Skip to main content

tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  March 28, 2024 9:00pm-9:31pm CET

9:00 pm
the, the, this is dw news live and from berlin. tonight, the convicted crypto currency king sentenced a 25 years in prison. sam bakeman fried, swindled the customers of the billions of dollars. the judge today saying it is clear that he only regrets that he got com, also coming up to an outrage as the united nations fixed saudi arabia to head a women's rights commission. critics pointing to the countries of business records on gender equality and france backs a ban on discrimination based on people's hair style, main victims of prejudice, black women, to get a job. any say they've been forced to treat their hair with chemical.
9:01 pm
the regard to our view is watching on p b as in the united states and to all of you around the world. welcome, former 1000000000 air crypto boss, sam bakeman freed, has been sentenced to 25 years in prison for multi 1000000000 dollar fraud. they've been freed sentence was handed down at a manhattan court house today. last november, a jury found him guilty on 7 criminal counts for stealing billions of dollars from his crypto exchange platform f t. x. prosecutors say that he defrauded tens of thousands of customers from all around the world, spending over $80000000000.00 of their savings on his luxury homes in risky investments. i asked financial correspondent young's court in new york,
9:02 pm
what he makes up. the length of this sentence 25 years. yeah. well, i mean, that was definitely a spectacular case. and to the defense a was saying that most of the money that was the loss of for a client's office embankment fried, actually recovered a lot of their money. maybe even all of it, that's why they were asking only for 5 to 6 years. but then the judge came to the conclusion that send bakeman for you what he was doing that it was a huge fraud case. and then he was also found to guilty on their perjury. so that also was one of the reasons why the sentence came to 25 years persecution at some point, even had as to 40 to 50 years. but to adjust that said that it's pretty unlike if it's the same back meant freed would do a fraud, a scenario like that again. so therefore, and $25.00 is enough at ease when it comes to the judge. here's, let me just ask you as, as the markets reported to the people who lost this money,
9:03 pm
we're talking about 7 or 8000000000 dollars. have they gotten any of that money back? well, i'm not sure if, if it how much money they've gotten back about them. actually a people who are running the company for some bank, but free. they did recover quite a bit of the money. they found some money, they found some assets, and then on top of it also there's a clicked on market. actually has been on fire in the past couple of months. so meaning that the price as increased tremendously it to you a highest. and that also helps um, so that the most of the money as it seems um actually i could get a recovered at what point investors will get their money back. i don't know. and the judge today said the bank been freed. the only thing that he regretted was making a bad batch and been getting call. how did he manage to do this in the 1st place as well, i mean, like, always send with other pundit schemes, for example,
9:04 pm
if it comes down to trust and people trust the tim, i'm actually even politicians and regulators in watson, washington to head to frequent meetings with sen, bank mon free attempts, he actually gave the impression that he wants to be the good guys that he is trying to get better regulation of for the eclipse. so an industry about one of the problems was that in other business of st bank meant freed a hedge fund. i made a, a research that lost quite a bit of money and to use the client's money to cover those losses. but people did trust them and gave for the money until it became obvious that he didn't have the money. right. financial corresponding, it's quarter, but the legacy new york ins, thank you. call it the unlikely as to the choice is today, the united nations announced that saudi arabia will take over the un women's rights for them. and that despite having what campaigners call and abysmal record on
9:05 pm
gender equality, re odd will lead the human condition that is responsible for promoting equal rights world. why know, at home, saudi authorities repeatedly throw the book at women's rights workers. and i asked to be something funky from amnesty international in b route for her reaction to this. i mean, honestly, i don't know whether to laugh or to cry after you're in the news that's on your radio was pointed to the commission on the status of women. every day amnesty international were working on the cases, the women were currently in prison because they have tried to defend the women's rights. and the job of this commission on the status of the women is to promote gender equality and to promote women's empowerment. i can tell you that right now we're working on the case of a young woman, 29 years old, fitness instructor and women's women human rights defenders was forcibly
9:06 pm
disappeared. so her finally doesn't know where she is. and the reason that she was locked up was because she tweeted on the hash tag and the male guardianship. and because she posted a photo of herself in the mall without wearing a traditional buyer. so for me, this is absolutely for us to call that the commission on the status of women which have sonya re beyond its chair. and i must express my disappointment with the 45 member states were on the commission and no one that stood out to challenge various appointment to to the commission. i think that there is silence is a betrayal of bruce, how many women were working so hard under a quality entertain huge, huge consequences. that was this one of our key there from amnesty international in they worked. let's take a look down some of the other stores that are making headlines. the un will no longer monitor the enforcement of sanctions against north korea that after
9:07 pm
a russian veto and the un security council effectively abolishes the panel which oversaw the longstanding sanctions over north korea's nuclear program. western countries of accused russia trading weapons with gun yang to fuel the war in ukraine. the united nations is describe the situation in haiti as cataclysmic. doing violence is spiraled out of control, that you would estimates at least $1500.00 people have been killed this year alone, and they blames corruption and poor governors for allowing gains to control the streets with violence. there is also having an impact outside of haiti. more than 700000 haitians live in the united states, largely in southern florida. many fear for the safety and wellbeing of their families on the island. but it's almost impossible to get help to their loved ones . des, washington bureau chief in his poll reports tonight from miami, miami is home to one of the largest haitian communities in the us. places like the
9:08 pm
family bakery service gathering. a lot of people come, they come from georgia, they come from new york. they come from all over. it feels like everyone here, his family in hate. terrible. uh, basically it's a problem even to go out to get food, to go shopping because you don't know when something is going to happen in the neighborhood. every time this morning i work up, i think eggs and bread. i gotta pick out what, because nicely they have everything. every time i'm going to get i, i'm gonna cry windows thing happen. and then the forget really, really i people the step to come between odyssey instead of case of petite, was born and raised in haiti. and she now works here in the u. s. as a social worker helping me quinn's she says she sees the pattern when ever there's been a major crisis on the island. haitians try to get to the u. s. by boat. the boat,
9:09 pm
the means of transportation does not change over the years. if they are man made very basic boats and with what would normally have a capacity of maybe 20 people will be loaded with about 60 or 70 people. sometimes they may be diverted by high seas, and they may end up in the bahamas, where they may end up on the costs of cuba, where they may, you know, end up somewhere else doing this journey that can last anywhere between $5.00 to $7.00 days. people will have no access to water, no access to fluid, or if there is an issue, some people will die or if they run out of, of space on the boat, they will throw some people overboard. i visit your new york, says she host the daily news, show out of miami for the diaspora. good. this is regular contact with family and heidi. but messages can sometimes be very distressing with gracious thoughts. so what's that? the good thing is to get to what's that phone call cause then you can pretty much
9:10 pm
monitor and give a conversation the worst thing and then you also want to prepare yourself. what's that voice? and then that's what breaks a heart that could ruin my whole day. because you hear, i love surely, is going to be met the new bama z. hello shirley. we have a, in a couple of days. you know, the kids have a e n and you set the money, but there is no market. and then or out here, the western union or any of the money, graham people have not open because the scare hate is just on the one and a half hours away by plane from here. and it is increasingly difficult for people to help the family spic home. its judges at the international court of justice have ordered, is real to take all necessary measures to ensure humanitarian assistance reaches
9:11 pm
palestinians. in garza, the court more into there is already a fam. in the order, the israeli government to act without delay. it also called for the immediate release of all hostages, held by from us, is realized finding itself increasingly isolated as the civilian deaths told and gaza continues to rise inside israel support for the war remains high. but the leadership of prime minister benjamin netanyahu is coming under heavy scrutiny dw, as rebecca rivers has more del from is when he is rel, loans states will on gauze in response to a mouse is deadly. terror attack is riley, is overwhelmingly supported. the operation, 6 months on that support remains steadfast. i think it was definitely the right decision because it was needed to happen that they needed to get rid of come off because they've been terrorizing this country. it was reprehensible what they did. and we had to react very sure, absolutely. i support the work. it's our future til january poll shows nearly 95
9:12 pm
percent of jewish has riley's think the military has used appropriate or too little false in gaza and nearly 90 percent think the number of palestinians killed or wounded is justified. but support for the government's will. strategy does not translate to support to the government, especially it's lead a prime minister benjamin netanyahu. many hold him responsible for october 7 am to the inability to get back. to protest against him have become commonplace. is the beginning of the know, the small on the east advising is a prime minister of the survival as a free citizen. concentrated all these trial visit then do release hostages. in the early days of the war, pulse the staggering 3 clauses of his rabies wanted to see. netanyahu resign either
9:13 pm
immediately or off to his handling of relations with these round key ally, the united states has put him under even more scrutiny. when the us abstained from rather than veto the un security council votes this week, many especially in the media pointed the finger at that in yahoo! accusing him of putting the country's future at risk. but it seems that in yahoo is intent on staying his course doubling down and aggressive rhetoric against the us and promising to ignore international cold not to launch a ground defense safe on garza's sub and city restaurant. the valves to go in with or without us support doing so could say strong, the moves against israel by the us and all the key allies like germany is right. we start to say they don't care. that's we don't have to ask permission from another country to every country needs to take care of itself. no one should be involved in our issues. we have the right to protect ourselves. i know that again. that's mean
9:14 pm
. if we don't save or so, is there anyone else there that will save us? no, we have no choice. it's very difficult to have a sign over there also in the army. so it's, but do we need to do it? so we need to distract from us and be with president barden is coming under, increase pressure to start with them. supplies to israel. if that were to happen, other countries may soon follow suit leaving israel even more isolated on the go the stage. it seems almost certain that even benjamin netanyahu wouldn't be able to survive, that were not very far from where rebecca was standing there. the the occupied westbank is seeing a surge of violence between these really forces and palestinians. the west bank is also home to about 700000 is really settlers that you when says that they are living, they are a lead really in the european union has agreed to sanction extremist settlers. these really human rights group, yes. did called 2023. the most violent year on record for attacks carried out by
9:15 pm
settlers, including the area around the city of novel hoops shepherd texas, heard out to graze in the occupied westbank a job. not without risk. georgia, maybe it will stay quiet. just maybe i'll get hurt. maybe the symptoms will come again. i don't know. somebody could happen here any minute. elastic is there any moon says he's endured repeated attacks by radical israeli settlers who live up on the mountain. the shepherd claims he and his flock had been beaten, and even shot at palestinians in the neighboring village say they have also come under attack. no near works for and is really human rights group and documents the violence. he filmed an incident last fall that claims to show mass settlers, trespassing on
9:16 pm
a property with she is really armies standing by and watching all of us officially. unfortunately, nobody protects you here. that is not the army. so the police, they don't do anything. how they will do you have no choice but to lock yourself on your house. to close the windows and doors instead of the attacks are increasing every day. how likely bob will show a big deal of it. this man says his car was set on fire over the weekend for the 2nd time. the flush of that's the one on i think i've lost 2 cars in under 2 months. i've got a new job in the lives close to a settlement, but he's cut off from his neighbors. they have shuttered their windows and sealed off their homes with barbed wire. a. back at my moon's things are quiet. he hopes has heard, can graze for several more hours. he claims the attackers are off and wearing is
9:17 pm
really army uniforms. the army rejects accusations that it allows settler violence . we drive up the mountain to hear from us settlers themselves. muscle many don't want to talk to us, but we find one person who does wear and that's no, it is a top by us. again, stand alone. i don't think so. that doesn't happen. i wish we could attack the at the moment. unfortunately, we're just defending ourselves. let's me to go to name what i on the southern, the human rights groups. a violence by settlers has risen sharply since a mass carried out. the october 7 terror attacks is really such as a, using the public climate and as well as the end of the stadiums. the also the fact that the focus of is really society and the international community is elsewhere. it's on gaza to basically pursue the objective that they've been pursuing for many
9:18 pm
years, which is to remove the students from their homes. this is the reason why this violence has risen. moon and has heard, had a peaceful day. he will return tomorrow despite the risks. after all, he says, this is his land now to the war and ukraine in poland. angry farmers post prime minister donald tusk says that his government is now close to a deal with ukraine on agricultural import. submit. thursday with ukraine's prime minister in warsaw for talks are possible caps on cheap imports. phones farmers have been protesting out for months, saying that you create a new boards are flooding the publish market and threatening livelihood. a marta frontage, that's silver. she specializes in publish foreign policy at the german marshall funding. i asked her what a compromise here could possibly look like. i think if it were easy to come to a compromise, they would have definitely come to a compromise by now. so um,
9:19 pm
after hundreds of hours, this is a topic that is a very important one between pulling and ukraine. but apparently it's very hard to come to a concrete solution. the good thing is that they are meeting regularly and holding conversations and trying to find a compromise. but negotiations have been very hard at the same time. they have a not impacted polar supports of for the war. and ukraine have not impacted the middle. terry deliveries to a significant extent and pulling in ukraine, continue to stand against our common enemy while trying to solve this of bi lateral issue. yet farmers have been protesting now in poland for a year, initially spurred on by the former right wing government. now how big of a challenge are the farmers pro charge is going to be for the new government led by donald tusk. so they're definitely
9:20 pm
a challenge. this is perhaps not the, the biggest issue that it's uh, the government has to deal with, but definitely top of the agenda, especially in view the fact that pulling will be holding its local elections very soon next week actually. so this is an issue that has a wide supports in the population, in the sense that's of farmers and what the protests that they are voicing are supported by wide segments of the population, including hunters and other groups of supporters. and therefore, this is definitely a very high on um, the government's agenda, of course, of the war being the top priority because it's a security issue is ever since imposing that ukraine's leaders recognize and empathize with the flight that, that farmers are in now and have been in for the past 2 years,
9:21 pm
i do think that there is a acknowledgment of the difficulties on both sides of from on the one hand, poland being aware of the fact that you premiums are at war and they're in a dramatic situation. and poland is entirely supportive of ukrainians fighting against the common enemy at the same time ukrainians wanting to come forward with different forms of compromises. and acknowledging that the issue of agriculture is one that is highly strenuous in these relations. and i think what's important to remember in these bilateral relations is that whatever happens now in whatever way these, this issue is treated as important going towards the future, because ukraine will eventually become an e u member. yeah. more into voltage is always good with the german martial funded more so we appreciate your time tonight in your dallas. thank you. thank you sl
9:22 pm
10 your hair style. get you fired? well apparently not anymore in for you. it's the country's lower house of parliament today passed a bill banning workplace discrimination based on how people wear their hair. estella works as a consultant. she's had to navigate the tangled politics of hair as a black woman in france since she was a child. the brother designedly, when i was younger, i remember lamenting the lack of salons and even hair products. there was a time when, unfortunately we had to use products designed for european hair and not adapted to our hair. wedged with the attendance of a friend salon owner, odd info encourages women to take pride in their natural in hair, especially if they've been told it's unprofessional, since i'm the focus and they say, thank you because thank of you. thank to, sorry,
9:23 pm
i really understand my here and i can, i can well then natural, the way i am not strong here means it's not been straightened. wood heat or chemicals, some black french women saying their employers have tutton, fired them for it. and be all of this so far drafted this bill to band discrimination based on head texture glint color and style, which is the i took the of so at this time i'm thinking of all the people who in the work environment made the effort of straightening the hands, he gives a job really and they'll be able to say, be careful, mr. employer in the business discrimination. and you'll face sanctions such as prison or a fine. that's why i think fundamentally that we expand to this legislation. it back at the federal and the consultants is francis draft law. protect anyone who wants to feel comfortable being themselves the. there's no reason to
9:24 pm
be ashamed of who you are, whether it's your hair or even the fact that you don't have any. it can be an issue for bald men, for instance, to feel less valued because they're bald. all of this, this law, the way i see it is that today we're going even further towards taking down these barriers of discrimination that it's from the french lawmakers approve the bill on thursday, which audio faced opposition from the far right? who believe friends already has enough laws to protect against discrimination? well, artificial intelligence or humans which or who brings a better beer, researches and built and decided to investigate the preferences of our pallets and the results. they could leave some with a hangover. there is a complex string containing thousands of chemical compounds, exactly which chemicals gift via sac new room is happened, a mystery to science until now. so the chemistry is something that we can measure
9:25 pm
scientifically. the aroma is what humans perceive. so it's what you think of a spaced when you drink and smell the beer. and that's something we can not measure scientifically. it's, it's normally done by having people faced the beer and then nothing down. what they think of the machine learning. reading aloud is for the 1st time to connect adults and to go from the chemistry and predict how all those molecules together would be perceived by humans. hundreds of chemical traits from 1000 based why identified by scientists. those traits within linked to sensory pro funding data from 16 professional, bad taste as and more than a 180000 online reviews from the rate the website using this sensory data and bids kind of cool profile. so i just train day i to predict which ingredients taste is great, enjoy the most. there was an adapted according to
9:26 pm
a recipes manual networks. taste is rated how much they liked it compared to know my. i adjusted their machine learning models could predict from a b as chemistry, how it would taste and be appreciated by people in this study with an accuracy of a 2 percent. compare that to conventional models which could predict the best tastes of success. an accuracy of between 50 and 60 percent despite i success. so i just came, bruise can relax for now. anyway. r a i models are not replacing brewers. they only predict how the chemistry of a beer would need to change to maybe make it better, or to change specific features of the beer. but it's still up to the brewers to make that happen from a recipe, right? the brewers use malt them hops and water in east, and it's up to them to use their draft to try and get through the result that the a i want. so you still need to the books. what's at the mixtures from
9:27 pm
a i can be scaled up, depends on how willingboro is, would be to use it. it is a reminder of our top story. the convicted a crypto currency king and sam, bakeman fried, has been sentenced to 25 years in prison for fraud. e swindled thousands of customers out of millions of dollars after a short break. i'll be back to take you through the day tonight. well, you should mind your money if you go crypto will be right back the
9:28 pm
they have to conceal their sexual orientation, l g, b, t, people in cameras. they communicate through a code. a code appears threatened with imprisonment, torture and murder. where does his hatred come from? the country for being date was once respected homophobia in cameroon. in 45 minutes on d, w, the,
9:29 pm
the new will tell you, be, we are happy that we are boxing the story. we have a, getting a visa is more difficult than finding gold hosted to you and for the future about what's going on in the industry. instead of being discussed across the continent, dw news, africa every friday on d w. the one of mankind's oldest ambitions could be within reach. what is it really is possible to reverse the researchers and scientists all over the world for you know, race against time?
9:30 pm
they are peers and rivals with one daring goals to help smart nature, the more likes watching it on youtube. dw documentary, is it real reform or just another? re run a question for the palestinian authority's new government presented thursday in the occupied westbank. the 2nd question, what if anything, does this mean in gaza? how boss control gossip? well, nothing if you're these really prime minister benjamin netanyahu says there will be no boss in gaza once this more is over. so tonight, 2 questions for him. what will that end look like and how many more people will have to die along the way. i break off from berlin, this is the day the
9:31 pm
.

13 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on