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tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  May 17, 2018 8:00am-9:01am CEST

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this is deja vu news live from berlin europe ask the lights the rhetoric over the iran nuclear deal but can the e.u. save it for a top e.u. official says it was friends like donald trump who needs enemies as those european firms fearing deep losses from american sanctions get ready to abandon their iran operations also in the show. young girl killed by israeli gunfire in
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gaza after monday's protest of left fifty eight people dead d.w. visits a family who lost their daughter and a community crushed by a blockade and with little or nothing to loose. and facing hard choices thousands of salvadorans in the u.s. will have to decide whether to return to a dangerous only land or live a life of uncertainty as an undocumented markers. also coming up the people of burundi going to the polls to vote on expanding presidential powers burundi's president wants to extend his term for up to sixteen more years tensions are high in this east african country that's no stranger to political violence. and a bloody cold madrid fans celebrating their club's third europa league title and nine seasons will be with the d.w. sports desk to break it all down.
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i'm brian thomas great to have you with us european leaders are bowing to salvage the iran nuclear deal at a summit in the bulgarian capital sofia they've been working to keep a ran on board now that the u.s. is out of the deal but top european companies are already saying they'll be abandoning their iran operations before they face any possible u.s. sanctions e.u. leaders have not been mincing their words in their criticism of president from. it was the day the gloves came off after donald trump pulled the u.s. out of the iran nuclear deal up ended decades of diplomacy by moving his country's embassy in israel to jerusalem and pushed the u.s. closer to a trade war with the e.u. donald to us decided the time for diplomatic language was over.
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the latest. push for. about focus speaking. europe should be great. because. we have to go through. that if you need. to scald for a unified european response to the challenges facing the continent but was already receiving some resistance for example and e.u. statement critical of the u.s. embassy moved to jerusalem was blocked by the czech republic hungary and rumania. leaders discussed rescuing the iran nuclear deal and how to protect european companies that could face u.s. sanctions if they keep doing business with iran. but companies are already looking
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to the exits french oil giant to tal announced its planning to pull out of a huge drilling project in the rann unless it gets us assurances it won't be penalized faced with the choice of doing business in iran or america for many european companies the decision seems clear. but are those type of decisions clear for you politicians let's bring in now. he's an analyst on iranian affairs and c.e.o. of the center for applied research in partnership with the orient he's joining us from dozens of good morning to you thanks so much for being with us. let's start out with the news that the oil john to tal is threatening to pull out of iran tal is the biggest foreign energy investor in iran if it leads will that trigger all rush for the doors by other investors i guess the problem here really is is to tell project was supposed to be
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a positive president that we've set basically this sort of a milestone for others as well to say ok so as as totality investing in that amount we're going to follow suit and obviously that falling apart with a negative. america's leverage economically and politically is this threat of shutting off access to the world's richest market of sanctions what does europe have to counter that type of power. it is obviously limited they can't there are some political measures that can be adopted to protect or immunize european businesses from u.s. penalties there are different ways of blocking regular regulations that can be looked into even if the political elites in europe decide to go that way the question really is better that would help european businesses would have a completely different set of cost benefit calculations and therefore the european
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leverage is rather limited but i guess they will try nevertheless ok what about iran what are its options could possibly chinese and russian companies be invited to jump in would they help out or would they back off when they weigh the consequences look i believe the iranians know that their economy or let's say the economy of the islamic republic can survive thanks to relations to the eastern powers russia or china and india but iran never wanted to be dependent on them and that also tells us that for russia and china this whole case if you know a crisis is a little the win win situation. being in place elevates the run to higher levels which is the benefit of china and russia but the jase if you are a falling apart will make iran more dependent on them which is also another thing that the russians and chinese might not be totally against so they are probably having a wait and see approach right now ok there's
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a lot of wait and see going on right now so in spite of that where do you see this all going. i think the iranians will expect some form of guarantees and the europeans will try hard and i think that after all the incentives for either side to keep this deal intact this is the political will is quite strong and it might end up being safeguarded and the question however is really for the europeans how far they are willing to go to put some challenges to transatlantic relations without abandoning them ok briefly if you could maybe see both when you say both sides want to keep this happening do you mean the e.u. russia and china that we're talking about actually i meant iran and the remaining party switch could be the p four plus one or the e.u. e three plus two plus one depending on how you know sort of that each three plus three plus two depending on how you want to formulate this so these are the two
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sides i was referring to and i guess both really want this to keep to keep this in tact but in the end it will be iran that has to decide whether it is better off with what the other parties can offer we're not done tabata by iran analyst and c.e.o. for the center for applied research in partnership with the orient thanks very much for being with us this morning thanks for having me. well later in the show we'll be taking a look at the next issue facing leaders out there summit in sofia and that's the union's anticipated expansion into the western balkans with albania and macedonia the very front line front of the line to join it. well u.s. president trump has officially revealed that he reimbursed his lawyer michael cohen in connection to a simple so-called hush agreement with a porn star cohen had initially paid one hundred thirty thousand dollars to the adult film actress stormy daniels allegedly keep quiet about an affair she claimed she had with the president the president and initially denied he knew about the
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paper's. earthquakes near hawaii is still way a volcano damaged roads as huge ash clouds spewed from the summit there the volcano is also shooting out a list of blocks and lava as torn through more than twenty giant cracks in the ground dozens of homes have been destroyed about two thousand people been evacuated . israel's use of deadly force against protesters in gaza has sparked a diplomatic dispute with turkey turkish t.v. film the israeli ambassador undergoing an airport security check that included removing his shoes as he was being expelled from turkey israel's called a frequent humiliating. or arab foreign ministers are due to hold an extraordinary meeting as it's called in cairo today to discuss the deadly violence on the gaza israel border some sixty palestinians were killed this week by israeli
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gunfire at the border with gaza most were members of the radical islamic group hamas now that's according to a spokesman for hamas which seized power in gaza a decade ago israel is blaming hamas for the clashes and claims the group uses the protest to stage attacks on the border but among the victims are a number of young people used on your kramer's spoke to one family in gaza now mourning their young daughter. picture on a phone is all that is left fourteen year old west was killed on monday during the protests here and the refugee camp a mother and sister struggle to cope with their lost. animal or. prevented her from going ahead lock the door with a key and told her i didn't want her to go out that day she said i've been waiting so long for this day please let me go she kept crying. so i let her go.
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sometime after eleven i got the news that she was dead make or bless her soul. west who was with other protesters not far from the border fence when she was shot in the head her mother says she couldn't stop a youngest daughter from going to the protests. was one of the fifty eight killed on monday by israeli sniper fire. the protests have calmed for now the fence has become a symbol of the tight restrictions on movement of people and goods that israel and egypt have imposed for a decade terek has spent most days near the frontier the seventeen year old doesn't hide the slingshot he uses to launch stones over the fence he says he has no fear. i want my rights if there would only be work for the young people but there is no work. if there were work i would have gotten married yesterday but there's no money
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no will like tricity no water nothing the blockade is suffocating us. at gaza city's biggest hospital room a crowded with injured patients from the protests nurses and docs is a working around the clock the already stretched health sector has reached its limits once again. the surgeon dr is busy treating a patient with a gunshot wound to his leg some of the injuries a so severe that the limbs have to be amputated. was. that all of these patients will need long term treatment maybe a year or more they need different surgeries plastic surgery orthopedic surgery so a lot of things are waiting for them because the. it's unclear whether the protests
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will continue people in gaza wonder if they'll actually bring change at the very least they drew the wells attention to gaza's misery for a few days. last two elections in iraq now where a coalition organized by the populist shia cleric who. has captured the largest share of the national vote iraqis rejected the american backed incumbent prime minister. a body rather skeptical of a political class that he represents that's considered on able to combat corruption and create jobs now all hopes are on all solder he's distanced himself from iran and reinvented himself as an iraqi nationalist and anticorruption campaign. every day academe grows fish on this busy street in baghdad he hopes the new government will bring change by ending poverty and unemployment he's pinning his hopes on election when a mock tada. we hope that he'll solve all of our problems
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he's the only one who can save iraq. the shiite cleric project himself as a man of the people he campaigned against corruption and government mismanagement of thought i want to form a government of technocrats and cub u.s. and iranian influence. sutter doesn't want iraq's future to be determined by the u.s. he wants better relations with europe iran and saudi arabia and wants to stop any one country from controlling iraq. talks to form a government a set to be tough the bloc led by iran backed militia leader. also made large gains finishing second in the vote a prime minister body trailed and he was the west's preferred candidate after the election setback he's looking to work with. all their hearts here now and a shift of power to populist parties in italy has markets very jittery about where
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the country's headed that's right and it's the konami plans that are raising eyebrows and rattling markets setting off alarm bells in capitals across the u. italy's two anti-establishment parties are reportedly close to reaching a deal after more than two months of deadlock and they seem prepared to exit the euro zone and writing off public debt that's according to a draft proposal leaked by the huffington post that has according to all the reports since changed still markets went haywire the leader of the five star movement benteke grillo shown here during talks earlier in the week wants to spend seventeen billion euros on increasing welfare payments for the poor is like. addition part of the fire i had league wants to introduce a fifteen percent flat rate of income tax and ask the european central bank to forgive two hundred fifty billion euros of debt that was also said to be part of the leaked draft of the euro's lead to
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a five month low in reaction to those reports their plans to free up billions of euros for tax cuts and well already rattling the markets why well to put it very mildly analysts are very skeptical skeptical about the economic sustainability of their plans italy has already two point three trillion euros in debts that's one hundred thirty two percent of its gross domestic product the highest ratio anywhere in europe apart from grace and that amounts to twenty thirty three percent of total eurozone debt that's pretty steep when you consider that the country only makes up fifteen percent of the euro zone's total economic output last year the italian economy grew one point seven percent but there are signs that growth could be slowing down in a factory has been sluggish since the beginning of the year and business confidence has dropped so what does that mean let's bring in custom bresh he's
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a chief economist of diva and joins us helpfully now from frankfurt oh yes there is a custom we've been become quite used to show it's a unconventional fiscal policy ideas from populist parties all over europe but in this case one really has to ask have they gone completely mad. i mean the almost half of this is like greece meets the reaganomics or reaganomics so you put all populist economic ideas in a basket and you you pull out whatever you can find i think it's all these things especially in combination do not make sense and i think especially this threat again to drop out of the euro zone to ask for debt forgiveness has to be spooked financial markets yesterday and i think financial markets have sent a clear message to rome and to the next attaining government that they should extremely with withdraw these ideas as soon as possible this draft paper that was leaked and it's since been denied or amended but does that not show that they are
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willing to fake to flee pointed a gun at the euros say good germans please send us a couple of billions otherwise we kill the common currency. i did you could see it like that interesting thing was that the two parties yesterday reacted to the the route of financial markets that financial markets were not blackmailing the next italian government i think what really is needed here is some common sense to really go to brussels to talk to the european commission to talk to the other european countries and really come with common sense because i think no one will oppose more investment in italy no one will oppose policies that create more economic growth in italy but everyone will clearly oppose any measure that could lead to a next euro crisis because this is something that the euro zone definitely does not need at all how how big is the race that we're looking at in the next euro crisis the next greece here. i think if you believe the the recent reports of the
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two parties already withdrew these two extreme proposals from the coalition agreement and i think also when you look at the greece the greek example it shows that you know you first promise the the sky and then you get down with all you have both feet on the ground and you forget about all these populist measures because i think reality is different one than election campaigning and i think the the lady on north end of the five star movement will also realize this extremely quickly if you look at the plans more close these do you find a single shred of economic viability that. not in combination of all of course you can argue a flat tax we've heard this on the from from reagan before we've heard this from other countries before you know if the idea was to make the tax system more simplified it makes sense so that could be viable but the combination two together with an unconditional minimum income together with debt forgiveness the combination is clearly not viable plus specially this but this point about debt forgiveness
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whether it's coming from the e.c.b. whether it's coming from the other european countries i think this is completely not viable at all because this would lead to an enormous turmoil on financial market i think we've got to ready some some flavor of how this could look like yesterday when you see that the u.s. on the telly and bombs really increased that spreads with a view of the german government bonds also why didn't these these ideas actually not viable. to the chief economist at joining us from frankfurt thank you very much. facebook c.e.o. mark zuckerberg is willing to address the european parliament about facebook's abuse of user data that's according to the president of the european parliament antonio to johnny zuckerberg might even come to brussels next week facebook has admitted to abusing the data of eighty seven million facebook users by selling it to the now defunct british data analysis firm cambridge analytical the data was
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handed over to the company without users permission has also stood before the u.s. senate to answer their questions about the affair the european commission is presenting its ideas for thomas vehicles on thursday it's already been announced four hundred fifty million euros has been set aside to build a telecommunications network along europe's streets and ethics commission will determine how autonomy vehicles should react in the wake of an accident about traffic experts thomas driving will change the flow of traffic in general through the technology is the although the technology is in its early stages comic is from china the u.s. and europe are vying for dominance in the sector. sometimes small businesses have have to overcome unusual hurdles on their way to success and one restaurateur perth australia developed
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a novel solution to stop his business going to the buzz quite literally ordered from diners at a restaurant in the west australian city of perth was tired of being harassed by swooping seagulls the owner of the restaurant has now given its customers want to keep the birth and bad seed of god just governs leftovers away from passions to throw them a bite now it seems the water pistols are not only a tool to keep diners unless this actually attracting customers. this is how it can go some nobody this time reject the of russia that there are no u.s. president donald trump as part of a new wave of opposition outrage when in criticizing california's sanctuary policies you referred to some of the people illegally entering the country as animals and not people now adding to this anger washington has ruled that two hundred thousand people from el salvador no longer qualify for
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a program that allows them to work in the u.s. legally the government has now set a deadline saying they must leave the united states by september of next year advocates are saying most will remain where they are. after working for almost two decades to build a life for his family in maryland no c.e.o. months or does not want to take his children back to a country ravaged by gang violence. it's really dangerous because of the crime there. because so often young people are recruited to become members of the international criminal gangs mara salvatrucha. when the temporary protected status program for salvadorans ends in september of next year they'll see faces a difficult choice return to el salvador or turn to life in the shadows becoming undocumented for the first time both options mean saying goodbye to his job in
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hotel housekeeping and losing everything he's worked toward. whole workplaces we have will probably lose our house because we won't have jobs to be able to pay the mortgage. and. after two devastating earthquakes killed hundreds of people and left some one million homeless in two thousand and one salvadorans were granted temporary protected status in the united states as part of a humanitarian relief program it had been extended every eighteen months since but the trumpet ministrations harder line on immigration means now life is about to change for two hundred thousand salvadorians the moment the protection and stay will be susceptible to being picked up by immigration police. the majority the people that return to the conditions in the country are not optimal for them to be to reintegrate them into into society in mixed families like mel sees it's
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especially complicated three of his children are citizens and one has protection under dhaka another program to protect young immigrants will have to decide whether to stay behind alone in the united states or follow their parents to a country they've never known. the king was a teacher and they're hard workers who live. since they came to the us in my seventeen years what eighteen years all that saving. is going to. you know see hopes congress will create a path to permanent legalization for salvadorans like him and his wife so that they can keep their family together. now after an about face by north korea plans for an historic summit with the u.s. are now in doubt president trump acknowledged that it is unclear whether the much anticipated meeting was still on insisting that pyongyang has to abandon its
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nuclear arsenal north korea says it will not take part in the talks if it is pressured to give up its nukes. history being written only a few weeks ago at a summit of the north and south korean leaders. where pyongyang said it was prepared to denuclearize. but now north korea has put on the brakes. in a possible sign of growing problems the north postponed a summit scheduled with south korea. the reason these annual us south korea joint military exercises that are currently taking place. in south korea expressed surprise and disappointment at the news. it's regrettable that north korea has decided to unilaterally postpone the upcoming high level talks. back in washington president donald trump said he hadn't been officially notified about north korea's threat to cancel their planned to summit next month we haven't seen
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anything we haven't heard anything we will see what happens very you certainly are the white house press secretary indicated that the president was prepared to roll with whatever decision the north koreans make. we'll continue with a campaign of maximum pressure that's the case but like i just said if they want to meet the president will certainly be ready and we will be prepared but if not that's unfair i think trump has taken credit for shepherding the korean peninsula towards peace last month meeting newly freed u.s. citizens who had been held prisoner in north korea. their release was hailed as yet another sign of thawing relations with yang but now out of nowhere things could be up in the air. this is the interview news still to come on the show a referendum in burundi today could allow the incumbent president to hold on to power until twenty thirty or his last reelection sparked deadly violence and u.n.
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officials say the east african nation risks becoming a forgotten crisis. and in sports joy on the streets of madrid we'll tell you why these and let it go fast we're so happy after their side zero police finally gets the french team marsay. all that and much more straight ahead here with either of you news.
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much smaller city. sixteen. a blessing and a curse the force of nature and inescapable fate. monsoons own the tropical downpours that she might fit into the blue some of us are so concerned the sums of money and to cause enormous destruction the be home soon starting may twenty third. hijacking the name. where i come from the news is being hijacked journalism itself has become a scripted reality show it's not just good versus evil us versus them it's black and white. in countries like russia china church people are told is that something
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and if you're a journalist fear and you try to get me on that you are facing scare tactics intimidation. and i wonder is that where work headed is well. my responsibility as a journalist is to give beyond the smoke and mirrors it's not just about the reader and balance or being neutral it's about being true. twenty years for golf and i were getting the. ball back through the news our top story at this hour european leaders have vowed to remain united in salvaging the iran nuclear deal speaking at an e.u. summit in bulgaria european council presidents don't all toss slammed president trump for pulling the u.s. out of that deal last week. while your leaders are resuming their summit in the
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bulgarian capital sofia today with their counterparts from the western balkans they'll be discussing the e.u. expansion into that region with albania and macedonia at the head of the line but in parts of the balkans there are aspects of daily life that hardly reflect you standards in parts of kosovo for example women often face of the year discrimination domestic violence is rampant and the justice system there repeatedly turns a blind eye to that again man has been locked up in prishtina us women's prison for nine years now for killing her husband we can't reveal have real name the marriage lost it just a year but it was torture as a husband can be terrible and even. bush incredible but i should also i went to the police so often once i even took the pistol my husband said he'd bought to kill me if i felt threatened but the police did nothing so i don't remember their names but i do remember their faces when you wanted one told me if you were my wife
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you wouldn't have had the chance to come here or because i'd have killed you with this pistol if a policeman says that to you you can't do anything else hollywood is you lose your will to live and don't believe in anything anymore laden but a year to the sun because. she left her husband but he continued to threaten her she was terrified and started carrying a kitchen knife. not long afterwards she was in his car she'd only agreed to get in the she was with her brother who wanted to act as mediator but her husband kept insulting and threatening her so she stabbed him she didn't even try to flee. again a was sentenced to twelve years for murder the court gave little consideration to the circumstances which led to her actions or the fact that the authorities had failed to help her for a year with only one note that's a harsh sentence twelve years even though i was
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a battered wife seeking help from the police in vain and then acting in self defense is not the same as purposely murdering someone out of jealousy there's no justice in kossovo absolutely not. fundraising so. a gay man comes from this village around an hour's drive from prishtina here they hold on to their traditions and gender roles men have to say around here many villages still remember this sad story for years the game is brother fed he'd fall victim to a blood feud as laid out in the can own a set of traditional albanian laws. even up to a few weeks ago it would have been too risky for him to talk to us but the families have finally reached an agreement he remembers what it was like. for a while or we were devastated all of it we never expected anything like this to happen but no one could have imagined it. we'd want something like
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this to occur but in life anything can happen. yeah. well sure. especially to women in kosovo because in this very traditional society women are all too often treated like second class citizens and simply don't have the same rights as men but in the i'm in favor of women having equal rights but a woman should know that she belongs to me and no one else that must be claire. cost of those constitution guarantees to abide by international agreements including the universal declaration of human rights but to decade after it declared independence cos of a still isn't fully recognized internationally so the european court of human rights in strasbourg has no jurisdiction to deal with such cases is a basically a black hole in bulk and because it's the only state of the rich citizens over which you can apply to people in court for human rights from the state it follows
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in violation of any human rights. again a says if the police had none of this would have happened after nine years behind bars she's now thirteen when she's released she wants to go abroad she feels there's no future for her in kosovo . and i want to i want to have a happy life when i get out of here and i want to family like every other woman and to become a mother a mother who loves her child. to me. most of all she dreams of leaving her terrible puss behind her. it's to africa now and burundians are being asked to vote in a referendum today that would allow their president to stay in power until twenty thirty four pierre and currencies are is already serving a controversial third term described as unconstitutional by his political opponents
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his flyin is to change the nation's constitution that could undermined years of peace building including by the international community the tiny eastern african nation as a bloody history a twelve year brutal civil war killed more than three hundred thousand people between one thousand nine hundred three and two thousand and five and the year two thousand the so-called russia peace and reconciliation deal was signed to ten years of relative peace followed that deal brokered by bill clinton but violence flared up again in two thousand and fifteen and turns he's the start of his third term more than a thousand people were killed that and with no reports of voter intimidation while there are now fears of brandy could see a return to the deadly violence of the past. in the small village of. bloodstains a straw mats where a family used to sleep pray for gruesome attack by neighbors assailants he murdered twenty six villages in their homes earlier this month with guns flames and machetes
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. these killers attacked my family my family is dead and the army did nothing to save them and although they weren't far from here. no one knows for sure if this attack was related to burundi's referendum but it gives a taste of the tense atmosphere in which the vote is taking place. the not always apparent bundy is deeply divided over its president and his plan to amend the constitution to be able to extend his reign pm currencies believes he has a god given right to rule and while not everyone agrees he has huge support in rural areas i am here before you turn arounds to all burundians that the election will go very well as god is my witness. the opposition says the president's planning a power grab and that it time and to stop them. who are trying to
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intimidate us claim that a new vote would push our country back to war and this is terrorism let us say no. but saying no to pm is an easy. when the indians took to the streets to protest his last controversial re-election demonstrations were crushed twelve hundred people died in the violence that followed and hundreds of thousands fled their homes many now live in refugee camps in neighboring countries such as this one in rwanda. those who stayed behind said they live in fear elena and her children watched as the husband and father was taken away in a raid. they were afraid we don't have a propagate we're trying to block the entrance to the yard with branches so we can hear the police and call for help. then as now the president's ruling party was accused of using violence to stifle opposition the run up to the referendum has
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been marred by hate speech and intimidation and reports suggest that people opposed to in currencies have been arrested and beaten. or more of the story let's bring in fred money he joins us from boston he's the head of our africa desk there fred good morning to you the first question is president and currencies as been accused of widespread human rights abuses ahead of this vote what else we know about that yes the accusation i guess president putin cruises stem from two thousand and fifteen when he decided to run for a third time which his opening say it was against a peace agreement that ended his civil war in two thousand in there are now up to the two thousand and fifteen presidential vote hundreds of people were killed and about four hundred of them drew indians for into neighboring countries you may also
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need to know that. to dozens of people have been killed suddenly the international media is not allowed to cover the events taking place in the ok that's probably why we did we don't have much coverage from there now despite this fierce criticism he's under he also enjoys huge support as we heard in our a report there from rural areas what's behind that kind of backing that he has. other brew in the end see him as a humble man they see him often the soca president who grew this is also a christian who goes to church he has also been visiting brokaw's on a regular basis but we cannot ignore the aspect of this mine is a former rebel leader whose henchmen killed of a thousand people minute rwandans have no choice but to follow him ok now the opposition has pointed all of this out of course but they're also calling in
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currencies those plans unconstitutional they're accusing him of a power grab do they have a point to sounds like be there something to that. yeah true they're right to some extent president encloses has completely ignored the peace agreement which ended the civil war and brought him to power in two thousand and five before he stick to print this is respected the peace deal and handed over power to him when they finished their terms no fees for him he ignored all that and then his bus three and four he pursued for the third time and now he is looking i try to stay in ofis maybe until twenty thirty four ok well the opposition does have a leader i guess on rwa some what we know about him. i got taught russ is the head of the coalition of opposition parties operating only in the broom the he supports
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the no campaign insisting that their friend them does not in present day of the people and he could actually are not or to a new regime but many in the opposition especially those living in exile don't trust him he's seen as a figure who is helping out presenting cruises are traded my eyes his tight grip on power saw he's not trusted out or the human self he's not seen as the person who can actually a contest or stand against president in cruz's of who has support in the ruling party has supported him in rural areas so i've got total he's also a former rebel leader who is not trusted at all or who has also accused to have killed so many people in the broonzy. what do you think this vote today will lead to new violence will it lead to the type of violence from the author sally as seen in the past. this fault first of all we have to remember that it has does
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the time when bru indians are commemorating or remembering their people who were killed in two thousand and fifteen with the the new divider is in the country i can't say for now but what we know the opposition is actually saying that they cannot accept that presenting cruz is the new or. amend the constitution because he doesn't they don't see him as they get to meet the president they don't see him as the possum who stands for the will of many. people so who knows just a few days ago just a week ago that twenty six people we have butchered with killed anyone the it's a sign for me it's a sign that the country is heading to a really bad path fred novotny from deed of use africa desk joining us from bonn
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following the story for us today thanks very much for. your come is to care about the next one of the world's most remote nations situated in the central pacific ocean the archipelago faces a range of challenges climate change is threatening the low lying islands poverty there is widespread that's forcing many of the island's young people to seek work with international ships that fish and care about these waters the training is long and hard and the work often takes some far away from all the know and early morning drill. it's the first roll call in the marine trade center school for sailors on beatty oh island at six am before breakfast the bosses have ordered thirty minutes of exercise will not. be empty see has been around for more than half
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a century co-founded by a german shipping company how boards are. that we have a. i'm in training here because i'd like to work on the high seas one. i want to and money to support my family. i'm interested in japan to see what it's like there and how they sit on the a lot of the stuff. as a human is in the first row but as with all the trainees here he's just a number. but there's adventure in store as hardly any of the candidates here have ever sailed beyond the horizon. under the sea. and will run a new kind of peace accords if you do not. know. who we are.
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with on board ship on this be and this. is it. yes we publish you thought it was. a sailor's life on land is highly regulated just as it is on board but for some it's tough going. most of the trainees here want to one day work for the german joint enterprise the s.p.n. mass or south pacific marine service confederation of six different companies. the company director is captain andrew heinsohn the young man here grew up with the ocean he says and the shipping industry values that but often something stands in the way of a more lucrative future. as cold it will believe is to t.c.p. disowning is the main problem and also trying to explain time and call it a seafarers in europe or in maritime navigation we have totally different times
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totally different temporal rhythms that we have to try to teach this to the sailors of accountants and. rovio wa or f eleven for now need six months instruction to work on the deck of a tuna trawler japan supports the training. eighteen months of study is required to stand on the bridge but that's too long for f.l. eleven. even though he is only in his early twenties he will soon have to provide for three generations. i don't have any doubt that it will be very son to no longer see my family. but this school is the opportunity to save my parents it's the only way i can help myself and others a lot to walk on. the potential income has never been more important now that climate change is threatening their traditional livelihood one downside sunday is
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the only day off. rubio will leave so. it's an hour's boat ride to his home village of top bonnie barra on the ocean side waves or road in the island's foundation only the shore of the lagoon remains intact m.t.c. trainers drop him off. it's another world no electricity running water or t.v. rubio his father has asked ma he believes the sun is getting closer and that's why the climate is changing. rovio is wife territory t. has a child she's worried along with the entire family. i'm afraid of the dangerous most say liz must be very careful. but my husband has said he would always pay
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close attention. to. rubio as father is glad to have helped he's short of breath and is no longer able to pull tough toral roots from the ground by himself and. i have another younger son he's fourteen and i hope he'll help me when the older one is away no one. the family subsists on what nature provides them the government buys up or dried coconut meat but the yield has been sinking year after year. the increasing water temperature and the corresponding rising sea level also have an effect further out. often only bring seagrass home.
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everything's changing we're catching fewer fish regardless of which kind of other sea creatures are also disappearing and on land we have erosion the well water is becoming celebrated and the coconut palms hardly bear fruit any more. if they get to the original already today what's happening here because of climate change when i'm not around and i'm afraid everything will change and again. kerry body is one of the poorest countries in the world and climate change is making it even poorer rubio will soon have what others don't a job so he can support his family but he will pay a high price for it he will soon have to leave so others can stay.
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we have our football now jonathan crane is with us to go through the latest in the football world starting with last night's europa league final good morning to you john listen more for a lot of dread fans we saw them earlier in the show absolutely thrilled dancing in the streets of madrid it was a gutsy performance they put in wasn't yeah as you say typical athletic madrid they got their noses in france and then shut out their parents must say and it was a frenchman in front suited for the french side i'm talking about that man that griese men he gave in the lead on twenty one minutes he took advantage of a mix up in the mouth a defense things thing got worse for the french side that star man dimitri pilots off after half an hour bad news for him and then time really as good as over just after half time when chrisman got a second finishing off a really nice move that not the stuffing out of mouth and no surprise in the set goal went to be that and he kept his hands on the tracey again the same trophy he lifted in twenty trials brian athletico just been consistently so good and the
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diego simeone a and the domination by spanish sides in europe continues they've now got their hands on eight of the last nine european trades he's awarded she that organization has been so dominant do some discussion out there this morning about greece money you know he will really go. in a classy performance very stellar at let it go hold on to the euphoria dies down of the victory that will be the big question because he's long been linked with a move away from athletic with manchester united and boss alone and most recently his likely seasons now we know he has a one hundred million euro release clause in his contract which will be a sneaker today's prices president admitted last week that they helped with reasons representatives that didn't go down at school well in madrid so the best madrid can hope for really is to offer griezmann a new contract with a high release clause and hope he wins over because he really has developed as a player. there was we've seen before with. the start of this
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season. at liverpool come calling it's hard to say no now griezmann after the match is been quite tight lipped let's take a listen to what he had to say about the situation. i don't think that now is the time to talk about my future i want to talk about the present. i'm happy and overjoyed to have won this title and i want to enjoy it with the friends. and it was a dream of mine to win a title with that let it go. the celebrations in madrid but what a hard break for the fans in marsay last night you know you talk about captain dmitri you know he was injured at the end of his world cup dream well for the sake of new fans everywhere i think let's hope not because he is such an exciting player he was an injury concern before the game he had a muscle problem must say took a risk and unfortunately the gamble didn't pay off now affronts christie did a show with select his world cup squad on says day and i think the only consolation
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for pie the latest news is the injury didn't get so hopefully with a bit of time to recover he will be able to be fit enough to be included in that squad because he's a player who can really produce the moments of magic can turn the game on its head and instead we saw that euro twenty sixteen withdrawn through be a massive shade if he doesn't get an opportunity to do that with him at the world cup ok let's move on to some other big games is a big match in german football tonight. it's the first leg of the relegation play off spec taking on whole stein kale now this is a two legged match which pits the team to finish sixteenth in the brenda's league against the team that finished in the second but in this league put simply the winner of a two legs will have a place in the business league next season now we have been here before specifically last season they have a came brown five in the playoffs that coach. there has experience of this he survived with hamburg three years ago in the relegation playoff record and wretched
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form since january really they've really struggled to score though at least they do go into this match off the back of a four one victory over cologne on the final day of the season you know a lot of us love minnows you know and if you love man those you have to have a hard for holsteiner keil they're the underdogs you know they pull it off so they have a chance. they do know how to score goals they were by far and away the high score is in the second in this league this season and they've had a fairytale a few seasons actually they got promoted last year just five years ago they were playing germany's fourth division for a massive turnaround is now obviously the second division side how form going into these matches but history does favor the brenda's league side because they've come through the playoffs in seven of the last eight seasons one little side of this the coach marcus and found he will take over relegated next season so even if he can mastermind a victory whatever happens he will be coaching in the second blues league next season ok i know a lot of people are going to be pulling for kewl thanks so much for joining us with
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the wrap up of world football today. it's going to be user minor the top story we're following for you right now european leaders about to remain united in salvaging the nuclear deal speaking in. the present. present problem for pulling the us out of the. last week. this is it of yours live from berlin we're back again at the top of the hour for now though thanks so much for being with us.
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glad.
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to. see. good luck for the white house. around this taking no but the trouble with your favor to. look to the left to make the point that took you and your politics to the entire country champion three pillars for the last sixty years. for minds oh and where. they require. her to. angle for cutting arnold combativeness welcome. to.
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the us but i love al gore first for that i am going to go up close. thank you i. was going out on our own i love your neighbor as i am a learner. and in the cold war. i will follow the army but the let us. all in the war my eye was. full of worming again i was only the galloway i didn't what am i. what i meant was this the our.
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city. this is deja vu news live from berlin europe the past delayed the rhetoric over the iran nuclear deal but can they can you save it meeting in bulgaria the leaders found to keep the iran nuclear deal alive and they meet their balkan counterparts to discuss further e.u. enlargement also in the show. young girl killed by israeli gunfire in
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gaza after monday's protests that left at least fifty eight people dead d.w. visits a family who lost their daughter and a community crushed by a blog.

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