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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  March 11, 2024 8:00am-8:31am CET

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the, the, you're watching the, the news coming to live, but from for land, oppenheimer sweeps the top of wards of the oscars. christopher know christopher nolan, the block buster, windows 7 awards, including best picture and best director. kelly and murphy also picks up the award for best actor. also coming up on our show portugal swings to the right after a closely contested general election. the leader of the center
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rights democratic alliance claims victory ahead of the ruling socialist party. but a search for a far right party could make it the king maker any new coalition, plus palestinians prepare for the mazda and holy month of ramadan. amid a dire humanitarian crisis, where basic necessities are out of reach for many. and we go inside, pick your brain in hospital. the survival factory by dr. is helping to save the lives of injured frontline soldiers, the inquiry. richardson, welcome to the show. we start with the oscars and los angeles, where oppenheimer has won most of the major prizes, tremendous to know what's next. what's next. special oracle drama picked up 7 awards, including best picture and best director for christopher nolan,
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the film, the star chilean murphy also took home best after bought the best actress. a war going to m a stone for her performance in for things going on. just can see. so on accepting his award, kelly and murphy paid tribute to those trying to make the world a safer place. you know, we made a film. we made a film about the mine and created the atomic bomb. and for better for us, we're all living in oppenheimer's world. so i would really like to dedicate this to the peace makers everywhere. to look at some impressions of the evening from entertainment journalist occasionally matthews in la, i am here at the store roosevelt hotel and i'm in the office here because i was up on the ground floor where there's a massive party going on. it was extremely allows, was it gonna come down here for this live here? yes. fact, it was a huge sweeper oppenheimer, but you know what?
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no, one surprise they walked away with the most width of the night winning step. and of course that's director best picture best actor or best supporting actor helium murphy. you have robert downey junior. you have christopher nolan. i don't think we are seeing any surprises in math. those particular categories and the fact that it was a clean sweep for all been done. but thanks for taking away time away from all the celebrations to speak with us. sound is great. i wanna ask you about bar be right, because this has stood out, 1st of all, for the nomination snobs and then for all of its loss is why do you think that this year's highest grossing film failed at the oscars? you know, it's really interesting when i hear people say, oh barbie was not, there was billed at the office. i'm not quite sure. that's the case. remember they still walked away with 8 nominations and it made a $1000000000.00. and i'm told that, you know, the number of women being nominated at the oscars were up this year almost by 32 percent, which we haven't seen since 2021. so it actually was
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a pretty good year. i think people are a little bit upset to not seek ready go rake for all her heart. were nominated for best director and obviously upset to not see marco robbie nominated for best actress because they believe if you're gonna nominate ryan gosling, you would have no kid. you would have no barbie without credit card. we in without marble, robbie. so yes, they were little bit upset to see that, but remember the show was like an homage to barbie with ryan gosling performing and there were so many jokes about barbie and he got really interactive. you know, he started his, his performance. i'm just kidding. seated behind model robbie and dancing with great a girl, we're given having all these maybe we can in back of them. and he even had a special guest star playing guitar slash from guns and roses joined him. so i thought that was incredible when i thought it was an easy way to make barbie part of the oscar telecast. and were there any nominee?
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easy thought really were robbed of a deserving. when absolutely can i say lily gladstone, i think she had been really winning going into it. you know, she won a lot of awards at the regionals and the other big award show. so people really thought that the award for best actress would go to lead gladstone for killers of the flower moon. they thought she deserved it, and they thought she would make history as a 1st native american. it was not the case, it went to i am a stone for poor things and this is give us don't 2nd. 6 so the surprising, yeah, nope. now katie, the oscars are of course all glitz and glamour, but they're also often a platform for advocacy. i want to ask you, we saw some actors. they're wearing a pin supporting a ceasefire in gaza. and then we heard of both gauze and ukraine mentioned in speeches. how important do you think it is for celebrities to weigh in on political issues like this? as you know, a lot of people,
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it's showing that they don't like that. they really don't when they look at their ratings and whatnot from people who've gotten really political. i don't think this year was really that political. there were 2 people that mention the ongoing uh, you know, more in with you, crane and russian. obviously the situation with, with the gaza in israel, in their speeches for winning a best documentary. and obviously that's an irrational bmw zone interest, which was, you know, the 1st academy award for international feature film for the u. k. um, but outside of that, i mean i think they were just wanting piece and wanting a ceasefire, and that's kind of what they hit to that. but i thought the most political statement of the night actually came from jimmy kimball, about 3 hours and 20 minutes into the show when he to digs are kind of took a shot at uh, president trump saying that president trump was tweeting him, saying how horrible he's doing and then he basically says something back to the effect of isn't it pass your jail time instead of saying past your bedtime? so i thought it was interesting that the jimmy kimmel, the host, waited until the end of the show before he brought that as being are in. okay,
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very thank you. as always bringing as i've just been there that his entertainment journalist catering matthews joining us from los angeles. thank you. let's bring you up to speed now with some other world news headlines. ukraine's president will let him hear zalinski has hit back at comments from pope francis calling for peace negotiations with russia to landscape of the pope shouldn't charge mediate from thousands of kilometers away and an interview with swiss tv. the pope had said that you crane should have the courage to raise the white flag and negotiate the one that's a waste of in haiti. officials from the u. s. and you've been evacuated to safety as armed gangs continue to terrorize the streets of port au prince. thousands of haitian families are trying to flee the violence. many have suffered of gunshots or been killed in the capitol. as gang members clash with police and authorities in bolivia have declared a state of emergency after heavy rains and struck the capital of pos. rivers broke
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their banks over the weekend and in dating several neighborhoods, the president has pledged to send 3000 troops to prevent further damage to portugal. now where the center right democratic alliance has claimed a victory in a tightly contested general election. the socialist party who have ruled for the past 8 years have conceded defeat. but a search in the far right has left the country facing on, on certain political future with no party claiming a majority. after 8 years in power, the socialist party is conceding defeat candidate, pedro new no stepped up to congratulate the victors. believe the good joseph everything indicates the surplus polity will not get the most votes get a police. so i want to congratulate ag for its victory. the ag stands for democratic alliance this into right party headed by luis montenegro to
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set to lead the government montenegro ran on a platform that promised tax cuts for companies in the middle class and the voice. tonight, portugal released the socialist party whenever it speaks to. so angrily, with a part of the portuguese population i'd. then it sounds to me as a montenegro now has to try to form a coalition, but he's ruled out, cooperating the far right check. a party check a which means enough is headed by ex football commentator andre ventura. she ran on an anti immigration platform that focused on stamping out corruption and easing tax burdens for ordinary people. the party came in 3rd, but also saw a 3 fold search and votes. no, still misquote because i've been to the 4 years of socialism in portugal. and this time the people have said what they want. you like to think. they set the right
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wing must go better, who are not, and that's the right wing to govern deals as you put together. last the wound up on monday this the govern portugal for the next 4 years of the rising popularity of tried to indicate a right. we shift in portugal, the socialist when the last election in a landslide victory. but after a corruption scandal in rising inflation, voters seem to be turning toward new parties in the new direction. the . let's get the very latest from our correspondent young philip schultz in a lisbon. so this looks like a narrow win for the democratic alliance and a leader luis montenegro. but as we've seen, he seems to have little chance of forming a majority. governments. can you tell us at this point who looks at to run portugal, as well as indeed it is a very narrow victory,
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was outlets any majority insights from what i can see once in dig it or has 3 options now of which to seem very unlikely. he could try to find some kind of deals with the power i'd say got parties, but he has with out this option many times because i tried to find some kind of grand core. listen with the socialists, but traditionally the socialist and the center rides are political and check on this and in portugal. and so they have some major differences regarding the policies or, and this seems more likely at the moment you could try to form a minority government and hope for the good width of the law moderates the parties in parliament. but it will certainly be unstable. i'd like to return to talk a little bit more about that far right. jacob party, you mentioned they're really in the spotlight, aren't they led by andre ventura. they've secured up to 18 percent of the vote.
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that's up from over to 7 percent in 2020 to a pretty significant rise. um, can you tell us what is behind their popularity to have a short answer? i think it's disappointed disappointment with politics in general and disappointment with the mainstream parties of socialist liter sanchez set in his speech last night. the rice, i've said, that doesn't mean that there are millions of races in the particles. suddenly, i think it has a lot to do with the corruption scandal that the socialist party was involved in, which was also a reason for the snap elections. and this gave a lot of, i mean there's some, 200 into uh, inches and to establish meant a rhetoric is a very charismatic politician. you know, especially how to talk to young people on social media and as of a big topic, square the cost of living and immigration regarding the cost of living housing is
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very expensive. in particular, basically an affordable in big cities for average portuguese, and a rise in the numbers of the irregular migration has also elects to a lot of control as a controversy here. so eventually i really know how to use these topics to advantage. and this will be a portable is most fragmented parliament in decades. can you tell us what this will mean for the country? or there are definitely unstable times a head's for parts of golf. and we will probably see a shift it to, to the riots of probably more conservative social apologies. strict are rules regarding a regular migration, but it's a democratic, a line. so you don't want to make her a goes ahead with his plans to form the minority government. this will certainly be
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an unstable one. relying on changing mind, changing majorities in parliament, some and other stuff even brought in the option of fresh elections. but it's very doubtful if we really have the minorities after you are that you can purchase out. thanks very much for that update that is young phillip shots for us in lisbon. the flag of sweden will be raised on monday, outside nato's headquarters after it officially joined us. the 30 seconds member of the transatlantic military alliance, sweden's accession and decades of post world war 2. not neutrality as concerns about russian aggression in europe continue to grow. fellow nordic nation. finland joined in april 2023 with nato members, claiming the expansion to be a major blow to the kremlin. sweden becomes the second's nordic
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nation in the past year to join nato and its membership brings with its a number of advantages for the lines. firstly, by following finland in abandoning neutrality, sweden is sending an important message to those nations still on the fence about russia's invasion of ukraine. it's time to pick a side. so you let him know this weekend is now leaving 200 years of neutrality and non alignment behind. it's a big steps to see. we must take that seriously war, but it's also a very natural step that we're taking the car. so the more the kremlin can no longer claim finland's, a session was an isolated incidents has made. so 6 to develop defense plans for eastern members aimed at the tearing rushes advance suite and brings considerable experience in understanding health accounts. so that threats sweden's military capability also makes it
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a powerful new member. the nation boasts cutting edge across an anti aircraft missiles, as well as states of the tanks and submarines and a considerable fleets of ships wave embrace a size or 100 year old navy, in the navy that is among the largest in the baltic sea, which you'd remember nathan doesn't have very many large, mavis sweden's geographical position also makes it useful. firstly, as a land transit routes to reinforce the members no way in finland. and secondly, by allowing nato to take control of the baltic sea in any conflict with russia via sweden's enormous coastline. in return, sweden now has security guarantees from nato and member states, should it come under attack from russia, or anyone else in the future? the message from russia is opponents, is clear, both nights so and sweden,
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a far stronger as a result of this agreement camera for a 2nd doctor working at a ukrainian hospital dumped. the survival factory by medics has been describing their experience after years of war. thousands of patients in need of life saving treatment or receiving care at the pros. mission to call the hospital just a 100 kilometers from the front lines. that means a long days and nights inside the facilities trauma unit. its just another morning at work for valentino lives, meet you. she has a soldier on the operating table who's only reading with one long a bullet pass straight through the other one. the surgeons want to remove the clouding the chop, but we get going on our operations at 9. 7 7 so recently we've been starting at 9 and finishing dues. whenever we finish the kinship,
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we're at the mentioned to call the hospital in the pro 2 thirds the patients here are soldiers wounded on the battlefields before the war mika work as a programmer and leave. he tells us he thought his injuries would kill him. when it was put on the mall. i got hit 5 bullets in the front and both my lungs. so my ribs and chests were crushed. uh, a little big on the doctors here called there hospital, a survival factory. and in this conveyor belt of new patients that doesn't even stop for the air raid siren. the soldier has a mine injury as well as trap no rooms to both his lower limbs and the lower back say it's, it's like we just have all of a sudden and found ourselves in this world film and can't get out to become our
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life. it's in the wash, if not something you can describe in words the 1st time you have to see it with your own eyes of a bunch of this. valentine use department specializes in treating sepsis patients. these patients have the most dangerous wound infections. she came here as a student and now leaves the department. there's been fighting and don't bus on the pros, doorstep since 2014. but in the last 2 years, the number of admissions has gone through the roof a law. so what changed is that the 1st aid soldiers get after injury is much better than it was. patients who wouldn't have had a chance of surviving the evacuation process before are now making it to us alive. so we get patients who are much, much more ill. gosh, because it's not just the patients that have changed. the medics have become faster, more efficient, but they've also burned out nickel,
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my colleagues and i have stopped asking our patients how they were wounded. he can only they tell us themselves, tell us their story. show us if we started asking too many questions, you just can't function or we're basically always at work. so the controller, so the days over, but valentino isn't going home. she has a night shift ahead of her. it's been that most new patients are brought in from the front lines. the doctors here don't have to read the news. they see how things are going by the number of ambulances arriving. saudi arabia's king has used his ramadan message to highlight the suffering and gaza calling on the international community to bring an end to what he has described as the brutal crimes taking place in the territory efforts to secure a cease fire. before the start of the muslim holy month have stalled and then made a cute hunger agencies say international efforts to ramp up deliveries of humanitarian supplies by air and now also by sea are not enough in
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parts of gaza. ramadan decorations and food are still available. but not the price is most people can afford to give you that there are no jobs left, no loss or no electricity. people are selling their belongings to live. right. sounds good to me. i don't run into is very hard on us. what i'm going to get done . i mess with it. for most palestinians, food to break rama down daily. fast will be hard to come by. my well, wow. yeah, i mean we rarely eat whether it is rama done or not? yeah, i mean it's a hyundai, you always remain hungry. it's amazing that i quoted, i couldn't miss that as well. a lot of these and rough parents are getting creative to help children celebrate the sun. ramadan is very different. this year we're not
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in our homes. were intense, but we insisted on putting up decorations and celebrating. we just pray that by the end of ramadan will be in our homes and give them a bunch of, you know, others from the fighting between a mouse and is rarely forces too much to bear. children reportedly injured admins rarely bombing or rushed to the hospital and this central gaza strip ongoing is really air strikes are also taking a psychological tool of all of us. we are tired, i swear, please feel for us please. we want a ceasefire and an end to this. what do we have to say? we thank god for anything lower than the book without a ceasefire in time for ramadan. and it is really ground of salt into rough, a still a possibility. the suffering of ordinary palestinians continues. without leif insight of
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a ship loaded with humanitarian aid has been given the all clear to set sail from cyprus to gaza. the open arms supply vessel is expected to lead the port of learning caught in the coming hours, carrying $200.00 tons of rice flour and proteins to go inside the charity world. central kitchen is providing the food aid and will take the vessel and estimated 60 hours to reach casa, once it set sale, using a newly established maritime aid court, or and we have to have these correspondent, tanya kramer with us from jerusalem antonio, let's take a closer look at this, a weighted shipment of 8, how useful will deliveries by c a be in meetings for monetary and needs and gaza. of the well, this is still to be seen. i mean, the humanitarian community has tried know many ways to land through the air. now by sea, but you also heard u. n. senior un officials say that the most effective way of distributing 8 would
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be by the land of crossings. and they've been calling on this road to open another crossing in the north, which would give them direct access to the area, which is, you know, where do you and the has said most people and really and then it can stream the dire situation. warning offs division and come in. now we have this announcement of this maritime court at the end of last week. it's, it's in 2 parts. basically the us military will build a floating dark they have announced, but this will take some months and then we have this test pilot. now if this ship waiting to set, say a to cause a but there are a lot of questions also that how, which is typically it was work wherever the dog in gauze or with the small guys a port a having be heavily damaged. and it's not made for larger vessels to come in there and also how then the food will be distributed in garza so we have to wait and see how this would play out. we mentioned the desperate communitarian situation in gaza,
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and even you, as president joe biden has issued a statement for ramadan, saying that that it comes at a moment of immense pain. there is seemingly growing frustration in washington with netanyahu and his government. but is there any concern in israel within the government there that washington will go beyond words like this to impose actual consequences of the well, that is the question. i mean that has been some really public a back and forth between us presidential pardon and a prime minister. benjamin netanyahu in the past days are with us being the closest ally and also supporting is roads of war efforts here. but there has been some sort of, as it seen here, a change of tone coming from the us administration, mainly about the humanitarian aid issue and also the looming operation, a potentially offensive by these really military in rough us aware of 1400000
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people, our show during right now uh, posting is having uh sort to show to him the southernmost city. now that's in y'all doesn't seem to be so impressed by this criticism. he said that he has the public behind him. and it's in a way, if you look at surveys, the public supports of the war. also pretend to operation in uh gospel. but of course they don't want to see the relationship with the u. s. for that the to a rating. but again, nathan, y'all was also reiterated that he needs to go into rough with the military, that the military needs to do this operation. rough otherwise, uh, whatever would a stop as road from doing so. uh would to make is read news of the war, and the question is, of course, what the international community do when, when this will happen. tonya, thank you. as always for your reporting, that's tanya kramer for us in jerusalem. us and we'll leave it there,
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coming up next. our program, the 77 percent, looks at the legacy of german colonialism in tanzania and asks how much it plays a role in young people's lives today. stay tuned and thank you so much for watching the
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