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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  May 19, 2024 3:00pm-3:15pm CEST

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the, the, you're watching data we can use live from the rift opens in israel, is war cabinet is a senior member to leave his impulse and nice. and any guns threatens to resign and list is a plan for a place to oregon. so it gives the government a 3 week deadline. it's heavy fighting spreads across the gaza strip. meanwhile, basic supplies wrong desperately log in, gaza as finding intensifies between each route and how much a trickle of a to arrive through a new entry point 5 experts i it won't be enough. 10 record flooding drowns cities across europe and the wind to wills communities. grapple with the cost of a change in climate as clean operations,
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the jared raid will come to the program. crux had begun to show and ease rouse volt cabinets all over the future of the gaza strip. for my defense minister benny guns is threatening to resign from the cabinets unless the government comes up with a concrete plan for a post full garza, he had joining does a show of unity of to home us launch the october 7 tara attack. now gone. so say it's a 3 week deadline wrapping up the pressure on prime minister benjamin netanyahu. what your file, what is right? the soldiers of his lang, credible bravery on the front. some of the people who send them to battle acting with trout as close to a company, they tell me to come on the war cabinet miss right down and right to find an action plan that will lead to the realization of 6 strategic objectives of national
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importance. i think by the 8th of july, if you book the only because benjamin netanyahu chooses to follow the zealots and elite the nation into an abyss of will resigned from the government control. so even if by any chance did actually resign, the move would not 3 good for a selection. so what is he trying to achieve? which is ultimatum? i put that question to dig up with use correspondent in his round time, your crime, a lot of things he's trying to position himself to tell the in the message to the is really public many to tell them where he stands when he was always seen as a voice of reason, a full meant defence and mister coming from the military background together with god, the eyes in codes there from the opposition, joining the small uh, a war, a cabinet and a thing right now, it's the time for benny guns as he said to no to for a change in strategy, a cooling for a concrete plan. as you mentioned for a day of to in a garza,
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he put out the, his, a several points. but also he said, you know, he accused basically prime minister benjamin netanyahu being in decisive and not putting the interest of is, was national security 1st, but to holding on actually to keep his cabinet together. of course, it has been strongly rejected by the prime minister of any minute to know himself. but this think uh, a guns also is picking up a bit on the mood and is rather people asking 8 months into the war. where is this going uh, with the international pressure mounting. uh, what is happening in the last off of why are the hostages are north? why there is no progress in those talks to bring the remaining hostages that are being husband garza uh, back home. and also in light of uh, old region, those threats uh, there's still very much on the table, you know,
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a potential escalation in the north uh with uh, his blogs. so people, one to say are responsible government that is handling uh, those are pass as well. tanya, separately to the us national security advisor jake sullivan, is holding talks with benjamin netanyahu. you're in east rylon sunday. what can you tell us about this meeting as well? the national security advisor take sullivan is meeting as we understand with the prime minister, but also with his counterparts and the national security here. you'll see this meeting with mr. guns. so he is interesting the coming a now from a saudi arabia, and that has been a lot of talk in recent months about, you know, a security lines between a saudi arabia and u. s. and the us trying to get is well to create to some concessions a saying this could lead to normalization a between so yeah, so do you rate the end is well, but it seems also rather a fall off because then and it's, and y'all would have to agree to something like
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a palestinian state would something he has rejected so far, but of course it comes at a very close the point that we are seeing on the ground defensive in the house of expanding. and that has been in recent weeks, a red line for the u. s. administration. so we expect them to hear from a jake sullivan on that. as we are seeing, of course, about 800000 people. that's an estimate. now, from the united nations of being displaced, once again, a dire situation, you many turn situation across scholars and intensifying a bombardment stairs. so we're expecting to hear also the stands of the white house . and this situation right now, dw time, your crime, it air inter ridgeland time. you thank you, scene time slicing between his route and how much is intensifying the noise of gaza is seeing some of the faces bottles of the wall sofa while in the south. hundreds of thousands of fleeing fighting in rough uh but there is legal shelter to
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run, to the reason know and to grief and desperation and gaza relatives a morning victims of another attack outside a hospital in the city of dare l. bala. it hate and nearby refuge account that if it lives them instead of my uncle's house was targeted last night. it was directly hit and there were only civilians in the house and it was headed up a married way by the israeli army. last my grandmother, my uncle, and my aunt and this but very good tag doing better. but a yeah, these are the billions was i'm what did they do wrong? of being killed or wounded is not the only danger that palestinian civilians are facing across the territory. their daily struggle is to find food, water, and other basic supplies. i like life is unbearable. there's no water. we bring water from near to see. we walk 5 to 6 kilometers and bring 4 to 5 container,
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some water when it's built on the road cabin, middle of a plenty. these trucks are transporting much needed. a that's been delivered through a us build appear in central gaza. a group say it's nowhere near enough for a ravaged territory on the verge of famine. normally, if we need water, we need food. we need a decent life to live. we want to return to our homes, we want tents, we find nothing to live in. all countries to live a decent life except us look now or almost the entire population of gaza is dependent on humanitarian aid to survive. but israel's restrictions on a deliveries are still in place. and the fighting continues. is really operations in the southern city of rough. i have been in the spotlight recently, but the patterns of violence and struggle for life repeating themselves across the
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territory. and now the news now russian, it strikes have killed at least 4 people in ukraine's 2nd be this is biggest cd ca keys according to the regional golfing, to at least 8 others were injured. northeast and city has come on to the constant bombardment recently. as russia presses a hate within your offensive chief has accused russia of deliberately targeting civilians which must go has consistently denied, but many are coming on the fire regardless. the 2 children, the plane here. when the guide ariel boom hid this private yard in central har keith now officials are assessing the damage. while the father is being treated by paramedics, his wife, and 2 children, all in hospital strikes like this one has
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been heating ukraine, 2nd largest c. today is russia continues, it's offensive in the northeast. for some, there's been no respite from weeks of attacks. the 2nd strike on this woman's house the thumbs. it needs to be really, it's exactly the same place as the last page. it was east of 2022. the russians were selling car keys and 2 of to live and i've just finished restoring the house myself. now, i don't know what to do or even tens of thousands have already been evacuated from hard to for region. but some remain in defiance of the russian on set you up
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a whole. so i was eating the kitchen and went to another room to drink coffee. i had an explosion. i didn't. the 1st source last night in glass was lying everywhere . then there was another explosion, 2 o'clock was good and wanted to run away so, but i didn't know where to go to do that, couldn't just put it like i lost it, you clicked on. there's no code that you got sort of a small har keep. residents may soon have to decide whether to stay on this russia capture small villages in the area. it is fee is that no way will be safe for civilians or clean up work has to be gone across the waste in europe, off to days of a heavy ryan's tree good, massive flooding. this has a non dated areas from the netherlands to easily and frosts. here in germany, official save the southwest in state of this island. so the west flooding in the league stairs use heavy downfalls caused dikes to breach in several areas, leaving streets underwater and hines. ruined residents in northeast and belgium
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have also begun cleaning off after experiencing with the countries prime minister called the worst slots in the regions history. i'd like to welcome professor malcolm a, ronnie. he's the director of the research center on climate change impact at the university of padre and easily a professor. welcome to you before we move on to i guess some of the effects and causes of this. i just wanted to discuss with you the floods in northern easily that have been happening over the last few days. but you could, you just bring this up to speed on what the situation is locked in now. the absolutely good afternoon. first of all, um well uh it's been uh difficult. um uh, p o the last uh, 3 days um does that have been uh, heavy down for is to give you an idea uh in uh, in a matter of 2 days in some areas. um the equivalent of the whole month of may on average has been received. so it's a, it's a large amount,
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very large amount of water and you'll see the images now on video. it's been uh uh not the need to the, uh, the number the and then it all in particular had been uh, everything impacted that had been breaches in levies and uh, flooding. um 2 bridges has the uh, being swept the with a near the chain. nothing's been easily. um, so it's been uh quite a bit of uh, of damage. yes. and the, even the event has been quite accelerating or used in some areas. we associated with a return period, a frequency of about 2 to 300 years. so on average, we get these type of events only uh, between 2, every $200.30 a year. it's just an incredible explaining,
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thank you for that description and bringing us up to date. i just wanted to sort of, aside from all of this flooding that's happening in western europe, it's happening a little around the world right now. the old around, across different regions. i'm thinking particularly afghanistan right now as well. to what extent is this climate change in action? the way we see and we see the big event in the sewer in brazil, and we see i've got this thing as you mentioned. and our experience is that these events are seemed to be becoming more frequent. but clearly we shouldn't rely just on, on personal protection of the data. tell us that this is actually the case from here is part of i has a very long time series of rain for that has to be measured, seen 1725. so almost 300 years and by analyzing these dates are you can clearly see that things have been changing,
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start the done to the more or less in the meat of last century. 1950. that has been a rosley 2025, presenting fees in next week. and we know why we know we know there is a basic mechanisms that is as possible for the as a side from the things increasing temperature makes allows the i to ask you to hold more water. every degree of being fee is a 7 percent increase in the amount of water the atmosphere can hold and the actual cost surprises that whatever and event happens does more water that the downforce professor malcolm or ronnie. i would have loved to have kept talking to you. unfortunately, we're nearly out of time, but i really wanna thank you for your time today. thank you. that's professor mock . i'm a ronnie, director of the research center on climate change impact at the university of patio . thank you. ok so much. i more on that story of coal, some dw comes,
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please do follow us to take off the jar drain invalid. thank you for the good news. innovation, green the green revolution global. so listen to a whole lot of crime. it's probably up to speed if the carriers subscribe to those channels to subscribe to plan. it's a the.

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