tv DW News DW March 11, 2024 4:00pm-4:16pm CET
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the, the business dw news line from ballot. nato is now bigger and stronger, says its chief f sweep form and the joints. the lines of his flag is rays of nato headquarters in brussels and stony brook claims. russia's president vladimir putin has failed in you. frank also coming off, we go inside the ukranian hospital, doctor the said 5 of the factory by doctors saving the lives of food, the front line troops on the right. and the go to hollywood,
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hit the red carpet for the biggest night of the show business. christopher no, no, no cab. blockbuster often harm a sweeps the major awards at the oscars. scooping best picks it best director and best doctor. the gulf is welcome to the program. the swedish flag is now probably flying up nato's headquarters in brussels. a rainy ceremony has formerly welcome stuck home into the lions as its 32nd. sweet and applies to join off the rushes invasion of new train in february 2022. they to a 2nd to general against 1000, but says the alliance is no stronger than ever when pressed on tooth and launched
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his full scaling nation 2 years ago. he won't the less nate, the more control over his neighbors. he wanted to destroy ukraine as a sovereign states, but see, famed nato is bigger and stronger. ukraine is closer to nathan membership than ever before. the security situation in our region has not been the serious since the 2nd world war. under russia would stay a threats to you. atlantic security for a foreseeable future. it was in these light, sweden applied to join the native defense alliance to gain security, but also to provide security. and i off to w as brussels correspondent, terry shoals with a suite and joining is being treated as a victory for nato. after, as you say, this very long,
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2 years. and especially even this last year when finland was admitted to the alliance, having gotten all the, the approval from all the other allies a year ago that live sweet and in a position where it felt very vulnerable, almost like it had a target on it. there was new member of finland on one side of norway on the other side, but sweden was not in. and so there's a huge, really sense of relief. you're around nato headquarters. both swedish prime minister of christmas and, and secretary general against oldenburg, were, were clearly happy even laughing a little bit. and you don't see that very often here at nato. so everyone is really in a good mood that this finally, this process finally has come to an end with the right raising of the swedish flag here. and now we heard a moment ago from the swedish prime minister, and he said the russians threat to euro atlantic security tip the scales for a sweden to join nato and the brakes for the long tradition of neutrality. why the sweet and st joining nato is a sofa bed and staying neutral as well. one of the points he made this morning
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and, and we notice also from nato's change and as military pastor is it, they don't believe this threat from russia is going away any time soon. not only will the war in ukraine not to be over quickly, but then russia will turn to other neighbors perhaps. and that's, of course, if you're in the baltic states or you're in the nordic area, you feel like you could be next. now this, we just defense minister who we've spoken to many times on our air used to say without article 5 without being and nato member. we can hope we can wish we can even assume that other countries would come to defend us. but we cannot know. we only know once we have article 5, and that's what nato membership gifts we have. your husband and socialist, every person from brussels. now inside ukraine, a doctor working at the hospital, just a 100 kilometers from the front lines that's been describing her experience of years, a full thousands of patients in need of life saving treatment. receiving care is the pros. mission of costs hospital, that's a facility that has been dropped,
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the survival factory. it's just another morning at work for valentino lisney cha. she has a soldier on the operating table who's only reading with one long a bullet passed straight through the other one. the surgeons want to remove the clouding the chop that 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 kingship. we're at the mentioned the called hospital and the pro 2 thirds the patients here are soldiers wounded on the battlefields. before the war, mika, lab work as a programmer and leave. he tells us he thought his injuries would kill him. what for all of them, all? i got hit by bullets in the front and both my lungs. so my
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ribs and chests were crushed. to the doctors here called their 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 one's to both his lower limbs and the lower back . say it's, it's like we just bought of a sudden and found ourselves in this world film and can't get out to become our life. it's and then watch. it's not something you can describe in words the 1st time you have to see it with your own eyes. a bunch of this valentine use departments specializes in treating subsystem 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
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pros, doorstep since 2014. but in the last 2 years, the number of admissions has gone through the roof. last, 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 a nickel, my colleagues and i have stopped asking our patients how they were wounded. he can only they tell us themselves, tell us their story. shows if we start asking too many questions, you just can't function. but we're basically always at work. so the scriptures, so the days over, but valentina isn't going home. she has a night shift ahead of her. it's been the most new patients are brought in from the
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front lines. the doctors here don't have to read the news. they see how things are going by the number of ambulances arriving. i see the display is with the international committee of the red cross and off the 2 years of war and tens of thousands of death. often often what we should take from the story like the one we just sold, as well as the piece that you have just shown exemplifies. we see that the areas that are located near to the front lines suffered immensely in the past 2 years from the proximity of the active fighting next to them, we see that the buildings are discharged, including all of this, including the hospitals, including schools. and we see that those who remain in these communities are typically among the most vulnerable, such as children, people with disabilities and elderly. also, when the people included women soldiers. so we can see that the, the, the proximity to fighting means that public service is essential services. people
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should have access to our extremely difficult to reach. and the, you know, the international committee of the red cross is one to many through an actor that is able to provide some new major and assistance to communities next to the front line. but of course, what we are able to do is not enough. we have provided just last year over 300000 people with essential humanitarian assistance in the form of food or hygiene items . but we know that the deeds are best and what we're able to do is not enough. what really needs to happen is that the protection conveyed by the geneva conventions by international you made your last are protected. this is on our respect to this is our main message in this conflict. as in others, even more for the rules and these most exist to protect me like now let's talk about fatigue. it is a major factor in the boat, a story of this war. is it becoming more effective for those patching up bodies and minds? of course, when you talk about key,
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this is something that's r t e. unfortunately, every day when we go to communities that have been so hard effected by a military also, it is that their doorstep for 2 years, but indeed for 10 years as your peace was saying for some of the eastern regions of ukraine, people are incredibly fuzzy of having to deal with the consequences of on conflict next to them, it means they just can't live a normal life. they tend to have a relative sense of safety. so they really need to be supported. and you know, it's hard to imagine the total, the space, especially for the front like communities having to live as your, as your piece was showing with the error rates are and constantly going off to stay . so huge store also in people's mental health and psychosocial wellbeing. so there is the sense of fatigue that people want to go back to having a normal life. having the basic needs met,
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having access to food or the access to water. i think their kids able to go back to school families that have been separated. you need to be reunited. but that's why it's so important that you minutes are in need in ukraine to remain a top priority for the global community. and it certainly is for us at the international committee of the red cross. thank you very much. actually a display from the international committee of the red cross in key. thank you. thank you for having a look. now some of the other stories making headlines around the world today in your current president for the zalinski has rejected the call from pope francis for peace talks with russia. the pope said ukraine should have the courage to raise the white flag and negotiate zalinski says the pope should not try to mediate from thousands of kilometers away the at least 26 people have been killed in slash flooding and land slides in indonesia. 11 others are still missing
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on the island of some of trump. while the flood waters are receiving, rescue efforts are being handed by power outages and damaged roads. right to good of hollywood hit the red carpet for the biggest night of the year in show base the oscars, the nuclear blockbuster, oppenheimer, dominated the ceremony. christopher nolan's epic scope 7 awards, including best will best director and best act period trauma and maria, se oppenheimer often hymer talked. it's a night of domination with the award for best picture. it's 7 when included christopher nolan for best director robert disney junior, for best supporting actor and kelly and murphy winning his 1st oscar for best actor
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. we made a film about the mine and created the atomic bomb. and for better or for worse, we're all living in oppenheimer's world. so i would really like to dedicate this to the peace makers everywhere because there are many generally steered clear of politics. but the brief mentions of international tragedies were powerful. jonathan glaser used his zone of interest international feature. when to echo the films method you to account, the humanize ation to a phone says what are the victims of october? the 7th in israel will the ongoing attack on gaza, all the victims of this t schuman as ation. how do we resist? what a night, when nearly every award was an apparent, we're going conclusion. best actress was the biggest surprise. going to em, us doing for her performance. interesting. lily
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gladstone from killers of the flower moon, had been to do with 1300 on the producers, kept the audience on their toes with a few unpredictable moments such as going on, john. so you know, streaking across the stage to 9 best costume design and the short warming cost to wage the dog from a not to me of a fall classics. and when it came to best song, billy i least may have won the award. but ryan gosling stove a night with his performance of i'm just can from barbie. an oscar where the performance in itself the
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and that's it from me and didn't seem for now i have enough that at the top the i don't go way up next. the dw documentary profile of a resistance group passing against they've spoke taishan of natural resources in a little bit out of the, the innovation green trends, the select the green revolution global. so listen to a whole lot of crime. it's probably up to speed. if the carriers by the time is helping subscribe to the subscribe to plan, it's a the
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