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tv   The Secrets of Wetlands  Deutsche Welle  July 4, 2024 11:15pm-12:01am CEST

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with the public interest, believe that those in power have not being behaving appropriately. assaulted with bars thompson, imposter gates, and continued on the lease trust, who was f, a just to shop months and cross the economy. and t is the wish you select simply did not have the political acumen, all the political copies failed to achieve a stick shift back in the right direction. where does this leave the reform party and some people are saying that they could actually, you serve the conservatives long term, considering how little support that they're enjoying among the voters. do you think that's an accurate statement? look, if you look at the sun exit poll reform predicts it's get 13 seats that will be a disappointment to nigel for raj on his policy. but the thing about nigel far ours is he's a great community. so an always attracts a lot of attention up from the media. so do i think that'll be a huge political false? no, but will it be allowed? false? absolutely. all right, and where does this exactly leave or what does the new potential labor government actually leave the u. k. when it comes to the e. u. i mean after breakfast,
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if the relationship is a little uncertain, look, keystone has said throughout the campaigns. they will try and build a more positive relationship with our european partners, and i think that will happen. but just yesterday he came out and he said categorically that the u. k. will not be rejoining the european union in his lifetime. so do we expect betsy relations? absolutely. does it mean that you take will be rejoining? i don't think so. all right, and what about the conservatives now? the conservative party person has been called one of the most successful parties. are political parties in the world. what exactly do you think is, is, you know, if you look in your crystal ball could be their future is true in the you, k, the conservatives all almost seen as the natural policy of government. i really think it depends on what happens later this evening. a lot of the big political heavy waves potentially might be losing that seats. and then i think it depends what happens in the coming weeks a month. do they talk to back to the center and become a policy of the old conservative or the drug to say that to the right trying to steal back those reform but reform but focuses on become more of an extreme his
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policy. so at the moment i think it's really hard to say what will happen to the conservative policy in the coming weeks, months and years, where they will certainly be exciting and weeks months in the years that was dw craig further. thank you very much for your analysis. or let's take a brief look now, some other stories making headlines around the world us and is really officials say prime minister benjamin netanyahu is sending a delegation to resume installed, talks on a hosted release deal with some us. the officials hailed a significantly revised proposal by him us as a breakthrough and said they were hopeful it could lead to a permanent cease fire proof labor unions have protested in athens, they're demanding the withdrawal of the new law allowing a 6 day working week. it took effect on monday. the government says it mainly applies 20 for our businesses and sure systems and we're boost productivity. but union say it's a roll back of hard one workers' rights police in india for us and 6 people
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following tuesdays deadly stampede. those detained our members of the organizing committee. they had been granted permission for a gathering of 80000 or 250000 people turned up to listen to our preacher. 121. people died from the st. pete. a football players hand gesture on the pitch has sparked a diplomatic route between germany and turkey. the german for an office has some of the turkish and best or after, and kara, did the same turkish defend during my reach day. my nero made the sign known as the wolf salut, celebrating a goal at the european championships. here in germany, the hand gesture is associated with the turkish bar, right, organization known as the gray wolves, which germany characterize as a nationalist extreme is anti semitic, and racist organization. adding some fuel to the diplomatic fire truck as president richard, the type of air to one has announced he'll be at turkey's court. a final match in berlin. on saturday, we spoke with the w's dw corresponded julia han and his symbol about the diplomatic
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desktop. what took it president ad one is someone who knows both football and politics very well. and he probably things this is his chance to score a goal. he wasn't actually planning to go to germany and watched the match. but today he canceled a trip to as a by john, he changed his very busy schedule, so he can be in berlin on saturday. and what i think he is trying to achieve is to demonstrate power and this diplomatic route with germany. while at the same time he wants to appease nationalist voters. here in turkey, who's been very unhappy with how ad one manages the economy and other issues, especially migration. so this a football crisis now seems to be playing into ad one's hands after german interior minister fees and other politicians had condemned. maybe they made as a wolf salute the texas for a ministry yesterday. some of the german investigator. and they also put out a statement where they called you a fuzz investigation,
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which has now been launched unacceptable. that the german authorities approach to day me ra, a, a can be considered as dental fully. and they also defend that they mirrors wolf gesture as a historical and cultural symbol that did not target anyone in the moment when he was using it, celebrating his goal. if you now all take this into account, i think ad one's visit to germany is not just a show of support for the turkish team, but a political move. and i wouldn't be surprised if you also would make this wolf gesture from the v i. p. fox in the, in, in the stadium on saturday. that was the w. as julia hod, reporting for us from his temple. 13 barrow is heading for mexico after battering jamaica barrel, was labeled that category 5 storm at one point and has cause widespread destruction across the caribbean. it's load the category 3, but will remain at or near hurricane springs into next week. the storm has killed at least 10 people so far. the battery
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and sluggish jamaica is the latest car would be a nation to suffer. the damaging effects of barrow wins in excess of 200 kilometers per hour and heavy rain from cuba to venezuela. grenada, and st. vincent on the granite deans. the deadly storm is leaving its mark. the hurricane is the earliest to reach category 5, a result of climate change according to some experts. its path is not certain, but it could eventually end up hitting the us state of texas. here in mx, it goes, you get time. peninsula preparations were being made. some areas have been evacuated by the navy is done with it, and that's what i'm home. we're in a very vulnerable strip of land where we have to see on one side and the lagoon on
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the other. and the waste of the community is about half a kilometer or a little less. i'm not sure exactly. so a hurricane even a category to that causes the sea to rise, which is happened before, where the sea emerges within the goon. but it's very dangerous for people to stay here. then in nearby tourist resorts preparations are being made for barrels arrival. with many, also stocking up on provisions on the beach though visitors enjoyed the last few hours of calm weather or before the storm will be staying here cause or flight. so do you will. so when they and the thing will just take advice from the will tell in the that the, or the, or the we're not too scared the barrels. seeing here as it hit jamaica is expected to make landfall and mexico late on thursday. or early on friday. we now turn
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some headlines from the asia pacific. cambodia has held a ceremony to welcome back 5014 artworks repatriated from new york metropolitan museum. this sculptures date from between the 9th and 14 centuries. thousands of pressures were limited from cambodian temples during the 20th century. cambodia, as coastal ministry says they return follows years of negotiations and many more on the end that they hope many more will come. japan isn't the group. if i record breaking heat wave, the central city, which is walcott has, i've had a daytime high of almost 40 degrees celsius. that's the highest and 80 years. and in tokyo officials, a dozens of people have been treated in a hospital for heat stroke. shanghai is also reeling from a heat wave. authorities have issued an alert. as temperatures exceed 38 degrees celsius, the conditions are likely to persist throughout the weekend. china is whether office as warrant that the country is facing hotter and longer heat waves due to
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climate change. i sent a guard, rebuilt after the original was destroyed in the 2nd world war has opened and pots them just outside of berlin. at a time when anti semitism is on the rise, it's hoping to send the guard will send a clear signal against hatred. germany's president says he's determined to protect jewish life in the country, a glimmer of hope for german jews in trouble of times. to celebration for the reopening of the noise in a google or new synagogue in the city of pots, noise, and a call to action. and this least the supply chain costs be nothing less than and it's less than that. i am determined not terrestrial until then. we in our country do everything we can to protect, to is live and combat all forms of anti semitism to the can some recent studies show that has been an alarming rice and anti submitted incidents in gemini, particularly following the how much terror text on these are last october,
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you this is lame, is to wish life as part of us know then only when use feel completely at home in germany with this country feel completely at home. jesus none. guns buys a this in the go was destroyed during the 2nd world war. almost 80 years later, dom induce see its restoration as an opportunity. you're not the ones that exciting, especially in these times that we need to be seen more again. a synagogue encourages people to look too high and about to show themselves a public going into into us. and we need that today more than never to. yeah, i see. the reopening is both a celebration of jewish life in germany and a reminder of the ongoing fight against anti semitism. and finally, an angry bull has caused chaos in the peruvian capital, lima, the animal escaped the vehicle, transporting it and dashed into busy traffic. in the suburb of santa anita,
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this cyclist was particularly unlucky. which the booty police the run around for a while, but officers eventually manage the corner it its owner has volunteered to pay for any damages incurred by the incident. and his reminder of the top story were following for you at this hour or the exit polls. the you can use general election indicates a landslide when for the center left the labor party, the governing conservatives are predicted to suffer big losses. the liberal democrats look to have made gains and are in 3rd place. the number suggests nigel for largest and team aggression reform party will not only enter parliament, but take as many as 13 seats. and with that, you're up to date, but stay with us after a short break, doc film looks into the jaws of the dragon. how to deal with china and air until berlin. thank you very much for joining us. the,
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to the point, a strong opinions. clear position. international perspective. can germany's national football team, united divided country and list the nation spirit. germany host to euro 2024. kind of kick it's way out of the crisis, find out more on to the point to the point next on d w. the secrets of what play, how big is there anything less on the client?
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the melting permafrost is releasing huge amounts of greenhouse gases. researchers are working to find out more are mores and swans 6 celebrating climate change the in 45 minutes on d, w. the have someone else to see the highlights of selected for you? you every week in you a box, subscribe. now you might see me, how much can we do simultaneously? multitasking these, the modern methods. because if we do too much at $180.00 all wrong mess, things up, risking brain damage. so let's stop this self sabotage,
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humans and multitasking watch. now on youtube, v w documentary europe's largest football tournament is in full swing. fans from china to brazil are following the action is germany, hosts the way for championship. for the 1st time since reunification, 35 years ago, the fans like the ample flow of beer. and i don't seem to mind an occasional cascade of rain, but germany live up to its reputation as a model of efficiency and organization. delayed trains, frustrate fans traveling to the matches, and discouraged germans for whom such a problem. so just one more symbol of decline. kind of diverse, an agile german team. help list a nation driven by doubts and divisions out of its crisis. our question,
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germany hoss 02024 kicking its way out of the crisis. the hello and welcome to to the point. it's a pleasure degreed our guest guide has on hasn't the berlin bureau of the financial times? matthew cottage, nick is chief. europe corresponded for political and it's a pleasure to create my colleague down here barcelona. she reports on sports and football for dw, and as a player herself, she's played mid field for clubs in germany, in norway, spain, and as of late. welcome. so daniel, let me start out by asking you quite simply, is germany a good host? what would you say is currently the mode here in the country? well, i've been lucky enough to go to a lot of the matches in the stadiums and i've been in
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a lot of the fan miles. and i can tell you that what i've heard from the people who have come to germany is that they're having a great time. they're really enjoying the defend zones that had been set up the stadiums. now i have have heard a lot of complaints about the train system, for example, some of the auction fans when there was a game in berlin. they actually missed a lot of the match because the trip now we're trained delays and goes incursion. also the same kind of situations. so in general, yes, but there are some complaints that i've definitely heard about it at the moment you're from north america originally, and at the moment the u. s. is currently hosting the cops, america. how would you compare the 2 turned events? well, cobra america is the biggest tournament for north america and south america right now. and yours is the biggest turn it for europe. so i mean, you're, the euros are a little bit bigger, i would say in terms of newer shit because europe is really the center of football in the world. so all the players around the world,
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if you're growing up playing football, you want to play in europe. so that's the goal. and couple of america, there are a lot of ice from north america, but i would say more of the world is watching. the euro is right now, and that's you before the tournament kicked off the head of you a for which is the governing body of european football, said that this tournament would be sustainable and uniting that it would bring the peoples of europe together. and in fact, the continent can choose some of that because it's been looking pretty fragmented lately. but do you think of football tournament really kind of cubical that big? i think it can divert people's attention from other things that are happening and that can be very positive. europe is obviously having a very difficult moment at the time both politically and with the war in ukraine. so i think uh, a nice football tournament can show people maybe the sweeter side of life to a degree. although i've heard some other people say some europeans tell me they feel somewhat guilty about supporting their national team is as strongly as they do
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. because in, in, in their mind that contradicts the european ideal of sort of european unity and everything. so i think there is a bit of skits of finding out there. but i think overall it is, it is a good thing. how do you see it? a guy, you know, this is taking place just a 9 hour car drive from the v saved from ukraine itself. is there a head in the sand quality for you when you see fans here in berlin, celebrating and cheering, while the war continues undiminished? uh, not far away. well, it certainly has completely dominated, so the kind of news flow you see it on a lot of the kind of big new science on the bbc for example. i mean, the euro use really is, is up and the sort of the various aspects of the tournament are endlessly debated and shoot over and the results. um, so you, you definitely have a sense that sort of international attention. i certainly you are paying attention towards the war has diminished rather a lot,
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also towards them at the door in the middle east. but in a way you understand that is kind of, you know, some of the boys and the media. you understand that they're the sort of waves of, of interest and this interest. and sometimes i used to it a bit with gauze or i think, you know, the attention, you know, public interest reaches saturation point and people are desperate for a bit of a diversion. and bit of distraction, so i think it kind of just the right time the new chancellor schultz said right before the tournament began that he hoped it would bring good spirits to germany. and certainly the nation could use some better spirits and you know, the country pretty well. are you seeing mood boosting effects amongst germans? yeah, definitely. i think that we're in a time right now where everything seems very negative. you know, there's war, there's inflation, things are not going very well. and football is that chance that we have to come together and it unites people from all walks of life. it's something that we all
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have in common and you see this in the sands on, for example, you see men, women, children, all different races, all different religions altogether. and they are cheering for the same thing. so that's very powerful in terms of uplifting people and bringing them together and showing that kind of unity. and that's the power that's for it has because at the end of the day, you think as okay, it's just as for, it's not so controversial, you know, and it brings people together and it uplifts the spirit. and now that being said, coming from north america, my 1st, you know, impression of billing was, people maybe weren't as friendly as i was used to. but here now during the year, owes people are saying hi to you on the street. people will stop and have a conversation with you will. oh, did you see the game yesterday? what do you think? who's going to win? so yeah, the spirits are definitely uplifted from my perspective. thanks. we will drill a little bit deeper on the diversity issue and perhaps the slightly darker side that we've seen at some of the some of the games. but let's 1st drill deeper on
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germany's situation itself in germany has no title to defend as a nation, but it does have a reputation for efficiency, organization and economic pro us that lately, at least it's been struggling to live up to kind of championship deliver a boost not only for the beleaguered economy, but also for gloomy self doubts. i'm. i think it's very german. they organize everything super well. um it's super friendly. you can go everywhere. it's really easy with public transportation. so yeah, it's really good. super organized. the daily lives of germans are quite different. trains get cancelled, are overcrowded, and delayed something, some football fans that experience to for instance, in portland the, it's badly organized little bit chaotic. germany efficiency seems to think of the past. the economy has plummeted in international rankings. germany less skilled workers, digitalization is only creeping in german taxes are really top tier has is german
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bureaucracy. and then there's the coalition government and leslie arguing about where budget codes should be made. things could hardly be worse. right? so good. i mean, look at this, this place is like, literally like the best place. remember me, can football lead german me out of its crisis. and you know, master there was a time when that actually did prove to be the case. i'm talking about 2006 what the germans referred to as their summer fair retail. when they hosted the world cup championships, everything seemed to be going right. the national team one. and there was really in a way, a new sense of patriotism in this country. do you think this european championship can possibly deliver something like that? i think it's going to be difficult because of everything else that's happening around the world and in europe at the moment,
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especially the war. and at that time there was an easy news. i think not just in germany, but around europe about the state of the world. things were, you know, not as not as kind of controversial than in many and many respects as, as they are today. also politically in europe. now we have the surge of the far right and the economy is not doing well at that time. angle america had just recently become chancellor. her predecessor had pushed through some very tough economic reforms that germany was coming out of sort of a tough economic period. when it was referred to as the sick man of europe, and that was sort of the beginning of the boom years right then. and some people attribute the summer fairytale to that success. but i think that there's just too many problems as we heard in the report right now in the economy for, for this to have the same same effect. although i do think that it could give germans, if it, if they succeed. and if, if this turns out to be seen as a success,
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success in europe and around the world, maybe a little bit more confidence in their, in their own ability to turn their, their, their country around. that 2006 championship guy of course, took place before the financial crisis after the reunification of germany. so in a way it was a golden moment. what's your take? would you agree with matthew that we're in a very different era now? yeah, absolutely. i mean, it's interesting i'm, we were talking to free drink minutes yesterday the leader of the christian democrats and, and he, some tiff nominate for chancellor. i'm sorry, i'm a station party and he said something really interesting, which was he thought that if god should, i had called the elections in 2006 instead of 2005. he would have one because the mood in the country off to the some of the fairy story was just so positive. it would have given a massive boost to his standing on to the s p d, which may be some people might think is
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a bit far fetched because it's an interesting sort of a hot offices. and there was a bit of an economic boost from the, from the world cup. and also there was a lot more spending. there was a lot more sort of confidence, consumer confidence. and also, as matthew said, these reforms that showed that had a started a beginning to come to fruition. so you really sole, it was a sort of real sweet sweet spot. and it could have changed the cost of german history, a general political history. if he the cool the elections like to have sufficient fantastic contingency to ponder the following that summer, fairy tale in 2006, which of course was a world cup as we say now to european championship germany g. d. p per capita rose by 1.5 percent. typically you don't see that kind of an up tick after and european championship. what's the difference in the scale that
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isn't just purely economically of these 2 different kinds of championships? well, the world cub means that people will be coming to europe from all over the world. so south america, asia, and if you think you come from asia to europe, you're not going to stay for the weekend. you're gonna stay for longer. you're going to make a trip out of it. you might go to different countries. you're going to see a little bit more of germany now for the year o's and germany's location is also pretty central. you can come to germany for the weekend. you don't have to stay that long. now, there will be, of course, a boom in the hospitality sector. hotel prices are extremely high right now. people are going out to eat. they're going to bars, but you don't have for the euro. those people really staying in germany for 2 to 3 weeks unless they're, you know, the super fans who are following their teams every single place they go. but that's a smaller number of people. and in the world caught, people really tend to save up for 4 years to make that big trip. and so they spending a lot more money. that's the tourism side. what about the infrastructure side? we see a lot more investment in conjunction with the world cup,
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building new stadium of priests, perhaps even transport and logistics and you would with it with in your opinion. championships, that really depends also on the country. for example, when the world couple isn't guitar, they had to basically build everything new. so of course then there was a lot, there's a lot more infrastructure now, there's train systems, there's some ways, new stadiums, everything. we saw this in poland and ukraine, when they hosted bureaus, poland really had to build up their infrastructure and that had a really positive effect in the long term. now, germany already had a trans, this system, they had the stadium. so a lot of what they did was freshening everything up a little bit. but, but i think that obviously the scale is not as big as the world cup. and germany already had a lot of this infrastructure set. so they didn't have to go construct new method, speaking of transporting logistics and we saw the pictures and the report. how's it exactly been working with that punctuality and deficiency that many people associate with germany, the economic powerhouse that it used to be?
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well, what's your assessment of the state of germany today is the my lives that people feel justified by the hard facts of the economy? yes, i think it is. i think germany's in a, in a very tough spot. but there's a disconnect, i think, between the way people outside of germany perceive the country and the reality of the best the country is germans experienced that every day, particularly economically in germany, is in, in a difficult situation. the economies been stagnating for 5 or 6 years. there's no obvious path at the moment out of the situation that it's in right now. they're huge problems in the auto industry. for example, you can see that if you watch one of the games because the, the main advertisers in the games or the, the, the tiny's electric vehicle maker b y d seems to be everywhere. and i think in, in past tournaments it would have been the german car makers, maybe,
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or german blue chip companies that would be advertising there. so there does seem to be a shift here and the current government and, and the, the, the german, a sort of titans of industry have, have yet to really find a path out of this, this very difficult situation that they're in guy that, that chinese advertising and it's not only be why do the audio auto company, but other products as well. what does that tell us? an optimist might say, well, you know, may be germany's presenting such a great image to the world that will have lots more incoming, a chinese direct for an investment. but is that a bit a bit to uh it, was it lives or? yeah, no i, i think that's the case. i mean actually the latest figures show that for an investment is kind of drawing up a bit and in germany is that a sort of low levels which we haven't seen for many is low levels. um, so yeah, i agree with my few i think that there's a sort of some, there was a bit of the malays at the moment. you see it also in the political situation which
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we have right now does basically a kind of it with the, the, the policies and the governing coalition have painted themselves into a kind of kona and, and no one really knows how's it going to get out of it so that does a sort of sense of political in the lives as well as economic malays. your a newspaper actually wrote just before the tournament began in in june, that europe's super power is football, not politics. that's a direct quote. the question is, how far that football super power can go and what it can actually achieve for a national government in my lives. as you say, germany certainly is that also for a europe that at the moment uh, you know, is fragmenting and facing a big right wing search. yeah, no, i mean, i think it's some, i think it's a very, very dangerous point really in, in europe's history. and because we're seeing sort of the centrifugal, uh,
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sort of a forces really intensifying and strengthening and, and going back to the idea of unifying and unity it's, it's very difficult to really project tennessee when you're seeing, if you're a skeptic policies, for example, do so well in the european elections and you have a sort of nationalist governments now in, in italy, in the netherlands. and, you know, who knows, possibly off the sunday and fronts as well. so it's, it's a very, it's a unique time, really for europe. and i mean, in the way football can kind of paper row for those crap cracks, but you know, the problems remain. germany is renowned economic institute. i w says that the biggest driver of a potential euro 2024 up turn of any kind is germany's national team winning the title that could deliver emotional and economic returns. certainly the agile team
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got off to a good start, but how far can they go and how far are germans ready to support? an unusually diverse lineup. a party in berlin, germans are celebrating their multicultural team, which includes sunny and who to go. we'll see all that including the one to see, to mix aren't it's a good mix of german society. so i think the team is great for too much of the customer. yeah, i mentioned slice. everyone is equal and it's been person represents germany and can play really well. then we should be happy. they are on our national team of us . but them opinion poll shows that $1.00 and $5.00 germans would prefer it if the national team had more white players. some politicians from the far right a f d party reject the team, saying it is not german enough. the a f, the recently became the 2nd strongest german party in the european elections with
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almost 16 percent. non german born football fans have had different experiences. the regular games here, if you don't speak the german, they like uh, you're gonna hear some assaulting words in germany and i have never seen any raises thing. and that's just me being fair. how cosmopolitan is germany? daniel, what's your answer to that? to what degree does this very diverse team actually represent this society as a whole? i think it, it's a good representation of what society actually looks like now, because everybody doesn't look exactly the same. and also talking to a lot of different fans. they also say that they say that this is a national team that the whole country can get behind. because i can look at the team and say, okay, there's someone who maybe comes from a different background like me, and then somebody else can say the same thing. and that's a great representation of what reality is now. and i think also that that does
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translate into, you know, politics because people can get behind football. and you can also learn important lessons from football. you see that, you know, germany, this german is working together for the goal of winning the arrows for the country and what that does to the country. and i think that that has the potential to then have a trickle down effect. now it's, it can be a catalyst, but it's important that you know, governments and society take this effect, that the heroes has had, and then use it in a positive way. because after a while, the effect will kind of be forgotten. nonetheless, may i ask you, and i know you're in austria and american, and we have heard fans from austria, but also from germany at some of the matches chanting slogans that are known as neo nazi slogans. foreigners out, i'll send to house. how bad it wasn't there, by the way, how bad is it? would you say, is this just a very small minority of very vocal fans,
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or do you think we really do see in both countries? austria in germany, a deep problem, massena phobia and racism? i think both can be true and i think it is both. i think the people who are, you know, yelling these kinds of insults are, are a minority, they're allowed minority. but there are deep problems in, in, in both countries with, with, as being a phobia. but not just in, in austria and germany, you're seeing it all over europe. and i think in those 2 countries in particular, it's very closely connected to what we've seen with migration flows over the past decade or so. and those 2 countries in particular, have taken in more refugees per capita than just about any other countries in europe. and, you know, there's a sense that they've been overburdened by people and they've been overburdened by the rest of europe is to say that, you know, they are the ones who are left to deal with this influx of refugees and that other
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countries particular in eastern europe for example, are taking enough refugees and so there's a lot of, there's a lot of resentment over this. i think there's also a lot of concern in germany about the fact that many of the migrants are most of them are, are muslims, and you, you saw this after the european election, there was a pole that really caught my eye that showed that over 60 percent of germans were sort of unnerved, let's say by the fact that is lum was becoming more prevalent in, in germany. and that, that kind of tells you, you know, where, where people, where people's minds are go. it's sometimes hard to believe that this is still such an issue back in the early 2, thousands. there was an anti bully and a phobia campaign in this country that showed an ad where you saw the foot. but the drum and football team lined up with it. foreigners gone from it, it was basically
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a losing team. if they had put that team out on the pitch, they would have lost. sometimes it's hard to believe, but this is still such an issue from your vantage point also. so as a, as a british citizen, looking at germany, would you say the country has a big problem? well, i think it does have a big problem, right? and you can see that that by the phenomenal success of the i f, the, i mean the right wing party. yeah. and the old tensor for germany, which it did incredibly well in the european elections as we've heard. and it's an extraordinary phenomena, india, if the, because we've seen in the last few months they've been embroiled in so many scandals, so much negative coverage and the price um and so many sort of i rages sort of statements that the public sessions of may. and it hasn't damaged the tool. and so that is a sort of very good indication, i think as to how deep this problem of sort of those. and if i'd be or,
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and nationalism is in germany, i mean maybe it's wrong to call it a problem. but maybe just a phenomenon that it is that there is this a sort of constituency in the german politics voting politics which is extremely designed to follow back on to immigration, then you could just say, yep, they're gone that because i don't think that it's really different in other parts of the world, and i think of, of the us, for example, and the debates that the us as having over the migrants coming over the southern border. and obviously this is a big issue for, for donald trump. and i think in any western country where you have a large influx of asylum seekers of migrants coming in, you're going to see this kind of backlash. that's been the story of the last 2530 years last year. germany took it and i think over 300000 migrants and that is just number that is very difficult for the country to stand. then you very briefly is
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the diversity of the team manifesting itself and the way they play. yeah, i think definitely it is. and if you look historically, that's often times, uh how it works and football, the team kind of represents society and how, how they play right now. this team is more fluid, want to change or more funds that going to win on friday night again, spend. i think so. okay, who's going to be the european champion? the method you will be thinking. okay, i have to say that there are no sense of no part of the peer. thank you very much to all of you for being with us today. thanks to all of you for 2, and again, please look at our youtube channel and tell us what you think facing the,
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[000:00:00;00] the, the secrets of what plan, how big is there anything less on the client? the melting permafrost is releasing huge amounts of greenhouse gases. researchers are working to find out more are mores and swans 6 celebrating climate change the in 15 minutes on the w. enter the conflicts own with tim sebastian in the early hours of february 24th
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just over 2 years ago. are you currently in, jo? listen care, i'm mistaken both on the russian this i'll probably think the city see me up on the money and go woke up the window and began reporting in real time how you can use as it falls on a daily basis. conflict in 90 minutes on dw, the get treaties. really exciting. i didn't tell you to look surprised. hi, i'm shop now and i'm ready to dive into the hands of humans or to have you as a one does comport package card via included in best deposits from quarter key indians to. i'm gonna keep customers that even local press vehicles. we've got
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a response. this for and unexpected size of the diesel being used on both ends. in the note or january 2021, the attack on the united states capital give them an idea of what you said. we had power, we should have power. power is being taken away from us, and by any means necessary, we can get thousands of people to talk among them. some of these manipulative voices are former high ranking military leaders. why did us veterans tended backs on democracy? and what does this mean for the upcoming next? the enemy within dogs to lie 12 on the w,
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the . this is dw news line from berlin, a landslide victory for the case center last labor party. that's a prediction from the official exit poll, which quits by your storm are firmly on track to be the next prime minister, which as soon as conservatives are set to suffer heavy losses with the anti immigration reform party set to enter parliament for the 1st time. also coming up in the program, the

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