Skip to main content

tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  March 11, 2024 6:00pm-6:30pm CET

6:00 pm
the, the, this is the, the, the news life runs on a nato is bigger and stronger, says it's chief, us waving formerly joins the alliance. the swedish flag is right, is it nato headquarters in brussels as yet in stoughton? but it's a class that rushes president inside of as soon as failed and his mission to destroy you christ. also on the program, a ship carrying 200 tons of food for gaza whites to leave cyprus, to the open arms will use a new maritime a car. it will go far to say that of problems of unloading and distributing supplies and news organizations withdrawal of royal family folks over the past with
6:01 pm
based manipulative buttons. princess catherine, apologize. the i feel very welcome to the program. the swedish flag is not flying, not nato headquarters in brussels as the country sweden is formally welcomed as the alliances 30 seconds. remember, its location, military power and experience in dealing with the rush. i mean it's membership is important to boost for the block. it's also a big step for sweden, which is turning its back on 2 centuries of neutrality of the swedish flag raised for the 1st time outside nay's. her head causes, following its neighbour of finland, sweden has become the 32nd member of the alliance. at the ceremony in brussels, sweden's prime minister laid out the nordic nations reasons for leaving behind its
6:02 pm
history of neutrality. the security situation in our region has not been the serious since the 2nd world war under russia will 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 since rushes full scale invasion of ukraine. 2 years ago, nato has sought to develop defense plans for eastern and nordic members. russia claimed to have launch the war imparts because of nature as a split expansion. but it's the threats of only pushed more countries to joining the alliance. when pressed on tooth and launched is full for scaling nation 2 years ago. he won't, the less, nate,
6:03 pm
the more control over his neighbors. he wanted to destroy ukraine, southern states. but she said, nato is bigger and stronger. sweden now has security guarantees from nation. remember, states shouldn't come under attack from russia or anyone else in the future. in return sweden's military capability makes it a powerful new member, boasting cutting edge aircraft and anti aircraft missiles, as well as the state of the art tanks and submarines. it also has a considerable slaves of ships, of sweden's geographical position is another advantage. firstly, as a land transit route to reinforce feller, members, norway, in finland. and secondly, by allowing nato to take control of the baltic sea in any conflict with russia by sweden's enormous coastline. sweden's military has taken its
6:04 pm
1st steps in the alliance, joining nato, whose biggest drills since the cold war. the exercises across the blocks, nordic states, aimed at sending a clear message from russia's rivals, both nature and sweden, a foss, stronger with disagreement. so let's pick up some of the methods arising with for brief pots. yeah, he's a former director of policy planning for nato, and i was the security analyst and c, e. o. a rasmussen, global which advisors clients on transatlantic issues and international affairs and public policy management. a welcome to dw, i'm. we'll start with that they face where there's probably ministers that thoughts on why joining nato perhaps would be a safe bet then remaining neutral. we have the russian threat. clearly a he suspected that russia would not respect sweden's neutrality if thing, if he chose not to, to exactly the swedish,
6:05 pm
the finished position on not be a sign, mitchell this by the name of it was increasing the risky. i will go to after a shuttle should certain. right. why? because the be a major situation in the book. the only way. no. the 100 percent guarantees the other line of interest. stacy, the call too is so busy may suite a solution to the way to each region that is increasing the other pressure is actually the central next after the credit for one piece of the launch, rice. and then it's always, always, always about a geography is made that if you look at the geography sweetened succession tonight . so that means, but nato now has this type of grip on the baltic sea, which is a vital transit route for blogging the proteins. navy show,
6:06 pm
do you think dates are be preparing for push back from moscow because of this to i think he's close is a very important board for this because this will be the remaining guy that nato was dealing with. this is how many years went by. you know, they may, some of these are looking at the baltic region. the have to do we've, we've all basically rely on ultimate because we have these all suite on a filter. so in that sense, it really helps us, like the need to re planning about how and which forces we have available in the region and how to respond to any contingency. so in the really strengths of the foster in the region, our estimated russia we this and get our 52 exec brochure all the see bit as well. we use it also kind of a lot. i think for me to ask you to do it for and how so see slides on how to
6:07 pm
basically breach the russia. atx is already a denial of communities, right. the topic to really you kind of a lot is just to read you. so we kind of holding, meaning we can call to, to reach you all the eyes must see the body by being able to override for the one. okay. i that's really because on this the, the article 5 is the one that everyone always talks about has been a to treat to the one i'm on the tactic games. one member being considered an attack against old, easy to is custom drive is a part of the orthodontic, exactly if a country rings that article 5 bell is a nato response on automatic. we're on our way. would that be paula speaking 1st? i mean, there's nothing to do. i think a nice uh, however, i think all the good to find is as good as it gets, there is all having no guarantee that you will have to support the clinic to
6:08 pm
mobilize. we've got to use few, especially the united states of america. so the 5 is know what the result, the what kind of response because it doesn't have to be $31.00. 05 creates. whereby each something happens. then they told us we shall know. $32.00, we have to come together and decide what to do and how to respond to the process with the, with a response. fraction good. talking to you. thank you so much for joining us. for brief frontier from rasmussen, google lasers top prior to the at the moment is the warning ukraine in case repeated requests. football of jeremy is considering a british proposal to swap cruise missiles. jeremy would give its taurus massage to britain, which within $0.10 you cried more of its own storm shadow weapons. german foreign
6:09 pm
minister and a basketball coach said she is open to the idea of the german chancellor. alas, charles has ruled out sending mung range weapons to keep saying he's concerned about his country being dragged into the world. the w is chief, but a single every sent me found out chris that explains why, but then dissenting such mixed messages because they are very mix takes on whether to supply this cruise missile. it's an open secret that 5 minutes to another in a bad box will describe the sending them a to britain who could then send it's miss else to ukraine. would be an option. she's was in favor of sending them straight away and determine tanza is completely set against me supplying any such weapons, particularly this set tower system, which is seen as a pretty much the best of it's kind of make in the world because he's concerned. first of all of a german soldiers potentially being involved in the targeting of this. and the 2nd
6:10 pm
v that these missiles have a range that if they were known for a particular project team crane, they could hit moscow. so the over arching concerning the top 3 is that germany could be seen as a policy to this concept. something to i'm trying to solve wants to avoid this whole cost that you put to edit that mckayla cooper, a hospital doctor working about a 100 kilometers from the, from the ukranian front lines has been describing, had experience of years of war. thousands of patients in need of life saving treatment over so you can catch at the pros, american because hospital, which has become known as 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 clotting the chop
6:11 pm
that we get going on our operations at 9. 7 7 so recently we've been starting at 9 and finishing is whenever we finish the kingship. 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 would work as a programmer and leave. he tells us he thought his injuries would kill him, or when it was the last. i got hit by bullets in the front. here and both my lungs. my ribs and chests were crushed. i have all the doctors here called their hospital, a survival factory. and in this conveyor belt of new patients, but doesn't even stop for the air raid siren. the
6:12 pm
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 ball of a sudden and found ourselves in this world film and can't get out to become our life. it's in the wash, 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 department 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 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,
6:13 pm
because it's not just the patients that have changed. the medics have become faster, more efficient. but they've also burned out to 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 front lines. the doctors here don't have to read the news. they see how things are going by the number of ambulances arriving. we'll take a look at the civil stores making headlines around the world. you're trying to present documents, the landscape has rejected a call from pope francis for peace talks with russia. the folks that do price
6:14 pm
should have the courage to raise the white flag and negotiate as soon as the landscape of the pope should not try to meet the age of thousands of columbus. that's why you as a colton jem, and he has sentenced that american man to his life in prison. some not drink on american tourist. last june, he attacked 2 women and pushed them into a gorge and the noise scrunched on castles in bavaria. feeling 13 libyan leaders have agreed to form a new government to obviously delayed elections. it was that meant to hold a vote in 2021. after more than a decade of conflict, it was proposed after disagreements of confidence and election moves. is it counting $200.00 tons of food for gaza is waiting to sail from cypress. the open arms will be the 1st vessel to use a new maritime car. it will setup to bring humanitarian supplies to gaza. super sole source is sort of a vessel has been clear to sale, but there are problems of unloading and distributing the aid. rosie bush out before
6:15 pm
it's from cyprus. we're flying into learning, come the sit bridge city that's become the new gateway to go. so age groups have been busy loading a ship with much needed food for the besieged territory. we had read it with almost $200.00 policy of foot ready to be delivered to the will of guests that we have rise flowers, beans, sooner or products ready to be distributed in guests. the 1st of its kind, c delivery is parts of a new not retained aged corps or a deal carefully brokerage by the supreme government. alongside the european union, the united arab emirates, the united states and others, secret officials check the goods we face really oversight. on monday through the passage from this coordination center to try and ensure they get to gauze safely. the 1st thing in where we focus currently is to have a successful fest journey. and then of course, we already have stowed more quantities. so if you want to tie in a, in cyprus,
6:16 pm
we hope to establish the quoted or to really be in a position to deal with the dire situation on the ground. this is not a switched or simple route. one of the charities involved is building a make shift, jackie to receive 8 and separately the us plans to build a bigger temporary peer the united nations. there's no warning. garza is on the brink of farm and it's some 400 kilometers from here in cyprus. and the road trip takes days. there is a quicker and easier way to get 8 in through roads crossings. israel says 8, welcome to see color door on thought. it's can make it to get some food to josten's . but it's also faced heavy criticism and accusations of blocking age entry by land . the new c corridor will bring some relief, but given the enormous need, it's final destination. it's just a drop in the ocean. britton's princess of wales as apologize. after several major
6:17 pm
news agencies, we drew a family photo saying it appear to have been manipulated. princess catherine said she tried to edit the image and was sorry for any confusion. the royal family published the picture on about this day, and the united kingdom has been weeks of speculation about the princess's whereabouts following surgery in january. let's have a look at this very andrew peer soul, who is a professional photographer who also let j as in john, listen to the university of south wales in the u. k. welcome to d w. so this building, they sort of trial over this apparently dropped to image. does it really matter if it was or it wasn't as well? i suppose it's, it doesn't really matter in terms of from a point of view is a family photograph. this is kate. obviously, mother's day showing of a wonderful family picture of myself. the problem that this is so generation is the fact that she has submitted this to a function of agency. and all of these agencies are so they all
6:18 pm
manipulate all they all say they have to be controlled through editorial guidelines and through ethical codes of practice. and so that's the issue in the fact that you cannot submit anything which has been manipulated into a photo agency. because of mistrust in the media towards the public. right. so it would have been one thing if it is a sheet opposed to base to social media, quite another to, to submit it to a journalistic agency inside that box it. yes, because i have these ethical codes of conduct, we have in the u. k. here we have it. so we have the b p a is guide of conduct. we have the n u j and all of these agencies across the world practice of abide by these regulations. we are regulated industry, you know, we're supposed to. so a health truth and accuracy as much as we can. and when the po,
6:19 pm
price organizations trying to submit something which has been made to play, to that goes against those rules. and that's, that's why it was given the, the kill older, which stands quite, you know, expands quite harsh. but some that basically means that old distribution of the image cannot go ahead because of those manipulations. i mean, if you look closely, so it's not difficult to see those manipulations if you, if you look at various elements of charlotte's hand. and if you look just behind louise knee, you can actually see very, very obvious manipulations which really caught go ahead in the world, the effect of journalism. okay. you say it's only yes, but it was out that is it being published before somebody picked it up. so it, i mean, i mean, it does seem as though it took somebody looking very, very closely and said, well, what's that was why she got a funny wrist before someone said, oh, wait. so all we now in this area of artificial intelligence, should we now be looking to automatically check every photo,
6:20 pm
but process a photo at his desk. oh, very much so, and that's what organizations like adobe and they pay a trying to do that on the bbc that they're looking at using that a i to detect these because imagine a picture editor's desk and have a number of my students and i've 5 to add it says in major organizations and they have thousands of pictures coming through every era and they come back to every single photograph. and that is why we have the public, the public will spot these images and then they will, um, they will bring that to the attention of those picture edits. as those agencies, they will be taken down and keeping that killed. that hopefully a all i will be used in a much more positive way in the fight to impress industry, to spot these, these issues, the stakes, the coming through. okay, so we see this, this action by kate and all of the policy. this is, this is a mistake rather than deliberate deception. most definitely i'm. you've got to think that like it's, she's trying to have a lovely day with uh, with
6:21 pm
a family and she's given william the opportunity to take some photographs. i know the cases and, and sees as think photographer, she's been taken the best of a selection of images and try to bring together. now they're all worryingly applications out at google pixel phone. you can now use a light to bonilla images. you can choose the best face and the best, the best positions, and then that will then give you the best company that that's quite worrying, especially for press. yes, so for your family pictures of where you skateboarding shots, there was still some issues. thank you so much and to history about so clearly a 100 pistol from the university of south wiles. thank you. have a great, a good of hollywood here. the red carpet for the biggest night of the year and show base the us goes the nuclear blockbuster oppenheimer dominate the ceremony, christopher note, and ethics group 7 awards, including best film, best director, and best actor, the period terms. and my,
6:22 pm
i see oppenheimer open hymer topped it tonight 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 . 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 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 says,
6:23 pm
what are the victims of october the 7th in israel? well, the ongoing attack and gaza, all the victims of this to schuman, i zation. how do we resist the night were nearly every award, was an apparent foregoing conclusion. best actress was the biggest surprise going to em, us doing for her performance. interesting. lily gladstone from killers of the flower moon, had been tempted to wait 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 costumed design and the short warming cost of wage the dog from a not to me of a fall classics. and when it came to best
6:24 pm
song, billy i least may have won the award. but ryan gosling stole the night with his performance of i'm just can from barbie. an oscar where the performance in itself the let's go from uh, from the expert scott rooks for welcome scott, what were your highlights? the lobby saw a few right there. i mean the, uh it's the, um, just, i'm just can performance for ryan gosling was incredible. uh, uh, john uh, son as a naked a word presentation was a stand up moment. i can say that with a sounding too rude. and um, an overall though, the uh, the, the big wins for oppenheimer, i think, were really interesting because that's,
6:25 pm
that's the kind of movie, the sort of big hollywood studio movie that really hasn't been awarded of the top prize of the oscars for quite some time. and it seems sort of smaller independent movies, everything everywhere, all once code and nomad land like these kind of movies, more independent, smaller movies within the top prize. i'm. and i think it's actually an interesting time because, um, maybe it will show hollywood that these kind of movies that they used to love the sort of big movies for grownups. have a, have a, have a future. i'm at a doesn't have to be just sort of super here. ok, homes are a franchise film. so i really welcomed that sort of a suggestion at the oscars. these type of really big old school hollywood movies, maybe have a future. i've heard anything could last hour too much around as well. i mean i was also hoping that lili gladstone was goodwin a best actress for elizabeth flower moon. she would have been the 1st indigenous, a woman to win a prize, but i can't really say she was rob because i am a stone, was phenomenal in, in, in,
6:26 pm
in poor things. and she really gave an incredible performances a woman and sort of rebuilds herself. and i sort of frankenstein, a style movie, but uh, i maybe really glad someone's performance was a bit sutler of an m, a, a stones, a bit, a bit more restrained and maybe that's why i, the voters went for m a stone. but i can't really say they need the wrong decision because i think i'm a stone, had to meet incredible performance in poor things. one of my favorite performances of last year, and very deserving of the youngest. on the quick what 30 seconds are on there on the german language of film, so of interests 5 as bridges filament can which one the best international feature film for britain surprise. oh, not at all. one of my favorite films of last year. and i think really does something compelling. an interesting a for a holocaust movie because i'm like so many holocaust movies. johnson glazer decides not to show us the horror of a whole costs, but instead show us the perpetrators. and what i think is quite incredible. make us, if not to empathize with them,
6:27 pm
then identify with them and see the sort of horror of that world in ourselves. i think that's a phenomenal achievement, anti incredibly deserving of, of the scott rock pro. thank you so much for that. as i said, show up today, so i'll have a world news at the top of the
6:28 pm
they have always been the box as how you would ever done then young indigenous to make his all fine and the finding of far away from pray. today, they tell the story how it was, is, and will be unveiled next on d, w. fast, faster, faster quantum computers. it takes them seconds to calculate what used to take some
6:29 pm
years. but how does it work? and why could quantum computers replace animal test? let's explore the wonders world of quantum computing. those in 45 minutes on d w the let's me tell you the story. we have a getting a visa is more difficult than finding gold plus the 2 years for c, n. for the future feelings about what's going on in the industry. instead of being discussed across the continent, dw, and use africa every friday on the w. come have
6:30 pm
a page of this outtake, the highlights, new every week in your inbox, subscribe now. in cinema m as in history, data, people have always been present throughout the years. how hollywood has affected native characters and their history does change radically. now indigenous filmmakers are beginning to tell their own stories in hollywood and around the world. the .

20 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on