to be a fitting metaphor for the fundamental problem facing leaders at the World Summit on Monday.
DN-249 1 inch
SHOCK TROOPS OF DISASTER - STORY OF THE NEW ENGLAND HURRICANE
POLAR BEARS
01:00:00:00 WS Churchill city dump/ MS tire half burried in snow/ WS dump/ WS over tundra to ocean bg/ MS following truck down snowy path, stops, siren on, game warden gets out with a riflt/ WS polar bears running away/ Low angle warden fires shots into air/ WS bears walking away/ MS Warden standing in door of truck, looking towards bears/ MS following warden with rifle walk across snow (4:33) / 01:04:34:07 WS abandoned industrial building with rusty water tower and old semi-truck trailers/ CU windows with broken glass/ Ws past truck trailer to bldg/ LS over brush and tundra to industrial looking complex/ MS sign "polar bear alert"/ WS city of Churchill, Canadian flag flying/ WS dog standing on top of dog house 1/2 burried in snow/ WS down street, truck by, dog barks/ WS boys playing on snow, one with hockey stick/ MS sign "Polar Bear Alert"/ Low Angle WS girl walking across snow (5:48) / 01:10:24:03 Low angle sign "port of churchill"/ Ws down road to industrial complex/ sign "port of Churchill"/ MS various people ender door/ MS sign on wall "Chef's Entree"/ VS people and decor inside restaurant/ WS ext Arctic Trading Company shop/ WS ext lit sign over small bldg "ArcticInn"/ WS ext "polar motel"/ MS sign "Polar Motel"/ WS ext "Tundra Inn"/ MS sign "Tundra Inn" (4:11) / 01:14:41:26 Low angle man scraping snow off sidewalk, toward camera, turns and walks away with shovel over shoulder/ WS Children getting off schoolbus/ MS low angle children getting off bus/ Ws boy rolling large ball of snow (making a snowman?)/ Low angle, boy rides past on a 4 wheeler/ Ws through snow, men standing on porch steps/ Various WS people walking across snow (snowing)/ WS sign "Port of Churchill" / WS industrial complex/ WS white building in snow (train depot?)/ MS sign "polar bears and people don't mix"/ WS white building in snow (train depot?)WS train cars sitting on snow covered tracks/ MS sign "Churchill"/ MS train car sitting on snowy track/ WS side of building "Welcome to Churchill"/ (5:58) /
Marshals seize produce with unusually high amount of pesticide; farmers treat fields and orchards with pesticides in the United States
A combine harvesting wheat in the United States. Workers picking peaches from an orchard. A 'Fruit Growers Express' train transporting produce. Trucks carrying fruits driving in highway. A Union Pacific train leaves a train station. Grain is processed by a machine. A barge sails past a flour milling plant. A Western Fruit Express wagon stands beside rail tracks. Sign in car front window reads "Deputy U.S. Marshal". Marshal attaches a "Monition" notice to the seized Western Fruit Express wagon. A man offloads crates of produce seized by the United States Marshal. Two farmers discover an infestation of caterpillars in their fields. The farmers inspect leaves from their infested crops. A Food and Drug Administration (FDA) inspector examines produce from a seized wagon. The FDA inspector carries samples taken from seized produce. The FDA inspector writes on the paper bag containing samples and seals the bag with tape. An African American scientist examines samples of produce for illegal pesticide content. A syringe is inserted into a machine for chemical analysis. An FDA District Director makes a call from his office. A General Counsel speaks to an FDA District Director over the phone. A United States District Court arrest warrant against seized illegal produce. A judge signs the arrest warrant and hands it over to a marshal. A farmer drives a tractor and parks in front of a shed. A farmer looks at pesticides inside the shed. The farmer grabs a pack of pesticide and placed it at the back of the tractor. Farmer drives a tractor sprayer to treat pesticide on a field. Sacks of pesticide inside a shed. Camera zooms into a pesticide sack to show warning that reads "DO NOT USE WITHIN 10-DAYS OF HARVEST'. United States marshals seize produce from a Great Northern Railway cargo. The seized cargo is buried in a landfill. United States Marshals oversees the destruction of seized produce. A bulldozer covers the produced with rubble and soil. Animation depicting a caterpillar and various bugs superimposed over farm pests and crops. A praying mantis feeds on a bug. A farmer wearing protective gear drives a tractor sprayer in orchard. Children running out from school. Farmers harvesting carrots. Tractor plowing to expose pests. A farmer releases wasps to control pests. A farmer breeding resistant variety crops. A farmer prepares pesticide inside a shed. An old weighing scale tilting. Farmer opens hose to fill water into the tank of a sprayer. The farmer pours pesticide powder into sprayer. Sprayer treats orchard with pesticide. Location: United States USA. Date: 1966.
FAMILY SEARCHES THROUGH TRASH FOR ITEMS TO SELL - MEXICO CITY - 1
A little girl plays with an old umbrella as her family and others pick through a mountain of trash at a local dump near Mexico City in hopes of finding items they can resell for money.
ACOMM
Establishing shot of center of small city Little boy takes out garbage Municipal work trucks leave parking lot Man in suit checks each truck as it leaves CU man in suit writes on clip board Garbage truck stops in alley, man gets off Man picks up garbage can, dumps contents in back of truck, puts can back, works compressor CU man turns lever Truck arrives at landfill, second truck dumps garbage Truck dumps contents, all or mostly cans, other metal items Bulldozer pushes, crushes cans, spreads dirt over all, drives over it Man, boy walk through park Man goes up to high branches of tree in cherry picker, trims them Man loads branches into truck, it leaves Man mows park grass with riding power mower Man rides on front of truck, works machine that picks up leaves, trash in gutter Sanitation man with cart sweeps gutter Children throw litter in street trash can Street-sweeping machine cleans street, panel of sweeper opens, dumps leaves, trash, truck with automatic arm picks them up Truck dumps leaves, trash on large pile near incinerator Man drives machine that pushes trash into incinerator Trash burns Little boy washes hands in sink CU boy's hands as he opens drain, water goes down CU pipes under sink Men, truck lay sewer pipes under street Manhole Truck set to work on manhole CU mechanical coil turns, grabs air Men put long hose down manhole CU suited man supervises Man works hose machine Hose stuck in manhole Coil spins at bottom of manhole Man in cherry picker cleans streetlight, rides down Man on ladder cleans window School custodian empties waste basket into container, cleans blackboard Little boy, little girl walk to garbage can, she throws trash from her lunchbox into can Trucks return to lot, park CU man watches
Portrait young asian little girl on a huge garbage dump from landfill site in Asia and holding posters for Environmental movement activists fighting for nature.Volunteerism,Charity,Cleaning,People,Child,Ecology concept,Children about Sustainability
Volunteering :Portrait young asian little girl on a huge garbage dump from landfill site in Asia and holding posters for Environmental movement activists fighting for nature.Volunteerism, Charity, Cleaning,People,Child,Ecology concept,Children about Sustainability
Environmental group launches legal action against Havering Council over Launders Lane landfill site
Environmental group launches legal action against Havering Council over Launders Lane landfill site; ENGLAND: London: EXT GVs of mothers pushing their children on swing GV of meadow.
Holding Our Ground
CS of two young Filipino children of family of squatters that live in shack on dump site. CSs of mothers preparing food on an open fire. CS of their crude shack made of recycled materials, PAN of dump site to MS of young boys sorting through garbage, PAN back to shot of shack (54 ft).
RADIOACTIVE LANDFILL
OC 1025 SOF MAG A ROLL FTG OF RADIOACTIVE LANDFILL. CS: SU TUCKNER. SAYS MOST OF THE HOMES BUILT RECENTLY IN GRAND JUNCTION, COLORADO WERE CONSTRUCTED OVER LANDFILL CONTAINING RADIOACTIVE ELEMENTS LEFT OVER FROM AEC TESTS. BUD FRANZ, OF COLORADO HEALTH DEPARTMENT SAYS THAT ABOUT 70 HOMES HAVE BEEN FOUND TO HAVE HIGHER THAN BACKGROUND RADIATION LEVELS. MRS UDELL WILLIAMS AND CHILDREN OUTSIDE THEIR HOME IN GRAND JUNCTION. WIDE PAN OF GRAND JUNCTION. MAN TAKING READINGS OF RADIOACTIVE LANDFILLS. CU RADIATION COUNTER. SU TUCKNER. SAYS RADIATION FROM RADIUM 226, BURIED UNDER HOMES CAN CAUSE LUNG CANCER. INTV W/ MRS UDELL WILLIAMS. SAYS SHE RECENTLY FOUND OUT ABOUT THE RADIOACTIVE LANDFILLS. VS HOMES IN GRAND JUNCTIONS. INTV W/ FRANZ.
COLOMBIA: BEETLES WORKING TO CONVERT TRASH TO TREASURE
<p><pi><b>**This package/segment contains third party material. Unless otherwise noted, this material may only be used within this package/segment.**</b></pi></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><pi><b>**This pkg contains content from AFPTV that is only cleared for use within the pkg. Affiliates may not cut these photos out of the pkg for individual use.**</b></pi></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--SUPERS</b>--</p>\n<p>00:00-:00:39</p>\n<p>AFP</p>\n<p>Tunja, Colombia</p>\n<p>July 18, 2024</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>00:27-00:33</p>\n<p>Germán Viasus Tibamoso</p>\n<p>Environmental and Health Engineer</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>00:39-00:43</p>\n<p>Google Maps</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>00:43-:end</p>\n<p>AFP</p>\n<p>Tunja, Colombia</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>01:02-01:15</p>\n<p>Jefferson Bastidas</p>\n<p>Electronics Vendor</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>01:32-01:41</p>\n<p>Germán Viasus Tibamoso</p>\n<p>Environmental and Health Engineer</p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--LEAD IN</b>--</p>\n<p>AT A LANDFILL IN COLOMBIA, THE LARVAE OF RHINOCEROS BEETLES ARE EATING ORGANIC TRASH AND CREATING RICH FERTILIZER.</p>\n<p>RAFAEL ROMO EXPLAINS HOW THESE TITANS OF NATURE TURN TRASH INTO TREASURE WHILE PRESERVING THE ENVIRONMENT. </p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS</b>--</p>\n<p>IN THE COLOMBIAN HIGHLANDS -- A NEW SOLUTION HAS BEEN FOUND TO TACKLE AN ESCALATING TRASH PROBLEM.</p>\n<p>THESE ARE THE UNLIKELY HEROES OF THE STORY: THE LARVAE OF RHINOCEROS BEETLES, which FEED ON ORGANIC WASTE.</p>\n<p>THIS ISN'T THE ONLY THING THESE BEETLES HAVE TO OFFER --</p>\n<p>Larvae poop is also SOLD AS FERTILIZER AND --</p>\n<p>ONCE THE BEETLES REACH ADULTHOOD--</p>\n<p>THEY CAN BE SOLD AS PETs....to buyers as far away as Japan.</p>\n<p>Germán Viasus Tibamoso, environmental and health engineer (ENGLISH TRANSLATION): "The beetles have the answer, but we haven't seen the full potential of the function they have."</p>\n<p>EVERY WEEK, 15 TONS OF WASTE ARE COLLECTED AT THIS FACILITY IN TUNJA, A CITY ABOUT 130 KILOMETERS NORTHEAST OF BOGOTA.</p>\n<p>ONCE IT'S PILED UP, THE LARVAE -- WHICH CAN GROW AS LONG AS A HUMAN HAND -- DIG IN.</p>\n<p>OTHER LARVAE ARE PLACED IN TANKS -- WHERE THEY CONSUME LIQUID ORGANIC WASTE THAT CAN BE HARMFUL TO THE ENVIRONMENT.</p>\n<p>WITH THE LANDFILL CLOSE TO CAPACITY, THE LARVAE PROVIDE AN INGENIOUS SOLUTION.</p>\n<p>Jefferson Bastidas, electronics vendor (ENGLISH TRANSLATION): "The world is so polluted that we are suffocating from the garbage we generate ourselves, and this is a change for humanity, for our children who are coming after us, and we need to make that change for humanity."</p>\n<p>THE UN ESTIMATES THAT AROUND 11.2 BILLION TONS OF TRASH ARE GENERATED GLOBALLY EACH YEAR.</p>\n<p>COLOMBIA PRODUCES AROUND 32,000 TONS OF WASTE DAILY -- ABOUT HALF OF WHICH IS ORGANIC.</p>\n<p>Germán Viasus Tibamoso, environmental and health engineer (ENGLISH TRANSLATION): "We should aim to preserve beetles because they are responsible for breaking down all the organic waste produced by humanity today."</p>\n<p>THE LARVAE START TO BECOME BEETLES AFTER ABOUT FOUR MONTHS, WHEN THEY DEVELOP HARD SHELLS.</p>\n<p>RHINOCEROUS BEETLES CAN LIVE UP TO THREE YEARS.</p>\n<p>SOME ARE EXPORTED TO OTHER COUNTRIES WHILE OTHERS STAY IN COLOMBIA-- WHERE THEY ARE SEEN AS GOOD LUCK CHARMS.</p>\n<p>RAFAEL ROMO, CNN.</p>\n<p><b>-----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----</b></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--KEYWORD TAGS--</b></p>\n<p>COLOMBIA BEETLE TRASH </p>\n<p></p>
MEXICO: IMMIGRANT FAMILY SEPARATED (EXTRA B-ROLL)
*****PLEASE SEE INFORMATION BELOW AND ON IN-139MO****\n *****SPANISH INFORMATION ALSO AVAILABLE ON SN-03TU*******\n\n **ATTENTION AFFILIATES: NEWSOURCE IS REPORTING LIVE IN ENGLISH OR SPANISH ON THE U.S./MEXICO BORDER IN MCALLEN, TX. CAMILA BERNAL WILL BE LIVE TUESDAY NIGHT FROM 4PM ET THROUGH 9PM ET AND WEDNESDAY MORNING FROM 6AM ET THROUGH NOON ET. BOOK HERE: https://newsource.ns.cnn.com/planner/upcoming-live FOR QUESTIONS, CALL 404-827-2915.**\n\n --SUPERS--\nThursday\nTijuana, Mexico\n\nJune 14, 2018\n\n --VIDEO SHOWS--\nVillatoro looking out the window of his room\nCloseup of Villatoro's face\nVillatoro working \nVillatoro talking to Rosa Flores and describing his room\n\n -----CNN INFO-----\n TIJUANA, Mexico (CNN) -- From a cinderblock church shelter that sits on a Tijuana public landfill, Ignacio Villatoro used a spotty internet connection to call his three children in immigration detention in New York. His bloodshot eyes filled with tears as he stared at his phone while waiting to see his three sons appear.\n But only the face of his 13-year-old filled the screen.\n "They don't want to talk to me?" Ignacio asked about his two other sons, ages 2 and 6.\n "No," the boy said, avoiding eye contact with his father.\n "But are they OK? They are not sick, are they?" Villatoro asked, holding back tears as his hands visibly shook.\n Before hanging up, Villatoro pleaded with a case worker who took over the call. He asked for a video chat with his two youngest children.\n His cell phone screen went dark as the call disconnected.\n "They are traumatized," Villatoro said between sobs. "I would give my life for my children." \n The Villatoros are caught in the middle of the Trump administration's hard-line immigration policy, which has officials detaining asylum-seekers and separating them from their families.\n The six members of the Villatoro family fled violence in Guatemala together, only to find themselves divided between sanctuary and detention in two countries and across three US states. \n His three sons in New York feel abandoned and blame him, Villatoro said. And the 41-year-old has limited communication with his wife and 20-year-old son, who are detained in separate detention centers in Texas and California, respectively.\n\n In a sanctuary but separated from his family\n\n As Villatoro looked out a small window of the shelter, at the buckled graves of a cemetery just feet away, he pondered how his family fell apart. The owner of a once-thriving bakery lives with four other immigrants in a church in Mexico. A small pile of clothing -- which is everything he owns -- lay next to his bed, made with raw two-by-fours and a piece of plywood for a mattress.\n Taking the perilous journey from Guatemala to the US-Mexico border was a decision, he said, that was forced onto him because of the dangerous gangs that rule his home country. But he didn't leave without putting up a fight.\n He and a dozen of his neighbors armed themselves with machetes and clubs to stop rapes, kidnappings and killings on their street, he said. They built a civil police force. They patrolled their neighborhood day and night.\n But those efforts put Villatoro and his family in the crosshairs of the vicious gangs. Villatoro said that the last threat they received was so vicious, he refused to utter it -- for fear his children would one day read or learn about the menacing details in news reports.\n The plan to have his wife, Maria, and their children, ages 2, 6, 13 and 20, turn themselves over to US immigration officials and ask for asylum appeared to work at first -- with one exception. The older son was sent to a detention center in California. \n Villatoro had to take sanctuary in the church in Mexico because an earlier deportation barred him from seeking asylum and entering the United States.\n He said he found solace in knowing that his three youngest children were with their mother, safe in a detention center thousands of miles away from the gang violence from which they were escaping. \n But his relief was short-lived.\n\n Permanently barred from US\n\n Immigration and Customs Enforcement separated his wife from the three youngest children on May 19. In a statement to CNN, ICE stated that Maria Villatoro was convicted of falsely claiming to be a US citizen in 1999 and sentenced to 75 days in federal prison -- something the agency said bars her from entering the country again, even legally. \n Then US Attorney General Jeff Sessions implemented a new policy rejecting gang violence as a basis for asylum -- the premise for the Villatoro family's asylum claim.\n "Don't sign deportation papers," Ignacio Villatoro said he told his wife by phone. "Be strong. Be strong."\n The couple's phone conversations have veered back and forth between tears and moments of silence as they both try to be strong for one another. Villatoro said he fears his wife could end up deported alone back to Guatemala, where she could be kidnapped or killed.\n "My soul is broken," Villatoro said. "It's torture. I feel trapped."\n In the last month, Villatoro has lost weight. He said he can't eat. He can't sleep. The pain and agony take over at night, and he tosses and turns in his bed. \n During the day, Villatoro tries to stay busy by helping break a concrete floor with a jackhammer. The church giving him refuge plans to expand a shelter area to house the growing number of immigrants who need a place to stay in Mexico while their families seek asylum in the United States. \n\n 'Zero tolerance'? Not always\n\n While the Trump administration's "zero tolerance" immigration policy vows to prosecute every person who crosses the border illegally, there appears to be some leniency. \n Bernardo Orellana, who works with Villatoro to expand the shelter, said his wife and three children asked for asylum a few days before Maria Villatoro and her children. The two families were even housed in the same detention center in Texas. But while the Villatoros were separated, his family has been allowed to stay intact.\n As Orellana described his situation, his phone rang. His wife was calling from Louisiana, where she is living with family while she and her children await an immigration check-in. Orellana explained that his wife has one thing in her favor: She has never attempted to enter the United States illegally. He, on the other hand, has two prior deportations and is, for now, barred from re-entering the country.\n\n Family life via video conference\n\n Ignacio Villatoro tried to call New York several times Thursday, hoping to talk to his two youngest children. \n He flashed back to the last time he saw his 2-year-old over video conference, perhaps one of the most painful exchanges any parent could have. \n When the toddler saw him on a cell phone screen, the boy rushed with open arms to hug Villatoro -- and abruptly learned his father couldn't hug him via video. That left him wailing.\n As Villatoro dialed this time, he looked down at his phone and his eyes welled up. \n His 13-year-old son again picked up the video call. His brothers, however, were absent.\n "Tell me you're fine. Tell me you're fine," Villatoro implored his son.\n\n 'Tell your little brothers that you talked to me'\n\n Villatoro stared at his phone screen anxiously waiting for a reply. Holding back tears, he encouraged his son to go to church and ask for strength. To learn English. To respect his elders. And he reminded him what an intelligent and well-mannered boy he was.\n "I love you," Villatoro said in a broken voice. "Tell your little brothers that you talked to me."\n After they spoke, the child's therapist took over the call and began scolding Villatoro.\n "Put yourself in their shoes," the unnamed therapist said. "They don't understand. They think that you abandoned them." \n "He (the 2-year-old) thinks it's your fault. Seeing you via telephone screen enrages him," the therapist said. "He feels you hurt him."\n "I can barely cope with the sadness and the depression," Villatoro said.\n He wishes he were at least surrounded by his children's toys and clothing. But the few items left behind after they departed north caused him so much pain he gave them away. He now regrets doing so.\n As he looks through the window bars of the shelter, at the handcrafted crosses in the nearby cemetery, he holds on to the only things he has that belong to his children -- their birth certificates. The outlook for his parental rights is as thin as the sheets of paper between his fingers, the outlook for what his family's future holds as bleak as the view before his eyes. \n Mending his broken family would take a pardon from President Donald Trump, he said. \n "Or a miracle."\n --KEYWORD TAGS--\nMEXICO GUATEMALA IMMIGRATION POLICY TRUMP BORDER IMMIGRANTS SEPARATED\n\n
BEARS AT LANDFILLS
COVER VIDEO AND INTERVIEWS ON BEARS FEEDING AT THE LONG LAKE LANDFILL IN NEW YORK. 01:00:43:19 INTV/W NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL CONSERVATION WILDLIFE MANAGER ROBERT INSLERMAN WHO IS AGAINST ALLOWING BLACK BEARS IN LONG LAKE TO FEED AT THE LANDFILL. INSLERMAN EXPLAINS HE'S AFRAID THAT EVENTUALLY SOMEONE WILL GET HURT AND THE BEARS WILL BE BLAMED. HE SAYS THE BEARS ARE BEING CONDITIONED TO ASSOCIATE FOOD AT THE LANDFILLS WITH HUMANS AND IT ALTERS THE NATURAL BEHAVIOR OF THE BEARS. INSLERMAN SAYS THE BEARS HAVE LOST THEIR FEAR OF HUMANS. 01:05:07:13 VS OF A PICKUP TRUCK FULL OF GARBAGE BAGS IS UNLOADED AT THE LONG LAKE LANDFILL. VS AS A BULLDOZER DRAGS GARBAGE AROUND THE LANDFILL. 01:20:54:13 CU OF ROTTING GARBAGE. INTV/W BRUCE JENNINGS, WHO WORKS AT THE LANDFILL, ABOUT THE BEAR PROBLEM AT THE LANDFILL. HE SAYS THE PEOPLE HAVE STOPPED RESPECTING THE BEARS AND DESCRIBES INCIDENTS OF PARENTS TRYING TO POSE THEIR CHILDREN WITH THE BEARS SO THEY COULD TAKE PHOTOGRAPHS. CI: PERSONALITIES: INSLERMAN, ROBERT. PERSONALITIES: JENNINGS, BRUCE. ANIMALS: BEARS (ABOUT). ECOLOGY: POLLUTION, GARBAGE.
Paris/ L'Abbé Pierre
L'Abbe Pierre: various shots around Paris city dump showing men unloading old furniture and junk from truck, sorting, smashing things into scrap. Shot of slum children playing "ring around the rosie" in field. Sequence on construction of quonset huts for the poor, cement mixer, some children watching, playing in sand. Shot of tents housing people temporarily. MCSs of destitute men sleeping on pavement. (sound)
Marine Baousson fights your administrative phobia
CLEAN : Kampala: Rescue operations ongoing at deadly rubbish dump collapse
Eight people including two children have been killed by mountains of garbage collapsing at a landfill in the Ugandan capital Kampala, the city authority has said (Footage by AFPTV via Getty Images)