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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  December 1, 2023 3:02am-3:30am CET

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in children's israel has released the chinese from its prisons, all of them women in teenagers, not a single man in this equation. is that about the change from her boss? there's no sign at all that the tier a group is willing to release the soldiers. the men that it took captive during its attack in israel on october 7th. but there are report suggesting a longer pause into fighting could possibly include the release of more women and children. and for the 1st time, cement, i bring gulf and berlin. this is the day the, the state of culture has been working since day one of this crisis to enhance its mediation, real, intense negotiations of taking place. this process, producing results important. and we hope that it can continue, we must, in suicide. the people of the reason finally about our eyes and of hope in the end of resorting to military means is definitely not
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a solution. responding to violence with violence only fuels hatred and leads to a vicious cycle. also coming up the long months cause a message for advertisers distancing themselves from what they say is his coming up with anti semitism. and hopefully there are no children listening. somebody to try to blackmail me with advertising black, knowing with money yourself. but sco yourself, is that clear? what do you all review is watching on cbs in the united states into all of you around the world. welcome. we begin today with the cease fire in gaza extended, kept alive and announced minutes before it was scheduled to run out. now that would have allowed the fighting between israel into mosse to resume. how long will this
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extension the i'm off today mentioned the time window of one day. israel's military has posted no information regarding any time references. guitar is the chief mediator between both sides. it is clear guitar sees this extension as a next step on the way to a lasting truce. take a list of hope is to reach a sustainable truth that would lead to a bad thing that goes. ready and, and eventually to an end, to add to this as the guys you know, by left through to this war. and the, we have always said that we need the push of the whole international community to make sure that that happens. all right, they want to speak now with mr. yos, children about and he is the middle east, west africa, director of the international crisis group in g o. he joins us tonight from vienna . mr. berman it's good to have you with this do. do you also see this extension in the cease fire as the next step, taking both sides to a lasting truce of some sort as the tensional. yes,
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and hopefully yes and, but there is no guarantee of anything at this point. the last extension was accomplished at the last moment just before the expiring of the previous pause. and now we need to see whether before 7, 30 tomorrow morning, global time, and his rope better starting whether the ceasefire can be extended for at least one of the 24 hours. but yes, i can t really. we move that into a more permanent cease fire, but i think the obstacles are enormous. yeah. and it feels like a one day extension, like we saw today, is simply a band aid being put on a gaping. when would you agree? not so much because i actually was every extra 24 hours. meanwhile, negotiations are happening about with overseas fire and they require more time. so we actually getting time for those negotiations in particular. so there's kind of an effect to different types of organizations going on. one about extending
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occurred pause the other one about ceasefire. so i think it's really important because if, if there's, if we try to fight it tomorrow, say it's going to be more difficult to have another boss. of course, how important are the men, the mil hostages, held by hamas and the male detainees, and is really present including the guy. well, it shouldn't be the case, but for both sides of the dentist, the most important thing, the wires and fighters. what is it? is it because they're, they're military, but why are they so important? 20 hostages that are going to be released within about for the phrase. well, it's inside. there's no faltering the women and children are more important books also for our master. easier to release because it's more embarrassing track though . it shouldn't have been the 1st bit. you know, it's one thing to capture soldier during the conflict. that's another thing to do
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to hold the women and children not, not come back. it's also meant by the way, civilian man, a captive. so, so it's embarrassing. so i think they realize that they need to release that. but of course they, they exact a certain price when it comes to the, to the, to the, to the, is where the soldiers then it becomes a match often to require from this perspective, a higher price. because these are actually, they're fighting entities. and when it comes to the understanding of prisoners and these rangel's is all, has thousands of finished indian prisoners, not prisoners. most of them are not fighters, they're civilians, but they're in, in prison for very security officers. and i'm not supposed to get as many houses as possible. and if we get to the point where we see adult male detainees and his real being released and we see adult male hostages, and they're not talking about soldiers. here's on a civilian being released by how much would you say that we are
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a significant step closer then to a lasting ceasefire. the you know, it's all increments. right? so we've gone through most of the women children, i'm not sure executive the numbers much or any put years. and we move to the meals that needs to be of course, the mil boonies, right? he's like to try work or significant, you know, work, or maybe they find the worker, but that's so, so we are building up to that. and it is a lot of pressure though, and i think as long as this is upward curve teams, we can actually start talking about a more serious political ceasefire. but that is not something that is real. seems to moment because is there any legal steps that they want to destroy a mass, and i wanna ask you about the role of guitar and all of this guitar is spinning this latest extension as a, as a building block. but one could argue that today's news does nothing but highlight
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the role of guitar as mediator in terms of actual, you know, moving towards piece. there's nothing to talk about. nothing new to talk about tonight. so cause there's a blade. yeah. you know, a very serious, important and constructive role in mediating this, the very big database you know, have us in israel and with success. so it's going to compete with us. of course, it's not at all, it's egypt. it's also helping with this. and, and of course, but it just seems united states pushing because as united states, as a google relationship with the cutter, actually as well as it worked above relationship with got there. so, oh, the sides. you know, it's ideally place meeting now administered with i want to get your take on this. you know, we have tried to get a guitar, he's to come on the program to talk about the mediation. we had someone today who backed out at the last minute. do you think that there is a problem for anyone representing guitar considering the fact that guitar is also
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a major from funding source for a moss? i mean they are, they are. one could argue they are part of the problem here at the same time. they're trying to be immediate. so i don't know if they are part of the problem because of course they also have a relationship with his ro, they're connected to both sides. i don't know a bunch of funding necessarily and they funded civilians and go so uh so it was important for the pro fuel into into guy which was needing to study but civilian population and they weren't even getting enough of it. so a, but i think if, if in the properties an officer particularly eager to talk about a clear just because they've hope they don't want to jeopardize the folks that are ongoing and where their role is so critical. i want to ask you before, when i've talked about the incentives of what incentive does have boss, have to continue to release the hostages that it took on october 7 on the other
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side. but we cannot guarantee at the moment. i'm asked me to serve sort of started almost over 7. that's one of the main objectives as low as to when the release of understanding of prisoners in his rare details. and so they're in the process of accomplishing that to some extent. you know, to the extent that they think is sufficient, given how many hostages they have a prisoners of war. but this is really one of their cubes actually just before october 7th, the prisoner issue was a huge issue in a better senior community. rob speaking was very sensitive and a sofa. i'm asked to put this as a talk to objective, resume to the overall understanding community. you'll see of them on the middle east, most african director of the international crisis group in g o. instead. i mean, we appreciate your time and your valuable insights tonight. thank you. thank you so much. yvonne must be the
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chairman of the social media company. x, formerly known as twitter, has delivered a bombshell warning to advertisers who dropped x as one of their outlets blasting what he says is there black mailing. well, disney warner brothers and discovery are among the big names that suspended advertising on the x. following must endorsement of what human rights groups say was an anti semitic post must have since said he regrets the endorsement. now here's what it must have to say under discussion at the new york times book deal gathering on wednesday. take a listen. somebody to try to blackmail me with advertising black, knowing this money yourself. but go yourself. is that clear? i mean, if the company fails because of the advertising more thought, it will fail because of an advertised board card. and that will be what back of the
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company. yeah, i have to paraphrases, i want to quote you on most. and i don't want to bring in said sanderson, he's the founding director of new york university center for social media and politics. the centers goal is to strength and democracy by conducting research and pushing evidence based public policy. deb, it's good to have you on the program. eli mosque was interviewed at the 2023 deal book summit in new york city. um, were you there when he told those advertisers to basically after themselves? i was not there but, but i'm certainly very familiar with that. not just that quote, but the full clips. and what did you think when you heard, what do you have to say? rates, are there any good? what's important here is that there are 2 ways to think about the platform. the 1st is that a business that needs to generate revenue to keep the lights on, and the other end of the social network where people may or may not want to participate in public discussion on that particular network. these are related to a certain extent. advertisers tend to want to go where their user is, but the,
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you know, must actions, can have different effects on the business versus the platform itself. here, i mean, it's pretty clear that his response is obviously bad. from a business perspective. advertisers have already left for brand safety concerns. it's unlikely that what he said yesterday will convince them to return, and you must himself. and in that what you displayed on the said that, you know, it's, there's a chance that twitter, my, or x my go bank run something. yeah. from the network perspective, the of the people may or may not want to show up the cuts in 2 directions for those who want the old twitter, which was imperfect sure, but also tried to promote a certain type of public productive discourse. this would be more evidence of twitter, his degradation for those were most fans. i think he can sort of do no wrong and, and we've already seen some evidence of business being celebrated. let's. let's dissect most of the claims that he made here for a moment. first, the accused companies of black mailing him or ex, over allegedly anti semitic sympathies that he may harbor. yeah. it's true or false
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. true that there, that he's being blackmailed or true, that he video did the blackmail that he's being blackmailed? yeah. so for me, there's a certain irony that mask who when he bought then twitter now now x, i'm really sort of made some, some sure is free speech claims. it's right that fit for people who are allowed to say what they want in for, for me, it's sort of interesting to see him frame what advertisers are doing as blackmail versus a legitimate for him. if he speaks to me, what we're seeing is, advertiser is essentially be concerned with their own brand safety and want to reject the type of speech that we're seeing must participate. and so, so you know, i see this is just, you know, for somebody who, who, you know, promote it a certain ideal of free speech that there was an iron, you know, calling and then he went on to say that the public will blame these blackmailers
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for killing x, do you believe him? it is that true with the public? blame the the advertisers if x were to fold to i'm so i think i want to. so the way that i think about this is not that there is one public, but instead there are many publics here, right? so like i mentioned in my 1st response, you know, there are people who want the old twitter and we've seen some of them leave twitter for other platforms for thread, for mastodon, for blue sky. i don't think that they will see, you know, what sort of advertisers involved here. i think that those see the changes that must have made both in tone and tenor. but also, you know, in terms of the actual platform itself at fault. you know, i think another cam, you know, that the folks who, who really like must be they may sort of take them up on, on, on his sort of promise and blame advertisers. but i would sort of complicate this idea that there is a single public and then we'll have a single person perspective on the table the the new york times. and it's reporting
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on this summit. it lists the the musk ask yourself moment as the top take away from the event, and that's a head of it appears by the us vice president and the is really president, is all p r good p r. is that whether proving so no, i don't think i'll p r as good p r, because i think that what matters for for twitter is 1st that advertisers advertise on on, i'm sorry, exits tougher. i always try to remember i knew that advertisers actually have advertised there and then you know, the 2nd is that users want to use it. so i don't think in this case, but all yours. good are. but i think that what's, what's important is for us to take a step back and ask why we care so much about the story to begin with, right? i mean, like, you know, x is, is a reasonably sized company, but we don't care about other companies of the same size. the reason why we care about it is for more than a decade, twitter health news rooms decide what to cover law make or share their views after this coordinate collective action. and it was
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a place for people to go online and understand the world and full that just sort of collectively sense make it together. and again, it was a perfect, but it was a key part of our public communications infrastructure. so for me, the reason why we care is because that sort of twitter, that'd be new is largely seems to be dead, or i would perhaps degeren's form is better dying. yeah. and, and so, you know, again i, i sort of see the p r not as you know of yours, good p r. but sort of almost as a, um, potentially long you would be for, for the platform, google and back in the day the twitter that we may be of all identified with or used. what was a, a platform today when we're talking about twitter or x we're, we're always, almost always talking about even most of the world's richest man, right. that's a big difference. that yeah, that, that, that, that's a huge difference. and you know, i know in the news industry, they say that sort of people who make the news and even who is. and i think some worldly for platforms. uh, you know, it's, it's best when they're just the platform. let me,
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let me ask you to look into your crystal ball from any, do you, do you see a, a positive future for x? i mean, you know, we still say retweet something on x. i mean, i don't know what the verb is on the x right? i'm x thing on x, i don't know what the word is for that, but i mean, do you see in 5 years, 67 years? will it be a force at all on social social media? so it's, again, it's clear, like you just mentioned, you have the twitter that we knew no longer exists. and so, you know, i think that the active change at the moment that the social landscape generally or social media landscape generally is, is shifting that shifting into primary ways. i think the 1st is we're increasingly sort of focused on an algorithmically driven multi modal content in places like tech talk. we've seen youtube and, and facebook and instagram change in this direction. the 2nd is we're just seeing, you know, more platforms, you know, platforms like discord and what's out there focused on messaging. hyper local
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social networks like next door. and so i think it's what sort of unclear is where x fits into all of this. and again, they used to be the place where media and political and cultural leads when to engage in public discussion and sort of shape public discourse. that doesn't seem to really be the case as much anymore. and so i think the future of x is entirely unclear. yeah, it's, it's like the say was a cards used cars, this isn't your father's, you know, chevrolet, it's not your, your social media, your father's social media company. the way he knew it. and when todd said xander is independent, director of new york university center for social media and politics, we appreciate your time to excellent talk you with you. thank you. thank you. i the, the united nations comp 28 climate conference has opened in dubai. and governments are preparing for 2 weeks of talks in hopes of reaching an agreement to phase of fossil fuel. some that began with the launch of a fun to help countries deal with the effects of financing. several countries
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fledged hundreds of millions of dollars. critics, however, said that the fund will need billions b, as in brent billions of dollars. if it's to have any impact i want to go now to the somebody in the by and i want to speak to the uganda and climate active is young. be more it's, you know me, it's going to have you with this. so what do you say about this funk then? is it, is it more window dressing, or are we really talking about getting money to the people who need it to mediate the impact of climate change? a lot of those, thank you so much. but this one up for opportunity i just to me and just one that we go from the airport and for me, my expectation of really like 5050 because the president for this conference is already se, go for it as a for the fuel company, you know, by the name i mean these by and which indicates that the chest is as very low,
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that we do something, but i would be so happy if they froze lighting my mind. and if i see is on i forgot claimant mobility. because why don't didn't you report that was published, but i forgot to shift projected that by 2050 the cost the vote as between you got and run that is going to be a claim. it will be the destination for receiving allowed one point. one, median play meant will be liable by. yeah, this is because the area as some smaller portion of the lift divided that as, as as border. and people are looking for the sometimes you've got a nice thing. it must have declined now with k to a, which has been a nice, i mean to for each zip code. let me since 1962. at the same time we see is kyla getting price on formed? s p chevy went so right now we had planned to read to get on 5. it tim reach up or down so people can grow for. but nowadays to buy a new book. well, focus on the a movie. we assume mastic novel people moving one over me. i wanted them to let me,
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let me ask you for a moment about the place of africa and these, the, the, these talks, you know, when these conferences began, there was the talk about africa even having a place at the table. but that was a long time ago. do you feel like you're being seen? do you feel like your concerns are being taken seriously and that they're up there, you know, on i level with, with, with other countries other cognitive. i mean, i don't think so because sometimes we are given even the microphone to speech and all last yeah, it was so hard to remember that in one of the room i'm asking questions and they may have been by that responding to me. so what that was so happy was the i didn't lose sudden that mind doing that, jim, that which was good. but at this time the new guy told us was going to be how much and waves. so today we went to see the pro tasing, the dress body is in play meet, especially when most and that means because we need to is always going to be how
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much able to pay, you know, and we need to be default every. yeah. for that, because show us the money which was be given by this country. and this is what you want the money, you know, well, you know, it's easy to throw money at a problem, right? if women, there's ever a problem that's our instinct is if we, if we had a lot of money, then we'd be able to fix it. a climate change is not that simple. even if the money were on the table for you, how confident are you that in your country or across all of africa, that, that the decisions would be made by local decision makers that would use that money in the best way possible to mitigate the impact of climate change. yes, the plans are already in place, but what a big challenge we have is the money that has been coming if you remember the i'm going to be you and that was probably 14 years ago. i opened that game. you know, the promise i'm going be a this month has been coming in portion, but from being enforcement has been coming with high interest rate. if you look at
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the report that was published by the books, what mean june? it was showing how that money has been coming, and communities we are unable to access these money. so if they want to see that, we can don't even much be done with the money. let them read easy ways. zillow interested it without like saying we're helping you, but let them send it in their way above combusted to what they have done. but also there is one thing i want them to talk about. we're talking about the just transition and we're not talking about how these countries from the volt. why would i using this opportunity to exploit these vulnerable countries? i see people b, s lived in green river ocean. so we need to talk about, i mean, so if i didn't seem discoveries anywhere we passed through, yes about that's done for the transition. the. i mean that is a topic that we will talk about in another time. unfortunately, we're out of time,
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but it's going to talk with you. your passion is infectious. i can tell you. um, thanks for taking the time to talk with this. good luck. thank you. the irish singer and songwriter, shane macgowan has died. he was 65. he was best known as the front man of the fault of van, the po, she's 1987 single fairytale. the new york means of popular track played every christmas gallons. death comes after a long period of the health. the senior struggled with both alcohol and drugs and had been using a wheelchair after a series of false. it's what tomorrow is december 1st, the christmas season has begun. we'll leave you tonight with a christmas classic from the post a fairy tale of new york. the lyrics remind us perhaps not to forget. the reason for the season was each more everybody the
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that was the insurance. the . this is the, the the
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account is the employees and the government is doing nothing to submit. it is due to non, to this months, the pride of savvy, but now in chinese ownership, it's become a dreadful pollution hazard. kanza is on the right. environmental activism sufficing back and demanding action. focus on next, dw, europe's largest house made by
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a 3 d printer. it's being assembled in the southern german city of heidelberg and approach to building that promises to be economical. climate friendly and quick leading only 3 workers on site or 3 d printers. the builders of the future made in germany. in 60 minutes on d, w, the manuals engine, you belong to the 77 percent comfortable. i just got on 65 last last those top 5. and here's one thing we are here to help you make up your mind. we are here on please find your mind. so all of the topics i'm much up to you
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from trouble fixed a new culture. and in 15 minutes, let's say together, nicholas talks about community life on the research is now on the hello and welcome to this week focus on europe with nissan. i'm done any more than a 100000 people slept from the car back in place to armenia in september. now ethnic armenians are trying to build a new life for themselves as a buzz on use military force to bring the area under control them as.

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