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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  May 28, 2024 12:02am-12:30am CEST

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for displaced people, blaise killing, dozens of civilians sheltering there. then you, when the you say there horrified at this latest loss of life, especially in light of the i, c. j, ordering israel halt it's operations and rough altogether. and while israel admits to having made a tragic mistake, the incident is putting israel's already strained relations with its western allies to yet another test article for lucian, berlin. and this is the day the, the found, the gold and the young man who has been cut into pieces got the idea targeted to some us commodities. ross whose hands were drenched in his riley block. so they would know, wanted people here know how much i think we have been here moving down. there is
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no safe space in the in government. civilian casualties of desperately sat. but this is a must one stop also coming off the thorny issue of migration ahead of the u. elections critics. and overall of asylum laws will lead to close borders and dangerous deputations. these are the scope of over the inflating expectations. but now both as we go to the bows, expecting you to have fixed uh, its own issues when it comes to migration policy. i'm fairly sure welcome to the show. today is really prime minister. it's a tragic mistake to the head of one raw. it's proof that rafa has turned into hell on earth. 3 days after the icj, i ordered israel to hold all military action in the southern go as in the city,
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a deadly air strike. they're killed at least $45.00 civilians and injured dozens more among a wave of international condemnation. israel has launched an investigation into the incident. meanwhile, those who are sheltering and the 10 city are once again left in limbo, was nowhere to turn. the aftermath of an is riley ash strike on a refugee camp in rough. uh, how much officials in garza say the attack killed dozens and injured to many more survivors described. well, that just going to say a line on this. we pulled up people who were reading and unbearable state. we pulled out children who are in pieces. we pulled out the young and elderly people the far in the campus on real, most of the displays to you didn't survive for the solomon family. the strike means displacement for the 8th time. what time, what am i supposed to do?
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what am i to go? tell me when and how long will this go on? i have israel should pinpoint to place for us and tell us to live or die that this way does not work. how long will we be disgraced like this for the israeli army said it was targeting to see me, i'm ask amanda's as well as prime minister benjamin netanyahu said the incident was a terrible mistake. a little more time. i'm not going to long despite the most. if it's not to how non combatants something unfortunately went tragically wrong. we were investigating the incident and will reach conclusions because this is that policy is on the neutral on. learn know for us, every noncombatant that is heard is a tragedy. so how much it's a strategy, this is the whole difference. there was injured any attack could take into a hospital and central garza and so now as well continues,
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it's up to the actions in gaza. and that's despite the ruling by the united nations quote, to stop. as we heard, prime minister netanyahu was acknowledged that a tragic mistake had been made. and the idea of has launched an investigation into the attack. you know, we use rebecca rivers has more on the reaction inside. israel is well within israel . obviously this is big, huge level of coverage though the media coverage hasn't been showing the same images as we've been saying internationally. it's not being discussed in quite the same manner. we have seen that statement or seen those remarks from a prime minister benjamin netanyahu holding this tragic accident. though he said that this would not change the cost of the war that they would continue to fight her mos, that they would continue to search for the hostages up. they of course have said that they are going to investigate this preliminary investigation. say that the bombing spot, the fire, they said that the preliminary is, you know,
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looks look into this when they were preparing to make the strides, carry out the strike. the military says that they did not believe that any civilians would be hummed. of course, the investigation will be going on and the us is also cooling for that investigation that they are also trying to assess what's been happening with the help of the ideas that was rebecca ritter's from jerusalem. well, a you foreign ministers have called on israel to respect the i. c j's order to stop it's military offensive. and rough on talks in brussels today, the block foreign affairs chief, the, the international community faced di. lemme on how to ensure compliance with the decision from the us top court. rosie richard was that the talks these protesters rallying outside the venue in brussels, say israel has crossed a red lane with strikes on russell, despite the world court order to hold operations there. the words of condemnation are also heard. insight, there is not safe place in gossip touching and refugees can and canning
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and burning more than 40 people among them. many children can imagine how horrified we are all of us for this, such a bench for the 1st time since the october 7th attacks by him us and being soon bombarding the goals. are you members decided to demand details from israel on its compliance with human rights obligations, and an explanation of how it will comply with the recent ruling on russell on these are for these provisional court orders are binding and of course they must be followed. but we are currently experiencing the options and not to not of, for international human returning. your applies to everyone. and this is also the choice rate that you know, shaq fix you. so ministers have been pushing for tougher measures. i would say we have an empty bottle of 5 days a week or 10 days maxima while you have to fulfill these entries on this. and if not, then we have to take sentence business for me. what would be my proposal on the table?
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but that's unlikely to happen due to unity rules, and it's on popularity, which is really officials as the regard to the u. member states who might want to put some sanctions on this topic. again, why would you do that? why would your rewards terrorism in the face of what is happening right now? we have seen yesterday, rockets from rafa, going into eas, rather territory all the way up to television. so i really want to see who can not justify going in there. do you members also approved a plan to revise their rasa border assistants? mission seen in the speech. it was suspended in 2007 after him off to over goza. monday's move takes the you a step closer to supporting simpler border crossings, but they can't become a reality without backing from israel. egypt and palestinians, familiar with the block will keep shipping age toward the rough a border from afar, with living guarantee it will get to gardens indeed. and the author of that report,
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rosie bertrand joins, is now from brussels. rosie, are we seeing a shift in the use attitude towards israel's conduct in the cause of war? well, listen, this is a shift of sorts. it's only because it has really struggled to agree on any sort of action in response to this conflict ever since. so some of the attacks on october 7th, not because the book is divided between members who on the one end of the spectrum tend to really be seen as of and so with directly with the posted in call. so that includes, for example, state an island that recently recognized paula city and state who and at the other end of the spectrum, countries like hungry and check here that are really tend to be see a staunch supporters of israel. and somewhere in the middle, germany, obviously with it's historic, what do you think is a historic responsibility to protect jewish life? so moving forward, the fact that they have decided on something decided to call for what they. it's called an association council. that does seem to be
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a shift to me and it certainly has seemed really in response to this i, c j really be you as top court and the use for the fair. so if you'll sit very, i'll even side on his way into these talks here. brussels on monday and he felt about presented a dilemma. a dilemma on how to ensure enforcement of thought, ruling and respect for international fee agreements to call that meeting to call official talks with israel. that was quite unexpected. it was the 1st time since october 7th. so how exactly do we get here, rosie? so this is something called association cancel. it sounds like brussels jargon, but what it really means is that the, you and israel have something called an association agreement. it's a broad agreement accord, deal which governs things including trade. so that is of course, a potential key leverage that you may have know in terms of what that means going forward. it means that the, you can call on is really officials. it could be, for example, the prime minister to come to brussels,
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to explain how it complies with the human rights obligations which are spelled out in that agreement, that the association agreement, israel doesn't have to necessarily respond, but we know that there was an association council held back in 2022, and it's known as 1st time that this talks for much has been politicized and was in fact, decades over high it is in these official talks when you is really a relation for very strange, but up until 2022 and of course no, given the ongoing humanitarian catastrophe is the easy. is it in golf? so those relations are very much strange. again, if we heard of the your report, there are a lot of if and let's hear how much leverage does the you really have, how much ability to act quickly as you can. well, the ability to act quickly is very much consigned by these divisions because that you could have a significant leverage over both sides. it's a major trade partner of a some real. it's also a major donor to the postings. but because of these divisions, what we've seen so far, so the diplomatic weight has really late with washington on base the base agreement
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that we had. however, on monday to potentially move forward with reactivating, the use board or mission russell. that could be something where we see that you're trying to move from being a bystander to be more of a broker in trying to take center stage. but i should say, we are still very far off that there really needs to be a lot more negotiations to achieve that. first tuesday, they'll be corresponding, rosie burkhard, in brussels. many things always great to get your input. those who need protection on the side of a given protection to decide them. but we are the ones and you decide who comes to the european union and under what circumstances that european union fades to open the board for a few trees abolishes their rights to individual examination of asylum applications . and i say this is disgraceful, but now we have also to open the reset the legal economic a both ways we need to work on the migration. and yes, we need to have
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a resilient asylum system so that we make sure that the k us on our extra on nevada and despite our differences, i think one thing has to be clear that we need to end the dying and the mediterranean. those are the lead candidates for the upcoming european elections debating the issue of migration and asylum policy with an often difficult and divisive discussion. here in europe and an emotional 12, tens of thousands of people have died making the perilous journey across the mediterranean sea. the un says more than 3000 migrants died in 2023 alone as they attempted to reach your pain shores. and this marks the highest staff toll on this route. since 2017, the e. u has been struggling to deal with migrants and refugee seeking protection or searching for a better life. and the topic has become a major campaigning issue. he's always jack parents, reports from brussels, stranded by smugglers in the north african desert,
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well risking their lives at sea in the mediterranean of the desired destination for many of these people fleeing war and poverty is your up against in the final months before the election, the you rushed through a little to overhaul this migration policy, which 9 permits member states to transfer people to all the e u countries for asylum processing, and increases its ability to send people back. right, scripts, fee of the implications of this deal, mike, us. and if he's with find it very difficult. all right, and youtube's, this one, dement the means that you would be either committing human rights violations by a key on it's within its borders or supporting the eyes of oppressive regimes or militias. b, u has been the past few months, signing politically complicated deals with north african countries like to nivia egypt and morocco to persuade them to prevent migrants leaving that shows. despite the new little beefing up for the security and migrant for tons,
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governments in anti immigration countries as well as far right parties are continuing to come pain in the elections on a promise to end migration into the u. official figures. so you receive more than 1140000 asylum applications in 2023. the most since 2016 to give, which was deemed to be the height of the so called migration crisis. despite the use new laurel migration having already been agreed, you can rest assured that so the 720 members who are going to be elected into office here at the european parliament migration will be a topic that will continue to press on. but lots of the nice thing my job with the priorities of voters research study by your a barometer showed that the european citizens migration is only the 7th most important issue they'll consider when costing that ballots behind things like the economy, jobs, health, and defense. it is of higher importance for people in front line countries where
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migrants have been arriving like greece and easily. but experts say it will take time for the new deal to have an effect. it does make a difference, but we now have these are the forms, the issue is that because they will only be fully implemented in 2 years time. that is at least go over the inflating expectations. but now the thing is we go to the pose expecting you to have fixed uh, its own issues when it comes to migration policy and the way in which is a managers these phenomena then you, you deal migration may have been done, but only the elections themselves will tell whether it's significant as being registered by photos or costing blue eye has been following the struggle over migration policies in brussels and at the borders. we heard of their christine migration is not at the top of voters agend, broadly seen and my entire block, but having been to some of your rooms, migration hotspots. how did people there feel about it?
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well, it's a different story that because people see the visible changes in, in their communities when, when my friends on the, in their island. so you know, in their villages. so to say, you know, where you have the detention st or the receptionist interest being both, they see their communities change it. and what i sensed was recently on the island of a lot produced to the attorney and i did. and there, i sensed a resentment towards brussel, you know, the deputy may said, you know, the, your opinion talks about solitary ways. this, on the day already with us when island is overrun with, with my friends and nobody volunteers to help share the load with us. so there's a lot of rage and in these communities a sense, well, we've been left alone to deal with this because you know, there's been a little of that says, an asylum seeker misapplied for asylum in the country that they 1st arrive. and so that is a rule. these countries have to process these asylum applications. they've cost to provide the make provisions for the migrants to arrive. and so there is resentment not directed at the micro says, certainly, but at brussels at the risk of the european union to say,
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ways to help when we need it. yeah. maybe not simply, li, unrelated to that resentment. we have seen a rise of the far right, pretty much across the board now that how has their influence in their anti immigrant agenda and rhetoric influenced the the strive to find a common approach to migration? that's such a question. nicole because the voters are saying that they know that migration is not the most acute crisis of the your opinion. hans is spelled at the top of the agenda, but what the far right parties have successfully done is to make this a symbol of the block stages. so they present this as this, etc, right? a crisis to people with very simple solutions. and it isn't a simple case, and now we're saying mainstream and yes, when policy is sort of respond to that themselves, taking on this toughest onto the migration tool, contest cooling, you know, the migration issue of crisis when an actual fact that's taking the page from,
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from far i parties and, and what it does, nicole is it's, it's, it takes away from the ability to be able to cooperate because that your opinion agreed on impacts for migration that they quoted in your past. this is not the european union forcing member states to do anything at the end of the statement, the states are still the ones who decide how they manage people, who they've gone to asylum to residents, firms, all of these things that is not the parliament to decide but what we're seeing is it's going to take away from the ability for countries we have to cooperate because that's what you need right now. sharing the load, sharing the button coming together with ideas. but if they what is going home and taking tough a sconces that's going to become defensive, difficult to come together and really call praise on how to manage the crisis. was the coolest. but also how to make meaningful advancements on this issue. you know, we're looking at the side of the recipients. let's look at the other side for those people risking their lives in the thousands to come to the mean. you go to these countries and you meet young men at sub farm african countries. the whole country
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is, you know, ruled africa, west africa until about nigeria, guinea morocco, to new z. a price used to have people from asian countries, some numbers as well from eastern european subject, but it's mostly people in parts of the world way. there are no opportunities, remote parts of countries with government services during which people they are all new opportunities. when these young men will tell you, i will do anything i will fix somebody's call. i'll help on construction size. anything. just empower me so that i can help people back home for them going back home is not an option. there's nothing to go back to. and so all these ideas about trying to incentivize people and also come to europe, it's not going to work. and so we create environments for people to be able to try where they are, because until that happens, people have the incentive to continue coming to here. so to what extent are e u countries then cooperating with countries of origin? so what we see is not the issue with the country of origin. so i want to talk with
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the countries with people who don't show from. so you've seen the your opinion in getting into these deals check mentioned it in his reports. way they say ok, we'll help you in terms of increasing your law enforcement capacity to stop people leaving your countries. i'm talk about country section is either way people take well from there have also been attempts and we're seeing this not to the scale of, of, of what i've just talked about. but you know, the sort of like trying to get into communities, especially in african countries, program skills programs, trying to empower young people so that they can be productive where they are, you know, to the programs. you know, these programs all rolled out by your institution. so, you know, implementing partners on the ground really trying to give people something a reason to stay with a all that probably needs to be scaled up more. but what we're seeing more is cooperation with the countries and the motivation for that from the point of view pin countries is to say, we're not gonna agree on how to solve the challenge yet. so let's stop people from coming. so let's go to the countries where they're coming from stripe deals, they said those countries hold them back so that we have less of a challenge on our shoals as christine. well,
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thank you so much fascinating insights. the, the spanish island of may, your is a popular european vacation spot, but its success is also starting to cause problems with many of the islands residents. the locals now want to see fewer visitors come to the island about 10000 people gathered over the weekend to protest mass tourism dw correspondent young philip shaw spoke to some of that. my, you ok is not for sale. this is the message of thousands of protesters who took to the streets of the spanish island over the weekend. an average apartment in new york and now cost $1500.00 euros per month on the affordable for most islanders under many play must tourism it's, you know, everything is about dories at the same time our lives good, precarious, and we can find a place to leave that did many years or a $1302400.00 us per month. they still share an apartment at the age of 14. i think
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based on what i'm fine to the number of tourists in new york, it has been increasing steadily and more and more holidaymakers want to rent that room and apartment at the same time local homeowners and investors are trying to benefit from the trend. the consequences can be seen just a few meters below the polity. streets of the holiday island, more than 30 people live in this rundown basement. many work in the tourism industry. but the salaries are too small to afford a normal apartment. are the people that we are all in dire straits, and of course we know that this place is not made for human beings cannot be dialed the residents. show us back into maine living conditions, widespread mold cockroaches, and the smell of fishy, he's everywhere. christopher nathaniel page $600.00 euros per month for this
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small windowless room. the student who has a part time job is a way to tells us that the ortiz have known about the problem for years. but they do little about it. even smallwood children continue to live here. that's where this is constant. do you made it to makes us sick? especially the ality and the very young one to speak of somebody for tenants. my age of less dramatic until the small children in this environment is horrible. one of the 2nd one i read that single most of the housing crisis is increasing the affecting people from many different backgrounds. some have even decided to move to cumberlands on the outskirts of panama. oliver ortega has been working as a technician for more than 20 years. his income is okay, he says, but still after the last rent increase, he and his dog had to move into a van. well, i mean, yeah, my life changed from one day to the next. coming in. i used to have an apartment
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this we rooms and 2 bathroom stuff unit. now i live in 12 square meters. oh, you mean of course i hope everything is completely different now. but you can get used to this lot of stuff without available. they literally read up local journalists kind of my chain. i has been writing about the problem for years. she says it's mainly due to failed policies. are you the property owner, serious doesn't make huge profits from this? i thing we should focus more on them. they could not than reach themselves from the suffering of the others most. or perhaps the journalist says those responsible announce slowly, waking up. they know too many protests on the holiday islands are not good for business. and finally, some sports demand years of practice. but the mothers just a couple of months of aging case in point of the age of the english past time of
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cheese, rolling a real live race to the bottom. the event sees a local cheese given a head start before a crowd tries to keep up with it. the ability to bounce being about the only requisite and skill. this year's honors in the men's res went to a gentleman called tom. he's promised to defend his title next year after arriving this year's race. and skate and the 3rd time and make sure to stay informed. stay engaged and stay in touch. she can follow our team on social media. our annual there is at steve w. news. thank you. so much for your company, by the
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way, it's getting hotter and hotter interest and well, he's thinking mind this, he's not backing extreme with it because of climate change. but also do you just that tiny, tiny news i know transforming the living spaces from great green building at best employment. next on d, w is advertised on buying european in t. v. authoritarian regime exports boil and gas to the european union and
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offers generous gifts to the politicians. are they really being paid to turn a blind eye to systemic human rights violations, corruption in europe? in 16 minutes on d w, the the you'll see about the video that goes enabled other data media. amiga la, give a lot done, but again, i will stop into that and i'll give you a go or them and you are you able to order that up? joe made any of the water power into the more people than ever on the move world wide in search of a better life to jump be able to use them in a decade to mess with the guns already already a few megs of appears and mid afternoon does our pearson minutes useful, or is that i'm was moved to the gets expose, go to less room,
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