tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle March 30, 2018 6:00pm-6:30pm CEST
6:00 pm
this is the dubliners line from poland clashes between the israeli military and palestinians in gaza as thousands take to the streets demonstrators supporting the medicine group hamas were met by israeli fire at the border gaza official said at least ten palestinians were killed and hundreds more injured also on the program. russia expels more diplomats ambassadors were summoned to the foreign ministry in moscow twenty three of them were told to send stuff home when the standoff over the poisoning of a former russian double agent and his daughter in britain. sierra leone prepares to
6:01 pm
vote d.w. talks to both sides in the delayed second round of the presidential elections you take place on saturday. also coming up watch out for space junk this is for much i mean spacelab is on commission calls of course with the except no one using control and scientists a rough idea of where it might last. we'll talk to a space scientist about where he thinks it might come down. to a. harmful gale welcome to the program. israel's military has clashed with demonstrators in the gaza strip as thousands of palestinians began six weeks of protests called by the militant group hamas the palestinian health ministry says at least ten palestinians have been killed and hundreds injured. this could be the beginning of weeks of tensions in the palestinian territories the first clashes erupted soon
6:02 pm
after thousands of palestinians started building tent cities on the gaza side of the border to israel. there marking a number of historic events the creation of israel and the expulsion of palestinians in one nine hundred forty eight. the deaths of six arab israeli demonstrators in one nine hundred seventy six and the scheduled opening of the us embassy in jerusalem in may. israel has doubled its military presence on the border similar protests in recent months led to clashes that caused multiple deaths israel called the protests a dangerous provocation and said that hamas would bear the responsibility for any violence. the first casualty came even before the protests got underway israel's military said soldiers opened fire on two men who approached the border and acted suspiciously during the night one man was killed and another wounded the slain man's brother said he was a farmer. full of
6:03 pm
a little man that. he went there every day to pick pursley in the morning. since anything that seems so he's been working there for six or seven years she thought nothing ever happened to him when the jews started shooting. what happened this time i do not know this is a. plus as. hamas has dubbed the protests the great march of return and says they will culminate on may fifteenth with a march across the border to break the siege and the cause of blockade israel has warned that it will defend the border more bloodshed and sorrow seem inevitable it is the. middle east correspondent. from the border with gaza welcome tanya bring us up to date. yes i feel i mean as you said i'm standing here just a couple of hundred meters behind be to the border with gaza and we've been hearing
6:04 pm
all day the ambulances there also the chants of the protesters and hearing also shooting israel has made very clear in the past couple of days in the lead up to these protests that we're on land day to day that's what palestinians usually commemorate the third is. that they would not tolerate that protesters come close to the border that they would not hold it at any protest it would try to preach the border and they said they would hold would hold hamas responsibly for any such reason that's why we're also seeing today the high number of casualties the ministry of has a says that over seven hundred people are injured more than that and also the casualties that people have been hearing today these protests are being called the march of return tell us about what is being planned and what they're trying to achieve. well from what we understand the organizers in gaza these are grassroots
6:05 pm
organizations young people and they've got to back the backing of all the political factions including hamas who is seen by israel was taking the lead in these protests but protesters say this is supposed to be a non violent protest they want to set up tents over the past. next you know over the past month until the fifteenth of may a nakba day when the palestinians commemorate nine hundred forty eight when they had to flee from their lands now is celebrating this year the pounding of the state seventy years since all have all these memorial days this coming up in this month and they're saying they want to set up ten cities about seven hundred meters from the border way where families older people are to old and young people should stay and highlight the plight of palestinian refugees but also to highlight the situation in gaza which has been closed off by israel egypt for the past ten years people can hardly travel there or kind of his tricks and so they want to highlight that situation as well with this
6:06 pm
protest the hamas leader it's sad but these protests are supposed to be a part of a new peaceful strategy so what has gone wrong. well this didn't clearly work out today the organizers said they want to see a nonviolent protest but you see the high number of casualties and also the high number of injured people at the same time it's been has made very clear that whoever comes close to the border and there is a buffer zone about one hundred meters into the palestinian side so whoever would preach this border would be shot at and that is new but already the high number of casualties doesn't look very good and is it usual for israeli troops to use live ammunition. yes it is we've seen in the past couple of months there have been protests ever since the us announced a move of the embassy from tel aviv to jerusalem and there have been
6:07 pm
a lot of protests yet every friday on the gaza border and there has always been mentioned that has been used but we've also seen it in the occupied west bank that life a mission has been used against protesters tony kraemer in israel thank you. moscow has begun a wave of diplomatic expulsions in the standoff of the poisoning of a former russian double agent a day after expelling sixteen u.s. diplomats and closing the u.s. consulate in st petersburg russia's foreign ministry summoned ambassadors from the other countries that expelled russian diplomats this week around twenty expulsions were announced today including four germans it's the latest move in the right over the poisoning of the former double agent sergei script pal and his daughter yulia in britain many western countries hold russia responsible despite moscow's repeated denials. a revolving door at the russian foreign ministry ambassadors from the west came and went as moscow inform them who'd be leaving the
6:08 pm
country at short notice russia is retaliating for the west's record dejection of russian diplomats early this week but western envoys say this is russia's fault if they're in my rights as a prisoner. free i think that is correct. russia says it's only responding to the objection of more than one hundred thirty russian representatives this quake creating those are sort of burden of. everything will also be reciprocal in terms of the number of people from their diplomatic missions who will be leaving russia the source there with people with each of these and that is all for now just look at a park or sixty american diplomats are among those big kicked out of russia and he starts some pages but consulate is being closed down stuff again heisley packing up the mission which was opened in the i.t.n.
6:09 pm
century. but washington too was on ballard refusing to accept blame for this low in russian american relations it says russia has violated international law in this great powell case. russia is responsible for that horrific attack attack on the british citizen and his daughter once again they have broken the chemical weapons convention it was a banned substance that they have used no but shock we take this matter very seriously former russian double edge and so gave great power and his daughter yulia was found slumped on a park bench in the city of souls brain early march poisoned britain believes moscow tried to kill the pad cigarets grip our minds in a critical condition in hospital with the yulia is conscious and talking according to doctors as russia did not any involvement in the case and wants access to yulia . we are witnessing the engines of russian representatives
6:10 pm
accessing injured russian citizens that are that's what i see is congressionally. the question now is whether this crisis will move beyond tit for tat measures. to get more almost from constantine the fall i got in the moscow welcome to day w what does happen next now that each side has made that move without the ticket without the tot's now without. i think it's another ticket and i think it's the americans'. turn now because what we've heard from the united states is that they consider these measures to be completely unacceptable that they are convinced that the russians did it that the russians tried to poison. a pot in his daughter so i suspect that what we may witness is yet another move by the americans also we see that there is quite a lot of appetite for that in moscow judging by what we've heard about the
6:11 pm
briefings that president drunk was it what was getting and also there is one thing which doesn't mention and that is that from the first of april r.t. russian state propaganda channel t.v. channel will stop brokaw saying in placentia only in the in the in the east coast and in the area washington it will be kicked off major cable providers and i think that what you have to follow i suspect so it's some action against american media here for example the authorities may order local providers to drop c.n.n. from their shadowy i think that will be coming up but again i suspect that there will be more wolves now by both washington and london and especially with regard to putting people on these a band lists as well as in this to getting russian assets in both countries so it does sound like you expect things to escalate beyond the script our case they need sounds like a sampling of all skulls. yes i think that what gloria. johnson
6:12 pm
. actually of your case said yesterday in his speech and the lord mayor's banquet it's a bit like some thinks that this idea that russia is lying too much and that you can't trust russia is now pretty widely spread is especially in london and washington so i think they will continue to think that it will they will continue their sort of hard line even if europe germany or france will say you know this is not constant in fun fun agates in moscow thank you so much. so some of the other stories making news around the world the czech republic has extradited a russian man to the united states to face charges of hacking into the computers of major internet companies including linked in and dropbox if get me to call him is seen here being arrested in twenty sixteen he was flown to the u.s. on thursday night after his last minute appeal was rejected just in the killings lawyer says the charges are politically motivated. me and my sworn in its new
6:13 pm
president says the country box two years of civilian rule when when my emotion wasn't close the close political ally of defacto leader aung sang suu kyi during his inauguration speech he stressed the need to respect the role of the media. in thailand at least twenty people were killed when a bus court fire varied off the road the vehicles on its way from the me and the border to bangkok when he burst into flames almost all of the passengers were migrant workers. sierra leone heads to the polls tomorrow and a closely watched presidential runoff vote in the west african nation was pushed back after a court challenge of a fraud allegations in the first round of this month with a close race predicted many people are hoping for a peaceful outcome the country's fragile return to democracy after a civil war was tested by devastating a bold outbreak in twenty forty w's west africa correspondent adam creech reports from the capital freetown. i mean yes you know for the past four weeks two or three
6:14 pm
children have become used to makeshift outdoor lessons like this one a series of elections run offs and still a's have meant that many of freetown schools are currently closed so. all. was well is very annoying. and will. be taxed because for the second time to have paid. fees on the at the all you wait for school one on how flutes so it's cause them. to fall yes stand out we are full you did not fall for the with. on tuesday the national electoral commission announced voting would now have to wait until saturday the delay has taken its toll on businesses too in freetown many have shut up shop for the election despite all criticism off the electoral process and the delays in sierra
6:15 pm
leone the majority of registered voters is expected to go to the polls on saturday and the country can look forward to a neck and neck race the opposition candidate. came in slightly ahead in the first round of voting and his supporters remain optimistic. that we're. going through something because he's the right man this country. has got the people of. real briefly took power during a military coup back in the one nine hundred ninety s. now as a democratically elected president he wants to kick start the economy as well as fight corruption there would be. this fund want to know the laws of corruption are concerned with first. the laws of this country to be different
6:16 pm
political we have to make sure that people are prosecutor irrespective of. the party of president ernest koroma has been at the helm for ten years as a second term in office comes to an end he has selected former foreign minister. as his successor come are rejects any accusation of widespread corruption in the country even though the nation's auditor general announced millions of dollars had disappeared during the abel outbreak. only business which. is about improper record keeping and i think all of those who. put it was not clear where the money is going i mean we're not talking about little amounts it's fourteen million it was not a huge amount of money while i was killing people but more than one hundred. and therefore that's where most people to. use it was difficult to get to it because it was not that it was stolen it is that it's helped to was the fight against it would
6:17 pm
. meanwhile is hoping that the elections go peacefully and despite all her feelings of frustration she's determined to vote on saturday after all this is about her children's future. what she did a billion years life from then still to come a disused chinese spacelab based jupiter fall back in the next few days it's out of control no one knows exactly where it will come down so how worried should we be. so about that later first though the dutch government has announced that it's turning off the top some of the world's largest natural gas reserves guy hot alpha's can tell us more that's why this comes after a series of small but still damaging earthquakes in the area that were caused by the gas exploration taking such a large field offline is a big project in any case but a few things make matters even more complicated lucrative groningen gas field is
6:18 pm
europe's biggest and the government has long term contracts to sell groningen gas to neighboring countries belgium france and germany but that's not all staggering ninety percent of dutch homes heat their homes with gas from that field. we're growing in gas field is going going gone. or at least on its way out the plan for now is to scale down current production of twenty one point five billion cubic meters to twelve billion but the long term goal is to shut it down entirely by twenty thirty. but the ordeal boss asked her judgment was that it's really not savings even at the level of twelve billion cubic meters so that means action had to be taken with your payment not a full name and although the majority of dutch households use gas from the field burning and residents have called for the end to production there as the low level tremors that caused damage upon homes schools and farms the gas field has been operating for more than five decades its closure will involve major efforts to keep
6:19 pm
supply covered this includes a five hundred million euro gas generation plant as well as a campaign to promote more electricity use in dutch households. today marks the two hundredth birthday of privilege to have my thighs and the man who founded the call part of movement with a particular form of rule called for tips it was a time when german farmers were fighting poverty as well as loan sharks co-operative bank a mobile has since spread to many other industries and it still functions today. these two families a members of germany's oldest co-operative in eight hundred ninety eight their forefathers banded together and started a cooperative that built and operated a flour mill one farmer could not have done it alone. in the grain for marija and the all mountains is very coarse it was difficult to sell to nearby dresden there was very little profit so they said we need our own mill so we can process the
6:20 pm
grain and then we can make the bread as well. as for. the mill and the bakery have ensured a thriving business for the farmers for many years now some seventeen businesses and now part of this successful cooperative. the idea of the cooperative goes back to free trish vilhelm hif. in the mid nineteenth century he promoted it as a way of overcoming the poverty faced by farmers in his region festival. since then the idea has spread to other parts of the economy new industries like sustainable energy have also adopted the model most corporative work on a majority wombs basis all members can have this say regardless of their stake. in the cantante both are small when decisions have to be made everyone's opinion has equal weight. that applies to the world's largest co-operative mondragon in spain it has around seventy five thousand men this eighty
6:21 pm
percent of whom it joint owners as with any business cooperatives like mordor gone can suffer in times of crisis but because all members have an equal say they usually avoid mess layoffs. still a private company that has to be profitable but the number one goal is always to support the members so there are always two sets of objectives to consider economic objectives and social ones. to co-ops it's not just. about the bottom line and maybe that's why they often outlast private companies that are generally profit driven. ironically the corporate in cyprus the island nation island nation's most popular bank for deposits has been put up for sale to private investors institution which has been seventy seven percent state owned following a bailout exactly five years ago today is being weighed down by bad loans both
6:22 pm
foreign and local investors have shown interest in the bank according to the government it reportedly says it is ready to support the sale of the troubled lender and guarantee the security of deposits but critics accuse the government of putting public wealth up for sale. electric car maker tesla is recalling one hundred twenty three thousand of its model s. vehicles worldwide making of the company's biggest recall ever affected our model s. cars built before april twenty sixth seen the problems are rusting bolts in the power steering unit the company says those bolts need to be replaced in a retrofit that will take one hour tesla shares dropped three and a half percent on the news. used in the car industry german auto makers are among the most profitable in the world and b.m.w. takes the top spot that's according to a study by a consultancy firm why the n.w.s. profitability stands a ten percent for every one hundred euro in revenue b.m.w.
6:23 pm
rakes in a profit of ten euro's down the came in third among major auto makers after news in its second place from last year's survey to japan's suzuki. and that's all your business is backed to fill thanks so much gas now china's defunct spacelab django wong is going to plunge back to earth this weekend after being in orbit since twenty eleven its ten meters long and it's out of control and no one issue where it's going to come down china's space agency says that most of it will burn upon re-entry and it probably won't cause any damage so how worried should we be well chris scott is a space scientist at the university of reading in england welcome chris so it's falling back to earth and it's out of control tell us why. well with
6:24 pm
any spacecraft they're all bit at a low earth orbit so it's the space goes currently at around one hundred ninety kilometers so that's still well within the earth's atmosphere even though it's quite thin up there is still has enough to gradually slow down that spacecraft through friction and eventually if you don't let it kind of rockets it will fall back to earth so why is out of control. well the chinese agency were hoping to carry out a controlled reentry put it somewhere so it made sure it landed somewhere in a very remote part of the southern ocean but then lost contact with it and two thousand and sixteen and since then it's been tumbling out of control in the fact that it's tumbling means that it's very difficult to predict this atmospheric drag on the spacecraft and so it makes knowing where and when it's going to come down will difficult to predict until the very last moment ok and when you say the very last moment the last moment we're talking. probably within an hour before it comes down we'll know have
6:25 pm
a much better idea of where it's going to land and now it doesn't get any of us much of a chance to run it can you give us a steer as to where in the world ought to be worrying well the spacecraft all bit takes it between forty two point seven degrees and latitude north and south so that takes it over the northern parts of south america. north and parts of africa and western australia is where it's come is that the land at the moment but although it's several tons of the moment most of that is expected to be burnt up in the atmosphere as it comes down and there will be perhaps experts are thinking maybe one and a half to three tons of material reaching the ground but that's spread over enormous day prefilled maybe a hundred kilometers so it's not going to come down in one big lump yet but it's still drop out of the sky at approximately how fast is this stuff going to be travelling. well it's certainly going to be traveling it to terminal speed as it
6:26 pm
comes down through the atmosphere most of the orbital track covers the oceans i mean the planet earth is a very blue planet as we know and so the most likely place for it to fall will be in the ocean so. there is a finite chance that it will fall down over and over land but whether that land is going to be populated and owns and whereabouts it would fall is impossible to predict at the moment as a matter of interest what was it doing up there. it was china's first manned space station and it really was quite a remarkable thing for the chinese space agency and it was their first the vehicle in space it was launched on manned it was visited by six astronauts over its lifetime and as with the early apollo missions it was there to practice docking and maneuvering and transfer of personnel and cargo as well as actually housing the astronauts and unable to learn about how you survive in space ok we'll just have to
6:27 pm
cross our fingers and buy a hard hat thank you for talking us through that chris got. you know. it's time to remind you top stories at this hour clashes between the israeli military and palestinians have erupted in gaza thousands of demonstrators supporting the militant group hamas met with israeli gunfire of the border official say at least ten palestinians have been killed and hundreds injured. and far on bass are suffering some of the russian foreign ministry a small scar on six folks enough diplomats from twenty three countries it's the latest round in the stop of the poisoning of a former russian double agent and bring. us up to date.
6:28 pm
6:29 pm
continent together. the answers and stories of the. and see a. spotlight on people. sixty minutes a day w. d w true diversity. where the world of science is at home in many languages. on top of that i've been going there even. now with us our innovations magazine for any. of us from every week and always looking to the future on t w dot com science and research for asia. is going well. and i just you know who today. you know the banks you know you like and
6:30 pm
45 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=979014358)