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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  July 24, 2024 2:02am-2:30am CEST

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things at the bottom of behind the house has tons of sites onto the next target. she's been in the state of wisconsin, one of the key swing states she has to secure to be donald trump in november. i'm feel gail in bedding and this is the day the, the days and weeks ahead. i together with you will do everything in my power to unite our democratic party tonight, just our nations and we got a kick. pamela here as out of the oval office. don't get for a chance. we have work. we have doors to knock on. we have people to talk to, we have phone calls to make and we have an election to with cottonwood harris is to blind or to co rock to admit it to the american people. the joe biden should have never been in there see fit to serve either it is my intention to go out and earn
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this nomination and to win the also, all the de china brokers, i'm a quote between palestinian factions, fossa and how much are we shipping? the 2nd step is to uphold the principle of palestinians governing palestine and to work together to advance the postwar governance of gaza. welcome to the de, a democratic leaders in congress have been endorsed income law harris as the passage kansas, the full november's election. chuck schumer, unpacking jeffreys of joy. the growing list of prominent democrats, tobacco after joe biden withdrew from the rice, followed by the associated press. news agency says the vice president now has the backing of enough data gets that next months democratic national convention in chicago to secure the nomination. iris has been holding fast campaign events
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inspired them withdrew and she has been speaking in the key swing state of wisconsin. so wisconsin, i am told as of this morning that we have earned the support of the mess delegates to secure the i am very honored and i had to i will spend the coming weeks continuing to unite our party so that we are ready to win in november vice president howard is expected to meet these rarely prime minister benjamin netanyahu while he's in washington this week. multiple protests so planned, he's handling of the warning, gaza. he's writing the leader is due to address a joint session of congress on wednesday. is visit, has been overshadowed by president biden's decision to drop out of the presidential
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race. the president biden's support to israel during the gauze of will, has provoked a backlash from some democratic supporters. and this was reflected in the large numbers of democrats who voted uncommitted in prime is of this year. that includes wanting 5 voters in minnesota, more than 10 percent in michigan and north carolina as couple of hours for the past to sit down with benjamin netanyahu. this week is a look at the washington shifting stands on the wall and gaza in the weeks following the october 7th terror attacks by home us, the message from jo biden's administration in washington was clear and his vice president was often tasked with conveying that stats. we are going to continue to stand with israel's rights defend itself, and let's be clear and never forget what happened on october 7th. carmella harris
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repeated that message at home and during for multiple travels abroad. but as the war and gaza dragged on washington's so called iron clad commitment to israel was slowly replaced by growing frustration. the rising death tool, the displacements, and the dwindling a deliveries to the territory. lead to accusations, israel was deliberately targeting civilians and to shift in stands by the administration in washington. as israel defend itself, it matters how the united states is unequivocal. international humanitarian law must be respected to many innocent palestinians have been killed. frankly, the scale of civilian suffering and the images and videos coming from gaza are devastating protests against the war and gaza. at of the bye didn't
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administrations, continued political and military support of this rule had been taking place across the us. many on college campuses in march, harris became the 1st administration official to publicly called for an immediate temporary truce. given the amends scale of suffering, any god, there must be an immediate cease fire. harris is acutely aware of the potential voter backlash over the war and gaza as she launches, who'd been to become the democratic parties nominee for president. so have a delicate balancing act maintaining to us as strong ties with israel was seeking to retain or bring back voters discontented by the way, the administration. she's a part of has handled the war and gaza. let's take
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a closer look at how i could choose to these 4 months way votes and november. mean, i was samara lectures in political science at the university of michigan, dia born. she joins us from detroit. welcome to dw bell, comcast pro. thank you for having me. no, this will be on campus protest. how big an issue is because a war amongst the viruses. and i think it's one of the main primary issues that for most of american voters on their current like agenda. but i will start by saying that the concept that the most from american vote is a bit reductive, considering that it's a very diverse community in the united states, both in terms of racially, economically with regards to foreign policy and with regards to domestic policy. just to give an example to a study that was done in 2017 by the force of the muslim american community identified as black and asked the american forth, identified as white,
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where white has been completed with many different groups like era persia in north ask. and, and so on, but a 5th identified as age and i've just identified as air of and like, the remaining were mixed across the board for hispanic and indigenous american as well as other groups. so it's difficult to pinpoint a single, almost invoice on harris as a presidential candidate, but also with the issue. uh because uh that is still one of the main concerns for the some american community. okay, so yeah, i take your point about what not dealing with a monolithic, a block here, talk to us about how this affection with that the us position on this cause a war has affected or has swayed arable, mostly a voters and how that might affect november's outcome uh yeah. um, so based on what i'm hearing on the ground um there are 4 major perspectives with
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a chair. so as a candidate with this is only unfolding in the last couple of days. but the 1st perspective i've heard the most commonly is this sense of the apathy because harris is viewed as basically an extension of biden. and this segment is mixed across those, across the board, wanting to vote, 3rd party or independent of them are hoping for another democrat to run against her . and in some cases, some people are choosing to be rational, mind voters. and, and, you know, keeping in mind that the end inviting campaign that was taken place. so in order to when this group bo harris really needs to showcase that her policies are her own and not biden's, particularly with regards to eliza. so back in march, that was quoted earlier, she had called for an immediate temporary cease fire on the one hand while at the same time declared that israel had a right to defend itself. and for many must
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a minute. again, this would be considering like batting for both sides of the team or for opposing sides of the team. in that it will be difficult for harris to win this group over as someone who was in the room during the bite and administration. but in order to do so off she'd have to have a clear policy agenda with advancements made immediately moving towards peace with regards to godsa. right. oh, okay. i, i know you had a list of forgive me, right? yeah, but that's quite a long list. but let's stick with some of the points that you you made that i'm sure it is. her problem is, and how is this problem is that she's effectively more of bite and it's when it comes to a choice of more of bite and, or trump what's what, what are people telling you? yeah, so that was actually the 2nd main group. okay. so that i've been here in the ground and this idea of like part of the way i say this,
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but this lesser of 2 evils are this rhetoric of that she's better than trump. um, so p some people um this is a smaller group, but some people see here as, as a solid replacement provided. given the other hand that by the end campaign as a vote against trump in the upcoming election. it's a kind of cut your losses type of mentality because people are seeing it 1st on the presidential race as exclusively to party, rather than you know, viewing 3rd parties or independence as having a potential for when. and so in this case, if the democratic party wants to win this group, so that has to be really strategic and selecting harris is running me and her policy platform. but again, like was noted, harris is already on the campaign trail and i listen to her virtually deliver her speech in milwaukee wisconsin earlier today. and she is contrasting herself with
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donald trump on using her record as an attorney general juxtaposed to trump as a criminal or a fellow in this positioning may be effective for the 2nd segment of the muslim american population. but again, i think the 1st group still does not see her as a viable candidate until she can clearly state her policy platforms, particularly on the issue of the as well on mass incarceration um with the in the present system. okay. based on what the, you know, definite policies from given the us as the long history of siding with age ro. when do you think that the, by the administration, i realized the potential for a backlash from muslim and out of votes is over, gaza? um, i would say that the binding administration probably started to feel the backlash
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when main stream media started to cover the engine. bided campaign. i don't. michigan. is this a swing state in and read? there was a pull that was done um, i can't remember who conducted the pool, but there's a stronger leaning towards trump in the republican party currently. and that was done at the end of june. um, so i'm not a 100 percent. sure. but what i'll say is that for by then all right. and for many, most of americans, they see that by them stepping down isn't only about what the media has talked about with regards to his age and his health, but also a response to the mounting pressure to the banded by the in champagne. so i'm not sure if i answer that question, that's fine. you know, a fascinating analysis and we thank you for it. to me. i was samara, the university of michigan debo, and thank you so much. thank you. have defied expectations as
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previous attempts that bridging their divisions have failed. and math runs gazda, while fatah controls parts of the occupied westbank. after feuding for nearly 2 decades, they have committed to a new chapter. what do you them? today we signed an agreement for national unity and we believe that this is the path to completing our journey audience. we are committed to national unity and we called for us on the, when the china, unlike many western nations, does not consider him as a tear organization. the pact is a major diplomatic to for broker beijing. china is keen to bolster its influence in the region and to present itself as a peace maker on the international stage. after repeating calls for a ceasefire in gaza, beijing laid out its vision for the territory post war yarbrough shipping. the
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2nd step is to uphold the principle of palestinians governing palestine and to work together to advance the post will governance of gaza. the will has left gaza, devastated and an early start to paced will reconstruction has become an urgent issue in the next stage. but israel has vowed to eliminate how mass for carrying out the october 7 terror attacks and firmly rejects their involvement in governing gazda. the future of the strip is a major sticking point, as israel and how mass way and internationally backed ceasefire proposal don't be ultimately is with the middle east program of the center for strategic and international studies. a welcome to the w. what do you make of this day? i think it's an interesting step. i'm not sure how much it's actually going to mean
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. there's a lot that will need to come between seeming to have a unified palestinian position and palestinians acting together. uh, i. well, there is nothing moving in this house city in space. it's interesting stuff to take, but i'm not sure this changes the picture for anything once people start having to make decisions. exactly. that's, that's through the same thing. lots of, it's around the space. they steal, looks like cable, they come into effect at some unspecified time in the future when if the war and gaza is over, it's such a big if it makes me wonder if it daily is really just an opportunity for china to play a piece, making wayne china wants to demonstrate that it has diplomatic chops that it can talk to all kinds of people. it can bring together. people who ordinarily can't find ways to talk together. certainly we're trying to was doing one of facilitator to saudi ronnie and deal about 15 months ago. but the reason this is so hard is
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because the stakes become very high, you're talking about a lot of power, a lot of money and people perceive it as a 0 sum game, either on the po, side, or on the homicide. and ultimately, for a lot of people, there's, those are 2 incompatible organizations, either one's going to win or the other that the attorneys like to talk about women's solutions. but it's easier to have when, when solutions, when you're only talking about talking. and it's harder to have when, when solutions, when people say, you know, somebody really could lose here and they don't just lose now. they lose billions of dollars for decades into the future. neither one is willing to do that. as i, of course, i have said that the stanley is nonsense, i will live to crush from us. and what does it tell us that i want you, michael? interested? possibly like israel didn't learn about this deal until after it was done. well i'm
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sure they knew it was, i mean i knew it was moving forward. i consider users as that they were talking about going what it actually is going to mean. i'm not really sure. it's partly what it means in the palestinian environment, where neither side really has a lot of legitimacy because each side is as, as failed in any number of ways. but on these really side, if you can't get, is really is to acknowledge it. and then what tools do you actually have to affect to agent? um, i think what, what is sort of missing from this whole thing is a theory of the case of how all the parties are going to be brought together. and whether that's about stopping violence in gaza, or leading toward some sort of reconstruction in gaza or thinking about what the political future and gosh, it is. i think ultimately you're going to need a lot of stakeholders and the oh city. and so i can say in theory,
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we've decided to come together by going from that to having any solution to the really desperate challenges of 2000000 people in gauze. if there's a long way to go and we're only the very beginning of the attorney. ok, so china gets to play a pace maker in the middle east. find talk to us more about how at china is relations with israel, which of course it's is this is going to be relevant to this house. china, for instance, picked aside in the israel high mass conflict as well traditionally tried. it was very much on the palestinian side in the last decade maybe to china has gotten a little closer to israel. they have certainly tried to engage with israelis on issues of technology, surveillance to some degree some, some weapons systems. although the united states was very careful to ensure that, that american weapons technology to migrate through israel to china. and there's
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been some chinese investment in israel. but since october 7, we've seen an increasing distance between china and israel, and china is really decided to double down on the idea that we are the leaders of the global south. the global south includes the pal city national movement, and israel is part of a depressive hedge, a monic effort to deprive the pals city and so forth. they right they deserve. there's been a lot of daylight between israel and china and last time months, so i don't think that's going to go away quickly. but of course israel does have things that china wants. and israel also thinks it's important as you go through the world. china is a great power and it's good to have good relations with great powers. chuck israel was very serious about not just having good relations with united states,
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but inculcating good relations with both china and russia. i think israel is going to be open to better relations with china, and i would expect that when the dust settles, china would be open to improving relations of israel, image years to come. so it's all hester that jump the altima from the center for strategic and international studies. thank you very much. i of the, anyone who has been surveys as patient tours, a parent, but a few situations in life. most stressful and when a child is diagnosed with cancer, what if your child is diagnosed in a war zone for children and you cry and having a chance that live can often mean having to battled brutal circumstances in the middle of his treatment for cancer? little demetrius and his family have been forced by russian bonds to lead their doctors and their country. there was an opportunity to start treatment abroad, but we decided enough my deeds because we think this institution provides treatment
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at the european level. i have 2 older son's, my plan was to get through this, everything would be fine. they would come to visit and then we'd leave the hospital and be together again. it would have been easier for both my child and for me. but unfortunately, after the terror attack by the russians were forced to go abroad, 3 year old demitrix was diagnosed with leukemia in june and had already begun treatment when a russian missile struck the hospital, killing several people. reconstruction work has already begun, and doctors continue to treat patients here before we left for school to uh, measurable, lovely, new, the blast wave damage almost half of the wing of the department which was intended to perform intensive, high dose chemotherapy regimens. those of laurie, she knew that i'd be almost somebody to know, we're doing our best to provide children with conditions in which treatment can
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continue to grow. vanya winterstein did the keywords key, or even a smaller bus are. now, when the parents who want to be relocated can do so all my gosh are, and those who want to can stay for treatment and the commodities so, so far, 8 patients and their families have chosen to leave for another country. their trip was arranged with help from the ukrainian government, as well as the world health organization and the european commission. the buses are specially equipped to transport cancer patients whose immune systems are compromised by their treatment. so we have so called i p c mattress. it's infection prevention control measures which is very close to varying mosques, maybe varying collins and isolate for patients from each other, so they should not touch each other, etc. we have um, teams which are working specifically on one patient. the bus is headed to an airport in poland, where the families will catch flights to their final destinations. demetrius is
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going to a hospital in munich. it's a long journey, but he's excited to fly in a plane for the 1st time. his father asks him to wave from the sky. unfortunately, he doesn't know how long he won't see his dad and his brothers. but we're going to call for going to color boys and viber, right? there's hope for demetrius and his family. the survival rate of his type of cancer is over 80 percent of the kathrina blo be nova is a health expert with unicef, ukraine, and we asked what the attack on the shoulders hospital in keep meant for the treatment of sick children or hello. of course, this attack was absolutely horrible for children for their parents and for this past and as likely mentioned that i'm already in your program. it is very important for the children loved to even set up their statements. so the government, the company as a full is very grateful for a better chance to continue 3 percent of all of the. and i know that
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a lot of these children were taken to germany and not only now, but as well in the beginning of the war because it's a really important nothing about these 3 men. because otherwise is investigating for the families. and as well. of course it is a huge festival, so the even like that. and this is a breast again, most only for the children and my family to the parents where they are not only from the doctors but as well. so everybody's weakness based events and it was basically the full time, think witnessed it and then use up and how people to help and the school and that is the day have a good day. so you, the next time the
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fair market is moving, but so far they haven't quite taken off their taxes. their hail is game changers. urban transportation, many issues like crash tests, pilot training and flight through this remains unresolved. when will the nobility of the future finally take to the sky? stayed in town on dw trench warfare. but you don't with the
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soldiers that went off and seize yes, looking to fight to the spot with drink and seniors. program focuses 90 years in 45 minutes on d w. the comes out seeing the highlights you every week in your inbox, subscribe. now this shadows, these pod costs and videos shed light on the dog is devastating. colonial har is infected by germany across and he employed scores to post tactics, farms, and destroy lives. what is the legacy of this wide spread race as depression today?
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history? we need to talk about here the stories, shadows of german colonialism. the late again, it's down to the very last minute. getting to the meeting on time will be type. maybe take a taxi. that probably won't work, because whether it's ben cox, beijing, or new york, the taxi will probably get stuck in a traffic jam in minutes. the but now there might just be a solution that's storing about the rest are also a name today. well, the 2024 olympic games in pair of be worthwhile financially wealth and power, or they get the threat to.

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