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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  April 5, 2024 10:30pm-11:00pm CEST

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of the supply chain process, all that massive. illegal leather stats may stood on d. w, the aggrieved mistake, and a serious violation of the standard operating procedures. that's the result of israel's internal investigation into the strength that killed $78.00 workers and gaza. 2 officers have been fired. 3 commanders have been reprimanded, but for the white house that's not enough. israel strongest backer wants to see the mountain. yahoo! government take full responsibility for the death and make protecting civilians. it's number one priority, while israel and says it's number one priority is eliminating homos. it has agreed to open more 8 routes and took also that the after unprecedented warnings from the united states of consequences. if it didn't, could this be a turning point?
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the war, i'm gonna go fairly in berlin and this is the day i of the attacking peoples or objects involved, gene in humanitarian assistance. my amount to i was trying to give us this was a mad, not a military action or a special services operation. but we some, some spits young and just 6 months more humanitarians have been killed in this conflict. then in any war of the modern era, the human rights of these valleys must be in short as well. we're no different. we deserve no less. israel's obligation, its responsibility to maximize protection for civilians to make that a priority also coming up 30 years since the
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genocide in rwanda. how far has the country come on the long and winding path of reconciliation? a good club to do? we have a good country and that has brought us together and we love each other. but it does not rule out the possibility that there could still be remnants of genocide ideology in some people's hearts you can't see and people's heart finality. welcome to the show. we start tonight with the results of an internal investigation into the killing of $78.00 workers and gaza. these really military has expressed deep sorrow over what it concluded was a grave mistake. it says 2 officers have been fired and 3 commanders reprimanded for the strife on the world. central kitchen convoy, an inquiry carried down by israel's military, found that its forces mistakenly assessed the 3 vehicles had been taken over by him, off militants, and that drone operators ms. stokers, humanitarian work are holding
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a bag for gun man. the 8 group says it coordinated its movement with the military and is calling for an independent inquiry. they believe israel's military cannot credibly investigate its own failure. were you a secretary of state anthony blinking says the us is carefully reviewing israel's inquiry into the killings. it's very important that as well as taking full responsibility for this incident. it's also important that it appears to be taking steps to hold those responsible accounts even more important. it's making sure that the steps are taken going forward to ensure that something like this can never happen again from us for that. yeah, when decatur to president biden, israel would be making further changes to his procedures to make sure that those who are providing assistance to people who so desperately need it and gaza are protected. so we're going to be looking very carefully what those steps are,
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how it achieves better. deacon function, better coordination. so that aid workers are protected. that was antony blinking. they're speaking earlier today. well, our correspondence, rebecca reuters and jerusalem is following all of this closely. and she told us more about the results of his internal inquiry. the results came out just a few hours ago here in israel, from the military, from that. so cold independent investigation though it is an internal investigation done by a separate branch within the is really a military. and the basically identified this, these strikes were carried out in serious violation of military prior to gall protocol. and it says that we carried out ju, to mr. identification. that in fact, the, the military thought that there was a threat. they thought that somebody thought that they saw a gunman on this humanitarian con boy, that was going uh, this was earlier before the firing. actually happened that was going to this warehouse and that they thought that that gunman then proceeded to go with this
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convoy. and that's, of course why they're saying that the, the convoy was been fired upon. you know, we, as we know from the reporting of the incident, the, the, the convoy was fired upon the 1st call. the 1st a vehicle was fired upon and the people tried the people that were still living. we tried to get out, go to the 2nd, and the 3rd, and i work, you know, it was continually fired at so that is being identified as a mis identification and in and in direct violation of military procedure. as you've mentioned, we've got to a senior military personnel has been dismissed and of some have been reprimanded, including the head of the southern come on that looks off to the military. that is basically carrying out the operation in gaza. it also says that this is a breakdown in the chain of come on, but we've been reporting on this week from internal a tunnel reporting that's being done here in israel magazine called a 972 plus 972,
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that they're in fact is a, is a gross breakdown of the china of come on in the military and that has been throughout this, in fact, that a machinery has been used to identify targets. and in fact, there is very little in way of chain of come on. so if that is indeed confirmed that could potentially go some way to explaining how something like this could happen. that was our correspondence, rebecca rivers in jerusalem. well, they used foreign policy and teachers that burrell says, a decision by israel to open up more core doors for 8 and to gaza won't be enough to stop storage ation in the territory. israel's move came after pressure from the us on thursday, the opening of the arus crossing into the palestinian territories north was among several steps approved by israel's cabinet to let in more humanitarian assistance. the 4th and i started will also be reopened to process 8 shipments bound for gaza and more deliveries will pass through param shalom in the south. and we can dig deeper now is making non tow. she's a senior humanitarian advisor of the international charity action aid in london.
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welcome to the w nikki at israel, announcing the opening of 2 more corps doors for humanitarian aid into gaza. how much will that contribute to alleviating the suffering of causes and seems a much, any action to get more agents because it's something that we welcome. this is something that is long overdue. so what we know is that the level of need it's overwhelming. every single person and gaza is hungry and people are desperate. it has only been able to enter guys, welcomed us to crossing so far. ras, one trance along both of which runs the far south kinds of city and so far the to have greater access to the north, harrison ash where it has been closed. however, it's really difficult to know at this stage exactly how much impacts opening these new interest plants or how it is already really disappointing to see that these really, governments have already specified these openings will be temporary. so what does
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that mean will be long enough to really make a difference because sometimes opening a cost, things doesn't solve the facts that distributing 8 right now in gaza is extremely, extremely dangerous. that's because of the real i missed from apartment and the roads being destroyed. and all of these are undergoing a series of history checks and deliveries, which have meant that a new crossing to make a difference. we really need more clarity, more transparency, inconsistency in the 8 screening. and we have to have assurances that this will be linked with the security of 8 workers in gaza. and not israel will comply with international. she might turn long. yeah. over 280 workers, if i'm not mistaken, have been killed since the war and gaza broke out, trying to cater to the people there. how does that impact the work of organizations like her own absences, the bushes as garza is the most dangerous place for 8 workers right now, you will have heard the news of the 78 workspace with world central kitchen,
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which were killed with a club by um, which was hit by and history strike. it's absolutely devastating that pick your mind, show workers have lost their lives or simply doing their jobs. and just attempting to desperately bring needs and food supplies to people at the bank of time. and that would support close friend pending to pro and to how this tragic cure it and we stand. and so the dart see with our colleagues. but the reality is that more than 208 workers, mostly post indians have been killed over the last 6 months. and getting 8 into guys that it really is incredibly challenging. it really is incredibly dangerous. that has a lot of complications, this just because of the frequent communication blackouts. because the damage and cost structure, the danger posed by the severe nature of the attacks and the air strikes. yeah. um aid workers really need to have it guarantees that they can tire the work safely. it is really just important to keep reiterating that to try to gesture this week
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was not an anomaly. it is what is happening with more than $200.00 works ceiling. but also we work with different partners in gaza and have a number of colleagues on the ground for doing their absolute best to help people, whether that's providing meals or dignity kits or offerings like a social supports. and we also work with a hospital in the north of guys that one of the 10 hospitals, partially functioning in guys are right now. yeah. and it's, it gets in november 3 of the doctors at that hospital, our water hospital which is run by action. it's part of the work killed after building was hit by bombing. so all these instances are completely unacceptable. she monitoring 8 workers are not and should never be targets. it really makes it incredibly difficult to support you monitoring assistance as nikki and ask your senior humanitarian advisor at action aid in london. thank you so much for your time. i. the report suggests
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ukraine is preparing for another strike against the courage bridge, which connects russia to occupied crimea. the bridge currently provides the safest road connection from the russian mainland to crimea, which russia annexed from ukraine legally in 2014 now keeps forces have managed to hold the traffic on the bridge with 2 separate attacks. since russia launched its full scale invasion in 2022 once with a truck bomb and once with naval drones, russia has managed to repair the damage. now, the british newspaper, the guardian is quoting ukrainian intelligence official, saying ukraine is planning a 3rd attack has the means to carry it out and expects to destroy the bridge. finally this summer, let's bring in the military analyst mike martin from king's college in london. like good to see you again. now if you crane is so confident it has the tools to take
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out the courage bridge. what are they waiting for? oh well, as with the minute, 2 shots, a j a is question is saying things as well as doing things as a narrative to be had here on ukraine. you know, he's on the back foot at the moment on the battlefield. the trying to get more weapons from the americans. and so just to do this is not to get the full benefit from it. much better to announce it and allow it to play out. over a few weeks, the speculation caused the russians and say, and then to do it, because then it dominates the media narrative for a longer period of time. all right, then let's get speculating. we saw ukrainian drums drank deep into russia this week, but against target small scale probably didn't expect different story here. would drones like this be useful against a heavily defended target like the bridge and one that russia is expecting to be struck this? i think so, the program is actually maybe not defense head. i think the problem is the amounts
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of explosives you can carry on a drone. so if you're going to hit a bridge with a missile, or with you know, something in the water, then that can carry quite a lot of explosive. and as you can see from your filters that those, those bridges a pretty serious bit. so kit, a lot of the size that you tried is using a quite small, some of them are bigger, but the bigger ones, the slow uh, they're easier to shoot down the smaller ones uh hard to shoot down, but they don't carry enough explosives. so off drawings might be used, but i suspect not. what about c drones? definitely an option. so, you know, as you said in your package, that was something they did previously when they hit the cartridge. they will also use the drones really successfully against lots of russian naval ships. so the kidneys had a really successful run of sinking rushes ships and the bunch. and the c drive is i'm a particular guy up against the russian ships,
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but also against the bridge. i suspect as well is the, is quite a new technology and a lot of ships and bridges and the way that we defend these things traditionally hasn't taken accounts of these very small online drones that doug, every day they sort of help uh, either a surface level just below the surface, they're quite hard to detect. so that's definitely an option. mm hm. the, at this point your brain hasn't received any western weapons that could do the job . is there anything new in their arsenal that could allow them to take it down from good aside from, you know, the 2 options that have already been displayed? yeah, well, so we will close the drains see, see, see drones. but i do actually think that they're all these cruise missiles, the, the case, given the storm, shadows, the friends, you've given them a similar system. and there's obviously all this discussion about the germans and tours and all the rest of it. but those do have the range and they also have the
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capability, you know, they carry $500.00 pounds of $500.00 kilos of explosives. so a couple of those would be very damaging to the bridge. and in fact, a several months ago, they used some brushes supplied storm shadows to take out all spa, that's a heavy damage, some of the bridges on the other side of columbia connecting crimea to the ukrainian mainland. so i think they're awesome options. i mean, i don't know whether they have an ice storm child is left. um they were given a whole load at the tail end of last year, but i think that's another option me. so let's look at that taurus discussion for a 2nd. i know we've talked about it a lot, but western governments have explicitly said that the courage bridge is a legitimate target. but, you know, neither germany with the taurus missiles or you the us with, you know, all the options they have on the table will give them the tools to do it. why do you think that is, as i did i, i find that a bit confusing. so the,
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you know, as we discussed, the, the technological capabilities that, with these types of missile systems, it is possible that, you know, political restrictions have been put on those missile systems. we do know, for instance, earlier in the war, ukraine was given missile systems, but explicitly they would tell you can't use these inside russia, you currently use them inside ukrainian territory. and we have have actually seen that the last couple of weeks and all of these ukranian the tax on russian oil infrastructure, the report servicing in the american press that the americans actually awesome to, to pull back from that and not do it. and then, and then the americans reverse that position, is that okay, go ahead and i think there's actually a little bit of confusion in west and capitals about mikayla. there is in terms of arm supply, but i think also there's a bit of confusion about how far they want to, you know, the sites that you guys, you can go in and we can see that on the battlefield. united. that's why you craze
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in a difficult position. that's why russia was slowly, slowly making small gains on the land. and you claim how much of an advantage would destroying the bridge bring to the ukrainians. wouldn't do anything to level the playing field. well, let them use the landscape, says the bridge is fueling the war or yeah, i, i probably think that's correct. the, the, the bridge is a major supply rate for russian forces, both in crimea, but also in not south and base if you cry. and so the, the south from casa, and you've obviously got the, the big river and the, the credit is holding the saw, the south bank and, or the area that there's only 2 ways you can supply. that one is over the coach bridge on the other is, is alone that little it's most of land is between the don't boss and
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a house on the bit when mary, a pool is an, there's any one radio link that was b shall do with time. and as a highway and obviously you comp but not sure the highway but the cush page with the royal lake. and also you know, to like most way going both ways is a major supply rate. so i think that's the 1st thing is a hugely important strategic supply route for the russians. the other point, of course, is the symbolism of it. this was a bridge, the it putins big idea. he opened it, he drive across it, he took the 1st train across it, he was a, you know, the driver of the train or, you know, so i paid and that kind of opening. and so this is very symbolic. and to drop the bridge, i think, you know, as we said, they the kinds of trial that they going to do it, they're going to get the maximum and information advantage. lots of mind games with the russians. it's, it's really both of those things is both the logistics and it's a symbolism and the information war. i'm the if you try and control the bridge and
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they'll get both of those adults just and the world will be watching that bridge closely though. is mike martin, always a pleasure. thank you so much for your time. thank you. or rhonda is marking 30 years since the genocide. that's awesome. 800000 people killed in her thick acts of violence over the course of about 100 dates. the killings were mostly carried out and by extreme is from the hutus. the countries ethnic minority majority, the victims, were the minority tootsie population, but also moderate. who would choose warning, much of what you're about to see, you may find distressing. april 1994 and a plane carrying lawanda is presidents. just bermonte and counts of politics shut down of okay, calling juvenile. happy you. ramona, and sit through and how to mirror a kilt along with everyone on board. those made the ethnic hutus the next day. the
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genocide begins either 100, a scans of many who 2 extremes slots, a hundreds of thousands, mostly ethnic tutsis, orchestrated by the rewan denobia militia, neighbors turning on neighbors. the club submissions these thousands heads of churches, many of the being offered to show and says that they would be safe, but nowhere is safe. the judge is the lights are recognized as the science of numerous mass killings. the extreme threats of life pushes masses of people through wanda's borders. sexual violence is also used as a weapon with as many as $250000.00 women rate during the genocide behind the buns. the violence, is it possible for power between one this ruling hutus and the towards the
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dominated lawanda apache uptake front rebel great. the mass murder eventually coming to an end. when all the fighters reach the cap to pick out a little while in july 19, 94 may have to do that by pull to gummy. the wind is coming presidents in today's the fall i p f takes control of the country arresting that was accused of being involved in the genocide. over the years since, tens of thousands of, of london's have been convicted. but 100 small suspects are still at large. ringback the numbers of the data are almost impossible to comprehend. take the example of the me, i'm not the agenda site memorial side. a single church were 5000 people were murdered over the course of just 3 days. the nobody is mario miller reports from the sight of one of the worst massacres of the genocide. it's not
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often that sometimes finds the strings to come here to a former church. now a memorial to the rhonda genocide, she says this is the place where she refused to die eclipse loans funded assemblies . coming back to this place 30 years later, i think it is still a big wound. but it helps me to remember many of the people who died here, man, according to their belongings, are still here frozen in time. and each piece tells the tale, a person's elbows tightly tied behind their back before being executed, toddlers killed with their parents. the killings that started a few days earlier, many to 2 families, including some talent, had children suited refuge here. thinking they'd be safe, good, and not the 1st. they threw grenades into the church and many people lost their
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legs. i was so much screaming who those who tried to leave the church, were hacked with machetes, a place of saying to me and into a burial ground. the remains of more than 45000 people rest at the memorial side. someone display a reminder of domestic shantelle managed to escape. a judge was injured at a corner where we fled to a nearby school when i felt something hit me in the mouth and other parts of my body where i was holding my kids. i think it was a grenade, then i saw that one of my babies had been killed. and that able, she had a nearby bushes at the end at a home with the who to initiate committing the genocide found her intact her with the machete to a rock i to her head. the friend lying next to her hiding under banana leaves was done to life safety. so they came back off and they rammed a spear. and to me,
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mocking us saying you cockroach has don't die easily. i stayed in there for some time. my wounds were rod and comedy had maggots falling out of them. days later has been found and brought her to safety, the surgical moment of se another community is trying to reconcile with a past and move the move in its form of perpetrators and the families of the victims, left side by side mean noises, 2 brothers and a cousin were killed during the genocide. these quin knobby but they were brutally killed hacked here and here in the head in the throat, all parts of the bodies shred it was done by them. oh my god brothers. i loved the hands that would have supported me down. the man who killed them supreme at that bottle was tried and one of wanda's poles genocide, tribunals, and spent 12 years in prison. on his release,
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he asked to be useful forgiveness and she accepted. now the regularly participating group activities together with other former perpetrators and victims. it's all part of the government program to create unity among brandon's re establish trust following the genocide that split communities would. would that work for sion tied to could see, forgive her attackers and killers of her baby what, what do we have a good country and that has brought us together and we loved each other. but it does not rule out the possibility that there could still be remnants of genocide audiology in some people's hearts. you can't see and people's heart, it's an older woman. her son was killed during the genocide would now be a grown like other kids and finish up some kind of hopes that generation will be able to put the genocide and the divisions of the past behind them to and that's or
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show the make sure to stay informed, stay engaged and stay in touch, she can follow and contact our team on social media. our handle is at dw news of the latest headlines you're looking for. there's always our website that's d w dot com. thank you so much for spending part of your day with us by the
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old friends. new front is nature still prepared to defend itself in case of an emergency. the world's largest military alliance has been maintaining stability for 75 years. now, some weaknesses call beginning to show up from this new threats made in 15 minutes on the w india. 50 or 60, if the quote is one way to haven't gone. and that'll come in. and this has happened
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in the last decade. this is not very long ago, let me talk about it even in our life. go based and g o is helping to protect endangered marine environment. and that's how the, how the eco indian in 90 minutes on dw, the dw. sure. on fix, on the inside. every day, the world wide web feel free to come all the world. we can take the different w call, the world unpack pulse of your info is and all the input u, v w story. now, on to the code name project,
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cassandra re determined through our investigation that has bull uh, was operating like a global drug carts. not somebody normally seizures organizations. the object to financially drain has gone up and bring them down. the team agents from the american drug enforcement agency, i mean, as well as another whole lot. they wanted to go after their money. they had from lies themselves. we needed them to reveal that so world and to their own people. why did the us government suddenly shut down project cassandra in 2016? 03 pod documentary series. i'm asking has paula stats may 4th on d, w. the,
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the, the, the, the we news line from berlin is ro punishes the army officers involved in this week's deadly drill and strikes on an 8 convoy and gone to officers are fired, and senior commanders reprimanded over the strikes that killed 78 workers. israel says their vehicles were misidentified as having her last gunman inside, also coming up thousands journals in iran for the funeral of revolutionary guard members killed in a striking syria earlier this week. their commander has vowed revenge against the israel, which has, if you have commented on striking less shaken not the.

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