tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle January 10, 2018 7:00pm-8:01pm CET
7:00 pm
odd. i am tuesday. this is it only news live from berlin the international community condemns the decision by me in march of prosecuting two journalists the reporters boards with borders news agency are accused of violating the country's official secrets act the reporters say they were trying to reveal the truth about the military's crackdown on britain from muslims also coming up political parties are stepping up efforts to
7:01 pm
reach an agreement to start coalition talks but they say there's still a lot of work to do well look at some of the obstacles. plus anger grows in tunisia over rising prices and government austerity hundreds are arrested and dozens are injured after riots erupted in several towns. also they fled more and starvation hoping that life across the border is better all these are some of the one million refugees desperately looking for an escape from the civil war in south sudan in neighboring countries but once they arrive they face new threats. and the french actress catherine deneuve attacks the me too movement and accuses of its supporters of conducting a witch hunt against men because she writes have the abusers the accusers of abusers gone too far or has to know miss the point she.
7:02 pm
it's great to have you along. we start our broadcast in me and maher that country's military says its soldiers summarily executed ten were hinge of muslims in september referring to those killed as quote terrorists it's the first public admission of wrongdoing by the army since it began a crackdown campaign on ethnic were hinges last august the admission appears in a statement on the facebook page of the military's commander in chief on more than six hundred thousand were hinge i have fled their homes into neighboring bangladesh by the violence in states iowa meanwhile prosecutors in me and mark have charged two journalists from the reuters news agency with violating the country's official secrets act that's despite widespread international condemnation the pair say they were trying to report on the military's crackdown on ranch are muslims.
7:03 pm
journalist while managed to smile as the soldiers paraded him outside the courthouse but hey and colleague. seen here in a gray shirt of facing serious charges prosecutors allege they collected secret documents related to the military situation retain state but according to wile one they're actually in jail for trying to tell the truth about what's happening in a cane. this is unacceptable i want to tell you that they are charging us like this to stop us finding the truth their actions are wrong and unfair. and you know to a bevy of you've got you've got a few journalists ventured into wrecking state since last summer they are images of what the united nations coast the textbook ethnic cleansing going on there they showed burning writing of villages and locals fleeing the violence. the me and my army strictly controls access to right kane state it is allowed few journalists in
7:04 pm
and and the under the conditions it sets the reuters journalists say they were there to report ethically and truthfully but they were arrested under the old laws on secrecy after visiting regain their families have been devastated by the arrests they convinced their loved ones in the send. every minute to get out he told me not to worry because he didn't do anything wrong. he voted for this government so to get i know he strongly believes that he will be released soon. i hope that also. near though getting a lot of good family i made to sit in on the jailing of the road his journalist has caused an outcry both inside and outside me and my colleagues gathered outside court the fear among many myanmar is stepping up its crackdown on those who try to report a grave humanitarian crisis. i want to take you to me in mar now to david
7:05 pm
greenbaum he is covering the story for d. w. news and young gone a day how significant is this admission by myanmar's military the fact that they were involved in the deaths of those two ten their friendship muslims yeah i mean it's kind of like they're trying they're trying to play it on two sides here they're egg knowledge ng that these people were killed by the military and they're saying that there's a good missions of murder between security forces and villagers are not quite we clear who did what against these are row hinges but they're also saying that these were hinges were terrorists who had threatened lucas so. it doesn't hold up a strong with the other argument that they've been making where there's absolutely zero wrongdoing where they've been making the thing that for months. but. there again i'm trying to qualify it by saying that they're that these people were dangerous so. you know down rather than it really comes down to what other evidence
7:06 pm
might be coming out over time and these two reuters reporters who you were just reporting on it's been widely reported for weeks that they were looking into this mass grave and we really don't know what kind of evidence those two journal scepter and so you think this admission might have something to do with them uncovering something can we expect the army to admit to more wrongdoings. i mean i think what's good that's really hard to say because of course we've got so many religious who fled in the bangladesh more than six hundred thousand and a period of months and so many of them are coming across the border of these horrific horrific accounts of mass murder gang rapes we've got satellite photos of villages that have run into villages that have been burned to the ground on the flip side the military has locked out largely locked out locked down northern rakhine state where the security crackdown has been going on so un
7:07 pm
investigators cannot get in journalists cannot get in except on a few heavily supervised. trips where they take a watch where you go and have you can really limit your access so it's really hard to say what we're going to be able to be able to turn up of course are so many people trying to get you know we're trying to get information through other routes but that's much more time consuming and much more difficult to get the facts right it's really hard to see what's going to come out that there are so strong evidence coming out otherwise that's why you see the u.n. call this ethnic cleansing right ok so the documenting of these possible human rights abuses will be very challenging i want to shift our focus back to these two workers journalists that are being charged under me and mars official secrets act this is mission by the army what effect will it have on them. you know it's really hard to say right now because certainly what what what what
7:08 pm
what what so many journalists here are saying is that they believe a local journalist here that you believe that they're trying to make an example that the government the military is trying to make an example of these to try and warn local journalists don't dig deep in the work i don't do anything that would go against our narrative meaning the military's narrative this or there could be repercussions. on the flip side there it's not making this country's transition look good at all and makin a bad foreign investment and clearly the military doesn't want the foreign investment this soft so and they're getting such rather press and such bad publicity and keep in mind this is really a political case the courts here are only independent in name when you talk to people who studied this court system for years they will tell you that it's only independent in name that i'm cases that are sensitive to the military notes will get handed down through a chain that will eventually tell the judge how to handle it and really challenging
7:09 pm
situation you to pick their day for grim bond reporting from yangon thank you i want to tell you now about some of the other stories making news around the world john doe no south korea's president moon j.m.s. said he is willing to meet with his north korean counterpart under certain conditions moonset denuclearization of the korean peninsula would be his goal in any talks with the north while his comments come a day after the first high level talks between north and south korea in over two years. two senior british officials have urged germany to support a deal protecting london's finance sector after breaks it they use she breaks the negotiator has ruled out including such a deal in future talks on trade with britain germany some government spokesman said berlin does not intend to break ranks with the e.u. on this issue. aren't staying in germany a long day ahead and a lot of work to do well those were the only comments made by politicians as they
7:10 pm
arrived this morning to begin day four of exploratory talks about forming a new coalition government while the parties have agreed not to brief the press for fear of scuppering any deal americans conservatives and the center left social democrats have set themselves a deadline of tomorrow to find out if they have enough common ground to start formal coalition talks. day four of the exploratory talks between chancellor merkel's conservatives and the social democrats but much remains unclear the parties have agreed on a news blackout so information about any breakthroughs is scarce us or any statements by party leaders. and ourselves on the ground i suppose this is going to be a long day so first of all good morning for all of you and i hope that we will make some progress today before we go on throughout the talks are scheduled to run until thursday night on friday the two sides then announce whether they intend to launch
7:11 pm
a full coalition negotiations however the s.p.d. will also have to seek the backing of its rank and file party conference in bonn on january the twenty first at an earlier party conference in december delegates had already voted in favor of the current exploratory talks if the party conference backs full coalition talks the conservatives and social democrats then start a fresh round of negotiations which could take several weeks just like four years ago the social democrats will vent put the final agreement to the entire membership back in twenty thirteen they followed the party leadership recommendation to enter a coalition with anglo merkel's conservatives so there are still a few are knowns before germany has a new government. well they didn't use the charlotte potts is covering the talks and joins us now from our parliamentary studios in burlington charlotte those talks of this taking part in those coalition talks are staying very tight lipped about
7:12 pm
their progress what are you hearing through the grapevine now how likely is it that will have an agreement by tomorrow self-imposed deadline. well at the moment it doesn't look like they will reach some kind of agreement until thursday or maybe in the early morning hours of friday we've just heard from a senior christian democratic politician who said the final is treachery has been reached we are we have tough negotiations ahead in the next hours and also during the day tomorrow but we remain positive and optimistic that these talks will come to a conclusion and he reminded one more time of the responsibility these two parties have to at least try to form a government now and they think a lot of politicians would lose credibility if these talks would didn't come to a positive conclusion in the end and the tricky part really will start afterwards so then the social democratic base will vote on it and that is the tricky pod that they could let these talks fail in the end and it could be weeks until germany through the new government show the flesh this flesh just
7:13 pm
a little bit out for us what are some of the hurdles and challenges that they still need to overcome and are there areas where they do see eye eye to. there are areas where they do see eye to eye for example increasing the police force or attracting more skilled workers from beyond europe to germany and they've reached agreements on those we are hearing but there are also a lot of hurdles still for example they are talking about the reunification of families for refugees from civil war torn areas and especially the health care system that is one topic that is very heated lee discussed so that will be negotiated in the days to come over although what is missing in these talks it feels like is a clear vision what these parties want for the next four years how they want to many to look like what they want to change and both parties politicians of both parties seem a bit tired when it comes to these negotiations it's rather a forced marriage we think then and really
7:14 pm
a bringing bringing new force into the new grand coalition possible new grand coalition all right we're listening to your reporting there it does sound like there is a big question mark over this coalition if it does get off the ground the question is will it work when it does. well that is the big question and i can't predict the future but at the moment it does look like there could be a couple of big projects for example the project for europe of europe that would be a very good news for a mano a mano cone both parties are saying that they want to make europe and the integration of europe a priority how long a grand coalition if it works in the end could last we cannot tell at the moment it might be that it wouldn't last the whole four years are the pots reporting thank you. now germany is known as a nation of meat eater is the average german consumes close to
7:15 pm
a whopping sixty kilograms a year on now activists are urging germans to eat half as much not just for health reasons but also because of the harm meat production does to the environment while some experts say growing meat in labs could ease the burden on the planet but that approach also comes with its problems. daniel is twenty eight years old he's a typical european meat eater that means that so far in his life he has already eaten one and a half cows fifteen pigs and three hundred chickens no other food takes up as much land for its production as meat the proportion of climate damaging emissions created by the meat and milk sector is huge the minuet produces acidifies lands and oceans and short means environmental footprint is dismal that's a view shared by dutch biologist mark passed in twenty thirteen he hit the headlines after going public with the first artificially created burger well i
7:16 pm
think what it will be better is that it has a smaller i haven't made. it so it's better for you. we need much less resources. we could use so that we can produce much more with much more resources so that we can feed. in the usa israel and japan by a technologists are also looking into growing meat out of a petri dish post's first burger cost around three hundred thirty thousand us dollars to produce now that's fallen to only eleven dollars but a big problem is the nutrient solution in which the meat grows. do you know order to have a nutrient solution for the meat to grow in for the muscle fibers to be able to grow you have to develop a serum which of take from coffee to citizen from the blood of the fetus and that means you have to kill this cow killed a fetus and then get that growth serum from officials in my opinion that's definitely also
7:17 pm
a form of animal suffering is it. all the hopes for lap grown meat have also since been dashed. in twenty eleven it was thought that artificially created meat used around fifty five percent of the energy needed for meat from a real cow. but in twenty fourteen it turned out that energy consumption for artificial meat far from being less was in fact even more. the editors at the new meat after this don't see lab grown meat as a magic bullet that will solve all of industrial meat production problems. in view twelve flies in vitro meat is in our opinion as a struction a token act here in our western countries we must really urgently halt our consumption from sixty kilograms to thirty kilograms. of tries to kill all and what the report's authors are also calling for that germany stops flooding the world
7:18 pm
with one of its exports cheap meat. now it's been nearly three years since germany introduced a quota for women on corporate boards and daniel has it been a runaway success well as some good news but well there's plenty of road left to travel of course the quota calls for thirty percent of new executives to be women and the study by consultancy y. shows that are indeed more women on boards than ever before but there's plenty of room for improvement. it's still a man's world in germany's boardrooms there are now fifty women in top executive positions here but that compares with six hundred thirty six men. in two thousand and fifteen women made up just over five percent of executives the number has been growing steadily since at the beginning of two thousand and seventeen it had reached six point five percent and the fifty women now at the boardroom table account for seven point three percent of corporate decision makers
7:19 pm
in two thousand and eighteen. just over a quarter of companies listed on germany's top four indices have at least one female board member but the vast majority have only won only four percent have two or more female executives. one of those few companies with two women board members is germany's biggest lender deutsche bank. france's sylvia was the first woman on its board as chief regulatory officer she joined in two thousand and fifteen american chief operating officer came hammond's took up her post a year later germany itself is led by a woman not long ago chancellor angela merkel hosted the w twenty summit of the world's most influential women in berlin but her moves to increase the female presence on big corporate boards have had less effect with second tier companies only four point four percent of executives listed on the m. dax index of mid-cap companies are women more than eighty percent have no woman at
7:20 pm
all on their board. see eating plastic for dinner well that's what you may already be doing micro be the type you find in beauty products and washing down our drains polluting water supplies and the food chain now the united kingdom is banning the manufacture of the plastic particle. in this ocean lies an invisible threat micro beats the plastic particles can be found in face scrubs toothpastes and shower gel and a deadly for marine life but now the u.k. is taking action the country has banned the manufacturing of products containing micro beads and will stop sales later this year it marks a move beyond regulating plastic packaging on the outside to managing the use of non degradable plastics as actual ingredients with in products. we've recommended the latte levy because of the recyclability of coffee cups and we've also
7:21 pm
recommended that producers who make hard to recycle products hold. paper and plastic products should be forced to pay more for them there are many biodegradable replacements for plastic microbial but they are mostly found in the more expensive brands. we've got pumice powder here which we use in the products it's a little bit more expedient thing and we've got ground rice powder which we use in our face to ascribes as well and the benefits of these because we never use plastic that will buy degradable if they break down in the oceans they don't get into the fee chain and we don't end up eating them the ban could also mean future changes for companies who make cleaning products due to the widespread use of micro beats. and the small business to coming through big tech manufacturers betting big on new trends in las vegas at the consumer electronic show now back to night if you so much i always look forward to coming out of their prize interesting book a lot of interesting looking forward to that idea now we have to north africa more
7:22 pm
than two hundred people have been arrested and dozens injured after riots erupted in tunisia one protester has also been killed anger at government austerity measures has been driving the violence tunisia has earned praise for its transition to democracy after the arab spring in two thousand and eleven but tensions are rising over economic hardships experienced by ordinary tunisians. anger new austerity measures spilling over into unrest tunisia's government introduced the measures on january first and placed a strain on the pocketbooks of many tunisians. in many places demonstrators took to looting stores into borgo one man died possibly from breathing tear gas from police . it was seven years ago that the arab spring began here in the west tunisia is seen as an example of a successful transition to democracy not everyone is happy though. we had ten
7:23 pm
governments in seven years but got nothing but promises. with the kind of problems are getting worse for poor people but politicians are living the high life look the same. people also took to the streets in the capital tunis as well. margin of the protests is a deal the government agreed to the international monetary fund to help curb rising debt economic reforms were introduced one result fuel prices as well as many taxes went up as of the new year. it is our right to demonstrate for a lot of people it will be more difficult to make ends meet. this. discontent is growing in tunisia more protests are planned for this coming sunday the seventh anniversary of the country's revolution. last month regional powers have yet made another attempt to end over four years of civil war in south sudan government and rebel delegations signed a cease fire but once again it was broken with peace nowhere in sight south
7:24 pm
sudanese refugees continue to pour across the border to neighboring countries in what has become the biggest refugee crisis on the african continent over a million south sudanese fled to uganda some eighty thousand others have sought refuge in the democratic republic of congo simona full time travel to the border town of aba and sent us this report. and new day a new country and hopefully the beginning of a better life the south sudanese refugees have just crossed the border from south sudan to the democratic republic of congo they fled fighting back home grabbing whatever belongings they could carry work at mother. but were to get here we have had to come through the bush. we were trying to avoid the rockets because of the soldiers. it was exhausting and there was no food for the children.
7:25 pm
are going to market they've reached safety but their life in congo is off to a rocky start this group of refugees has been stranded at the border for several days waiting for registration and transfer to a refugee site many have tried walking the seventeen kilometers to the nearest refugee camp but say the congolese soldiers are demanding payments if you see with your eyes. as you see with your eyes we are now suffering if they allowed us to go on foot were able to go if you start here there are two checkpoints where you have to pay to pay to pay up to the camp. two. to three. such harassment isn't unusual says the president of the mary refugee site in our congolese soldiers often extort money from refugees or confiscate their belongings and sometimes even arrest refugees they suspect of being rebels.
7:26 pm
for us we. suffered in these refugees in congo have received little international attention donors have funded less than a quarter of the united nations humanitarian appeal that means basic services like shelter are lacking this woman arrived in congo over a year ago but she's still waiting to build a house. there is no way we haven't received anything since we arrived eleven months ago we're not even building materials. going to leave this house where we are staying belongs to a relative and i did the question a minute ago and there are ten of us sharing the place said it enough that i began my and i just want to set up a lesson that. education is also proving
7:27 pm
a challenge many south sudanese refused to send their english speaking children to local francophone schools instead refugee set up this makeshift anglophone school inside the camp but the authorities dismantled it now many children roam around without anything to do officials here in south sudanese refugees to attend local schools even though they admit there is not enough space. there's a call up works military the schools close to the size of full of children and it's a problem. of lambie but we need to have more schools. to accommodate all the children of. the. book would be faced with limited resources and the challenges of integrating some refugees are considering moving on to neighboring uganda instead but that would cost money that few can afford so for now where they have little choice but to settle in for the long haul and hope that one day peace returns to south sudan.
7:28 pm
our your washington years we still have a lot more to tell you about here's what's ahead french actress catherine deneuve and one hundred other women in france have denounced the me too movement against sexual harassment and they say it infantilize is women and is the start of a new puritanism and we'll look at some reactions on social media. we'll have that on a whole lot more and just a few. kitchen moba. the menu regional and mostly filling. the street food. a coolie never journey through the streets our kitchens all the american. led street led tales of talk
7:29 pm
goes to each it. in forty five minutes d w. to learn german with w. any time any place. whether with joe joe and your friends. it's tough to be mucking up the east. with friends all over the world. online and interactive. german to go. learn german for free with g.w. . bush family person bio diversity. you said the current pros and to live in an interest in the last five months of their lives happy and global ideas presented on signs from all over the world the flow traditional knowledge this is a drill we'll use it to make it see it'll help ease pain. coaching.
7:30 pm
i live in the kind i feel it's my duty to protect the area and that's why i bring my students here live they learn to love nature it's a new game. these are. our strategy is based on the traditional lifestyle of the people as a way of preserving the environment for the future generations out of yourself and . global ideas on facebook twitter feeling. great to see you again you're watching the w. new somebody the hakan brylin these are main stories right now. prosecutors in myanmar have charged two journalists from their workers news agency with violating the country's official secrets act the pair had been reporting on the military crackdown against her hinge on muslims in the norden reichian state the e.u. has called the case
7:31 pm
a test of democracy for me and mark. french actress catherine deneuve has criticised the me too movement for growing too far saying men should feel free to make advances to women in an open letter published in france warned of a new puritanism as a result of the recent surge of sexual harassment scandals while the actress is among one hundred women including journalists and intellectuals who signed the letter which the cries the recent wave of allegations against powerful men as a witch hunt. all right lots to chew on the provocative letter has hit social media like a bombshell i'm joined now by my colleague said smart from culture and bodger from our social media desk and i'd like to start with you affinity to how has the newsletter gone down well a lack not very well especially with a solid majority of women who are saying that the nerve was completely out of line
7:32 pm
and some of them are calling her an apologist for rape that's a pretty strong. reaction's there we have sandra miller who started the hashtag. which is basically basically the french need to and means expose your pig she writes here it's a shame that women's collective is trying to frame this international movement backed by both men and women as hatred towards men let's keep pursuing our view our vision now others say that is a speaking from a privileged position and she's out of touch this user rights missed an oven her friends who only travel by private transportation or taxi don't have to deal on a daily basis with the rising verbal and physical sexual assault in the streets and on the metro and of course the letter has also caused anger outside of france this is as yet a dent on italian hollywood actress who denounced harvey weinstein she writes kathleen the of and other french women tell the world how their interiorized mr g.
7:33 pm
has a low bottom ised them to the point of no return so a huge backlash there lee huge back has anyone come to her defense well there are some people in france who are saying they're afraid these movements are leading to a sort of feminist extremism adem when izing men and sex they say courtship should still be allowed this man for example here she says soon single men will be so scared of flirting with women that they will become a sexual or will only opt for pay for relationships while real harassers will still not be dissuaded by hashtags such as a balanced on both but then again the debate comes down to drawing the line between romance and courtship and abuse and critics say that this counter movement and this letter don't do that and we have a woman here who makes the point and writes the letter is sloppy and unfortunate of
7:34 pm
course that we shouldn't criminalize courtship and flew. hurting but the major mistake here is that the letter doesn't really distinguish between flirting and harassment now some female politicians have been in france have a lead to push for a law that would regulate kept calling and street harassment and that also shows that there is a strong voice that pushes for change and friends aren't for that i thank you so much for that want to head now to our colleague dorsey. thus cutting the nerve have a point here i mean are we in the middle of the equivalent of the french revolution and i hope spirit is on a rampage chopping every head in sight. if we are maybe cutting the nerves a little like marie antoinette when she was asked. you know the poor a starving what to do and she said let me take from such a privileged position it's very hard i think to have a realistic view of what an empowered women feel and the other thing about the
7:35 pm
french revolution since you say that is the aims of the french revolution were liberty equality and fraternity now if we change that for tonight a brotherhood to sisterhood then if we get a revolution here through this movement and get more liberty equality and more sisterhood for women across the world then a wonderful thing will have been done i don't think anybody will argue with that on that point but is it right for women to be judge jury and executioner in this case but are they really being this i think that didn't the has got reasons for writing her letter. for being a signatory the other around one hundred women also have their reasons i think. if you look at the nerve she has benefited greatly from working with male directors being a very successful actress often playing prostitutes she she has such beauty
7:36 pm
she has such a sexual power and i think in the at least the last half of the twentieth century. sic should power was the easiest power for women to have now it's time for a different kind of power we have access to real power to changing the world and that's what needs to happen now this what needs to happen now but that brings me back to the me me to movement you know it's getting momentum we've just had the oscars serve every prominent women sorry golden globes and just jumping you had already the golden globes people coming out and oprah winfrey with that riveting speech yes but what has really happened for women not in high places but people women's whose careers have been stopped in their tracks because they're harassed in the work that they get their jobs back how are they going to go about giving them their opportunities we need to give this time from the me to campaign which started
7:37 pm
with hollywood women talking about sixteen abuse this hopes doesn't answer it but helps give a voice to women who don't normally have a voice who aren't normally listened to that all it helps give them courage. i think the other thing is that the me too movement has led to the times up movement it led to it because seven hundred thousand women fam were kids wrote a letter or their organization wrote a letter on their behalf saying this is not just about hollywood it's about ordinary women working everywhere and they are the women who really need to be empowered so we are at the beginning of something where at the beginning of pets a revolution create words to end on thank you so much dorothy smart and for that it provides a thank you for bringing us the reactions thank you. business
7:38 pm
now and the consumer electronics show in las vegas is increasingly a form for old industries to show off their newfound tech credentials just take comic it's they're desperate to promise yourself driving technology within a matter of a couple of years even not decades and this year the show begins before you get to the convention center. tito paean vision of a driverless future is already taking shape before a visit even reaches the c.e.o.'s. self driving taxis like this b.m.w. awaiting to take them there for now there's still a human driver on hand for emergencies but on this trip he's not needed. it has three l. sixty degree sensing weight our sensing lives are sensing and vision and the fuse that information together so we can combine basically the
7:39 pm
readings and we track all the objects along i don't often get when this toyota goes into service there'll be no need for human backup it's a joint development between amazon and pizza hut. the transporter can carry twenty passengers but it can also double as a mobile office called a bar a tree or even a delivery van becomes in sixteen different versions expected to debut at the tokyo olympics in twenty twenty toyota says it's on course for the future technology is changing quickly and the race is on. germany's mercedes is opting for private automobiles the luxury carmaker strategy includes onboard driver entertainment with highly promising artificial intelligence which are to the road inside two months if you're driving it in the morning at seven o'clock to your office why do you have to
7:40 pm
type in your address in the vehicle at seven in the morning or do you have to ask why the car doesn't tell you on your own that i bought and secular navigation to your office address and you just get into the car and it just drives the way you drive it and you don't have to interact with the navigation system at all comparable pictures the next zero s u v powered by a fuel cell it converts hydrogen into electricity to drive the vehicle emitting only steam the next hour. the main advantage of a standard battery driven eco's is that hydrogen can be pumped as fast as petrol the drawback is that there aren't many hydrogen filling stations yet. whichever model comes to dominate future mobility the chances are it's already on show at this year's c s. yeah i can't help but be skeptical anyway it's not just markets that have been up in recent months as you will have noticed reported plenty of times here but the price of oil has been climbing to on wednesday all prices hit
7:41 pm
a three year high thanks to tight as supplies opec production cuts and a sharp fall in u.s. inventories pushed the price of brant crude over sixty nine dollars a barrel in u.s. trading if oil prices stay this high there are fears they could firm inflation down the road. have you ever looked in the fridge and found that food has passed that sell by date well it may not seem so appetizing a lot of food gets thrown away as a result even though much of it is the part that we find to eat that's why dairies in norway moving to a new system that dates will now be labeled best before but not after it's hoped consumers will learn the sell by dates doesn't mean food isn't safe and that they'll still give that yogurt that inspired expired a week ago a chance that should reduce food waste and could serve as a model for all of you. like to lay them out and an exclusive best occasion absolutely in
7:42 pm
a sad one has tens of thousands of children go missing in china every year now one knows exactly how high the number is while in many cases these children are bought and sold on online forums with corrupt officials allegedly covering up the deals as adoptions w.'s mathias bullinger met one chinese mother searching for her son. time jane jane lives near beijing with her youngest son jay chen she divorced three years ago was born after the divorce his older brother stayed with his father bit challenging jane was later awarded custody but when she went to pick him up i wasn't there. you know it's family for. my ex-husband threatened me he said if you report me i'll kidnap the boy then you'll never see him again since then my only purpose in life is to protect my younger son and find my older one i'm terrified every day. town
7:43 pm
jane jane is convinced x. has been sold the child tens of thousands of children disappear in china every year there are no official figures. she petitioned the court and filed charges with the police. she goes through her paperwork again and again all her applications were rejected the m.r.i. thought only if i'm especially afraid for him when winter comes i think maybe he's out there somewhere where i imagine that he's living with people who treat him badly. finally she has a small glimmer of hope an officer told her the address where the child should be now tandjung jane is on her way. has a long journey ahead of her and she has to be careful the state is targeting troublesome people like her even if she can't prove it she believes that corrupt
7:44 pm
officials are involved in the disappearance of her son. michael phelps she also got a new haircut to change her appearance. was a good one. finally she reaches the village she knows the address but most of the house numbers are missing. she doesn't dare ask directions because she's afraid her son will be moved again. this village is really big. remember i don't know where to start looking tell you. how much of. the village kindergarten. tangy engine carefully questions a camera of the village children. none
7:45 pm
of the kids here look like my son. the next morning she wants to try the local police maybe the author it is here more helpful. the officers take time to listen to her case and promise to look. for the child that very day. when that and i feel like i'm finally getting justice i'll soon see my son again. i'm so grateful. the next day the police call challenging jane back in she hopes that means she'll be able to see her son again. after a short while she returns without her son the officers only took blood for a genetic test. you know what they told me that i didn't follow the right
7:46 pm
procedures it. was that those i tried everything gone everywhere now they say it was all wrong what's the right way to do this i try to lawyer without success i'm at a loss i'm just a country girl all i know is that i want to find my child is here and no doubt. a few months later the old fart is finally confirmed that tanjung pinang son does live where she had been looking for him but she isn't allowed to see him he has now officially adopted one or the thought that what that i don't know if i can find him just that my son lives in that village and i need to get back there and find him guilty it's the only thing i can do now that you are the fun. challenging gene now knows that move ten lives with
7:47 pm
a family that had no sons in the countryside it's important for parents to have a son to look after them in their old age. the result is a thriving black market for trafficking in boys. was. a little does anyone know this child are you there how do you know i'm i can see it do you think the letter was you know not. just that you've seen him haven't you but. how old is he five. where. on earth are. never seen him before the. time changing doesn't get anywhere with her charm she grows more desperate. oh yeah we're far i've been trying to find him for three years this is my child he was sold to someone in your village three years. i want my child back
7:48 pm
while you are young yet have all that on the ground. why where did this family get the money to bribe everyone i was asked. but i don't. think that i'd tell that yet the fellow that. you know. damn you all have it on your criminals no one will save you you misfits you crooks. it is another cent back in the fight for her child and against a corrupt system. will not give up until she has her son back. to cycling nears now britain's a chris froome has been urged by the director of the tour de force to the slower mirrors of a doping violation. done said the thirty two year old is must provide an explanation
7:49 pm
as quickly as possible for his blood was found to have twice the legal amount of an asthma drug during space twenty seventeen love with a tour which he went on to win well if he fails to explain himself the four time tour de france winner could face a bounce from cycling. whatever the looks of the. one. i leave. well bloom i think. that if it's big it's big. you'll kaggle you said when i got what your head. that's a clip from darkest hour a new movie about when winston churchill became prime minister in the summer of one nine hundred forty against all advice he resisted the german army although the british forces in france were in retreat and in grave danger robin miller from our
7:50 pm
culture desk is here gary oldman there as a winston churchill he got the golden globe award this yesterday. a worthy winner critics here oh undoubtedly this is a tool of the force of this is this film sort of centered around gary oldman as performance and he didn't play churchill in the way we just the way we storm then the sort of gently typical thing we expect of chess we have there's a soft side there's a sensitive side to it. and also the fact that he got the goat is quite surprising because a few years ago gary oldman bad man have forgot loeb's calling it meaningless and words i can't repeat in front of you or indeed. it's. obviously the jury have forgiven him for that because it is an extraordinary performance i think it's got oscar written all over it but for now let's see more of his performance and more of darkest hour. the germans have encircled all forces and dunk
7:51 pm
when churchill is made prime minister he doesn't only have to fight the nazis in world war two he also has to define those who are itching to negotiate a peace deal with germany a remote path to the arctic and death or glory if the odds are firmly on the former nothing employers in trying to shorten a war that we are clearly losing. your right there. has lost a collapse a push to preparing for his role after gary oldman discovered sides to the man he hadn't known before chip ice suddenly started to actually see recognize and see the genius the man it was he was and i felt it was a twinkle in his i he was sort of naughty and and cherubic darkest hour takes a close look at a man who was disliked by many around him and still managed to take a firm stand in
7:52 pm
a time of crisis. when so. it's kind of about leadership and doubt and a crisis of confidence. and how winston rose above. the difficulties and imparted to happen but it's not just churchill this needs your most in here it's the man himself with all his flaws and insecurities. through qualities you carried my poor judgment you know. you sense of humor. you walk yourself. darkest hour is a riveting political thread are but also has a few jokes in store protocol it's just that. or does it mean well i mean that i would have to advise the whole i spend time in
7:53 pm
a south african place. well . you know i'm. not a. great staff he's under recognizable as as gary oldman in that role absolutely and this is down to the makeup it has to be said really i mean it's extraordinary performance but he wouldn't do the film unless he got the makeup off his coat custer heroes sujit was in retirement he did get him and there's the result it takes three and has every day before he went on set and just one example evidently he said in an interview recently gary oldman that when he had the make up all of the solution everything he walked into to the set all the extras would sort of dull for hats and say good morning so. that's how good it was i mean it's all going gets an oscar i think they'll get the oscar for makeup as well for custer here issue
7:54 pm
should be right the transformation is remarkable to see this talk about that other movie that's also making waves at the moment a wartime movie done kirk could we see this as a companion to done kirk absolutely what what was going on politically behind the scenes as shown in the film this huge movie last year which also says oscar written all over it we see what what was happening in reality in cuckoo i mean he was determined not to give in to the germans which as we know change the course of history because they they were they were saying we've got to make peace. but he had the problem that there was this huge force in from. beating a retreat from the german. and and all me and and we're talking four hundred thousand soldiers and he was determined to get them back to being that it was a terrible loss of life but three hundred and sixty thousand. to follow us another
7:55 pm
day which are obviously proved to be very very important. you're for edition going to put you on the spot a little bit many great great actors have gone on to for train winston churchill so is this performance the definitive portrayal of the great churchill hybrids i mean i don't think you know all of them but i mean it's an extra it really is a tour de force as i said before and. as we saw he's got the side we saw of him with his wife clementine this insecurity that he was he was a very sensitive man who was a great painter he wrote lots of books the only other performance was very keen on was john lithgow in the crowd you know the series the crown. and of course is a brit using an american place that he was known for the synopsis of funnily enough he won the golden globe for best supporting actor. this is interesting i think this is real oscar material actually with with back to and i think i think you walk away
7:56 pm
with it all right we'll hold you to it we'll hold you to it there so and thanks so much for having greatly appreciate it all right before i let you go i want to remind you of our main headline this hour prosecutors and me and maher have charged two journalists from the workers news agency with violating the country's official secrets act the pair have been reporting on the military crackdown against branch of muslims. aren't that doesn't free i'll see you again tomorrow thank you for spending part of your day with us.
7:57 pm
7:58 pm
fifteen minutes. and i think one day this war will be considered cruel and unjust war. and certainly all citizens of ukraine every man woman and child in. their homeland. no one wants russia here is the. global news. d.w. made for mines. unimpeded access to education and knowledge and the same opportunities for everyone it's a central goal of the global community but what's the reality on the ground education for w.'s multimedia special roommates personal stories and highlights
7:59 pm
8:00 pm
8:01 pm
50 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on