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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  March 12, 2024 3:02am-3:30am CET

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and if you like, think about it as the wind smoke, but sure. i feel it's really a mistake, a historic mistake sweden, this making right now really not to was calling to make also on the day of last year's movie going experience was dominated by the single tiniest release of 2 block best of unknown together as bob and time in the end, the only one of them triumphed at sunday's off because 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. welcome to the day and night service. welcome to the newest member, raising the swedish flag over its headquarters in brussels. they took chief to install some books at the moment, represented the bottom of pretense failure to weaken the military lines. the sermon
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was held on monday to formerly box reading, succession and cemented surprise to see a lot of success. the 2nd time this comes to he is asked, normally country applied to join a specialist full scale invasion of ukraine. after the ceremony, mister stolt of books broke alongside swedish prime minister of christus on when pressed on tooth and launched his full scaling nation 2 years ago. he won't, the less, nate, the more control over his neighbors. he wanted to destroy ukraine, southern states. but he said the 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,
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sweden applied to join the native defense alliance to gain security, but also to provide security. well, i'll respond and tell you. shouts joins us now from brussels, where she's been covering nathan for many years that welcome telling you that at nights are headquarters full of a flag raising survey of what was the mood that elation or relief of his 2 year processes finally ended. well, both of those emotions for sure, both elation, i mean really you can see it in the faces of, of the swedish officials and also secretary generally instills and berg, who worked very hard personally to bring sweden in and also relieved that there was no longer going to be the struggle between allies, this a sort of having to negotiate whether they're, they had done enough, whether the swedes had done enough for, you know, turkey and hungry to, to give their approval. but, you know,
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there's also some trepidation because now this process expose that the unity that nato is always trumpeting about, you know, isn't quite as strong as it may seem from the outside. there are things that divide the allies and when it's something like bringing in a very capable country, then you've got to wonder what the other things are that are going to be divisive. let's talk about that, but, but those um, law gods hungry on the turkey who were recreating obstacles of a swedish membership. all those arguments now fully resolved on mike, that'd be problems further down the line. i i definitely think when it comes to turkey with the, with which, uh, both sweden and finland signed an agreement to continue. uh, what they call the tri lateral talks. uh, you will continue to hear about these issues even now that sweden has been admitted . and that's because turkey feels that sweden has been too soft on certain ethnic
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groups, the kurds, because there are demonstrations by the p k. k, which is classified as a terrorist group throughout europe. and there will continue to be issues on this, but it won't any longer be of this scale that turkey can prevent sweden from, from operating as a full ally and was hungry. you know? basically it seemed in the end of it or bond just wanted a business deal with the swedes and he knew that that he had leverage at that time . he got, you got a deal to buy for more gripping planes from sweden and then suddenly the, the approval went through. so i think there things may come up from time to time with these 2 allies. but they won't be as monumental as they were when they were keeping sweden out of the alliance. ok, so sweet and joining after 200 years of utah, let's say what, what made the country? i think the joining data was a safer bet than staying unusual. well, this is an interesting question because this waves will tell you many of them that
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you know, they haven't actually been neutral since they joined the european union in 1995. the european union also has a mutual defense clause in which sweden would have been drawn into any potential attack on an e u country as well, even when it didn't belong to nato. so i'm sorry to the european union, so it hasn't been the purest of neutral countries in quite a while. at the same time, there was a big shift in thinking to joining a military alliance. and it was, you know, you can answer this in one word and that is pretty sweet and no longer felt safe in the neighborhood. and especially once finland decided that it was going to go into nato, which it did before. sweden made that same decision of sweden would have really felt vulnerable there, left out on his own between member finland and norway. and that's why it decided to join. and nato has made clear that it doesn't believe that this threat from russia
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is going to go away any time soon. that actually, all this instability is the new normal and sweet and just felt like it would be a really good time to have friends. if this is the new normal, it's a tell us more than about once we've brings to the table when it comes to dealing with a potential russian ministry threat, as it is very experienced in dealing with russia. i mean, it hasn't had a military encounter, nor has any other nato ally, but sweden is an extremely well country. um, it is also a really huge manufacturer of weapons. it has some of the largest and munition producers in all of europe. it makes really superb tanks and boats and planes. and so i think that you know, a country that had planned on being able to defend itself into perpetuity. so certainly comes up with a pretty big stop pile. but the other thing it has is both resilience and
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a lot of experience in dealing with russia's hybrid attacks. now we're not expecting any kind of military attack on a nato ally, but it can be unnerving to deal with constant cyber attacks and in different this information campaigns and sweden is, is, has been dealing with b, d is for years. and so it can share some of those best practices in finland is basically in the same position when it comes to these kinds of attacks. and what about what we might call that, but the center face of the nato alliance, honestly cool 5, this mutual aid, which, which says that on, on the attack against one i like would be considered an attack against old if a country rings a that article 5 about is the nato response. i know is the magic, we're on our way or would that be paula taking 1st? it was interesting. it isn't actually automatic, but we don't have a lot of experience in knowing what would happen because it's only ever been use once. and that was after 911 to to help defend the united states. but there are
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a lot of steps that would lead up to a declaration of article 5 by any country. so probably the most part and one person, one being article for, and that is that a country would call all of the allies together and say that they feel like they are being made in secure. and that's been use several times, mostly by turkey. when the missiles were coming over the border with syria, so you would have some warning before you get to article 5 and a country would not just uh, willy nilly declare, an article 5 without knowing that it would rise to that level. that's the sort of language that is used, rise to the level of an article 5 and know that the other allies would be willing to come in in those circumstances. so i think that we could only hypothesize about what kind of attack it would be and where it would be. but to be honest, the reason countries join nato and the reason that they feel more secure once they're in the alliance, is because this is supposed to be something they can count on. we just don't know
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what those circumstances would be because it's never been used except that one time integrated, one clear as ever saturday. thank you so much for that type of shows and brussels. the hunger is prime minister of it to old bond has claimed to donald trump told him he wouldn't give you, cried a penny towards its war against russia. the pat matt last week in florida or mr. roll them says mr. trump made the comments a big deal about his, the, of the related to maintain the close close ties with russia since its invasion of ukraine. he's been a controversial figure and he's floating, he has an office cracking down on amongst of the things that ruled a flaw in hungry. well, as donald trump run for office again, but offense that he might be taking a leaf out of him to all events playbook as to devices of figures with a special relationship. donald trump post of hon. gary and prime minister victor
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oregon at his home in florida on friday just as the rates for the white house was getting into high gear. the 2 were full of praise for each other. as they have been in the past. he said, this is the way it's going to be in the boss for tom is the man who can save the best of it and the probably the human beings in the envelope as well. we don't know for sure what trump in oregon talked about, but they're meeting got a lot of attention and use media. many are calling or about an outright autocrat and are worried that trump might follow his example. and we can the rule of law with his visit victo urban has become part of the us election campaign. we want to know what time gary ends in florida. things nearly 100000 people in the state identify as a 100 areas in this european bakery just an hours drive away. there was some debate about trump and oregon, and i'm pro trump, like most americans are by now. the way i see there is no alternative at home,
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but victor a much, i don't mean to be attack gary and a following all been like cheap or oriented salita got. that's what they want or bond is each that is like a guest, but they don't see the whole country has been sold the toner side with l o. l, back to cities, them for bond or bond. ok. barb on. and trump ok. these 2 are good, but sentiment shared by many other residents of florida. the republicans grant home . many here likes to enter the latest tough guy image that both trump and oregon project. i think he's a great leader in europe and in, in the change there's been a sense, there's been a change across europe where the people are starting the rise up again. populous leaders are gaining popularity because people are getting tired of suffering. people are getting tired of the elite, so to be recent polls show trump is leading joe by the end of the race for the that . and so you can look at some of us commentators and theoretical or less that victor oregon's a liberal rule that hungary might be a blueprint for
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a possible 2nd. trump term in the white house of charles britain's princess of wales. apologize. after several major news agencies that to withdrawal a photo of her and her children are saying that is appear to have been manipulated business. catherine said she occasionally experimented with photo editing and was sorry for any confusion. the role family publish the picture on mother's day and the united kingdom of the weekend. the incident follows weeks of speculation about the princess is health and whereabouts the following surgery in january. let's have a look at best buy andrew piersal, who is a professional photographer who also lunches in joe and listen to the university of south wales in the u. k. welcome to d w. so this building they should have trial over this apparently dropped to image . does it really matter if it was or it wasn't? well, i suppose it's, it doesn't really matter in terms of from a point of view is
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a family photograph. this is kate, obviously mothers day showing of a wonderful family picture of myself. but the problem that this is so generation is the fact that she has submitted this to a site. so agency, and all of these agencies are so they all manipulate all they are they, they have to be controlled through editorial guidelines and through the cool codes of practice. and so that's the issue in the fact that you cannot submit anything which has to be manipulated into a funds agency because of mistrust in the media to 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 aside that, that's it are yes because they 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
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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 press organizations trying to submit something which has been medically 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, i have louise knee. you can actually see very, very obvious manipulations which really can't go ahead in the world, the effect of journalism. okay. you're sorry, it's only yes, but it was out that it had been published before somebody picked it up. so, i mean, i mean, it does seem as though it took somebody looking very,
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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, but process a photo at his desk. a very much so, and that's what organizations like adobe and i 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 i'm a number of my students and i 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, 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 are coming through. okay, so we see this,
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this action by kate and all of the policy. this is, this is a mistake rather than deliberate deception. most definitely. um you've got to think that like it's, she's trying to have a lovely day with her with her family and she's given william the opportunity to take some photographs. i know that cases and, and sees that stick 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 5. and you can now use a lie to bonilla images. you can choose the best face and the best, the best positions, and then that will then so give you the best company that's quite worrying, especially for press. yes, so for your family pictures of, we escaped building shouts. there are still some issues. thank you so much for talking to us through about so clearly. 100 pistol from the university of south wiles. thank you. of the great and the good of hollywood,
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half the red carpet for the biggest show biz. nice if the here the us, cuz you play a blockbuster. oppenheimer dominated the christopher nolan ethics group 7 awards, including best film and best director, and best dr. peerage homes and maria ac oppenheimer open 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. 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. to ceremony generally steered clear
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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 problem 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 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,
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streaking across the stage. tonight's best costumed design on the short warming cuts of 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 dentist type of journalist k j matthews joins us from los angeles. welcome back to dw k j. let's pick up from not report. we're always welcome. let's pick up from not report with arguably the nights. biggest lewis. i'm the use highest grossing phone
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bobby, despite going home almost empty handed, it really felt like a dominated you know, i think a lot of people understood especially the people were putting together the oscar show that people were not happy that model robbie and get it right a girl we're not nominated, so they kind of gave the os protell a cache or a paid an o march to barbie. there was a lot of talk the body to office 3 and a half hour show. so yes, the can perform is i'm just kid by ryan gosling was wonderful. i love the way people were getting into action and dancing with it. and i think they did a good job of honoring the film, even though the film was not on or in the categories that a lot of bands wanted to see. which is the best director and best actress. i know surprises them. that's a oppenheimer sweat, the bold everybody expected oppenheimer just participate. i mean, they won 7 awards the major categories, best picture, best director, best actor,
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best supporting actor. none of that was a surprise at all, was a phenomenal for them, and people expected oppenheimer to walk away with most of the wards of the night. so i'm, you also recall the, the oscar. so white hash tag that started back in 2015 criticizing their wards, but it's the lack of diversity. how do you assess the change since the you know, a lot of people are talking about that especially since uh more who robbie and and gregory did not get nominated in key categories this year, but i think people have to still understand that river. barbie was nominated 8 nomination and this year alone, female nominees, the number of female nominees are up by 32 percent and major categories like 19 of the major categories. so there has been progress and we haven't seen that since 2021. so i don't think it's fair to judge whether or not barbie was kind of nominated in the right categories,
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but we are moving in the right direction and every year you just have to wait and see. but yes, they'll probably never be enough. diversity for everyone here in hollywood, but i think we're going in the right direction for sure. and you look at the nominations and the knobs. it does seem to be the year of the return of the blockbuster arousing the, the small, the scale move is the more i would, obviously, when it's a previously, it's like moonlights and i know about live in code. yeah, you know, the golden gloves, which i'm a builder for, and the oscars, and all these other award shows they get that most of the world and most of middle america wants to see the films for trade and awarded on stage the films that they see in the theaters that they likely are house be likely in the films, but they have to honor some of these big blockbusters because that's the majority of the bill making that everybody is watching out in the theater. so they understand that, and that's why i think you'll see a lot more films like that. the big blockbusters being honored at major award shows
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and 3 international fields nominated as well. yes, of course. of course, of course, anatomy able saw was great for original screenplay zone of interest. you know, i saw that going back to kim film festival last year, and i got a chance to speak to the bill maker job in the laser. and i knew that, and i said zone of interest and anatomy of a fall are going to take it next year. the oscars. and he won a best international feature of the 1st u. k. films when that title. so i was not surprised at all, the people were blown away with anatomy of a fall and also zone of interest. very, very serious movies, but very well performed. and the screen writing was excellent. so there were the films in, in the academy award at that because they knew that i was, will access wearing pens and so forth to office safe spot in gaza and both gaza. i'm due, craig was of what were mentioned in speeches,
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do mega wells who act as calling for world peace. have much effect. you know, what i, i don't think there were too preachy last year. you know, on my way to an honest reviewing party last night at the store at roosevelt. i don't know. i passed some protesters that have the policy in the, in black. so there was a lot of that out in the street last night. and yes, people are worried buttons because they want to bring in ceasefire. they want to see peace. we had somebody mentioned in one of their speech kind of a nod, but not too much so about the situation happening with israel in gaza. and obviously the situation happening with ukraine and russia, but i don't think people were preachy this year off. i think the only poor person was actually jimmy kimball. we took shots at president trump about 3 hours to get through to the telecast. it might be good. so could you as a, as a magenta, mr. kj matthews in los angeles. so and that is the day more so far. so
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the vehicle's to be a distant memory, the plans for trust now these are calling for cleaner transportation alternatives. are this countries rose about to change forever
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on dw best, faster, faster quantum computers. it takes them seconds to calculate what used to take some years. but how does it work? and why could quantum computers replace animal testing? let's explore the wonders world of quantum computing. 16 minutes on the d. w. the in many countries, education is still a privilege. property is one of the main causes some young children walk in mind draft instead of going to class others can attend classes. after they finish
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the minions of children of the wills, collins going to school we ask why? because education makes the world make up your own mind. made full minds. this bus will remain with me till my last breast. i never leave this bus. the car shows actually dying where they see it to me by international motor show. and
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what you can see right here behind me is mostly it who came who didn't come and.

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