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tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  March 19, 2018 3:00pm-4:00pm CET

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this is g.w. news live from berlin a fourth term for russia's president vladimir putin thanks to supporters of moscow after they hand him his biggest victory ever will get reaction from the russian capital. meanwhile the e.u. foreign ministers condemned the attempted murder of a former russian spy and his daughter and they say they take extremely seriously london's assessment that moscow is to blame that those chemical weapons experts are in the u.k. to test samples of the talks and used in the attack and. also coming up mounting pressure on facebook after
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a whistleblower hands over abbott and seven huge data leaked he says fifty million users had their profiles plundered to help create fake news and put donald trump in the white house. in the bogus legal light six score of victory to remember they beat the runaway leaders byron munich for the first time ever. a unique exhibition here in germany tells a story of a club or a culture rather braver robin merrill will be here to tell the future. i'm sorry someone's going to get to have you with us let me put in has been re-elected to a fourth term as russia's president final results gave him more than three quarters of the vote his biggest victory yet many say putin's win was a foregone conclusion that's after his most siri. rival opposition leader of lexie
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in a volley was banned from the race. was. greeted like a pop star the man who has dominated russia's political stage for years and who now has the mandate to stay here for more. specially for them i should thank you for your support. this victory demonstrates how much we've achieved in the last years under very difficult circumstances. to a rather subdued audience the head of the russian election commission confirmed lot to me of putin's landslide victory he won almost seventy seven percent of the vote but that victory is overshadowed by allegations of election fraud cameras inside polling stations showed signs of forged ballots being submitted by the handful or the russian authorities have denied widespread irregularities the reports concern
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of is germany was quick to voice its reservations about putin's win in the fear regarding the russian election we can't talk about a fair election as we know it leaders are suffering to forgive us for that's why we assume russia will remain a difficult partner but we need russia to solve the major international issues we are currently facing that's an awkward so we hope to maintain our dialogue. china though has welcome putin's latest success i'm sensing that wasn't what we believe and the president putin's leadership russia will continue its stable development and play a bigger role in international affairs. says president putin has allowed himself some time to celebrate yet again he's on the front pages and the top man in the russian federation. more now on flovent putin's victory we have a good stuff gracile from the european council on foreign relations here in berlin with us here in our studios and we also have roman order from the russian
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independent election monitoring organization a go los movement with us good to have you both thanks for joining us werman let's start with you what exactly did your observer see during the polling at the election. you have to understand that the observers don't see a lot of fraud during the day we can collect from not on the observers but the video cameras you mentioned previously we observed have been observing campaigning because complaining is quite important for the we know for the results of the overweening so moralists complex situation and complex operation now as for the election day itself what did you see there because the russian government said that it was trying to uphold international lection norms you you talked about the c.c.t.v. cameras there why would they go through that effort if there were also going to be some ballot stuffing happening. still the
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book stuffing and it's a surprise for us about the type of crime is still exist and even possible to prove the official video you have to understand that our observers for example now are greeted with a welcome by the commissions commission try not to falsify in front of them so in this case they don't see anything but in that case we can compare this data to the previous the nearby polling stations without service and in this case we can prove that for example in children public even in china to results i did tickle two more school districts when an observer is present in polling stations. let's talk to you about this now because this woman said this is a surprise to actually see this happening and putin enjoys widespread popularity why would they risk getting caught. he never stood
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a fair and free election the only independent polling institute deliver the center is now for an age and they're forbidden to poll on issues of domestic policy. and there is a widespread problem on the wall you have huge effort of intimidation or actually the c.c.t.v. cameras for not installed for monitoring election or for a good faith effort nationally there is just really forces to control who is going to the polls and not because they're asking intensive pressure on civil servants and pension years on people who depend on the state as a money giver to cost a vote in favor of flooding important. i don't buy the popularity outright lying. so this to you was very clearly not a free or fair election no it was not a free of fair elections it might be surprising that they are all before the ballot box because usually the votes this is of the throw away the actual ballot. preprinted. votes to fill it up. this time may be dead.
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in doing so they usually sort of the. the true stories of the fraud they sort of sneak into the public weeks after the elections well the kremlin says this is a very clear mandate a very high turnout why was that so important here it's a ritual d d elections in russia have a different functions on the elections of the west for for us it's determination of who rules for russia it's a show of the administration capacities of the state and the capacity of the state to mobilize society for the needs that's russia. needs the need to moralize society for a large bagging war in neighboring countries or buying war in the middle east they need to test their ability to seduce to rally to population behind their cause and elections are the best quantify a bull test run for such and as well putin winning with his biggest victory yet today well let's come back to you will your election commission be reporting we are election group sorry the reporting there regularities that you found and what do
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you expect to happen there do you think they'll be any action taken. yes of course thank you for this question but let me return to your previous question and i agree that you shouldn't the turn out as well for example we now study a kiss all over about you know ball cutter when we see universal almost universal mind just something percent of turn out but on the same time you have a video video was done during the whole day and people counted actual voters who came up to the polling station to the voting books and we can proof with video that of it turn out false if i do and the hoffer times in this case since everything is universal for the that. in the bulk of the republic that means that. all the republicans falsified something about doing the hard times his old early
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days yet whether we will be able to get hold all the videos and. only then we are able to say actual real turn out all right roman for us in moscow and our finding yes we hit ok so we have to leave it there roman to thank you so much for joining us a roman would out from the russian independent election monitoring organization goalless movement and with us here in our studios gustaf grasso thank you both very much for your insights thank you. now a lot of input and victory comes amid a growing anger at russia's likely role in the attempted murder of a former spy in the u.k. moscow has denied any involvement and says britain needs to prove its claim or apologize but european nations have joined the u.k. in expressing their frustration with moscow not least germany. there was no honeymoon period for the new german foreign minister got straight to work in brussels and russia was top of the cage and the election results in russia came as
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no surprise and the apparent irregularities in the votes weren't masses only gripe you topped the cities of it's unacceptable that the election was also conducted in an extreme media important bills with us for that reason we assume that russia will remain a difficult partner part of britain's barra's johnson keeps up his war of words with russia relations between london and moscow are near an all time low following a nerve agent attack on a former russian double agent and solsbury for britain's foreign minister the attack has russia written all over us the russian grew increasingly absurd. the one time they say that they never may not be talking all the time they say that they did not make nor be tropical storms to be destroyed but again they say that they made a stop to be destroyed but some of them have mysteriously escaped the e.u.
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assures britain of its undivided solidarity but member states austria is hesitant to jump to conclusions. in swedish included for you as far as i know an investigation into the substance is currently underway so i imagine this will take a great deal of time has always had to have a name of it meanwhile paris makes no qualms about taking a position standing in solidarity with the u.k. . we see eye to eye with the british on the study but the next one to give you know there's no ways that the russians can deny a total who said it was. britain want sanctions but hey you foreign ministers have yet to take that step preferring to waste and see how the investigation develops. meanwhile international weapons inspectors have a right. in the u.k. to investigate the poisoning of the former russian double agent service cripple and his daughter yulia they'll be testing samples of the nerve agent used in that attack known as noby truck the u.k.
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alleges that that substance was manufactured by russia and let's get more from london we have our correspondent barbara vase all standing by for us hi barbara who are these weapons inspectors and what are they hoping to establish these weapons inspectors are independent inspectors they're independent experts and do we have to imagine something that's very similar to for instance the people who went to iraq to a certain whether there were still weapons of mass destruction there these are experts who go visit countries and try to sort of find the clues off what happened there so what are they doing they are in effect getting some new to really traces off this novacek agent from their british colleagues in portland down does the military rather close to assad's very and they will also trying to take sort of
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small traces from the environment to the environment in the center of town where all this happened that is going to be difficult the weather is bad it has been snowing and it's debatable how many traces still can be found or ever there is of course the car of the script that has been taken away in a container under protection and probably traces can still found be found in the car so these are the technical that is the technical side of these factions going on right now how important will these findings be to backing up britain's claim that moscow is to blame for this attack. they will be quite important it's going to take about two weeks to see those results because then those traces that are now taking are being sent to again in a national independent laboratory where experts will try to somehow. identify then to find the exact chemical make up of those off that nerve agent
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that has been used and from that they can then conclude where it has been made because chemical weapons like all the other chemical substances have something like a sort of if fingerprint one might say where they can be identified in the way of how they have been made so then after this after this cation then. traces can more or less be pretty exactly laid at the front of a front door on not we were barbara have there been any more developments on the investigation any more information about the circumstances of the poisoning. that is still really contradictory because there have been some reports coming from american sources and this is not the first time that leaks from british security services have gone to the u.s. that say that this nerve agent has probably be distributed throughout the the air
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vents of the car that the scripts have been driving other reports however coming from inside the u.k. say that makes no sense because this particular type of truck it works was a sort of delayed reaction time otherwise the scripts would have been breaking down within a few minutes from ingesting this chemical and so they say it's probably it probably has been in the car maybe on the door handles or somehow but the car seems to play central role and the police is still also trying to determine. how the scrupled moved from where to where during that fateful day and who could have approached the car in order to put this highly toxic chemicals a chemical somehow inside or or even on the door where i did have his barber of a cell with the very latest developments there thank you barbara now to some other
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stories making news around the world the chief breaks of the go she added michel barnier he has hailed what he called a decisive step after britain and the e.u. which to agreement on the terms of a post break that transition period under the agreement e.u. rules would remain in place until the end of two thousand and twenty but there is still disagreement over the status of the border between ireland and northern ireland. a bomb planted on a motorbike has killed at least four people and injured several others in eastern afghanistan the blast in the city of jalalabad went off as people left a political rally organized by a former militant commander who made peace with the government last year he was unhurt in the blast. authorities are warning people in southeast australia to remain alert as wildfires rage in the region the blazes in victoria new south wales have destroyed dozens of homes and forced hundreds to flee it is thought they were sparked by lightning and then fanned by hot dry winds. you're watching d.w. still to come lives ruined by lead poisoning in kenya we meet the victims taking on
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thing business in a battle for compensation. but first a hell of a fallout from the latest data breach at facebook a huge data breach and when a company announces that it's launching an internal and external review so you know something has usually gone wrong and facebook has done just that it's launching this review in the wake of those explosive whistleblower claims that the personal data of fifty million users was misused by britain's cambridge analytic in the twenty sixteen u.s. presidential election now facebook c.e.o. mark zuckerberg is facing some serious questions. facebook's mark zuckerberg enjoys the limelight as much as the next guy who at least when the news is good but as far as the latest data scandal is concerned he's keeping a low profile more than two years ago his company discovered that cambridge analytical was using a data leak to spy on fifty million of facebook's users but facebook failed to
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inform those affected cambridge analytical was simply told to delete the data which according to media reports never happened instead facebook has opted to delete the accounts of those who brought the scandal to light people like chris wiley former research director at cambridge analytic he's described how the company worked. imagine i go and ask you i say hey if i give you a dollar two dollars could you fill out the survey for me just do it on this op and you say fine right i don't just capture what your responses are i capture all of the information about you from facebook but also this app then crawls through your social network and captures all about data also so by you filling out my survey i capture three hundred records the user's facebook friends was spied on without their consent of course their likes their gender sexual orientation and political
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leanings everything was gathered on friday facebook announced it had suspended cambridge analytics but that's not enough for politicians in britain and the u.s. they now want to tackle the issue and confront those responsible from facebook. well for more on this developing story we're joined by e.w. social media editor jared reed now in the studio jared how on earth was all of this data gathered in the first place the dod the dod it was gathered through an add on to facebook that paid uses a small amount of money to download a personality chris ellen if you downloaded this personality craze you'd be consenting to the terms of now and so your you'd be consenting to your personal information being given to the developers of this. where you live what you live what your political leanings are and also your friends' least and what their personal preference preferences are where they live what they like for example and
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so the spiral to encompass fifty million people and all of these die ends up in the hands of cambridge analytical which as we heard was was used by donald trump in the presidential campaign and it was a company that was hated by steve benen at the time which he went on to work for donald trump so this company harvested the dos and then created software to target voters with sir. predicting what they would want to do and hitting them with ads and stories and one of the big questions in this whole story is whether about had any effect on the election day huge web of powerful information that how is facebook responded to all of this or this is a pretty big scandal but just as controversial is how facebook's responded because it's been revealed that it found out in two thousand and fifteen this was happening and all it seems to have done was asked the companies involved to delete the information but it didn't really follow up as to whether it had done that because it's been reported that some of the information is still online and more
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importantly didn't tell any of the fifty million users involved that this had been happening facebook has released a statement we can take a look at that it says the claim that this is a doctor breaks is completely false and it goes on to say people knowingly. provided their information and that's true to some extent people did knowingly download these clues but you can't really argue that they would have knowingly given away their friends information and that they could have possibly known that their information would be being used as it was it seems to be another case of facebook sort of not taking its influence seriously enough it's been accused of having the sort of lax regulations that allowed the platform to be tampered with in the u.s. presidential election and breaks it and and now as well and as you point out facebook was aware of this since twenty fifteen that's an awfully long time should we expect repercussions now for facebook in light of this it's really hard to say
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we do know that as we've heard the company has denied wrongdoing the massachusetts attorney general's launched an investigation they've been calls for mark zuckerberg to appear before the u.s. senate and the e.u. has launched an investigation of its own these of course will take some time and what effect that will have a bit too early to say right now and on the users as well it certainly makes you want to reconsider your facebook account i have to say jared really from our social media desk thank you very much indeed for. now u.s. allies are scrambling to seek exemptions from the terrorists that they trumpet administration has threatened to impose germany's economy minister is currently in washington for talks the e.u. trade commission will join them tomorrow and the clock is ticking new u.s. import tariffs on steel an aluminum could be imposed as early as friday. the new tariffs come into force on friday and in some ways the german and european steel industries could simply sit back and relax after rules steel and aluminum make up
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only a very small proportion of european exports to the us. and yet the e.u. will be the trading partner to be hit hardest by the new taxes the e.u. as a whole all twenty eight countries would have six point five billion dollars worth of steel and aluminum exports affected by the new charis it's followed by china with an export volume of around three billion dollars germany would pay taxes on a total of one point seven billion dollars worth of such exports each year making it the country most affected from within the e.u. the e.u. for institute warns that the new tariffs might terrill the beginning of a cascade of others which will spread across further sectors and countries and the european steel industry fears that europe may soon be flooded with cheap steel imports being an alternative cheaper dumping ground. right back to see me now and the kenyans fighting corporate polluters residents from a poor mombassa neighborhood they're heading to court today to give evidence in
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their battle against the polluting lead smelting factory they say admissions from the factory have poisoned scores of people now they want to clean up and compensation for the damage to their health our correspondent catherine on one door sent us this report from the affected area outside of mombasa. catarina kilo's home from another round of treatment she's taking part in a clinical trial to treat lead poisoning here in kenya the city. doctors tried to clean her blood using dialysis the catheter is inserted in her right shoulder it could be her only chance to stay alive the lead poisoning has cost her two kidneys and two children. until i started getting sick in two thousand and fifteen coughing my skin was itching and i couldn't walk i had six children three of them also got lead poisoning two of them died. in two
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thousand and seven metal refinery opened a small tin plant bordering kathryn's neighborhood we know who. in the years that followed at least twenty factory workers in one hundred children died of lead poisoning the pantry is closed in two thousand and fourteen but the aftermath is still coming to light we know who still has dangerously high levels of lead in both the water and soil. blood tests revealed that i read a key has levels of lead more than eighty times the point considered a health concern she suffers from thyroid gland and. my brother and father worked at the smelting company i would wash their clothes and handle the batteries and waste they would carry from the factory while cleaning the house and if the liquid would pour out of the batteries i would be the one to clean
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the mess when. i didn't know it would affect me because what good as a supply doing a. medical treatment is a luxury in all we know who many who live here struggle to put food on the table the nearest hospital that treats lead poisoning is in south africa catherine was fortunate to take part in a medical trial i really is still waiting for her health concerns to be addressed. but there may be a just end to the story and vironment will defend the phyllis a me too has launched a class action suit. victims are seeking compensation it's thirteen million euros as well as a cleanup of the contaminated land now phyllis is expecting at least ten witnesses to testify she hopes that this case will set a precedent on how to deal with social injustices and pollution in the country.
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catherine one the reporting there from. here watching the news still to come the turkish army takes control of offering in syria now turkey says it will target other kurdish cities as it seeks to shore up its border with syria. the top goals from sunday's bundesliga action including a mouthwatering match between legal leader inspiring munich and life think. from the disco to the story of club culture as told by a new exhibition right here in germany. although for it you can always get good reviews on the go with our app get access to all the latest news from around the world as well as push notifications on your phone for any breaking news you can also use the data to send us your photos and your videos just download the app from google play or from the app store well we'll have much more news and business for you coming up in the next thirty minutes thanks for watching
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. the. young lions. that's what i asked calls a child soldiers. what will become of them after years in the ranks of a terror organization. many have never known anything but he create environments. homes. for the child soldiers of his mom extinct trying to write. w. w
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true diversity. where the world of science is at home in many languages. an issue. now with our innovations magazine for. the every week and looking to the future on t w dot com for science and research for. hijacking the news. more are going wrong the news is being hijacked journalism and still has become a scripted reality show it's not just good versus evil us versus them. and why. in countries like russia china turkey people are told lives or something and if you're a journalist there and you try to get beyond it you are facing scare tactics intimidation. and i wonder is that where we're headed as well. my
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responsibility as a journalist is to give me all of the smoke and mirrors it's not just about me. or being neutral it's about being truthful. when he was born gough and i were good enough. to. welcome back you're watching news our top story. has won a landslide victory in russia's presidential election as expected motor's handed them is the biggest victory yet but over seventy five percent of them thought the winnick senses were open. other six years and foreign ministers have condemned the poisoning of former russian spy service revolver and his daughter in the english city of salzburg they say they take extremely seriously london's assessment that moscow is to blame for this as chemical weapons inspectors begin analyzing the
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substance used in the attack. to syria now where at least one hundred fifty thousand people have been forced to flee the fighting as turkish forces take control of a free it's been the target of turkey's two month campaign against the syrian kurdish militia it's the terrorists kurdish sources now accuse the turkish military of mass looting and destruction that's turkey vows to expand its off to other key towns along its border with syria. it was the moment turkey had been fighting for this town have been controlled by syrian kurds for the past five years now it's the turkish flag that waves over after in. the turkish backed forces captured the center of the town on sunday these fighters are proud to have ousted the kurdish militia known as the people's protection units or white peachy turkey says the y.p. g.'s an offshoot of the kurdish nationalist p k k group it claims it's made up of
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terrorists and is a threat to its national security. across the border news of africa's capture was met with jubilation by turkish president and one and his supporters most of the terrorists have already fled with their tails between their legs are special forces and members of the free syrian army her cleaning the remains of the troops they left behind in the center of the symbols of trust and stability are waving instead of the regs of terrorists. one of the first actions of the turkish backed fighters was to demolish a statue commemorating a legendary kurdish figure. there are also reports from the syrian observatory for human rights of looting right across the city. the kurds remain defiant with an official warning that the war with turkey has now entered what they called a new phase. was that the how are our forces and afghan will be
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a nightmare for the turkish troops and its allies the resistance and afrin will continue until the liberation of every inch of the town and until the return of the residents of afrin into their villages and homes that are free and what are you what. for this is villian population of affray in turkey's offensive has been devastating more than one hundred fifty thousand people most of them kurds have been forced to flee for their lives in the last week as turkey attacked the city from the air and the ground at the bottom of the us we fled because of the airstrikes and the bombardment of our villages by the turks there is no united nations or international community anymore they have forgotten all morality what can we do is civilians turkey is amongst a country. without totals. up until the recent turkish attacks afrin had been a safe haven cheering syria's war now in its eighth year after the capture of afrin
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it's unclear what will become of those fleeing the town and if or when they will be able to return to their homes let's go right to due to be as correspondent dorian jones who's following the latest developments in a frame for us hi dorian what will happen to the people that have been displaced by fighting in a free. well that is the big question over it's believed around one hundred fifty thousand people fled the african town in the run up to turkey who were running it it's unclear where they are it's widely believed that most of them are still in the nearby syrian regime controlled territory now according to reports the syrian regime forces aren't allowing them to proceed towards the east where there are other kurdish controlled regions where it is believed most of the people fleeing afrin want to go it's a place they will feel so safe and there are other reports confirm seem to claim that many of these people haven't received food or water for the last forty eight hours so there is growing concern about the humanitarian situation and even if they
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are allowed to proceed to the east of these kurdish regions turkey is already clear that those regions are its next goal in its operation during looking at the military operation turkish backed forces seem to have taken african with little resistance why is that well there's another question people are asking in the run up to turkey laying siege to afrin town the leadership of the syrian kurdish militia the y p g declared that they would fight to the bitter end to their last breath is what one commander said but then it seems a few days before tokyo took the town the decision was made to leave now officially they say that is to prevent the humanitarian crisis to prevent a humanitarian catastrophe is what one spokesman said but there is a questioning that possibly there was some possible deal between turkey and the syrian kurdish forces because these kurdish forces left the town with relative impunity no real attack by turkish forces and they left only
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a few hours before the turkish forces arrived and it coincided with the various sturrock and symbolic day here in turkey martyrs day and that's seen as a very important boost for the turkish president who does have eyes on possible early elections later this year meanwhile those same militia are saying that they're starting a new phase of guerrilla warfare what will that mean for turkey. well that is another thing that turkey will be mulling over the syrian kurdish forces say they're going to war wage a guerrilla war they say they know this territory it's their own territory they say they have forces all over the african enclave and they say they will make it a nightmare for turkey and the syrian forces it's barking now it's unclear whether they will carry out that threat but if they do this will be a key factor in determining whether turkey continues to expand on words towards the east of the kurdish areas and if they are forced to consolidate their position that plan may be put on hold due to these correspondent dorian jones reporting for us dorian thank you for your insight fred back to helena now and are signs of
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liberalization in china at least on the economic front at least on the economic front if the u.s. trained economist who's doing to take over the central bank there sumi his name is you gang he was appointed to succeed the longtime governor of china's central bank on monday now you studied at university of st paul in minnesota you're missing received his ph d. in economics from the university of illinois previously he's called the greater market access for foreign investors and for a further internationalization of china's currency. while our correspondent in hong is covering the story for us we can speak to her now linda what will the new central bank chief mean for the chinese economy. well the new p.b.s. the governor's moving up the ranks from his previous post as deputy governor and then actually signals continue with the china's a fiscal policy now are with her from a while ago that china's debt level is so high that some credit rating. downgraded
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its credit rating on it and still right now china has been forcing some of its companies to sell its assets as well as to pay off some of its loans and as you've mentioned as the economy opens up you know instead part and that china maintains all these debt levels in case because many people are seeing it as a financial crisis brewing and now the central bank now has to play a major role in trying to ensure that just the right amount of credit flows into the economy but his role will not be as big a carry as much clout as his predecessor because his boss mr is a long time economic adviser to presidency and yet she has quite the same credentials as this mr ye and so this is actually overseeing and the two of them are likely to oversee the further opening up of china's economy helena and of course in the u.s. china trade relations are very much in the spotlight right now will this
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appointment affect what are strained relations well he has actually overseen the devaluation of the currency in twenty fifteen and with the road towards opening up its economy it's important that there's a healthy balance so that you know the currency does not tip one way or the other and if you think of it there's always been complain that the yuan has been too long and if it strengthens against the u.s. dollar we are likely going to see the treat deficit between us and china narrowing and this would likely hopefully appease ministration at least for a little bit. for us in singapore thank you. third and what do you think of when you hear the phrase wearable technology perhaps seat monitoring all those health tracking watches might spring to mind have been around for a while but how about a fabric that can generate its own electricity on startup says it could soon be part of everyday life. at london's wearable technology show reading based comair
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a sport is demonstrating its energy generating textiles it uses the piezoelectric effect that allows certain materials to generate an electric charge through movement so all we have here is a mechanical new reg with the taxol over here that's that's actually harvesting the energy has in the removed as any rate is moving and this carbon is elected you can see here the voltage spikes that occur as as that you have that much in this election and this is usable energy that can be extracted out say here at the century charge wearable devices as yet it generates just a small amount of energy not nearly enough to charge a smartphone for instance but it could be used to power a simple in clothing senses or perhaps an emergency beacon to alert rescue workers . munich based wearable tech company pro glove is here to demonstrating the logistics device a smart glove that allows workers to quickly scan goods and products senses in the
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glove can give rapid feedback to uses automotive workers at b.m.w. skoda and audi are already using the device. we know able to work it's working hands free means you don't need to carry with him anymore a scanning device he uses it he forgets if you want to get rid of it at all yeah and we use that possibility to be out to give him his one hand back to you both of these heads more than three hundred million wearable devices were sold worldwide in two thousand and seventeen that's an almost seventeen percent increase from the year before experts say the sector is just getting started. back to see me with force in a big weekend in the bundesliga that's right alan and we have are here to talk about some of the highlights with chris harrington from devious for its press and big match ups tell us more about it yeah there are a lot of big match ups and a lot of gold production over twenty goals were scored we saw
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a cologne go from hopeless to hope full but all eyes were on by a minute because it was an opportunity for them to secure their sixth straight but it's a good title tying the earliest record set by pep guardiola but beings in work out that way even before that shock i had to lose and they ultimately won but those a big match up for biron didn't things that work out so well for them ok that's a good teaser let's take a look at the match. the start of this match was more noticeable for he was on the bench rather than the pitch top scoring robot live in the one six rested by brian on mount hospital left out his captain in center back really open among another six outness you might see coach may have been ruling that decision early on the home defense all it see sundry buckner was the happy recipient. at the other end of the heroics from strength rice in the acrobatic meekness you know we keeping bryan a hedge it was only a matter of time so right see break through the case of iraq once but twice i
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was with an immense amount through a frantic fast. and the pressure on in the second period team event to play through and go in the strike on a sub made a mistake by any commanding his seven game goal drought and they'd been a sneak out. fan and then got greedy as he trying to see a light six win. for the visitors can break through again talking and sending out a chance of the match time and weiss. and so i went to the milestone in the light six story and banner inspired first of a victory over par and. that's a huge win for life's a kratos is that also kind of indication for the coach with his controversial decision to wrestle many players like him of any yeah definitely a team of and he got the greenlight due to an injury unfortunately midfielder marcel sabates without in an injury early in the match inter you know van advantage really was the hero of the day first not the case i converted a gold inventor you know finish it off but you know the coach ralph hostin who toll
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said he was trying to inject a new system and they were going to see how it worked and it looked it looked like it worked well because their goal was to really take byard out of their flow you know and obviously it didn't work out that way because they were very aggressive they actually had twelve shots on goal to buyers one and that was only in the first half so you know just the way life sic approached the pitch you know in this considering you know recent. they lost a cologne you know cologne is the bottom of the table so you know they have reason to really rejuvenating selves and it's good but in all honesty by or did not feature their premier lineup i think things would have worked out differently if they had but even their coach of hikers gave a lot of credit to the way life six showed up to perform or was it just lights it was also of by a labor christian that was looking for a champion think spot they were also in action of the weekend let's take a look at what happened there. seldom has there been a hotter favorite for the writing darby. highflying leave
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a coup isn't coming off the back of two wins would surely have the edge against rock bottom cologne who hadn't won at home for two months. but cologne clearly how to read the script there were just nine minutes gone when you asako gave them the leads by leave accused and couldn't get to grips with leonardo bits and his cross caused chaos in the leverkusen defense and bentley wouldn't cover himself in glory with his attempt to save by what might have been a lucky goal but it was one that colognes play had merits it. leave a cousens mistakes went confined to their defense the video assistant referee summoned on field cunts apart most of the pitch site monitor where he saw what had happened behind his back was miss julie sent lucas a lot he was packing for a flying elbow by not wasn't leave a cousens last moment of madness in the darby. deep into the second time charles
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and it affectionately headed through for cologne zeman sala it gratefully accepted the chance to seal a shock to know when for the hosts five three big points for the billy goats to suddenly have renewed hope of avoiding relegation. a really nice victory for us what does this mean for their hopes for staying up in the bundesliga. i don't think it means much you know just looking at their statistics their achilles heel in my opinion is how many go the number of goals they have conceded they've conceded forty nine and that's way too many and you know they just moved off the bottom spot of the table with his victory and now they're over hamburg but in all honesty they've just been struggling and when you have a lack of goal production can see too many goals the math doesn't work out in your favor of course you know but hope is the word you know. that will carry over the next two weeks for the club we have to see if you know they can somehow train with some sort of enthusiasm so pally it will carry over into the next match and we can
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see if this winning trend or if it's even the beginning of a trend but you know the numbers don't lie i think over the course of the games they played already forty nine goals as i mentioned before you know in my opinion they're destined to drop ok with all of the action that we saw this weekend take us through the table where things stand ok now looking at the table if we can you know see the table we see you know the top four now frankfurt is in the top four which means they have potential to reach the champions league and having lived in frankfurt for a little bit. for frankfurt they do have a solid defense you know let labor couzens loss of cologne was really huge because they missed out on that opportunity but it comes down to the top four teams you know byron shaka seem pretty secure you know dormant as well with their when and why it's been unbelievable for them so i do think they're in the top three and i'm going to pull for frankfurt to maintain that position because that we have seen some up and down from leipsic hoffenheim and of course labor has its recent
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performance is nothing to celebrate all right well looking good for those teams at least cress harrington from the sports thank you very much ok. now a bit of tennis for you what indian wells a world number one roger federer lost in a thrilling final to juan martin del potro the argentine entered the encounter on a ten that match winning streak but knew he would be facing the game's best player on good to the title del potro saved three match points against federer as he snapped the swiss his seventeen match winning streak this year it was the first time that photo after one at indian wells. a unique exhibition has just opened and use even here in germany telling the story of did go it's not like club culture that started to emerge about that fifteen years ago it's called. designing club culture it's really all started in the one nine hundred sixty s. .
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and we have a child of the sixty's with us robin oh. god you must have been a disco god. i have to admit i was the finish of lee not actually the number of reasons paul was my best mate was better looking than me. specially the me and i got interested he had a call as well which i didn't but. also there was no chance of any meaningful conversation in discotheques park at the time because the noise of course the music however it was the place you had to go as a young person was the place to go because it was cool also is where you might go and gold it happened because what had been before were these are all the drab holes of the nineteen fifties where people sort of not even to jazz music but now we
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have great music the sixty's music exploded popular culture disco delight strobe light seeing the miniskirt this is already mentioned from our point of view where all came together in perfect harmony waltz of course the disco. i'm glad the disco tech at the detroit design museum invited. spaces for experimentation with interior design and alternative lifestyles. in new york in the one nine hundred sixty s. there was dancing here plus happenings and concepts groundbreaking new bands like the velvet underground played here this was the start of the so-called modern night club. this is its european counterparts the space electronic instruments it was a multifunction designed by the radical architects group. for
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the one nine hundred seventy saw the start of the disco movement and things became more professional. new york was a key part of all that in the late one nine hundred seventy s. and early eighty's new york was in bad shape financially. and property was cheap. the conditions were ideal for new caps like the legendary studio fifty four. from nine hundred seventy seven on it was for the cities and went down in history as the first disco. recognizing few. as a stage for individual and collective. with clubs serving as a source of inspiration for fashion design is and is a space to move. to launch the careers of numerous.
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i think a lot of people are interested in the history of clubs just about everyone has gone out for a night on the town. if your clubs record. and a time when young people get away from their parents and find their own identity. showcasing the relationship between music and design in cat culture the veto design museum succeeds in presenting the discotheque as an only compassing. so rob in full disclosure i'm not a child of the sixty's and i don't use the word disco it's a word that seems to have gone out of fashion but the premise is the same i mean the premises stayed music lights of vos dance for a great sound system but the disco is something of course i mention it my my grown up children of course. it's completely gone out of fashion this course of now
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it's just clubbing if you go club clubbing right and berlin is one of the best places to go clubbing the world is and certainly it is and has been for many years now there's a number of reasons i think first of all the techno boom of the late eighty's ninety's i mean berlin was one of the capitals of the techno but my won't call it the capital detroit could get upset frank right anyway but also it was also exactly this time the wool came down and there were lots of sort of empty spaces in the eastern part of the city. fantastic wonderful places for clubs all factories the one a couple first of all trades all trees all which the three things bank vault it was in in the sort of side of an old department store just in the east now that's bad which is in an old power station it's incredibly difficult to get into big time to this day this is most probably down to the ferocious storm and you see his friend i
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know. who's very picky about the cleone tell instead he's the only delivered in the world of the day who has an agent and oh the bear kind although it has the store policy of not letting people can only do that because people queue for hours to. get in new and just say ok you can come in you can't come in and i've even seen on twitter just the other day somebody writing i queued for three as didn't get in my cool now things like this so not getting it yeah ok so surely you must know the secret how do you get into that i don't know the secret nobody knows the secret really because that guy and his cohorts the doormen there are no rules they don't seem to have their i mean one thing you must say is you must dress down that's very much so here in berlin you don't dress up you dress down don't look like a journalist because they hate publicity they don't live photos in the club they're allowed anything like that and there is even a bird kind app called how to how to get into bear kind there's an app you could
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buy so that is how ridiculous it is because nobody knows it is a myth is part of the whole legend of clubbing in this city and as you said. is possibly the most famous club in europe to this day and has been for many many years some show there being more very long here is there today as we speak are absolutely and so that more on this exhibition than this is more on the exhibition which is invited round which is right in the southwest and tip of germany it's actually quite close to basel in switzerland but it is just over the border in germany it's the vitro design museum if you're interested in design this is one of the museums you mustn't miss all right robin mail from our culture does thank you very much robert. and we just have time for a minder of our top story at this hour vladimir putin has won a landslide victory in russia's presidential election as expected voters handed him his biggest a victory yet with seventy five percent of the vote the way to extend his role for
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another six years and e.u. foreign ministers have condemned the poisoning of former russian spy service cripple and his daughter in the english city of seoul is very they say they take extremely seriously london's assessment that moscow is to blame. for apple have an update on your headlines in just a few minutes. from . the.
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young lions. that's what i asked calls the child soldiers. what will become of them after years in the ranks of the terror organization. many have never known anything but in the streets in violence. homes and out of the city . the child soldiers of islamic state. d.w. . european stocks are struggling performances the lead.
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player live concerts every week can cut between concerts. playing. live. on the top stories followed across social media sharing commons and content welcome. with different languages we fight for different things that's fine but we all stick up for freedom freedom of speech and freedom of press. giving freedom for its global news that matters w made for minds. i want to see what's going on with all of the food the birth of the you know what
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you have to do to fight it. the sharp microscope that have been done but the dolphin there would come better and better and better over the years we were in the bad fall for example of the viral infection with all the molecular veto and therefore a lot of rip off of the product much more easily work to speculate about what's going on than twenty fifty i can't imagine that you will in the data call the kind of much better kind then to do with the number of cancer cases there is the opportunity to live a much more fulfilling life because many defeated shortcomings called in for aging had to counteract that the large degree at the close they halted for a longer period of the life.
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meaning. to. me. this is the w.'s life term berlin britain and the european union seal a deal on life after briggs it chief negotiator me should bonnie and says the two sides have reached an agreement on a two year transition period that will make life easier for citizens and businesses will get the details from our brussels correspondent also coming up turkey promises to push on with its offensive against the currency in syria all that's after it seized control of the city of pasadena displacing around one hundred fifty thousand people.

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