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tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  February 23, 2018 4:00pm-4:15pm CET

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you considered one of the greatest cities of the world thank you. before you got to this picture here very young. very young. thing. to all first. place and. brothers. did you ever think when you were playing football that he would get to this point well it was like. this is what i want to work for of course there were situation where you think it's not working i want to. i think
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the key point is that you always follow your dream and work hard of course sometimes it doesn't happen. you have to believe in yourself. and of course you have to be on point when you get the chance you have to perform at some point afraid of always tells me who plays baseball the major league tells me you know if you stay ready you don't have to get ready yeah. your brothers. walking through the streets you. are young football. grew up what was my important things to do. when i started to play for what was very young but then when i got to the. age like thirteen fourteen fifteen sixteen years your friends say want to go on. and i do want to have. goods.
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sold but this is the time you have to focus you have school you have to perform to the team's soul if you want to come through especially the point you have to work on your things i would say just even if you don't come from a good area you always have people who support you and believe in you. from the market to the artwork. now we're going to have to start with it because i saw a young version of geronimo ok no he's done that really yeah yeah you know it started when i was sixteen seventeen years old and i was with my two older brothers and they say oh yeah today we get to we all do the same to we don't ask your mom because she was right we just go in. and i was like
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ok let's do it so we all went and we all do the same to we did the first draft right. and. i read somewhere that you've never been to god or africa is that still i would i been to africa and gold to go do some. down with my dog. with my family members in two thousand and eleven jerome breaks off the field and welcome twin daughters to the world. after the goal you school or whatever you dedicate the goals you daughters they always say you have to school and. so how has fatherhood changed you changed my whole life when you have two daughters and you're your complete whole day changed for you it's a lot the ball how you are and how you feel when they were born. between you
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situation and you want more relaxed and you're all right and i had to fold them and of course sometimes you also have to say you know all the small bright and stuff like this but i always wanted to be a young father and very proud of them right but it's you know like i have a son and a daughter and it's completely different girls like it's like. you promised. to do it here to make it what. it is that's what i thought of that because as a kid there were going faster because two weeks ago my builder when i picked up from school was she's like calling a guy so now. you can fight oh you came by looking at my own so my going take my meals out i want to know.
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some loving father who's graced the cover of a magazine. a lot of guys with west would start their creative force their way so what i try to do my own way. it was interesting for me when i was injured i had a hard time that i had to time to create my own glasses one might. try things i don't care what people say this picture here this picture he's got a kind of crazy are you addicted to shoes like these would be on the c.d.'s from my mother always told me you can open. it started when i was thirteen fourteen years old and i saw all those shoes i want them in different colors and then right. right it was like i looked through some old sneakers last pair of shoes you bought . where the. question. well tonight you don't have to.
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love. one another connection is across the pond with hip hop. talking about this relationship like how did it start and what is the relationship a lot of people don't or kind of confused about the work i was with my old management and we had to make a corporation question the nation work with them and us through all. my old men and then we met people from rome nation we talked what was possible to do in the u.s. marketing and stuff. we played. and i will say. ok what was that like meeting that was amazing. was the dream of just. one of the biggest in the world to make. i come so
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yeah it was very interesting little soul like there was like i talked to a friend i told him i. have futuristic they call you and that's everything yeah you can see kong or anywhere would all like you know. very few very few of call man like a family member in the rock nation cool and. i took the whole management for me it's also a nation cool so favored jay z. song ninety nine. you're already part of a dynasty here by your thoughts about the upcoming world cup well of course always before the world called you're excited just like the biggest tournament in full i'm excited to. it's coming. yeah of course you try to one of the game but it
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will be very hard but we have a good young team makes young fans a little bit all the players so i'm really looking for a guy who's going to make the problems of. winning and he's got a world cup. and plenty of silverware. should be finished yet. moving on from brian's veteran defender let's check out don't miss brand new strikeout missy that's why. i'm. me she. loves him but. will he stay or will he go and only has him on line from chelsea until the end of the season the twenty four year old was born in
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brussels belgium will he become don't miss new super heroes. all the more but if the philippines ever. but who is me she bats why exactly. his parents moved to belgium from congo. let's have a look at them up close and personal. try to get. it all began in belgium she has a. looking good mission. he started out just on the edge where he stayed for six years they've been champions of the belgian late ten times but why his little brother also plays football issues next stop was must say. i mean she has
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a. ship in this french sea port such why grew to be a much softer strike and international player. oh and he also has a twin sister who's a model that will bring a. child killer. in twenty fifteen the batsmen made his international debut for belgian. and with the belgian national team he has lots of fun. up to two years in my sights he headed to chelsea she has a. thirty nine million euros a record transfer from a site. what else is a fan of sponge bob. and dragon ball. right mission.
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so now ones that don't thank me she has a. history. since day one but why has had supreme to the dalton fans that he can be a new and better batman his predecessor about a young did it pretty well and left behind large shoes to fill. that position opened up the she was that to sweep into the rescue. scene sense of what might be a community whose whose home oxymoron did so he could combine it with the music that's. going to compute. most of. these.
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i will try stay in durham and overall his journey continue. and have a new back and these three in the starting line up sorry i got so drunk surely and malcolm royce. state twenty three daughter one first mentioned black five. i think. rice secured three points it's amazing it's a good feeling we're very good friends and. we want to do this for long time and now it's finally there and now we have to get healthy and then play together like like we used to. it was the first time together and darkman starting line up three close friends. so we knew each other from the youth league level
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because we're all roughly the same age and then on the german national team we all met again that's where it happens is you know. it is a. win goodson sure that transferred to dortmund in the summer of two thousand and sixteen it was a dream come true for the past all three playing for the same team you know are through she goes through it's a really great feeling on the national team we always used to joke that we might all end up at the same club one day when none of us really thought it would ever happen off this was myself in the room and then it took another year and a half until they were on the same starting line up in football that seems like an eternity. as for andre surely he's had a streak of bad luck during his time in dortmund countless injuries repeatedly held him back his self-confidence and fitness were in danger but now that's changed after confidence and after that the trust from the manager that's that's all you need because if you're not on the pitch you can't can't play. so now i want to want
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to give everything i want to play i want to have fun and at the moment i'm in the good form soft to keep it and look forward to this mario good so missed a lot of matches in the meantime know he's on the right track to being in top form . with them up most voters told us that once you get back in the rhythm of playing it helps to get back in shape and it's important for every player to trust himself and to work on his fitness to really get back to one hundred percent. mark of russ finally completed the trio after being injured for nine months right away he's back in the game his goal against laptop was his first in two hundred seventy four days but credible feeling. he finds a modern we're always happy to be on the pitch together which hasn't been the case too often. or today that was the case and i think we did really well.
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yeah still even if there's still room to improve the whole mystery. finally that three tales of hardship have found a happy ending the best friends are reunited on the pitch and all three have big plans for the future with germany at the world cup and if all goes well with you i've been in the champions league. now to a man who's a fighter with a soft side. that's right we go visit them for us you mention blood but. happy as can be that wasn't always the case. tone of your shirt on the come on the. mic you know and then you know and then put. his story started with poverty and hunger and those who were true whether or not this number of moves that he took. a story with early setbacks.
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to morrow it's a story full of struggles and desperation. i think simpler. than anything else that i've seen one of them yet but i don't deny but it's also a story with an incredible happy ending. if you do. anything in for them is he putting your name into i'm a guy. what happened to raul bob idea who helped him on his way to stardom and how did this tiny boy become a footballing things. that a search kicks off in argentina's capital but outside as it may look like it's all sunshine and tango but for many life in the city is a struggle. but that's not such. an enormous what might i mean here you know i mean david grange. but the little boy had big dreams
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and you did football it was the way out. there we may see a puppy about one. in a whole john wayne i know. you know who the others were by the end of a looker. only grew up a diehard fan club produced talents like diego maradona played in a youth team until one day they won't pull can you recall you'll improve with us or prettiest this year get on with the people in london you know being politically. faithful for the years with us from the only. original form of bookish so you all can lead on this we're going to be disappointed kid needed help and found it at the local football camp because she's fed him more than just knowledge. from.
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a. group of women here that we've done this. you know. intense a hell of a. regained his confidence thanks to good coaching and regular meals. dipping in and his hand you know you know. you really are brewing in peru and what i'm. going to go and. sealing it in torment you know. but then a small miracle occurred riddle played his favorite team's biggest rival taking the chance to record champions were desperate to sign him up they could sell it was something special for. me. because. i mean the ice age you know they say.
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this is. what i want i was simply made a choice you know playing at a you tournament in europe an offer from you headed to switzerland but it wasn't quite what he expected. bernie you know a group. of us here in london we mention them clues to win the case and hopefully also. where we're such a gift from that we would want to nearly. did it for you and pm loose on the name and the tone he showed on this home on the. make you don't even need to do it before so i. pulled through and eventually got his big money so the german ponderously get.
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the fight so he has his grandfather's tattooed on his chest to give him strength. but no love i'm definitely that gentle bloke you know i said she keep those within me but i'm not going to quit three young. mice in my family the boy but only a. little me feel old but i think of them. to hold a lot of them. disagree. now and i will but there is a proud father himself and his little boy no i got he has. a new number son in dusty oh you look at it said eva look on the you know what i mean i knew he hopelessly do you know put one into. deep poverty and hunger
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to become a focal of. a fight. for what it's worth a football star stuck only know how to kick a bolt to run such a kick off life present some secret talent. i'm. going.
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to say goodbye here's a wrap from grease madam papa. just bought it was going to the post is right here it competes in the pot was in the
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pipe. book you should complete the gain is there still a descent on the bottom of the way but. don't stick with. the. the book. the book. the book. the book.
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the book. the bontrager international. journalists discuss the topic of the week following the release of turkish german journalist uneasy from a prison in turkey to question the be the book again this president i don't want to play francis join. the be. the boss the book
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. suitably. tomorrow today t.w. . every journey begins with the first step and every language of the first word emerged in the. cohesive germany to punish the business. why not telling the truth. in simple online on the role model and training. course week. maybe see. the barely feel. the scars on. the pain
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still tangible. suffering for god. for c.b.s. and. they have survived but do they also have a future. i really understand people who say they don't want to stay here. but i also admire people who want to stay here and who decided to create something . new beginning in peace time more the people making it possible what needs to happen tolerance and reconciliation are to stand a chance. out of darkness cities after a war. starting march tenth on d w.
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that is due to the news coming to you live from berlin no ceasefire for syria russia don't suppose you did a humanitarian truce of the un security council this is the new wave of attacks in eastern good just kidding and injuring more people also coming up another victim of last week's florida school shooting is laid to rest president trump appears to give some drunk on gun control of the city and says the teacher is beyond. class a very good day for the winter olympics most controversial competitive as russia was a little bit accurate secure three medals on day fifteen with success and i feel cocky and figure skating can bring you the latest from kyung cha.
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a look of i'm good to have your company. the u.n. envoy for syria has renewed his calls for an immediate cease fire in eastern guta near the syrian capital damascus this a day after russia blocked a u.n. security council resolution calling for a thirty day humanitarian truth moscow's demanding seven amendments delaying the vote until later today meanwhile there's been more bombing by syrian forces today as warplanes shelled the heavy populated enclave human rights monitors say government shelling has killed more than four hundred people since sunday including many children. even for those surrounded by day it is a crushing moment. a father hugs his child
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one last time. for syria's victims there is no dignity in dying. should. and for syria's government there is no relenting every minute bombs are dropped. monitored groups say more than four hundred men women and children have been killed since sunday homes and hospitals obliterated leaving doctors to handle matters of life and death amid the ruins. we had to do one of the operations under the rubble. because we couldn't evacuate we had to do it under the rubble. of them so i'm now. the syrian regime says rebel extremist groups who control eastern are using humans as shields the un security council has been debating
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a thirty day ceasefire that was along for a deliverance and the evacuation of casualties. these are not terrorists showing up in these makeshift emergency rooms these are civilians they are ordinary people under attack by a barbaric assad regime that is bent on leaving. level to the ground with no regard for the four hundred thousand men women and children who live there but it was met with resistance to russia blocking the resolution. the world just used to achieve stabilisation painstaking work is necessary these parties need to sit down and negotiate the parameters of the ceasefire. there is no other way. but hope still locks within the beseech concrete canyons. by the young men it comes in the shape of a hole and i slowly but surely they're digging their way to safety. the only
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escape from a torrent of coal mines must be an underground one. is the syrian doctor who worked in aleppo at a time when the syrian city was experiencing the kind of bombing that we're now seeing in eastern huta i asked him to give us a sense of what civilians there are going through now. so it's like. literally hell in a little time out like back in aleppo like. three or four years. same thing happened all the time with no different yeah. for five years so. everything like that maybe america medications that was a few unfortunate i just sort of electricity and now this by public. attacks happening for the past ten days it's
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a disaster humanitarian disaster. you look at the pictures that we are seeing a lot of civilians but the syrian regime face that they are rebel groups based on day using civilians as human shields what's your response to that. actually it's not making sense at all though the regime and their cheap propaganda always used those claims back there was three hundred thousand. people and the regime also claims that like. the fighters are using them as shells but it's not making sense at all because in aleppo back in aleppo there was well it's opened and people. wanted to stay in aleppo same thing happened for five years. there was open and people want to stay in their hometowns. and. not the fighters who are surrounding. the regime who is to run to get.
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preventing and they think or anyone to come in or out from up with up. in two thousand and sixteen when i was talking to a liberal and yet it doctor was killed attack most of the game and the washington. media pages claim that they managed to target and kill the tourist doctor so they consider it but you accept doctor is he as a tourist and say that he is treating tourists so it's not making sense at all it's a cheaper book and something even like and how many. talk about of their homes i know you work as a doctor in aleppo and what are you seeing coming out of eastern widowhood new fic injuries of people and children what specific challenges doctors face in dealing with such a situation. main challenge is that the doctors and hospitals are the main targets all the time during the best three days more than twenty one
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health facility have been targeted. so it's the main target the main targets for the which him and the russian are the hospital facilities the bakeries and the schools so that's it must said and the other thing that. those people and those doctors know for sure that they are list alone. killing machine so they have to to see each time each injury over how many medications they can use before it's. because they are afraid thinking all the time that they might run away or feel the pain killer or if you're six or everything's just fine and most chance that's very very situation based on that it's such a difficult situation thank you so much for finding time to talk to us comes i'll cut the missive in dr who worked in aleppo sharing his thoughts with us indeed obvious thank you very much turkey is free to german national head to prison for
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political reasons this has been confirmed by the german foreign ministry on friday the identity of the prisoner has not yet been disclosed in the person will not be allowed to leave ticky being onsen comes a week off the release of jim into his janice dennis you cheated he spent more than a year in investigative custody. usually was allowed to return immediately to gemini his release was seen as a sign of easing tensions between germany and ticking for german citizens remain in jail. right now during a political correspondent thomas spat upon the mentee students told us what do we know about this german citizen and turkey and israelis. i'm richard we know very little about this person we don't even know if it's a man or a woman we don't know how long he or she spent in prison we don't know what prison this person was in we only know what you yourself mentioned there that he had been
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in prison that he's been released but he can't leave the country as of now the spokesperson today here in berlin was asked why he couldn't give any details about this person and he explained that it was essentially because of privacy protection that the german government can only give personal information about these cases when the person in question explicitly agrees to have that information released and that in this specific case that does not happen that they don't have that permission so that's the reason why they're not handing out information so that's also the reason why we know very very little about this person not these the detention of these cases of strained relations between the two countries and now we've seen two of them released within a week why essentially if you ask the government they will say that's their diplomatic efforts that was certainly the case with the release of mr a few days
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ago in fact the german foreign minister stress that it was basically germany's diplomatic efforts talking to turkish officials that it was the key behind them if you chose release and it's probably also the case here but again since it's very difficult to find any concrete information about this person it is also difficult to find information about what prompted his release from turkish prison tell us the lead up on i'm interested is thank you. european leaders are meeting in brussels today to tackle some major issues including the e.u. s'posed brags that finances on the table is a possible increase in contributions that's to plug the budget shortfall after britain leaves the bloc next year before that summit the e.u. commission hosted high level talks on fighting terrorism and stemming migration through africa's sahil region that's rocked the world's poorest areas more than four hundred million euros has been pledged by e.u. nations for the region also said it would double its funding for
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a joint military operation set up by the five countries in the sahil where security is threatened by extremist groups and criminal networks that help in this has become a european priority because of the high levels of migration from the region to europe. europe's front here in central africa thousands of migrants travel through it before they can take their chances crossing the mediterranean for years the hell has been plagued by jihadist groups and criminal networks smuggling weapons drugs and humans across borders. it's become a breeding ground for terrorists and a big worry for the you. in brussels boosting development was a key topic at today's meeting with leaders from the african region but the main issue on the agenda was that of security the european union has pledged to double its funding to the g five so help joint force
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a partnership of fight to help countries mauritania burkina faso mali niederer and chad founded to counter terror and illegal immigration in the area. we want to support the g five sale joint force. the e.u. was the first to believe in this project and invest in it with the first bed of fifty million euros last july today the european union will double its support to the joint force runs. other countries such as the new and saudi arabia have also pledged found show support. until now the head region has heavily relied on european countries for security france alone has more than four thousand troops deployed in the area the g. five partnership aims to be fully operational later this year europe is hoping that it will mean more military self-reliance and fewer european troops on the ground in the sahara. if we are being stupid some of the stories making news around the want
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australia's deputy prime minister bobby joyce's announced his resignation joyce had been under sustained pressure to resign after revelations of an affair with his former staff member came to light now new allegations of sexual harassment against him have emerged. nigerian authorities say the schoolgirls who were unaccounted for following a book overarm attack on monday are still missing this comes after early reports suggested that some of them had been rescued dozens of girls from a state run boarding school inductee in you'll be a state of thought to have been abducted by extremists. haiti has suspended oxfam great britain's operations in the country for two months pending an investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct the move followed reports that oxfam staff held sex parties and sexually abused women during relief efforts for a devastating earthquake in two thousand and ten. to the united states there are
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new details have emerged about last week's florida school shooting that left seventeen people dead the armed officer assigned to the school waited outside the building during the shooting and did not confront the killer this news comes as president carter trying to schooling for tighter background checks and for some teachers to be armed. this is the coffin of chris hicks and hailed a hero for trying to stop the shooter at the florida school he worked at a u.s. navy veteran he was given full military honors. as families lay their loved ones to rest more details about the fateful day are emerging surveillance footage has shown that the armed officer on duty scott peterson never went inside the school to confront the gunman was radio at a point in time. and he took up a position where it looked like he could see the western most entry into the
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building and they were was never wanted. peterson has now resigned and is under investigation. the latest the shooting has led to a raging debate on gun control the national rifle association the n.r.a. offered its solution to ending gun violence stop bad guy with a gun it takes a good guy with a guy school districts p.t.a. teachers unions local law enforcement moms and dads they all must come together to implement the very best strategy talk harden their schools including of fact they have trained armed security that will absolutely protect every innocent child in this country. advocates of further gun control are
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demanding action be taken we are taking students protesting outside the white house this week said they were angry that school massacres have become commonplace and little has been done to stop them according to gun control advocates a group there have been eighteen school shootings since the beginning of the year i mean the public outcry president trump has endorsed a higher minimum age for buying certain rifles and tighter background checks for purchasers. he also rates are rated his call for some teachers to carry guns. your house in my opinion you want to have the issue of these because these people are cowards they're not going to walk into a school if twenty percent of the teachers of god so maybe ten percent or maybe forty percent that what i'd recommend doing is the people that do care and we give that what bonus we give them a little bit of a bonus back in florida the family of slain chris heaps and like thousands of
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others in the united states every year is coming to terms with the consequences of gun violence. let's get some business news doll from helena and bitcoin's wild ride continues hadn't has not been the best week for bitcoin i'm afraid amri said the cryptocurrency struggle to stay above that key ten thousand dollar mark and it's currently just shy of it still people invested in the cryptocurrency a year ago would now be seeing a return of seven hundred percent quite an impressive figure for something that some see is making money out of thin air so how exactly does it work let's take a look at the technology behind it. you can't pay for anything with real physical tokens like these bitcoin is a digital currency and its value is determined just like everything else by supply and demand and unlike with the dollar and the euro there are no central banks able to influence the course of the crypto currency value. bitcoins were first
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programmed ten years ago the developer was known only by a pseudonym said toshi nakamoto to this day the programmer behind the technology has never been identified the idea that everyone who installs the bitcoin software on their desktop or smartphone becomes part of the bitcoin network the digital ledger that supposedly makes that coin both independent and secure is what's known as block chain a block chain is a digital chain managed by many computers in a network which keep track of records and what are called blocks each block contains information about a transaction the block is checked and verified by all the computers distributed throughout the network and contains security codes from previous blocks that practically eliminates the chances of manipulating or counterfeiting the currency. at the moment bitcoin is still on a wild roller coaster ride in the markets but one thing is fairly certain it won't fall victim to inflation the algorithm behind the digital technology won't allow
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the mining of more than twenty one million bitcoins and they'll all have been created by the year twenty one forty eight. i want to delve deeper now into the world of block chain and joining me here in the studio is shemya russian get the founder of block chain hub dot net and the director of the crypto economics institute at the vienna university of economics i mean great to have you with us for inviting me now i've heard that you think that block chain has the opportunity has the potential to revelent revolutionize the wall to some extent explain to me how in which areas. we're now today talking a lot about bitcoin and cryptocurrency s. but it's really just the beginning the first application of the next next generation internet some refer to it as the decentralized web or the web three which will redefine our data structures and bring more ownership of our
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data back to us and it allows us to have real peer to peer transactions without centralized institutions who own our data. is money without banks and bank managers and it's like the first application just like email used to be the first application of the internet back in the ninety's a lot of people thought that e-mail is the internet in the early ninety's most people could not phantom what would come next continuing in that vein and can you see applications beyond the wall to finance yes there are many applications and many startups actually working in this field already for example peer to peer energy trading we already have decentralized energy production through solar production on house roofs but if neighbor wants to trade their energy production with another neighbor they have to go through a centralized institution like a huge energy provider and thanks to block chain they could have peer to peer energy trading without a centralized institutions like. large energy companies but we could
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also have rights sharing with her and we could have apartment sharing without air b.n. b. and we could have social networks decentralized social networks we already have the first one steam it without a centralized party owning our data these are all very sunny outcomes like anything light and shade yes you see any potential for dark areas we've blocked what all day . is a technology it's only a technology it's not the solution to all of mankind's problems i would like to stress that it's a very powerful technology if we do it right we can. and create a universal what i like to call freedom machine that enables us to have a peer to peer economy with less centralized institutions. but if we get it wrong we could also create a universal control machine so i think we have to look at the to privacy privacy
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versus transparency in a data driven world who owns our data and where do we store the data and are we in control of our digital trail and those will be very important questions especially in the light of decentralized technologies they are big questions definitely something that i would want to know where my data is being held for example who owns it how long until we're talking about blocked chain is a household name i mean would it just be for business people will i be using it and every day way. the block chain is operating system that sits on top of the internet. i don't know we might not be talking about block chain we will be using a lot of. applications that build on top of it and did the time line depends on the industry really very much so there are applications that will be possible next year they're application that depend on network effects regulation technology being faster or more user friendly and i think within the
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next three to ten years we will see a lot coming up right now it's the early adopters who are using it right very briefly we talk about it second navigating for example bank systems where does that leave them financially and do you want to see it do. i know the benny banks actually a very happy to get out of the remittance business. banks will not vanish they will have to redefine themselves all right very complex tech will be really interesting to see where it goes we thank you very much for joining us sharmeen russian gear thanks for sharing your and thank you. time now for an update on the winter olympics in south korea chris harrington from didn't obvious footsteps joins me with all of the big and interesting stories. let's stop now with the team which is the is it a limb pick athletes from russia this is a lot of controversy about russian athletes but now they have
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a good to celebrate was the story that that's right does have a goal thanks to alina zaga tova only fifteen years old fairly new to competition but in her red dress she thrilled when she picked up the first goal for o.a.r. and she actually set a new world record eighty two point ninety two in the short program beating her rival and of again a medved devas score by one point three one points her routines what we're seeing here we we called the flying camels big double axle several things and there they are in bracy the double silver in gold is very young she was very happy and thrilled that she actually won and she said it's time to settle in but she pretty much warned all for competition she said she's only starting so i do expect for more things for her as well as the silver medalist medvedev and mesmerizing stuff looking at that are team that we just still seemed russian on they could be getting
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another gold medal what happened and i say that's right they pretty much dominated the czech republic they won three male and you know they started to open up the score in the second period nikita who sat score first and that was followed up by vladislav grief cough. that's goosey right there celebrate use of celebrating in the next goal a bloody slough story in there and the third and final ilia kovach to go former n.h.l. player picked up his fourteenth career goal in the olympics so that's good and they are set up to either win gold or medal gold or silver scuse me they're waiting for the winner of a match is underway germany versus canada germany a long shot because canada is right number one in the world. but germany's in pole position they can walk away with possibly bronze or even better so a medal anyway for germany and of course if the underdogs as you said in that match ok what else can we do forward to during the day well canada had a pretty big performance canada had
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a double and they picked up their third consecutive title in the women's ski cross best friends b.f.s. and roommates in the olympic village kelsey serve one go she's leading the pack right there in red and her fellow canuck britney fell in one silver in a rounding up the podium was fanny smith from switzerland and it's nice because this the gold and silver put canada in the double digits in terms of gold in this competition now they have ten and they're trailing germany and norway who each half thirteen gold medal so we're going to wait and see sunday who walks away with the best prize in the most golds but he grabs to canada congrats to canada and also to you chris i'm going to bring us all the wonderful news from pyongyang the winter olympics great to talk to you thank you very much thank you. you're watching the w. news coming to you live from but and here's a recap of the top story that we have funding for you russia has blocked a u.n. security council resolution ordering an immediate ceasefire across syria the
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civilian deaths to it continues to rise as government forces bombed the rebel held suburbs of houston who took me at damascus. and don't forget you can or was good news on the go just download the app from google play over the apple still that would give you access to all the latest news from around the world as well as push notifications for any breaking news you can also use a video of the app to send us photos and videos which you think might be off interest to us. that's it for me on the document also from chris robinson from us both it's lovely to have your company as you again in half an hour.
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more intriguing international talk show journalists discuss the topic of the week following the release of turkish german journalist an easy job from a prison in turkey to question. our. president and i don't want to play france is joining me again. next. rights lawyer. culture. hair.
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superfood stylish style icon. lifestyle you're up. to. sixteen years. where i come from we have to fight for a free press and was born and raised in a military dictatorship with just one to shadow and if your newspapers when official information as a journalist i have worked at all ministry for many characters and their problems are all in the same order to social inequality a lack of the freedom of the press and corruption we can afford to stay silent when it comes to the fans of the humans and seem right to fold who have decided to put their trust in us. my name is jenny paris and i work.
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alone a very warm welcome indeed to quadriga where the focus this week is on the strained relations between germany and to this off the german turkish journalist dennys you jail it was released from a turkish prison after spending a year in detention with no charges brought now many people here in germany are asking why did president wretched thai a bedouin let you joe walk free. was a deal of some kind struck and what does it all have to do with turkey's military incursion into northern syria so our question here on quadriga this week then as
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you joe is free but what game is turkey playing and to discuss that question i'm joined here in the studio by brilliant move my who writes on turkey for the front for the argument it's item he says freedom for ten years you joe doesn't symbolize a serious change in turkey unfortunately there is no place for hope yet it's also with us his mission to man as a foreign policy specialist for the weekly team sites he lived for several years in istanbul and he argues that turkey is hoping for transactional deals but values stand in the way of closer relations with germany and a warm welcome troops are already cahow man author and journalist with the berlin based daily the target site on board taps says it is also more common of milan where tennis you joe worked for many years and will recur argues that everyone wants to make sure he's not fighting on too many fronts he needs germany because in syria he's provoking the america just remember my let's begin with you you are
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a friend of dan is huge i'll explain for us why his case and his personality his person became so important for so many people in germany well actually you should start first at the personality of the news richard he was one of the most ambitious most reliable journalists in turkey i mean as a former journalist so he always his stories were always made the government so angry so. to silence him they just created the case to put him in prison but then as a person who has two different pest ports he become one of the symbols about the tension between turkey and germany actually he was kind of the host that took i took his government against germany i mean his his arrest went had no links with law and. even his release has the relation with lho it was just the case it was kind of a negotiation between two countries and something happened behind the curtains and he is now free ok let's just hear what dennis you jel have to say he had himself to
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say specifically about that point of view that was just mentioning it would go. the funny thing is i still do not know why i was arrested a year ago to be more precise why i was taken hostage a year ago and i also don't know why i was released today. didn't you also spent time in a turkish general only for a couple of days i know but what insights did it give you well if you speed that. we always read above the best history of talkers journalist they suffered a lot in turkish republic the thing is i have learned personally that your government never forgets what you have did before even if you don't have any links with the good in this even if you didn't take any role in the military coup in the input they don't forget your past what you did as a journalist and read one has a he which has a huge faith and he never forgets about the germans and they always punish you at
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the right time and after the porch they they use the pooch to punish their old enemies frightening and fascinating. you were worked together with denise you john at the top where you work presently what was the reaction of you among yourself and your colleagues to the news that he had been released in july because of course in men's they relieved us news five it was also a very stressful time because of course it was very obvious that we had to support dennis went in prison sylvia. actions a free dennis movement in order to get him free so for us that was really. enormous relief finally to be successful and to get him free but at the same time and that's something i'd like to add it is of course tragic that while dennis came free three other trackers joined as the condemned for life and now a life sentence in jail you know it is kind of problematic of course we have to
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concentrate on tennis because otherwise you cannot if you want to get some for one free you cannot talk about turkey as a whole. about everyone sitting in jail but in the same time of course it is a problem that now everyone focuses on dennis and the other target still is that andrea somehow forgotten. short term what's your view on her or what can you tell us about the connection between denise you joe his release and dennis you joe the person and the current situation in syria the war the incursion that turkey finds itself what's the connection between those two . well at first sight i think there's little connection of course but if we look take the general picture of how and taki tries to mend fences on the one hand and wage war on the other hand. in
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a year or two years ago the main focus of two on was europe and so far as he described europe and particularly germany as the as the enemy at the s. as the adversary he stirred up public opinion against europe and germany. with the war going on in syria things have changed no he is in a very difficult position in with the americans arguing about the role of the syrian kurds. there was even the prospect of a possible conflict between the u.s. and turkey in syria so there are lots of problems at that front and one since. i think late late summer fall last year tried to mend has tried to mend fences with europe and particularly germany and in his youth is
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his release is the result of the house he in some way being used as a bargaining chip against the backdrop that you've just described. i think not really i mean as far as we know and this is what both the german foreign minister and the text found is that there is no deal struck. we don't know more than this because both foreign ministries and governments don't talk about if we look at the longer prospect if he was a bargaining chip for anything he is part of this normalization process which turkey would like to see happening on the one hand and of course what the europeans my return and here i think we need to focus especially for example on things like the modernization of the e.u. turkey customs union which is something where there's a lot of money in for turkey and which could also really come as
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a relieve to many other financial challenges and political challenges turkey has been and what do you say about this question is be much discussed here in germany about whether there is you joe has been used as a bargaining chip or what turkey wants for his release the german foreign minister says there is no deal has been struck and i'm wondering whether he's telling the whole truth well the first thing i think the mission is very jealous i mean because a country a whole country and the whole ministers the whole region grid you don't try to go the guy. when they try to you know rescue a journalist from a country you know it's it's something that we have never witnessed in our country in the country other countries trying to put much more journalists in jail so it's really the thing that we need to add my first but the thing is there's a still he would focus he in the german government like one year ago. told to the press that took his government is getting away from being a democratic and the rule of low country he said it in may two thousand and
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seventeen and after the news has been released the same minister mr guppy told to the press that took his government is always careful about freedom of the judgment system from the government so it's really unbelievable and the things the details that we have learned about the news release it shows us that there was a huge negotiation and both and both governments they knew that the then this will be released the government had sent a private plane two or three days before this has been released to the plane we learned from d.p.a. yesterday and we know that mr benoliel the docs prime minister when he came to to berlin before he met from work and he thought that i hope that the news will recently it will be so happy when he got released and one day later the prosecutor they prepared indignant and one day later he was released and two days later the turkish prime minister in munich in the in the security conference he told that they are ready to produce
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a common tank together with germany so unfortunately these small details shows that the news wasn't and then israelis were so happy about it it's really very very clever not to. just briefly on the tank issue i think we're still quite far from that because. the commonly produced tank is basically. turkey once there's once this turkish tank and so they can provide some things to that but the main technical technologically advanced parts would come from iran mittal and and i think we are still. very far from that kind of an agreement because at the moment it's politically you can't implement you come to explain that and particularly why that campaign is open to question of the future but i think what is what this what you've just said shows is that it was surely political the whole process to put him to rest him to release him it was all political dealings and but
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but it all happens in the framework of what the turkish government wants at the moment normalization and gabrial i think he played that game with the turkish government by said by saying quote unquote independent and just a system of turkey. was it ironic wasn't said casti wasn't cynical i don't listen let's pick up on the point of normal normalization germany and western countries have criticised turkey's response to the two thousand and sixteen failed coup tens of thousands of people have been jailed many more have lost their jobs in turkey is reported to be a world leader in the imprisonment of journalists. the authorities moved the site of the trial of the jo maria journalist from the palace of justice in histon bull to a high security prison at celebrity that's where denise you joe was held in pretrial detention. but the defendant supporters turned
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out again and again to protest what they consider the anti-democratic policies of the turkish government. which is the best known journalist among the defendants and he's been in jail for more than a year. another journalist at all times his brother and four others were sentenced to life in prison just hours after your job was released. how far has turkey moved away from the rule of law. the big question how far is turkey moved away from the rule of law and michel i was just talking about the prospects of normalization of relations between germany and turkey gemma's to be a very prominent green politician with turkey's german roots has come out and said normalization of this point in time is absolutely not possible is he right to review. and i think that's clear to everyone here in germany that you cannot but
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it's not clear that chancellor merkel yeah but you know what she tries her best you know she is someone who never ever escalates that size of a to go ahead get ahead of developments she is very very cautious and also close it would be for her it would be completely it would be dangerous to. adeline but i think at the same time everyone knows that he's a dictator and veges really cannot count on what he's doing next and what everyone wants is that more tourists come to come to the turkey i think that's. germany to. issue its own inhabitants that they can. travel safely to the turkey because turkey really needs this money from the german tourists and many of the tourist stayed at home because they were fed of turkey and of course the whole issue often as you say they made it clear to the germans that is safe to travel to
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turkey i think that's the main reason why dennis was finally released and somehow. pop up business. move my we see meetings between anglo-american in the prime minister were seen meetings between the two foreign ministers they were very engaged in a two day ceremony you for him to lead together that sounds like normalization to me. well it sounds i mean that's that's what the politicians do and the thing is we as journalists we need to tell the realities i mean of course i would i would never ask or wait that my country would have huge problems with journey of course these two countries should vote together they have a long tight in history i mean like more than three or four million people living in germany turkish origin people that's quite good the relations should be good but the thing is. we shouldn't get used to the politicians people crissy we should always force them to come first to talk about the realities i mean when then is is
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free we shouldn't think that everything is ok everything got normalized between two countries and we shouldn't tell the scenes of the turkish government what they're still doing shall we keep silence no we should still continue criticizing them but what's really happening nobody's especially in the german government is they stop criticizing what's really going on in the country like every a picture to buy d.p.n. until an agency which shows that at a tank produced by germany was used in syria and they showed that picture to the press guy of the german government and he said that we don't have any information if these low part tanks are being used in syria or not but there are still pictures even denver is the reality they're trying not to talk about it but that's that's really the nest the face of the politics when you talk about realities just tell our audience a little bit about what the situation is like for you on the ground into you because you are of fiercely critical. journalist working criticizing the turkish government and living in turkey what's not like well it's not easy actually when
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you're sitting on your desk and try to type you're trying to type your article you always think that after a couple of days and when your when your story is a column is being translate them published in germany they can knock your door in the middle of night if that didn't happen you don't feel yourself free to write everything but the thing just so much should do that i mean even my very. close friends are in jail and we should do something for them they're not outside and they can try to we should do the realities on the ground the problem is. they side with the whole community i mean they always think that we put that journalist in the jail and ok that nobody will be able to criticize of actually putting some guns in the jail is the message to the rest of the media so the rest of the media are frightened not the right to think about that we don't have any mainstream media in the country that's the biggest problem and talk you know michel to my niece is rigid tired to want a dictator. if we if we talk
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about dictators if we talk about a concept of the twentieth century i think. i think what he is doing is he is establishing and strongly authoritarian system with some democratic decoration so he insists. he's is having elections and he but by having elections he makes sure that he's going to win these elections untidy he you still have every time you say dictator and somebody comes along and says well but there there are newspapers which are still reporting more or less freely but of course these newspapers are insignificant so that is basically what we today call hybrid autocratic hybrid offering tarion system that's what we have so and that leads me to that point where we were just talking about the normalization question i think this is the reason why there can't be any new normalization because what we have in
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turkey is the end is the total absence of the rule of law. germany is a state with the rule of law and that is why these two states are to a certain degree incompatible and this is the reason why i think in the future we'll have lots of problems precisely because of the because turkey is asking for the extradition of turks living in germany germany won't do it all these kinds of things so we'll run of new it into numerous problems because of that that mismatch of the two systems where we've mentioned already the president that iran has ordered a military offensive in northern syria it's getting a lot of backing back home in turkey a lot of international criticism here are some images of what's going on. turkish president type heir to one portrays himself as an uncompromising defender of national unity and he will do whatever it takes to block kurdish demands for more
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autonomy. or to one has also vowed to crush terrorist groups that he claims turkey's sovereignty. turkish troops continue their offensive against a syrian kurdish rebel group called the y.p. g. but the u.s. considers the white p.g.p. key ally in the fight against what's left of the islamic state organization. the alliance is among the states involved in the syrian conflict are constantly shifting. his or her to one leading turkey into international isolation. so let's pick up immediately oh my question rick or is there a president who i'm leading tookie into international isolation well he is leading turkey into a confrontation with the us but of the same time he comes on russia that's very obvious that no is some hall of the that he things that his biggest ally is put in
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at the same time of turkey is the become hot it is the one who says what is happening in turkey has some haldol bay but that's at this point i think the best option. adlon thinks he has because he wanted to have a wall in order to somehow. have good news for his own domestic base because at home they have a big economic problems and the economy is collapsing there's a high unemployment so he needed to somehow put himself into the role of a big war hero so that was all it was about to move how is turkey's status as a nato member affected by the crackdown at home in the military incursion abroad. series of is a values based alliance it's a values based alliance that is what basically the wisdom of the past ten years or so if we look further back into history of course we had examples like port hugo
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and. we had reason and turkey for that matter during the coup times nine hundred sixty seventy eighty so that as. nato has always been an alliance of members with. delta bowl credentials and matter but here what what we face is the problem of turkey and the u.s. on two sides of the battle battle trends and syria and that is a problem so if we will come i think the visit of foreign minister to lesson in ankara has let's just some easing off the tensions between the u.s. and there's an agreement that they don't want to confront each other on the battlefield but i don't know for ha long that lasts and all depends on how far and
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where one will turn his troops to so if he goes in the direction of men beach town in northern syria kurdish controlled with u.s. soldiers i think will definitely see a confrontation because. the so-called adults in the room and washington. the ministers of. the dominatrix resident they are not willing to concede this kind of control because it's the last stronghold of the us in syria so that might then have effects after all and that on it might have effects after all also on nato but we are not there yet i think even never risk it because in the. everyone knows that trump has no personal interest in syria and that he will not engage in syria but of course if the if one attacked us soldiers then being in much will just as adeline but no longer tolerate it and you know it and i
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think that's something i don't really understand i think he knows what trump is like because he is like trying to solve so he would never ever attack i think you know if i sell your rice but mind you add one did that mistake with russia ones hold on a russian act of one hundred five it is nice to know i have no trust in this man this riyadh police but let's see him and. well everything is based on the elections in the world where he was going to rise to the presidential to presidential elections at the end of twenty nine this is the stepping stone the reason that our government and other army say is that the kurdish guerrillas they're linked to p.k. k. and there are third organizations so we need to them all the stuff that's that's kind of understandable reason for turkish government but the question is recently for a couple of years this area is in the in in part of the score discuss why today why the turkish troops today started a war there and it's all about the elections in two thousand and nineteen and all
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polls show that before the operation against our free before death like before christmas we all saw that the poll showed that here's what's wrong forty and they voted less than the last referendum because you want economic crafter with the economy cries of international problems they all creates really unhappiness in the country and he needed he needs and they should list rick three to be able to be like the emperor of a free we know that. today there was a there was kind of a. story in a turkish newspaper a calm said wrote that if he cannot win the first row in two thousand and nineteen between two elections he can open the third song conflict zone in syria two to be able to win it so he can do anything to win that election because it's kind of at that a race for him he will he will be able to stay or not in two thousand one hundred springboard for ok we began with you but i'm sorry i did this one question i'd like to go off and it's sort of a little bit of
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a tangent and just ask you we talked we've talked in the discussion about how dependent turkey's on germany turkey is perhaps on nato membership how dependent is germany on. their hostages that turkey is a big nato partner and of course the refugee problem and the refugee refugee problem is number one here is turkey's problem of population here in germany and that's right but the poll that had been published by billed last week it's shows that did the horror of the fear in this country is getting bigger and bigger about the refugees and that helps if the in this country so anything can happen in the country change or what's grilli going to in the government to it's ok thank you very much for those thoughts thank you all three for being here we've been discussing turkey dinners you jelly's free walk again is turkey playing was the question. we've given you plenty of food for thought come back next week by by inches.
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come up stories from both people making a difference shaping their nation playing and their continent playing w.'s new multimedia series for africa cler dot ca look for go on the move. meet the germans new and surprising aspect of life since culture in germany play us american keep music takes a look at german idiosyncrasies of their traditions everyday lives and language there's a lot of my life is i'm a soccer player so i'm ok i'm going to explain the trick i unplugged g.w. dot com the germans. played
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. this is exactly the is coming to you live from berlin no ceasefire for syria russia dogs of television monetary issues of the u.n. security council. this is a new wave of attacks in houston killing and injuring more people and also coming up making new pledges one hundred million euros to a joint military force in africa sahid region body of a group the effort to stop migrants and militants. that's the latest from the burning now incredibly popular mexican actor guy got seven i did light sponsored by the parents and billings international film festival and he's here for the screening of his latest movie museo inspired by the most famous heist in mexican
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history. i'm on a thought she. the u.n. envoy for syria has renewed is urgent calls for an immediate cease fire in eastern huta near the syrian capital damascus this is a deal after russia blocked to u.n. security council resolution calling for a thirty day humanitarian truce moscow's demonic several amendments delaying the vote until later today meanwhile this being more bombing by syrian forces today as warplanes shells the heavily populated enclave human rights monitors say government shelling has skin more than four hundred people since sunday including many children. even for those surrounded by day it is a crushing moment. for the father hulks his child
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one last time. for city is victims there is no dignity and die you. should go. on for seven years government there is no relenting every minute bombs are dropped. monitor groups say more than four hundred men women and children have been killed since sunday homes and hospitals obliterated leaving doctors to handle matters of life and there amid the ruins. we had to do one of the operations under the rubble. because we couldn't evacuate we had to do it under the rubble. the syrian regime says rebel extremist groups who control eastern are using humans as shields un security council has been debating
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a thirty day cease fire that allows for a deliverance and the evacuation of casualties. these are not terrorists showing up in these makeshift emergency rooms these are civilians they are ordinary people under attack by a barbaric assad regime that is bent on leaving eastern ghouta level to the ground with no regard for the four hundred thousand men women and children who live there but it was met with resistance to russia blocking the resolution. over the stage to achieve stabilisation painstaking work is necessary these parties need to sit down and negotiate the parameters of the ceasefire there is no other way. but hope still locks within these beseech concrete canyons. by the young men it comes in the shape of a whole. slowly but surely they're digging their way to safely. the only
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escape from a torrent of poems must be an underground one. is the syrian doctor who worked in aleppo at a time when the syrian city was experiencing the same kind of bombing that fear seeing now in eastern huta i asked him to give us a sense of what the civilians that are going through. so it's like. literally hell in a little time out like back in aleppo like. three or four years. same thing happened all the time with no different yeah. you see. for five years so they are everything like. maybe america medications that was a few unfortunate i just sort of electricity and now this public.
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attacks happening for the past ten days it's a disaster humanitarian disaster. now look at the pictures that we are seeing out of civilians but the syrian regime says that they are rebel groups based on day using civilians as human shields what's your response to that. actually it's not making sense at all though the regime and their cheap propaganda always used those claims back there was three hundred thousand. people and the regime also claims that like. the fighters are using them as shields but it's not making sense at all because in aleppo back in aleppo there was well it's opened and people. wanted to stay in aleppo same thing happened for five years. there was open and people want to stay in their hometowns.
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and not not not the fighters who are surrounding. the regime who is to run to get. preventing and they think or anyone to come in or out from uncle tom. i mean in two thousand and fifteen when i was in aleppo and yet a doctor was killed attack most of the it would seem and the washington. media pages claims that they managed to target and kill the tourist doctor so they consider it but you accept doctor is he as a tourist and say that he is treating tourists so it's not making sense at all it's a cheap propaganda something even like and how many. talk about appearance so now you work as a doctor in aleppo and what you're seeing coming out of eastern widowhood new fic injuries of people and children what specific challenges doctors face in dealing with such a situation. main challenge is that the doctors and hospitals are
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the main targets all the time during the best three days more than twenty one facility have been targeted. so it's the main target the main targets for the witch him and the russian are to be the hospital facility is the bakeries and the schools so that's the most the other thing that. those people and those doctors know for sure that the list alone. killing machine so they have to to see each time each entry over how many medications they can use before it's. because they are afraid thinking all the time that they might run away or feel the bank. takes. everything. and wants to chit instead it's a very good you ition. it's such a difficult situation thank you so much for finding time to talk to us hums i'll
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cut the missive in dr who worked in sharing his thoughts with us and thank you very much. this article about some other stories making news around the wild. turkey has freed another german national held in prison for political reasons that's been confirmed by the german foreign ministry the identity of the prisoner has not yet been disclosed the person will not be allowed to leave turkey for now australia's devotee of promise of bonamy joyce's announce his resignation joyce had been under sustained pressure to resign after revelations of an affair with his former staff member came to light now new allegations of sexual harassment against him have emerged. haiti has suspended oxfam great britain's operations in the country for two months pending an investigation into alleged sexual misconduct the move follows reports that oxfam staff held sex parties and sexually abused women
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during relief efforts during a devastating earthquake in two thousand and ten. an armed officer who had been assigned to protect the american school kids by last week's mass shooting in florida has resigned local police say the man took a position outside the school during the attack but failed to confront the shooter the officer is now under investigation. european leaders are meeting in brussels today to tackle some major issues including the post brags that finances on the table is a possible increase in contributions to plug the budgets shortfall after britain leaves the bloc next year before the summit the e.u. commission hosted high level talks on fighting terrorism and stemming migration through africa sahil one of the world's poorest regions one hundred million euros has been pledged but you need a sions for the region the e.u. also said it would double its funding for
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a joint military operation set up by five countries can see that graphic now where security is threatened by extremist groups and criminal networks. helping the sahil has become a european priority because of the high levels of migration and refugees from the region to europe the europe's front here in central africa thousands of migrants travel through it before they can take their chances crossing the mediterranean for years the hell has been plagued by jihadist groups and criminal networks smuggling weapons drugs and humans across borders it's become a breeding ground for terrorists and a big worry for the you. in brussels boosting development was a key topic at today's meeting with leaders from the african region but the main issue on the agenda was that of security the european union has pledged to double
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its funding to the g five so help joint force a partnership of fights to help countries mauritania burkina faso mali niederer and chad founded to counter terror and illegal immigration in the area. we want to support the g five sale joint force. the e.u. was the first to believe in this project and invest in it with the first bit of fifty million euros last july. today the european union will double its support to the joint force. other countries such as the u. and saudi arabia have also pledged found show support until now that's ahead region has heavily relied on european countries for security france alone has more than four thousand troops deployed in the area the g. five partnership aims to be fully operational later this year europe is hoping that it will mean more military self-reliance and fewer european troops on the ground in the sahara. and now news from the bell in
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a while premier screening at the bergen film festival the mexican movie musial was shown on a thursday night inspired by the most famous heist in the country's recent history the film is one of nine thousand in the running for the coveted gordon bear. what's the best way to impress the room full of film critics. thanks have mexican acting i can see the band now gatecrasher press conference that's how he cut short rehearsals for his new play to make an unexpected appearance to the head of the premier of his new film museum even the balance is director couldn't help but be star struck. me in. the films as compelling as the real crime it's based on it tells the story of two men's daring heist on a museum and the chaotic quest offense that priceless. the original work back in the eighty's left mexico stunned not least because it was carried out by young.
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students the mystery about their motivation grips mexican's to this day for those old enough to remember it that is we're not. the first time i heard about the robbery was through. yet this case stole the museum of anthropology twenty five during christmas during recent whites in museum go see a band now and code to live a gripping and highly watchable thriller even if it is generous with the truth all the people that we interviewed close friends and relatives of them they all told contradictory stories so we decided to embrace those contradictions and say well. it's a myth in its own right so let's create our own myth and that's what we did there is a video of this crime looking for a true to life account of what happens will surely be disappointed the team behind this film put a huge dollop of creative license bob davis just a fun heist flick hereafter this isn't one to miss we'll find out on saturday
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whether the jury agrees and if these guys go home with another priceless hold the balance is golden bad. and we have lots more coverage on the bella donna coming up later today as well as tomorrow and the day after. before the belly not a draws to a close this weekend here was indeed on the news here's a recap of the top story that we're following for you russia has blocked a u.n. security resolution ordering an immediate tells you to cease fire across syria the civilian death still continues to rise as government forces bombed the rebel has problems of. damascus. and don't forget it can or risk news on the go just after moving to open the apple store doesn't give you access to all the latest news from around the wild as well as spurs don't have occasions for any breaking news you can also use of these i'll be apt to send us photos and videos which you think might be off interest to us. he would have in his bent is going to
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standing by he has the latest business news coming up for you shortly to stay with us. everyone my name is minute by you is merely an eye. towards you tube channel. all easy for thieves and stories. need a condom and it's. always good to see you chatting about when you should better check it out yourself. germany is a strong country. we have achieved so much we can do this and it's something
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we must overcome it. where it's uncomfortable global news that matters w. made for mines. the bitcoin volatility continues as calls for regulation mount that banks and states jump on the block bandwagon the technology behind the controversial cryptocurrency . and mechanical money we made to create a digital currency designed to give machines the power to pay. and benefits and lets do business bitcoin has managed to poke its head above the ten thousand dollar mark again if people who invested just a year ago sneak a peek at their digital wallets they'll see a return of some seven hundred percent impressive money doesn't grow on trees but you can dig up the virtual kind on the block. bitcoin is
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a digital currency and its value is determined just like everything by supply and demand and unlike other currencies central banks cannot influence the course of the cryptocurrency value through monetary policy bitcoins were first programmed ten years ago the developer was known only by a pseudonym toshi nakamoto to this day the program of behind the technology has never been identified the idea is that everyone who installs the bitcoin software on the desktop or smartphone becomes part of the bitcoin network the digital ledger that supposedly makes bitcoin both independent and secure is what is known as block chain a block chain is a ledger managed by many computers in a network which keep track of records in what are called blocks each block contains information about a transaction the block is checked in very fide by older computers distributed throughout the network and contains security codes from the previous block that
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practically eliminates the chances of manipulation and count a feat of accounting. at the moment bitcoin is still on the wild roller coaster ride in the markets but one thing is fairly certain after all the coins are issued bitcoin won't fall victim to inflation jago rhythm behind it won't allow the mining of more than twenty one million bitcoins and they'll all have been created by the here twenty one forty. financial advisor moch freed today she joins us now from our stock outs trio you're no earlier best to it bitcoin i don't expect you to gloat i don't want to make you blush but. quite a billionaire. no not at all not at all not in the not yet. you did it best back in twenty thirteen those so i expect the gains are pretty impressive what happens if big goes back to zero as some people is that.
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it will never go back to syria of course it's a disruptive technology and it will change the vote definitely it has the same impact like the internet i think blocked and the big con technology has the same impact on the financial world like the smart phone on the telephone booths and not a telephone booth will not totally disappear but we don't use them anymore and i think it. financial system for the future in the next ten or twenty years what about these huge swings in the value of big fifteen percent a day i mean do you sleep well at night when you see the news you see mccrea have no just kidding no seriously and i'm used to it it's like a tradition actually notice in the big concord unity to saying hostile hold hold hold your call ins cause i saw horrible horrible corrections and crash ninety percent even in the year two thousand and thirteen but it always came back and you
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could always speak and higher and i'm very positive that does technology will change everything it's a revolution we can't stop and now it's time to in west in small portions ok it's nice of. you guys to hold on to your coins but what about people who actually want to spend those going to feel buying a house in florida which is possible with bitcoins what happens when it falls in value by fifteen percent the next day. yeah. definitely it's a risky investment right now but i think it's the future and you shouldn't invest more than five or ten percent of your whole wealth you just little steps and into future we will see that it will be more and more normal that we spend crypto currencies in the future and i think the banks realize that and that's why they're so fighting so hard against the block chain and bitcoin and crypto currencies it's not just banks it's all countries china is cracking down on what does that make you feel. i'm happy it was sort of already in two thousand and seventeen nothing
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happened you know what it was a short dip but you can't ban a correct on a decentralized system it's a possible cause all the information out on thousands of millions of computers all over the world you have to switch off the internet and that would be catastrophic so you can't do centralized system that's not possible they can try but that there is the great wall of china which we've all heard of venezuela as well as it introduced its own crypto currency the first state controlled crypto currency but it is state controlled i mean it's not decentralized obviously that exactly is the opposite of off the ground idea of the blocks in technology and bitcoin so i'm not recommending to invest into petrol and gold petrol so on the one side it's very positive for the whole movement because you see now a centralised governments and institutions going into this market and they see the potential on the other side come on legacy and spend corrupt there's hyperinflation
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it's a socialistic communist regime it will fail and we need to be noted with the german democratic republic in eighty nine briefly there are many other crypto currencies out there what makes you think bitcoin is the one that's going to stay there many people saying it's going to be the ultimate of crypto currency. yeah test all longest track record in history it's now things two thousand and nine it's working it got never hacked and it's getting exponentially more and more secure and i think it will be the gold standard of crypto currencies of approved occurrences will come as well but bitcoin will always be there it's the same like the blocks in technology it's here to stay free for us in shotgun thank you thanks for having me of course critic and about more than just making a quick buck digital money has the potential to brave aleutian eyes the world of finance a machine learning makes huge strides we met
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a young man who's developed the technology to allow machine to machine payments. easiest to catch at the airport dominic shino twenty two year old programmer with big plans. the entrepreneur is flying all over the world to promote his digital currency he's put the code for us out in the public domain called c.e.o. is aims to transactions especially those that in the future could be carried out between machines. on our mission isn't automation it's to make things independent and the way we make machines independent is to give each of them a digital wallace. and what we do then is get machines to pay their one good example is the car paying its own parking fee in the future that'll all be sorted out by the car and if the parking bay or its charging station or the road toll sounds or. groceries offer another opportunity for automation like
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a fridge that makes purchases automatically and pays digitally cryptocurrency could be the money of the future the best known as bitcoin which is based on block chain technology she now believes it's already outdated. but if i want to carry out a transaction i have to pay fees of between ten to twenty dollars and that's obviously more expensive than a bank and if you look at the machine economy where one machine is paying another we're not talking about larger transactions like ten dollars so we're looking at transferring micro payments a few cents at a time so you can only do that with the your. the u.s. our currency is based on what's called a tangle confirmation of a payment functions much faster and more cheaply than with block chains from competitors like bitcoin small sums are easily dealt with. it's just a secure. good thing about your size that we've got a lot of researchers on board almost ten mathematicians they're laying out the
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theory behind the tangle and they're validation it with solid proof which is what we're working on that. until now people are still shopping for groceries for the leaving it up to the fridge but cryptic currencies are bringing the days of machine to machine transactions one step closer. let's bring in our correspondents in singapore and frankfurt and greying and conrad booze and conrad is bitcoin already out of date. well obviously the competition is on the rise people like the young entrepreneur in berlin the government in venice where they're all are in the mining business of crypto currencies and this variety makes it likely that the volatility of the prices of many of those crypto currencies is likely to stay that's why many people here are in places in traditional trading places like the frankfurt stock exchange are warning private investors of putting money in such crypto currencies you have also always to be prepared to lose all of
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the money you speculate with. what about the safety and security aspect andre that's a question to you asia's seen some quite scary examples that's right the thing is the selling point about block teens is that there is no centralized exchange that manages these transactions and your data for you and on top of that the detail is not take to your personal information so your transactions are anonymous yet visible at the same time so what happens is the digital wallet that you're given is assigned a public key so that we participants can transact securely privately as well as credibly. the regulators the chomping at the bit of we certainly will be hit hard very soon could we see bitcoin dealt a blow in other cryptocurrency. well the bigger this gets the more and the bigger the edge is for policymakers to regulate this but as we've just
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heard this is a d. central technology that's its big asset it might be very very difficult to control it in any case this sounds like this global phenomenon needs a global approach in regulation correct those birds there in frankfurt and under a hanging in singapore thank you. and i was doing business with you are moved to a moment. the amount. to a movie.
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the i'm. moving. clocks lawyer. culture. car hair. superman. superfood. blood color. letter. lifestyle choice. to. make your small t.v. even smaller amounts of documents much much. much more of what you want
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to play up to date. extraordinary. job. to decide what so much. fun no more ok w. small. bursts player moments from moves of species. column were. saving. those are big changes and most start with small steps global ideas tell stories of creative people and innovative projects around the world. the protect the climate boost green energy solutions and resource station. was out of people you cannot protect the forest create interactive content teaching the next generation about environmental protection. using all channels available to inspire people to take action and we're determined to build something here for the
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next generation. global audience multimedia environment series. hello from the today show with a shooting star at fashion week but that's a look first at what else is coming up. almost dream germany's most famous puppet theatre in seventeen. and a wide range of american breakfast options is on offer at diner. and to the top of the mountain the highest peak of the filing it's.
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he's a rising star of the international fashion scene design not so obvious the thirty five year old austrian has been living in milan for years even in the city of fashion where big labels such as a mani. have based he was able to make a name for himself we learn fashion week has just started and obvious are presented his latest collection there it's inspired by his old home country he says it's good to be able to sort of your roots and here's what it looked like on the catwalk. gets that look like paintings created yet timeless about short lived trends and opening highlights at milan fashion week. that came courtesy of thirty five year old austrian design talent are sure. even seasoned critics are convinced they
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welcome the breath of fresh inspiration to italy's fashion capital. this is young and fresh us who is really breathing new life in to see people take elements from our own backyard and at the same time it makes it very much he's able to do this which is why i read so every election two thousand sunni and yet at the same time it fits perfectly into the modern world the location is an old school a shabby background chosen to create a stark contrast to the apparel the other says collections are always inspired by personal story or theme this time around it's viennese artists from the turn of the last century. beam of fire to it all vienna is celebrating one hundred years of viennese modernism in twenty eighteen so i made it the theme of the collection that means taking inspiration from artists like egon schiele or gustav clipped from a dispassionate column and more and also wagner the wagner system right down to the architectural features or details from the furniture glassware own jewelry all of
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that was incredibly creative back then and that's what i wanted to put into this collection and it's a critical part of. art that so combines classical with high tech fabrics. he regards bodies and clothes as his canvas. was going to source us all for example there's briscoe stress here is very fluid and just very feminine however i like very clean lines but then i combine it with something like this a feminine wide slim. then i suggest to wear it with a parka made of a very thick wall printed with animal motifs. he creates his designs at his small studio in an old town apartment. besa studied fashion in london and in two thousand and five moved to midland to work for ga no armani. there he learned that you can only reach your goal with passion and hard work.
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after seven years he gave up a well paid job and took a leap of faith he founded his own label. and for the money you have to decide either you take a risk in order to completely develop your own vision or you can stay on the easy track but if i don't well i have to try to live once and there's no fun without a bit of risk. was that somehow i had enough self-confidence to take the leap. is and want us to put. pressure on the success of his first shows he managed to garner the praise of fashion journalists like susie. she was impressed by his talent and now considers him to be a rising star in the land fashion scene. other fashion houses are also keeping tabs on the young designer. in twenty seventeen the longstanding italian
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brand face made him their creative director here he has to deliver more mainstream designs the opposite to his own playful nisha label is absolute and it's very challenging to create in two different directions to fit something like fairy i think it works very well. it's important that the two projects don't neutralize each other creatively office and sources are both need their own track and i going to sign i going to sheena. is now showing his eleventh collection in. the critics darling has to prove that he's not just a fluke. newcomer our best sir is under a lot of pressure and it's also a financial adventure but. this is i guess you put yourself under that pressure i'm proud of what we did i was happy with what we did anything for but i know it has to be better every six months i'm the one who puts the biggest pressure on myself of course there's always also. our betters ranges produced in small numbers mainly in
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italy prices for his sweater started six hundred euros though he still has to cut his cloth according to his measure of a skill his job at faith helps develop the also present their collection at the current milan fashion week. and we stay fashionable and continue with our roundup of cultural events in europe yesterday's express. an unusual runway show that alexander mackay a creative director of good she raised eyebrows at milan's fashion week. titled sidewalk the show presented a collection that transcends traditional boundaries in assessing inspired by an operational theater. in men's or women's several high street culture aleksandr mccain i wasn't going to let such classifications constrain him in milan fashion week continues through every twenty six.
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months basing are doing and wrapping storms they were the big winners of this year's bridge awards on wednesday evening they connected to a comfortable to each. past the best british female sir no artist and best british breakthrough act. strong as he was almost as best british sentimental artist and for best british album of the year knocking out superstar edge sharon in both categories which even took home an award for global success you do wish. with. liam gallagher walked away empty handed yet gave one of the most moving performances. after ariana grande they fell ill the former way says lead singer stepped in to perform a tribute for the victims of the terror attack in manchester. showing
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works at their pavilions until sunday. and the spotlight this year is on the theme of the future in particular in works by female and italian artists. the fair will be open until february twenty fifth. to be honest today i was especially looking forward to our next report which is about the all spoke of that brings back memories for me because here in germany the puppet theatre from a very a is an institution it was one of the first children's programmes on german t.v. some of the what a marionettes have even made it onto the big screen each puppet plays by the small family business now it turns seventy and even today both kids and adults alike love it. the whole world of it's the characters like jim bastion and
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luke the engine driver of kings who by their subjects ice cream. shines and daily tracking. it's a world of little stuff you call it. the nature of television day i use in one nine hundred fifty three live from the studio. it's comes not. only in. ten strings something good and a little blue is all the puppet make. use the front head string along it raw. over the middle and index fingers we have to have flexible wrists so we don't have to change hands after every move i guess we've got special property as handsome. as moshe is the surgeon aeration to run the thing he put on his first play at school aged twelve he says the story comes alive in the audience's imagination when they can see their own images that's why the narrative has to unfold slowly unlike
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most t.v. shows today. not long after world war two his grandfather vita emission wrote a letter to the x. books is he who asking permission to open a marionette. it held its premiere in february nine hundred forty eight in a former hospital. with five to seven puppets he is above and the speaking actors below things got a bit crowded it was a family enterprise that has to one hundred over covered her first puppet at age thirteen his wife causes the costumes. it went on to over the shows for adults like court jesters where units can speak inconvenient truths they stage their own versions of socially critical plays like that old fashioned strictly opera. that. linea who played pirate jenny for the
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opera's nine hundred twenty eight premiere road to the public theater enthusiastically praising the production and wished for her very own pilot january anette. for two decades the ensemble of pepper tears to a german speaking theater is. the cast of characters personified such traits as lethargy rage green and envy. your run across many strange characters at some point in your life and i think the strange. the more you get inspired by them from the middle. class michelle's mother alone crafted over six thousand men steering her lifetime. the heart and soul the treasure trove of the theater. you for if you asked her when she got the idea she'd say from the street so i'm sure some citizens of our struggle discover they're looking like you know chest of puppets. for seventy years
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now the public has just been a family business like many marionette faces but it hasn't always been easy. to minimize the right. there was a very bad teacher she was so far ahead first time before i knew it now what did you do and it was done my mother always said keep changing nym's that's very important when you're not getting anywhere just grab the next knife. the minimum and first pick for most of. the magic happens once the marionette is finished when it comes to life. and the marionette comes to life when it starts to move pulling the strings is an art in itself. when his head hangs down and his hands in front of his face like. this and this is how he crisis in vain we went by and he pulled ahead are going to make you laugh or. decades the
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marionettes have been in chanting is young and old alike it's made of wood and strings and lots of imagination. to start. this task. in a serious fifty kitchens one city will take you on a call in every trip and prove that you can enjoy good food from around the world without evolution. in the german capital this home to people from the two hundred different nations like oliver miller he moved to the german kept the from new mexico in the united states in two thousand in america you can get breakfast twenty four seven this was one of the things he missed most of the move to germany but it took another twelve years before he decided to open his own authentic diner in berlin where you can find the american way off breakfast.
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i think i wanted to live in berlin almost as soon as i discovered what was below the surface. as soon as i started to to meet the people here who are engaging in their own projects and that's kind of the thing i want to do too and it seemed like a great place to do it. all of a miller was born in one thousand nine hundred seventy two in san francisco the youngest of two brothers seven years later the family moved to new mexico all of us started architecture and was active in the arts eventually he and other american artists were invited to participate in an exhibition in potsdam just outside. after finishing his studies in two thousand he moved to berlin at first on a temporary visa and with no real plans then he got the idea to open up our it was
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such a success that he branched out a few years later and open a restaurant but no new dyna it's modeled on the classic diner where breakfast is served at any time of the day. the inspiration for the restaurant actually came from going out. at clubs and the desire to have said this kind of food late at night it's a very common thing in america to have a diner breakfast in the twenty four hour diner at four or five in the morning with bottomless cups of coffee. an american breakfast means first and foremost lots of combinations patrons at the nod to diner can pick can choose from a variety of options the menu is centered around eggs for instance on toast all with hash browns around fifty combinations are possible aside from breakfast the diner fries are classic hamburgers. i love
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a special. the idea of having unlimited among the profit that you can get all the science that spits grade them and the hospitals that they fear the place the leaders are showing to you and the friendless is really really great. i left in the usa for. this is really quite authentic it's very close to an american diner and. this is not the it is fantastic very american but it's not feeling you get hooked on it and you keep coming back to smoke i'm going to veto. one of my new cents the american breakfast apart from the european continental breakfast of the many cooked components. most of them can be fixed relatively quickly and easily americans call it. ok for standard to make them nice and think the american way the battle has to be
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right when the pancakes truncating little bubbles in the pan they're ready to be flipped. the knowledge diner also serves their own spiced breakfast sausage patties. it is fried with. chunks of pam and of course aches are an essential part of any american break first . all the entrees are served on one single plate the sweet and the savory together. when. one orders breakfast in american diner. the question of how you want your eggs is is an open one and there is no standard in america you have scrambled eggs or fried eggs or poached eggs it's really your choice the server will always ask how do you want your eggs and i love hearing.
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it's a question because it really means it's going to be an american breakfast when you can decide how to see exactly what your rights all of them in a season is restaurant is a project that keeps evolving. the pictures on the walls were made by himself artist friends keeps changing them for new ones. the decorations are a hodgepodge of personal objects and mementos. opened his restaurant in twenty twelve eastern district of prince and back he lives close by and enjoys the neighborhoods diversity. classes guests come from all over the world which suits them not to diana. to name another diner came from a conversation with my one of my old partners who grew up in hawaii and actually i've never been know why but the name is hawaiian it actually means surface but not
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surf in terms of surfing but surf is like a noun it's the top of the wave as it's breaking. and we just thought ok that's a good name for for the place. at least twice a year one of them in a gets homesick confines back to the united states or sometimes even considers moving back in time someday maybe. we've made a dent or all it. takes to try to enjoy. and if that's made you hungry you can find this and many more recipes from our series online at the w dot com sless fifty kitchens have fun cooking and enjoy your meal and now we are off to a very special among into a and for that we are heading to spain to be precise to the pyrenees a mountain range of the border between spain and france with roughly three thousand four hundred meter the netto is the highest peak of the period nice and spain's
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third highest mountain whether professional mountaineer or amateurs thousands of people try to climb the summit every year just like the four germans accompanied on the adventurous to a through the snow. deep in the remote valleys a winding road leads to them and ask a hospice from there you can head up to the rental is a refuge. in. this region in the spanish peyronie's is a meeting point for mountaineering and the easiest from all over the world that's because the moderator massif has a special attraction clear views of the highest summit the pico de and nato this group plans to climb to the peak and ski down afterwards respect i have great respect for the mountain she is too stunning to just look at it from afar over stop short of the peak.
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to for now though it's time for them to head back to the huts and charge their batteries for the next stage. around fifteen thousand visitors come every year to climb peak all day and they told. the mountaineers start off in the wee hours of the morning it's still dark out they will need about five hours to scale the thirteen hundred metres to the top. the view it twilight makes it worth the early start. unfortunately it is also a bad weather sign as a cold front is on the horizon. at an altitude of twenty nine hundred metres there's a passage in the rock that heads over to the huge a nato glazier basin with. inclement weather makes for a difficult climb the hikers rope up for the last stretch to the summit they will
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soon be crossing a bridge that turns the tour into an adventure. we're going to need to scale because twenty meters are turning around now out of the nonsense. with numb fingers . and i see wins they slowly climb higher each step has to be chosen wisely. the group consciously makes headway. there isn't a soul to be seen for miles something the climbers welcome especially at the bottlenecks along the route. that sort of discipline. finally they make it. all up and. arriving at the summit is a success in itself. because of all of. the hype or celebrate their achievement even if the visibility is poor look at the other side of the book then they head back down on skis which is challenging under these weather conditions. the pico de
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a nato adventure is one that the mountaineers will certainly never forget. and now it's time to get creative we have some inspiration coming out for you in how serious you are max d.i.y. our expert on cisco shows how to brighten up your home in no time and with just a few things today she proves that mobile is scummy much more than just a toy they can be transformed into a candle holder that creates beautiful lights the flexes that's how it works. i'm for that and i've got a great graphic for you today it's made out of lava and i'll show you are going to do it yourself. you will need and also need
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a glue gun. and about one hundred fifty models of any color you like begin by gluing models all the way around the edge of the city make sure to put you on the sides of the mother too so the whole thing is a room the first row should look something like this. to the next row on top of the . top blue cool thing happens very quickly so take and pasting the map and you can already get an idea of how it will look in the end. as many rows as you like. seven rows of mobbers. finished now i'll just have to remove excess glue. trap and i can enter manton is good to you. nice light isn't it. if you like you can also use multi-colored. makes super
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great like that. and if you're looking for more inspiration just look up our youtube saladin w interior design they can find plenty ideas for your home well that's all we have time for today but we'll have more reports from around europe on our for tomorrow so don't miss it see you're bound by. on the next edition of your in the next vicky keeps us current one of europe's most sought after young actresses she plays alongside daniel day lewis in the oscar nominated movie phantom thread and won over international critics with her performance. a newcomer on the road to success next time on your own tax.
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bill.
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what keeps us to say what makes us see. my name is dr carson because i talk to many cases. watch them at work. and i discuss what you can do to fill half. stage use and let's all try to stay. on t.w. . and why. a trip by airplane. seven teams thousand kilometers in six weeks.
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commenced the brooks period. touching the story of the book this is our home the god's country a perfectly good muslim in other better priests symington found some obstruction starting february twenty seventh.
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this is news coming to you live from berlin the e.u. calls for a cease fire in syria but there's no sign of one as yet russia's so far blocked a tell you do humanitarian truce at the u.n. security council this is a new wave of strikes hitting east and killing and injuring more civilians also coming up how to fill the hole left behind brakes if you are green union leaders need to plan future a bunch it's with britain's contribution. and another victim of last week's florida school shooting is laid to rest president donald trump appears to give some ground on gun control who was still insists that teaches the. class in the next sixty minutes a great day for the winter olympics most controversially competitive as russian athletes secure three medals on day fifteen with success in ice hockey figure
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skating we bring you the latest. patent. and where a lot more a lot from the right time for the bell you know for the world premiere of the new polish film we'll tell you how we raise its chances at. sorry neither would sarah brady say to. her in a very warm welcome to you i'm. the european union is there urgently calling for a cease fire in syria and a strongly worded statement demanded immediate access for aid trucks to instant kuta close to the syrian capital damascus this a day after russia blocked a u.n. security council resolution on a thirty day humanitarian cease fire. another wave of attacks and strikes meanwhile
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by syrian forces has rained down on the heavy populated. hundreds of people have been killed since sunday including many children. who were there don't you think even for those surrounded by day it is a crushing moment. suppose. the hulk's his child one last time. for syria's victims there is no dignity in dying. should look. out for syria's government there is no relenting every minute bombs are dropped. monitored groups say more than four hundred men women and children have been killed since sunday homes and hospitals obliterated leaving doctors to handle matters of life and there amid the ruins. we had to do one of the operations under
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the rubble. because we couldn't evacuate we had to do it under the rubble or how does our office for time haha problems i'm now. the syrian regime says rebel extremist groups who control eastern are using humans as shields the u.n. security council has been debating a thirty day ceasefire that allow for a deliveries and the evacuation of casualties. these are not terrorists showing up in these makeshift emergency rooms these are civilians they are ordinary people under attack by a barbaric assad regime that is bent on leaving. level to the ground with no regard for the four hundred thousand men women and children who live there but it was met with resistance to russia blocking the resolution. over those days to achieve stabilisation painstaking work is necessary these parties need to sit down and negotiate the parameters of the ceasefire. there is no other way.
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but hope still locks within the beseech concrete canyons of by the young men it comes in the shape of a whole nationally but surely they're digging their way to safety. the only escape route from a torrent of golems must be an underground one. that is a syrian doctor who worked in aleppo when the syrian city was experiencing the kind of bombing that we're now seeing in eastern huta i asked him to give us a sense of what civilians that are going through. so it's like. literally hell in a little time out like back in aleppo like. three or four years. same thing happened all the time with no different yeah. you see. for five years. they are everything like. maybe america
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medications that was a few unfortunate i just sort of electricity and now this public. document and attacks happening for the past ten days it's a disaster humanitarian disaster there now look at the pictures that we are seeing out of civilians that the syrian regime says that they are rebel groups based that on day using civilians as human shields what's your response to that. actually it's not making sense at all the. cheap propaganda always used those claims back there was three hundred thousand. people and the regime also claims that like. the fighters are using them as shells but it's not making sense at all because in aleppo back in aleppo there was well it's opened and people. wanted
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to stay in aleppo same thing happened in a little talk for five years. there was well open and people want to stay in their hometowns. and the not the fighters who are still rounding. the regime who has to run to get. preventing and they think or anyone to come in or out from. me in two thousand and sixteen when i was little and i but yet a doctor was killed attack most of the it would seem and the washington. media pages claims that they managed to target and kill the tourist doctor so they consider it but yet doctor is as a tourist and see that he is treating tourists so it's not making sense at all it's a cheap propaganda something even like and how many. talk about of homs i know you
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worked as a doctor in aleppo and what are you seeing coming out of eastern widowhood new fic injuries of people and children what specific challenges doctors face in dealing with such a situation. main challenge is that the doctors and hospitals are the main targets all the time during the best three days more than twenty one facility have been targeted. so it's the main target the main targets for the which him and the russian are the hospital facilities. cory's and the schools so that's the most sad and the other thing that. those people and those doctors know for sure that they are list alone. killing machine so they have to do so each time each injury over how many medications they can use before it's. because they are afraid thinking all the time that they might run away or filthy you think. six
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or everything so that's the main and most children's that's very very situation. it's such a difficult situation thank you so much for finding time to talk to us hums i'll cut the missive in dr who worked in a level earlier sharing his thoughts with us and be a thank you very much thank you very much let me bring you up to date with some other stories making news around the want australia's deputy prime minister barnaby joyce has announced his resignation joyce has been under sustained pressure to resign after revelations of an affair with his former staff member came to light now new allegations of sexual harassment against him have emerged. nigerian party said the school guns who were unaccounted for following boko haram attack on monday are still missing and this comes after only reports suggested that some of them had been rescued dozens of goods from the state drawn boarding school in
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you'll be state awful to have been abducted by extremists. haiti has suspended oxfam great britain's operations in the country for two months pending an investigation into alleged sexual misconduct the move followed reports that oxfam staff held sex bodies and sexually abused women during relief efforts for a devastating earthquake in two thousand and ten. former trump campaign aide support manifolds and rick gates are facing fresh charges in the russia probe they've already pleaded not guilty to indictments for money laundering and fraud it comes a week after a special counsel robert miller charged turn thousand russian xit meddling in the us presidential election. in your old leaders in the european union nations are meeting to decide how to fill the multi billion euro hole and its budget that would be left off to britain leaves the block is expected to be
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a shortfall of fourteen billion euros postbag said the leaders are discussing where to prioritise funding of migration terrorism and border protection high on the agenda. joining me now is brussels carson dog matis who is at that informal summit to get all brag that will leave a huge hole in the e.u. budget it seems what other proposals to make up for that shortfall. but germany and italy america have suggested that they would be technically open for a limited increase of the money they are giving into the system to make up for that be called created by breck's it's a ten billion euros per year we're looking at that that need to come in but let's be clear it's only is facing a general election in germany we still have no coalition you know coalition government still in the making so let's focus on to the scenario that is more
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likely and that is a major cut of the e.u. budget as something for in. the netherlands would be in favor of and that means less money for the two biggest things in the boches and that is agricultural funds and regional funds going to the different the local regions different constituencies of e.u. member states and europe it seems member states are divided on how to fund the bloc post rex and what are the major sticking points here. now the division lines here are a clear cut you have those countries who are not contributors so i e those countries who pay the money from for example most prominently the netherlands but also germany and france and you have the net recipients particularly in hungary or poland who receive a lot of factory cultural funds now the dutch fine is made in a dutch a prime minister rather we're right here made very clear that he wants to free up
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money and lower the e.u. budget whereas the other countries have said well they want to keep receiving the same financial aid and so you have basically a route between the stingy countries and those countries to receive money and to complicate matters at the end of the day you have the european parliament that also wants more money and that as a final save can needs to give a green light if we want a new budget by the end of two thousand and twenty and what of the poison by germany to link it into funds and going to the less well off countries in the block to fulfilling certain conditions including accepting refugees how did that go down . as you can imagine it's the most controversial topic in eastern european states are are up in arms it's a it's a freeze the way it's a cold wind that comes here from the east of europe because they call foul play and blackmail basically whereas the german chancellor says look at this the solidarity in the e.u.
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is no one way street and basically you have all those countries who pay money into you in the to the e.u. hussein. oh this is great we have a means to actually make sure that even member states implement the things they have that have been agreed to that they play by the rules if they don't we have our tools or we would have a true with this new budget to force them to follow the rules. god martis in brussels thank you very much for that. and before that you summits got underway the e.u. commission hosted high level talks on fighting terrorism and stemming the flow of refugees through africa sahara region one of the poorest in the world and the e.u. pledged to double its funding for a joint military operation set up by five countries in the region you can see them now on the graph where the security situation is fragile because of extremist groups and criminal networks helping the sahil has become a european priority because of the high number of refugees and migration from the
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region to europe this is the front line in europe's bid to stem migration from africa thousands of migrants travel through it before they can take their chances crossing the mediterranean for years the sahara has been plagued by jihadist groups and criminal networks smuggling weapons drugs and humans across borders it's become a breeding ground for terrorists and a big worry for the e.u. . in brussels boosting development was a key topic at the meeting with leaders from the african region but the main issue on the agenda was security the european union has pledged to double its funding so the g five said held joint force. a partnership of five so hell countries mauritania burkina faso mali share and chad founded to counter terror and immigration in the area. really today we are raising support for the
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g five joint force to which the e.u. was the first contributor last year we pledged fifty million euros and today we pledged another fifty to enable it to get into action. in the. security is a public good what we're doing in the sahara is not just to defend our countries it's for the world security. i think it's normal that the international community should show solidarity with thousand this fight for. other international donors such as the u.s. and saudi arabia have also pledged financial support together all partners have raised more than four hundred million euros exceeding the meetings expectations until now the sahara region has relied heavily on european countries for security france alone has more than four thousand troops deployed in the area the g.
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five partnership aims to be fully operational later this year europe is hoping that will mean more military self-reliance and fewer european troops on the ground into hell. human rights groups fear that me and my government is using bulldozers to raise the villages of the ring of people and a high end state has been nearly empty to fix muslim minority since last august when a military crackdown drove hundreds of thousands of people across the border to bomb that this these before and after satellite images show that dozens of empty villages have been completely wiped out in recent weeks i mean must government claims it's trying to rebuild the region human rights watch has expressed concern that crucial evidence of crimes against the muslim minority is being destroyed. what we're seeing in this area isn't just the knocking down. structures
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we're seeing is the complete clearing totally leveling completely a racy these villages that were there there's no more landmarks no trees there's no vegetation everything is wiped away and this is very concerning because these are crime scenes and the evidence of these crimes that were committed there is being completely wiped away such that there is no and there's no bears been no credible investigation of these crimes and so what we're talking about really is obstruction of justice that this richard rijs from human rights watch time of a businessman joins me in a story that's a bit like digging for gold ben it is it is mine involved and some people do strike it rich emerita bitcoin has managed to poke its head above the ten thousand dollar mark again if people who invested just a year ago sneak a peek at their digital wallets they'll see
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a return of some seven hundred percent impressive money doesn't grow on trees but you can dig up the virtual kind on the block chain. bitcoin is a digital currency and its value is determined just like everything by supply and demand and unlike other currencies central banks cannot influence the course of the cryptocurrency value through monetary policy bitcoins were first programmed ten years ago the developer was known only by a pseudonym satoshi nakamoto to this day the program of behind a technology has never been identified the idea is that everyone who installs the bitcoin software on the desktop or smartphone becomes part of the bitcoin network the digital ledger that supposedly makes bitcoin both independent and secure is what is known as block chain a block chain is a ledger managed by many computers in a network which keep track of records in what are called blocks each block contains
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information about a transaction the block is checked in very fied by older computers distributed throughout the network and contains security codes from the previous block that practically eliminates the chances of manipulation and count a feat of the current sting. at the moment bitcoin is still on the wild rollercoaster ride in the markets but one thing is fairly certain after all the coins are issued bitcoin won't fall victim to inflation jagow rhythm behind it won't allow the mining of more than twenty one million bitcoins and they'll all have been created by the year twenty one forty. financial advisor mock freed today she joins us now from our stock outs trio you're no earlier vesta it bitcoin i don't expect you to gloat i don't want to make you blush but you are big quite a billionaire. no not at all not at all i'm not not yet.
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you did it best back in twenty thirteen those so i expect the gains are pretty impressive what happens because it goes back to zero as some people say. it will never go back to c.e.o. of course it's a disruptive technology and it will change the vote definitely it has the same impact like the internet i think blocked sharing and the big call in technology has the same impact on the financial world like the smartphone on the telephone booths in order telephone booths will not totally disappear but we don't use them anymore and i think it's. our financial system for the future in the next ten or twenty years what about these huge swings in the value of big oil and the fifteen percent a day i mean do you sleep well at night when you see the news you see mccrea have no just kidding no seriously i'm used to it it's like a tradition actually notice in the big cunt come unity to it's a saying hostile hold hold hold your call ins cause i saw horrible horrible
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corrections and crash ninety percent even in the year two thousand and thirteen but it always came back and you could always speak up and higher and i'm very positive that this technology will change everything it's a revolution we can't stop and now it's time to in west in small portions ok it's nice of. you guys to hold on to your koans but what about people who actually want to spend those going to feel buying a house in florida which is possible with bitcoins what happens when it falls in value by fifteen percent the next day. it's a risk definitely it's a risky investment right now but i think it's the future and you shouldn't invest more than five or ten percent of your whole wealth you just little steps and into future we will see that it will be more and more normal that we spend crypto currencies in the future and i think the banks realize that and that's why they're so fighting so hard against the block chain and the bitcoin and cryptocurrency s.
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it's not just banks it's whole countries china is cracking down on what does that make you feel. i'm happy if we sort of already in two thousand and seventeen nothing happened you know it was a short dip but you can't. correct down a decentralized system it's a possible cause all the information out on thousands of millions of computers all over the world you have to switch off the internet and that would be catastrophic so you can't decentralized system that's not possible they can try but that's ok there is the great fire wall of china which we've all heard of venezuela as well as it introduced its own crypto currency the first state controlled crypto currency but it is state controlled i mean it's not de centralized obviously that exactly is the opposite of off the ground idea of the blocks in technology and bitcoin so i'm not recommending to invest into petrol and gold petrol so on the one side it's very positive for the whole movement because you see now
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a centralised governments and institutions going into this market and they see the potential on the other side come on ministerial spend corrupt there's hyper inflation it's a socialistic coming to stick it will fail and we've chosen to be noted with the german democratic republic in eighty nine briefly there are many other crypto currencies out there what makes you think bitcoin is the one that's going to stay there many people saying it's going to be the altar of vista of cryptocurrency. yeah so. called in history it's now two thousand and nine it's working it got never hacked and it's getting exponentially more and more secure and i think it will be the gold standard of crypto currencies of a trip to qantas will come as well but bitcoin will always be the same like the blocks in technology it's here to stay for brick for us and show god thank you.
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this is the final competition day at the burnin international film festival and my colleagues charlotte chisholm pill and god rocks down at the red carpet how do both a few human beings know what is going on behind you. yes we've just had the wild premiere of the new polish film ugh the stars of that film were on the red carpet behind us just a few moments ago they've now gone in to take a look we were lucky enough to see the press preview just a short time ago yeah this is one of the last times to screen here in competition. it's a comedy about a man who has a horrible accident and has to have a face transplant and having his face changed having his face taken off and put back on again it transforms him and can cause some sort of crisis in identity and i just have to say i'm really even saying the words face-off right now and. going on between canada and germany doesn't mean. on the record now of watching
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him going to germany is very painful for me. but but this was quite interesting because it was a female director in a way addressing an issue of male identity and i didn't know what you think of this approach you know why i mean we've had a few female directors in the competition so far and they seem to be doing pretty well as for what i think that we are she can't tell you quite yet until a bit later on but it will give you are our impressions ok scott i feel been telling to barely know how to get through the film by women directing what are their chances like are they likely to win anything. yeah i think so i think we were talking about this just before the show and i think couple of some pretty good chances i yeah that's right there's a time feel good feeling in the air which means daughter of mine female director
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nora perry and that is very complex picture of what it means to be a woman it's very it's very rule it's very deep it's about motherhood is while and i was really moved by the film that i think that is one that is is really in for a good chance of winning a good chance when the top prize probably even the golden bear for me also mention three days in cuba also german film by a female director of the active. reviews but i think particularly for the lead among plays the famous actors are only schneider in the film i think she is a pretty good chance to win best actress i was a stunning before and yeah i have pretty impressed i saw a story of a woman on the edge but really beautifully told beautifully shot i think critically because she's a german actress here in germany maybe with a german director leading the jury tom tech for and she's got a good chance yeah that's right having not grown up in jenny she wasn't an actress that i was physically familiar with that i don't think that that's especially important i was really kind of carried along with the film just by just by her
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actions goes i was very impressed ok and the results will be known tomorrow evening is that right. that is quite right so make sure you watch as will be live here on the red carpet with those results and we're getting pretty excited yeah and also just a caveat i mean i'm almost always wrong with you. so please don't put any money on a. scarf and charlotte thank you very much. again to end this half hour. it was indeed i mean is coming up ahead a food bank in the west in general city in essence still has controversy by deciding only to offer food to german citizens or what is this all about. and that in will coming up shortly here watching the news coming to you live from back. to cut. cut. cut. cut cut. cut. cut.
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cut. every move he makes has a global impact. but when has president putin lead russia during his tenure. is his strategy working. or has he miscalculated. putin must stand up again. in forty five minutes on t.w. . freedom of expression. a value that old ways has to be defended and new. all over the world the art of freedom freedom of art. a multimedia project about
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artists and their right to express their views freely. d w dot com the freedom. to. feel. the scars samoud. the pain is still tangible. the surface for. the four cities edged by. the. kind of surprised they don't have a future. i really understand people who say they don't want to stay here. but they also admire people who want to stay here and who decided to create something. in peace time. the people making it possible what needs to happen if tolerance and reconciliation or to stand a chance. dorcas cities after war starting march turns
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on t w. you're watching the news coming to you live from berlin. a pleasure to have you with us our top story russia has so far blocked a u.n. security council resolution ordering an immediate thirty day humanitarian cease fire in syria the european union is also demanding a truce as a civilian death to it continues to rise in the damascus suburb of eastern huta. that here in germany a food bank in the west of the in the western city of essen has stirred controversy by deciding only to offer food to german citizens the charity's chairman said order food bank using single mothers and friends determined by the many foreign language speaking young men in the queue some of whom showed a lack of respect for women they said but other charity workers have criticised the
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decision for being discriminatory. leftover food for the poor and needy that's what a food bank is there for this food bank in the western german city of essen has sparked outrage by deciding to refuse any more foreign customers a bank spokesman defends his decision. this kind of should also not funny this is nothing to do with racism we don't think that foreigners are more or less nearly than germans it's just that we want to make the distribution of food more fair gary schroen the food bank says that over the past two years the proportion of non german customers has risen to seventy five percent it says especially elderly people and single mothers feel deterred by the large number of men speaking a foreign language the essene food bank gives out groceries and food to more than sixteen thousand people every week other food banks in the region are shocked by the decision. nobody comes here just for the fun of it and if you're hungry it
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doesn't make any difference whether you are a german or a migrant issues hit the headlines in germany and unleashed a debate on food banks and who really needs their help one off essence members of parliament gearing is urging the food bank to reconsider its decision. it's highly problematic to play off different groups of poor people in germany and the need and poverty must not be connected to one's nationality or possible and that's something all france banks have agreed on the deposit and man shot. mr tough and in doj land over nine hundred food banks in germany give out groceries for free that would normally be thrown away more than one point five million people use the nonprofit organizations at least once a month experts estimate that sixty percent of them are foreigners. but we're not drawing up political correspondent family on who joins me from up on
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a mentors who is so prominent what is going on an initiative written only feed you if you're german sounds outrageous. yeah i mean the tar file is a volunteer organization that hands out food that would otherwise be thrown away and the policy of the organization in fact is to give help to everybody who can prove that they're in need of it by showing that they are recipients of state aid if they can do that then they can register to use the service now this group in essence say that there's an imbalance in the people using their service that three quarters of them are now foreigners people from overseas migrants most of them and they say that there have been over the last couple of years these incidents particularly where single mothers and older people waiting in the queue have felt uncomfortable surrounded by in some cases large
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groups of migrants some of whom don't see why they should wait some of them he said not showing respect to women so that's why they said they're going to have this stop on taking in any more people into their register. not german citizens now this has become front page news here in germany what's the reaction been. yeah the reaction has been very negative indeed people have been saying this is dividing a poor and needy people into first and second class people one charity worker has said that this is pouring water on the mill of the right wing poll populists and indeed even the social affairs minister catherine of bali has said that you know dividing people in this way is not compatible with german values
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and how all the food going to bank managers defending what's going on here well as i said they say they're responding to a specific problem they also say that they see as a temporary measure and they wouldn't expect it to be in place for more than a few months through the summer so so far they've been relatively relaxed in responding to this wave of criticism even from within their own organization right simon young that upon a mentor thirtieth thank you. in the u.s. news you just have emerged but now three florida school shooting that left seventeen people dead the armed officer assigned to the school waited outside the building during the shooting and did not confront the killer and this news comes as a dominant trump president is calling for tighter background checks and for some teachers to be armed. this is the coffin of chris hicks and hailed
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a hero for trying to stop the shooter at the florida school he worked at a u.s. navy veteran he was given full military honors. as families lay their loved ones to rest more details about the fateful day are emerging surveillance footage has shown that the armed officer on duty scott peterson never went inside the school to confront the gunman was radio at a point in time. and he took up a position where it looked like he could see the western most entry into the building and they were he was never going to. pietersen has now resigned and is under investigation. the latest the shooting has led to a raging debate on gun control the national rifle association the n.r.a. offered its solution to ending gun violence stop bad guy with
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a gun it takes a good guy with a guy school districts p.t.a. teachers unions local law enforcement moms and dads they all must come to gather to implement the very best strategy to harden their schools including of fact they have trained armed security that was absolutely protected every innocent child is theirs contrary. advocates a further gun control are demanding action be taken. we are taking students protesting outside the white house this week said they were angry that school massacres have become commonplace and little has been done to stop them according to gun control advocates a group there have been eighteen school shootings since the beginning of the year. i mean the public outcry president trump has endorsed
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a higher minimum age for buying certain rifles and tighter background checks for purchasers. he also rates are rated his call for some teachers to carry guns. your have in my opinion you want to have the should is because these people are cowards they're not going to walk into a school if twenty percent of the teachers are gods or maybe ten percent or maybe forty percent that what i'd recommend doing is the people that do care and we give the bonus we give them a little bit of a bonus back in florida the family of slain chris hicks and like thousands of others in the united states every year is coming to terms with the consequences of gun violence and turning out to businesses and facials have announced details of a pioneering marine conservation plan then this is all part of an agreement amrita extremely interesting with the island nations credit says for the first time to say shells has designated the seas surrounding its islands as protected waters
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safeguarding the fishing and tourism industry and receiving debt relief in return. for many this indian ocean island is what paradise looks like the remote atal is home to the world's largest population of giant tortoises and is the spawning cryan for a number of rare species. the seychelles government has now signed a bill restricting nearly all human activity in the waters around aldabra it's the result of a unique deal with its creditors debt relief in exchange for protecting biodiversity . in a nutshell. the seychelles managed to. convert hearts of its debt through debt swap loan agreement facilitated by the nature conservancy and this debt restructuring. and mabel for
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a certain. amount to be repaid into a trust fund for to fund conservation related projects and activities the ambitious plan places thirty percent of the country's territorial waters under protection putting it way ahead of the global marine protected area target of ten percent by two thousand and twenty took four years to put this together but what happened was is over that time period the seychelles was a poster child of what you do to come out of a debt crisis they were running positive budget surpluses they successfully footed the currency they were used to do so their debt to g.d.p. ratio in the late two thousand is the seychelles was one of the world's most indebted countries according to the world bank sovereign debt peaked at nearly one billion us dollars today the finance ministry says it stands at less than half of. many fishermen except that the long term effects of the marine spatial plan will
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benefit the economy and their industry yet some fear the short term impact will be crippling to their livelihoods. chinese authorities have taken temporary control of private insurance group. the government says the group's chairman. has been prosecuted for economic crimes the company's made a series of high profile multibillion dollar foreign acquisitions in recent years especially in germany the regulators say on bank has violated rules that could make it impossible for us to pay back its debts the takeover is that it lasted a year and is part of beijing's efforts to curb excessive debt. let's bring in andrei hangout asia correspondent who's based in singapore and great first of all what's the company actually done wrong what are these economic crying. when it's not really clear what but this whole thing it is one of those situations where the company has gotten too big to fail and it's now
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a track that unwanted attention from the government so it's part of the government's measure to come any excessive capital flows from leaving the country and given how and brown has been acquiring a lot of high value high profile properties of the seas such as the new york so wall of a story would tell it's pretty obvious why they go how they got caught so how's this going to affect those foreign companies that export is the world of a story now run by the chinese state. you could probably technically put it that way but it's really not clear. has been ordered to sell off its overseas assets we're not sure whether the officer is going to be one of them or not. this one yet takeover is going to rattle some nerves for a lot of these foreign acquisitions they will have to leave the downgrading for us in singapore thank you.
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on the final competition day at the burnin international film festival is today and my colleague shawna chazan pill and scum drunk so i have been watching films for more than a week now and they joined me from the red carpet and i know scott had devastating to. me and i saw in pyongyang but tell me about them better than i what i got out i had to write about amrita he didn't. start crying. interviewing ariel you know i know what's up but we are here to talk about films and there's a new there is a new world premiere of a documentary tonight that's right it's called songwriter is it a fly on the wall look at the british singer songwriter ed sheeran it's actually directed by his cousin so it's a very intimate look at his life his life on tour i still think if you're familiar
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with i'm retired i think scott could give us a quick rendition of one of his songs yeah not. that i have to think i'm not i'm not a fan i have to admit he is a ginger so i should show solidarity but i was just thinking about this ten years ago martin scorsese was here with his documentary about the rolling stones i would open the band and film festival shine a light rolling stones ten years ago now ed sheeran i think that says all you need to know about the climate of all of pop music clearly and share and it's i've received as i'm going to take up they have i think it could be one to watch i'm interested to see he's you he's really popular now but he's don't he's boring i mean it's going to be him drinking tea him writing boring lyrics he's always sleep was oh noes i don't drink that i'm sorry that's all right go and see if you're a fan maybe it's something that maybe it's interesting i'm definitely gonna give this a miss. the going to sound quality so look at all the various jilin firm coming up later tell us all. yeah this film is in the
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aisles it's a jungle my thomas should do well and it's interesting because it stars to the really rising stars of germany asunder hello we might remember from tony at montrose the star of tony at my which was oscar nominee and. a frontal wicki who's this one here is a big fan of very attractive young german arguer everywhere here is been he's already in another film that's in the competition safer he's also when the shooting star would hear the bell and i mean that meaning it's that this little thing that he's he's one so what say i was very excited to see how this goes down a bit later on we can't tell you exactly what we think about the film itself because we've not had the world premiere yet instead i think we've got a report that can do the talking for us. this is not an action movie.
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and it's an unlikely place for a love story in the aisles takes us to a discount superstore in a small town where there's a new guy working the drinks section. to. christian hardly says a word but his coworker bruno takes a liking to him as does the unhappily married mother on from the candy department he's sweet on her too. plus an angle a pound. yeah . it's a plant thousand and. one molly on goes on sick leave and falls into a deep depression and has checkered past threatens to catch up with him. rising star. leads this portrait of an eastern german working class life and a tale of very cautious. because i knew what i've been
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seeing films for the past two week do you have a favorite as to what like when the big. three day we've been battling it out trying to figure out exactly which one will buy thankfully there are nineteen films in competition the one that was my favorite safe feeding and me a daughter of mine it's highly and film females are acts of very strong cost very interesting betrayal of motherhood and i think it in a hash tag me to claim that i think that this really could be a woman's year yeah i probably agree without also from a betting perspective i think. daughter of mine is the best chances to win the golden bear but i don't really really like the iranian film here pig it is a male director male focus perhaps but also is a lot of very strong female characters and it's very very funny the funniest film at the balun always here yeah i'd really like to see it with something i'm not sure if it got the golden bear but i really like it see it with something in mazing film
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and one of my best picks this year so we have to wait and see the results come out tomorrow shallows and scott enjoy yourselves and thank you very much for joining me from the red carpet at the billion dollar. ok now turning change of pisa norden college in southwest england has been creating nannies for more than a century every year the conner just seems hundreds of applications from just a few dozen places the training is expensive but the jobs can be lucrative graduates a highly sought after by wealthy families even by the royal. history and tradition thrive in the city of boston southwestern england the waters have been taken in this picture spot town since roman times so it's no wonder that it's home to the world's most elite school for nannies norland college watching students
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rush to morning class dressed in premier any forms with their hair tied in a neat bun one feels transported to a bygone era. i think no one and i was so sorry go and i think the uniform you hold on to that history i mean was also so. i think it holds on to all of. this. we we come had one of the one of the best jobs in the uk. it's the uniform as such but if you take that away from us it's not part of northern. alexandra and many are in their second year and on loving every minute. they're not being trained to be just plain nannies nolan credentials are worth their weight in gold and even britain's royal family relies on norland alumni who don their uniform with pride lending a job with the royals is
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a career dream come true the students say they're not actively seeking a prestigious position. i'd have to talk with that i'd love to see the unknown set up but it's not necessary and i look for it's an addition it's not a primary. after graduation the students generally can pick and choose their first job but first they have to be able to afford their education and you will fees and norland amount to some fourteen thousand euros the curriculum doesn't just include cost is in quetta cooking and how to sterilize a baby bottle things like how to deal with proper oxy are also on the shuttle the principal knows the modern nannies challenge. it's cyber security training from former military intelligence officers and that again reflects. perhaps some of the needs and demands of society today the implications of for example social media usage giving away for example geo location particularly because i often go on to
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work for quite high profile or high net worth families newland ninety's have long been seen as the ultimate status symbol and are in high demand among the global jet set to meet from hollywood stars to russian oligarchs everyone who can afford it wants their offspring minded by a very british nanny. the increasing breakdown of gender stereotypes has resulted in new interest from real students. this school year so it's a largest ever intake of men charles is one of seven. friends of first and understands their bit confused because obviously it's not all that popular thumbnails right now but they found out they found it interesting they were quite proud and they'd buy it may said. regardless of the number of miles with them. and the starting salary may be one winning argument graduates
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can expect to earn an annual fifty thousand euros once they pass through the college gates for good not a bad outlook and worth stepping out in full time full. time now for an update on the winter olympics in south korea hecho florist sports says joins me now with the highlights from chunks high and they can only be one highlight is lies jimmy's concern a huge shock in ice only it was it was a massive game massive result for for germany they got to beat canada which is the . number one ranked team in the world and they were able to beat them to reach their first final ever. it was in the old biter of a game we had the germans go up three nil in the by the second period of the game but of course this is canada you cannot write them off their best and mention their the number one team they have won gold at the last olympics so they were able to
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pull the game back pulled it back to to a four three when it was the final score but of course germany was able to get that win historic win for the germans as mentioned is their first final now and germany was the lowest ranked team to to go into the semifinals so this is the methods it's a massive it is and in fact i know you know scot drug guru is covering the body law but he was completely devastated by this result because he's canadian no one had ever thought that the girls the girls lost yesterday as well against the u.s. they got silver and now there's another shocking result in hockey for canada which is. a favorite of ice hockey is actually now they're struggling for germany big big ladies who met face to face next well now they'll be facing another favorite in this case it's the controversial team which is the olympic athletes from russia team ah you mean russia let's say let's say about. facing them who.
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leads from russia were able to be the czechs three nil they swept the czechs actually. needed to open up the score them bloody got the second goal we see celebrating his goal and chuck was able to score that last third goal his fourth goal in his career so as mentioned they're going to be one of the favorites in coming into the final their last nettle with a bronze back in two thousand and two may not sound that amazing and as mentioned i mean germany they were able to beat sweden in the quarter finals who are currently the world champs. now they beat canada which are number one in the world so i mean there's there's no stopping the germany so far would be what happens if you have a really exciting game because of course as you said that team from russia as it were so kind of big favorites in ice hockey but so that if he's going to sit there what olympic what do you pick athletes for michelle but they've already got to go
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to their first goal actually they've got to through a. fifteen in the ice skating event she actually set a new war record here we see her dancing and look at just those moves she got an amazing world record of eighty two point nine hundred two in the short program which is also amazing because it was one point thirty one points clear of her fellow russian if it ever so she had a world record and that's just amazing to see this resolved there's a living their first goal let's hope or well we'll see what happens against germany we have to see what happens in ice hockey the second go for us thank you so much for bringing us all the action and see you again so you. you're watching the end of a news coming to you live from london we have more news coming up for you shortly do stay within if you can but by.
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every move he makes has a global impact. but where has president putin lead russia during his. is his strategy working move or has he miscalculated feel good in moscow again. in fifteen minutes. for sitting. where the world of science is at home in many languages. now with us our innovations magazine for in asia of every week and always
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is it over your news line from berlin the u.n. security council prepares to vote again on a temporary ceasefire for syria will they be able to stop the bombs raining down on eastern ghouta the u.n. wants to allow humanitarian aid into thousands of people trapped there hundreds have been killed since the bombardment started on sunday also coming up. how to fill the hole left by bricks it european union leaders meet to plan future budgets without britain's substantial contribution. and if we go to the berlin film festival to see a movie about identity mongers about a man with a new mug a new face the problem is his neighbors don't recognize him anymore which makes life rather to from.
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iraq thanks very much for your company everyone we begin in syria and in eastern guta this week has been the deadliest the area has seen in years residents in the besieged suburb of damascus are living a nightmare as syrian forces unleashed waves of air strikes hundreds of people have been killed since sunday clothing many children all now the european union has joined a growing international corps calling for a ceasefire to allow a trucks into the beleaguered area the un security council is due to vote on a cease fire later today so far russia has starfleet opposed it but reports suggest a compromise might be within reach. because they're going with their even for those surrounded by day it is a crushing moment. suppose. a father hugs his child one last time. for
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city is victims there is no dignity in dying. should shoot. and for syria's government there is no relenting every minute bombs are dropped. monitored groups say more than four hundred men women and children have been killed since sunday homes and hospitals obliterated leaving doctors to handle matters of life and there amid the ruins. we had to do one of the operations under the rubble. because we couldn't evacuate we had to do it under the rubble. i'm now the syrian regime says rebel extremist groups who control eastern are using humans as shields the un security council has been debating a thirty day ceasefire the line for aid delivery east and the evacuation of
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casualties. these are not terrorists showing up in these makeshift emergency rooms these are civilians they are ordinary people under attack by a barbaric assad regime that is bent on leaving eastern ghouta leveled to the ground with no regard for the four hundred thousand men women and children who live there but it was met with resistance time russia blocking the resolution. over those days to achieve stabilisation painstaking work is necessary these parties need to sit down and negotiate the parameters of the ceasefire there is no other way. but i hope still locks within these beseech concrete canyons of the three by the young men it comes in the shape of a hole and i slowly but surely they're digging their way to safely. the only escape were from a torrent of homes must be an underground one. well the security council plans
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to vote today on an amended serious cease fire resolution after russia blocked the original draft put forward yesterday or i want to take you now or to moscow to our correspondent we had a search who is monitoring that story for us me oh let's go back to yesterday wide at russia reject the original draft resolution i think is hard to tell because if you come if you compare the first draft with the second draft there's no not that much of a difference i think what is very important to russia is just to show that they're really a global power the global paranoia and not what president obama wants a just a regional power that's something that. is something good that that was something that really hurts president putin here trying to shoot me late him and someone
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who's very close to mr putin he told me once that putin has not forgotten and i think the second reason why they may not say yes to a compromise some sort of compromise if that if if this is a compromise is that they want. to gain days or to make sure that assad's army has as many days as possible to to win the battle on the ground all right so they want to buy more time for the pro assad forces to continue their air campaign what kind of compromise could we be seeing today that could potentially persuade moscow not to use its veto again. well as i said before i don't think that this is really a compromise because when you compare the results number one with the one that we have right now that there's not that much of a difference let's be realistic russia is going to continue to support the
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president assad and his army and the security council came over and over again just a couple of years ago the whole situation reminds me of the situation aleppo and you'll remember i think this was summer two thousand and sixteen that a security council came over and over again that there was there were many of resolutions but this is nothing to hasn't change anything on the ground so in the end president assad and his army took control of aleppo and in the end we may see something very similar to that right now are it now let's talk of course about that catastrophic or humanitarian situation in east ghouta we have been inundated by these just heart heartbreaking footage of people carrying dead children how russian media were porting on this said bombardment well as you know those this is a holiday today in moscow and russia it's
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a defender of the fall and day the situation in syria is not a big issue here in the news and you won't hear in the state controlled news that the weapons used in aleppo used in ghouta that those weapons came from russia you want to hear that in russia raise our source reporting from moscow thank you all right i'm going to tell you now about some of the other stories making news around the world. the u.n. investigation into the conflict in south sudan says there is enough evidence to prosecute at least forty senior government and rebel officers for crimes against humanity and war crimes the u.n. report gives arifin witness accounts of gang rapes castration and ethnic violence and says children are not being spared. nigerian authorities say the schoolgirls
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who were unaccounted for following a book zero harami attack on monday are still missing this comes after earlier reports suggested that some of them had been rescued dozens of girls from a state run boarding school in the states are thought to have been abducted by the extremists. an armed officer who had been assigned to protect the american school had by last week's match shooting in florida has resigned local police say the mount a cuppa zisha outside the school during the attack but failed to confront the shooter the officer is now under investigation in europe leaders of the european union are meeting to decide how to fill the multi billion euro hole in his budget that will be left after britain leaves to block there's expected to be a shortfall of fourteen billion euros post gregg's it the leaders are discussing where to prioritise funding with migration terrorism and border protection high on the
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agenda. today is the final competition day at the berlin international film festival and my colleagues as charlie are to kill and scott roxboro are still down at the carpet you can't beat them away from that credit card great get the senior guys for fails a competition are for women directors are they likely to win an award. we are very hopeful this. woman will win an award the golden bath one of the films the film that i particularly have my money on it's a film called daughter of mine and mia is an italian film by laura at this very and it's painted a really complex very rule picture motherhood and womanhood as i was extremely moved by the film i have to say yeah i think that's of those four of the four films
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directed by women in competition i think that's probably the strongest but there are two others that could could pull off a prize maybe not the golden bear but maybe on the other awards there's muckle polish film which is a look at a man who has a face transplant and has questioned his identity it's a comedy it is very funny and also is interesting to see a woman looking at sort of crisis and male identity that's an interesting take but the film i think could definitely come out with some award is the film by a german director here and three days in cuba on this a black and white movie and it's a look at the last interview given by rumi schneider the famous german austrian actress that i actually as a growing up not in germany i wasn't familiar with the actress in this film really does carry a paints a picture of what it was like in actually what turned out to be the the final years of this woman's life yes and the actress moneyball i must very famous here in germany this is really a parade role for her i think she's got
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a really good chance of pulling off the best actress prize here in berlin all right and there is a german film being screened a little later on tell us more about that. yeah this is in the aisles from thomas to bone and it's a it's sort of a romantic comedy set in a huge supermarket and there the main characters are forklift operators it's the woman you might know the actress sandra hello she was the star of tony at mum and she's playing opposite frontal good skier who sort of the star of this valley not right to come. petition films here he plays a very silent closed off man and i have to say he found a fan in this lady he could later he's dropping me into he's sharing that i think i like this magazine somewhat attractive man i sort of am i mean a german joaquin phoenix i'd say yeah he's in the press conference just a short time ago we were that he was making jokes that how hard it was to drive
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that drive that forklift it was pretty funny i we can't tell you too much about what we actually think of the film there because we haven't had the world premiere yet so we can't be there want to spoil anything we do have this report take a look. this is not an action movie. and it's an unlikely place for a love story in the aisles takes us to a discount superstore in a small town where there's a new guy working the drinks section. to. christian hardly says a word but his coworker bruno takes a liking to him as does the unhappily married mother on from the candy department he's sweet on her to. this an angle bones. you know. doesn't go up.
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when mommy on goes on sick leave and falls into a deep depression and has a checkered past threatens to catch up with him she is rising star francois gubs leads this portrait of an eastern german working class life in a tale of very cautious. alright charlotte scott thank you guys so very much i'll catch up with you is our other bulletins later on for now thank you. are you now since forced to the winter olympics impelling chang jeremy have stunned canada to reach the men's ice hockey final in a thrilling match germany got off to a flying start against the defending champion is taking a three nil lead canada battled their way back into the game to make it forty three with just minutes to go germany held on to for the historic win it will now play the russian team in sunday's final. the olympic
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athletes from russia have won their first gold medal of the winter games in south korea figure skater alina tovar claimed the team's maiden title in chang and just fifteen years old secretary is the second youngest gold medalist in the events history fellow russian. took silver all right before i go i want to remind you of our mean headline right now the u.n. security council is expected to vote surely on a proposed ceasefire in syria it would stop the bombardment of eastern ghouta worth thousands of people are trapped and hundreds have died since sunday. art for now thank you so much for spending.

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