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tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  May 29, 2018 9:00am-9:31am CEST

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mining industry forward i work as you know but. this is deja vu news live from berlin germany remembers the deadliest raises the stock this post war has for forty five years ago neo nazi so far to a turkish family's home in the city of soling and five people died in that blaze the day the country pays its respects to the victims also coming up italy's new stopgap prime minister is promising to do all he can to steer that country out of
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its political crisis but carlo carli his appointment has sparked a fury from the populist alliance that was set to govern its calling on italians to rally for a mass protest in rome this week. and talk stark today in paris to push for a peace deal in libya we hear from migrants who survived their journey through libya to europe their accounts reflect the collapse in libya and its human trafficking nightmare. and also coming up in archaeological and nick my more than twenty five giant art works are discovered etched into the coastal desert in southern peru but what was their purpose and why are they in such a remote location.
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i've. brought in thomas thanks so much for being with us well today germany is remembering the most deadly anti foreigner attack in his post war history twenty five years ago four young men set fire to the home of a family in the western city of soling in. five people died fourteen were injured today chance for all america host one of the survivors at a memorial event. on this state against family lost nearly everything two young women and three girls died after their home burst into flames the date may twenty ninth ninety ninth he took. him to meet him along try to put yourself in my position five of the people you love most mother father brother or sister are killed your house and everything that belongs to you is set on fire what would you do you wish you had died as well but
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life goes on. and every day again two daughters two granddaughters and in use on the night of the fire fourteen family members were injured some of them critically point here is where the family house one stood today only five chestnut tree stand in memory of the deceased. two of them die after jumping out of the when those three of the girls were killed in the arsonists flips. one of the four perpetrators a sixteen year old neo nazi lived across the street from the victims all together four young men were sentenced to lengthy prison terms the motive criticism. from c.n.n. . i feel no hatred towards the people of germany we are all brothers and sisters the german state and turkish governments have given me assistance but i will never forgive these for perpetrators. the arson attack and zoning in what the
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communication of a wave of races attacks on immigrants and refugees in the one nine hundred ninety s. installing in greven discussed transforms into indignation there were three tryouts for dates. back when there was a huge pedestrian zone here we were. through it and were shocked when we heard about the attack. the day after the attack it was like a war zone here. they were burning tires on the streets it was a catastrophe. since them have again just called on her compatriots for reconciliation and peace the arson unverse theories are particularly difficult for seventy five year old and her husband but it's important for her to remind people what happened that day her granddad her helps. inside give me my wish is that we look towards the future. part that we treat each other with respect and are an example for the next generation. so many of my compact
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hits live in germany and i wish that we could all live respectfully and amicably together. in one hundred ninety six method again she was awarded the federal cross of merit for commitment against racism and revenge she's lived in germany for forty eight years leaving zoning out of the question for her. today a memorial commemorates the crime it symbolizes a distorts what's to come again just please that turkish and german states were presented as they're coming to the memorial this year she's only concerned that a day of mourning is being instrumental lies politically and ideologically. so how far has germany common combating racism over the last twenty five years or more of the spring and interviews a chief political correspondent on the train the morning with the chancellor meeting with a survivor of the sewing and attack today certainly sending
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a very clear signal. absolutely this memorial today is being taken very very seriously and we've heard a concerted message go out from a number of member members of the government the foreign minister for example saying that the attack in salling and twenty five years ago was an attack on everyone and that the memorial today is a mandate on all germans not to look away not to remain silent but to speak out we've heard similar messages from the justice minister from the government officers who is in charge of integration and the justice minister for example saying that she feels a sense of shame when she sees that even today there is still discrimination against people of migration background and and even a rise in attacks on migrants melinda let's pick up on the let's talk about germany today a country that wants to see itself as having an open and welcoming approach to foreigners has that changed in this regard has
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a country changed since. yes and no it certainly has changed in the sense that this is the country that took in nearly a million refugees in twenty fifteen it is the country where thousands and thousands of people are working every day with those refugees to try to help them integrate into germany and it's certainly a country that looks and feels far more diverse than it did twenty five years ago and of course i say that also on the basis of personal experience simply in terms of what all of us see in daily life so that's the positive side the less less positive side is that in fact as we heard in the report following soling in there was for example a wave of murders of people of migration background committed by a far right cell from eastern germany and they were able to commit those murders with impunity over the course of more than ten years we are seeing today the rise
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of anti-semitic attacks some of them made headlines in recent months an attack even here in berlin which is viewed as a very diverse place we've also seen the rise of a far right party and as you know on berlin this week in berlin this weekend five thousand people from all over germany demonstrated on behalf of that far right party one of whose heads for example has said extremely bitter and discriminatory things about migrants so it's a very mixed picture going forward but just that demonstration on the weekend we also saw twenty five thousand people demonstrating against the a.f.d. so as i said it is it is a mixed picture milling to try and thanks very much for that one more from commemorations later today. now for some of the other stories making the news today malaysian authorities of called off the search for flight m h three seventy the for
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your effort to find the malaysia airlines jet which disappeared over the south indian ocean has failed to solve one of the world's greatest evasion mysteries two hundred thirty nine people were on board. the death of a young man has unleashed massive student and opposition protests in bolivia clashes broke out in the western city of cochabamba after a protester was killed by police it is unclear how many people were injured. thousands of people in cuba have been forced to evacuate as sub tropical storm alberto wreaked havoc on the island forcing the shutdown of the main highway system in the central province of alone seven thousand people fled their homes were safe for us. it's to italy now where that country's populist alliance has promised to deny the new caretaker prime minister carlo called ereli parliamentary approval now such
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a move would mean new elections in italy as early as august corelli was appointed by the italian president in a major setback for the populists there five star movement says its followers were in rome this weekend to protest what it's calling a tell in democracies darkest night. this is the man with the mandate to form italy's interim government a moderate and former official at the international monetary fund he is a firm believer in the european union and the same goal currency. a dialogue with europe to defend our interests is essential we can do better than we did in the past but it has to be a constructive dialogue fully acknowledging that as a founding member our continuous participation in the euro zone remains essential. after the coalition parties put forward a staunch euro skeptic as their economy and finance minister the president pulled
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the emergency brake rejecting the formation of a new government. it's the establishment versus the new kids on the block an italian politics. the president trying to keep it away what he considers to be change of his populist policies. leaders of the coalition parties in turn accuse the political old guard of acting autocratically. it seems anyone who has criticized the euro or europe is considered to be no good as a minister. if this is the case we have a big problem in italy. it's called democracy this is not a free democracy. the league in five star parties had spent days drawing up a coalition pact aimed at ending a stalemate following inconclusive elections in march. their agenda is to tear up
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the political rulebook but they may have gone too far shoppers in rome seem to side with the president. i'm absolutely pro european and i believe that italy is connected and must have a connection reviewer for future. that's a certain point the president who looks after the constitution sees that things are moving in a direction that he doesn't want in my opinion he simply applied the constitution. you have. some took the political turmoil with a sense of humor you are for profit ship or coup it's the same old ministry but we are totally and so it's normal we managed to get by so viva tahlia. enough support to tell you could be heading to the polls again much sooner. this is the interview news still to come on the show more than twenty five giant artworks discovered
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etched into a coastal desert in southern peru archaeologists want to know why are they there. first. dozen or more first is over to mark an important deadline looming for transatlantic trade yes both the german and especially also european top officials of very very busy in order to solve this because the united states is expected to begin enforcing high imports tears for metals imported from europe on friday announced a permanent exemption to the tariffs which took effect for china already in march e.u. trade representatives were sent back to the drawing table after they failed to negotiate a permanent extension to the u.s. terms at the start of this month the pressure is on because if europe fails to come to an agreement again with the u.s. policymakers say they will be forced to introduce counter measures which many fear could hurt both the united states and europe by german chancellor angela merkel
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said on monday that she's willing to continue negotiations and that she hopes there won't be any need for retaliatory measures. the chance in their group using the opportunities of globalization for that to same time reducing the risks is something we can best achieve together but instead of that we see that multilateral initiatives are being questioned international agreements and institutions are being weakened solutions that have already been found i'm not finding support and unilateral approaches are being launched this is worrying. so the chancellor is worried and for more i am now joined by a thought the end of the night columnist to the macroeconomic policy institute at the house but the foundation a think tank that works closely with the configuration of german trade unions good to have you with us so washington is definitely shaking up global trade to put america first the e.u. is now looking to avoid tariffs what kind of deal could there be i think
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a president is the man big photos that means that we don't get any terrorism now exports but we say ourselves that we only export a certain amount of steel and aluminum to the united states this has happened in two thousand and two as well and it didn't really hurt so much so i think that was the. story that would be something that you could offer to the united states why isn't he asking for quotas right away rather than threatening high tariffs of twenty five percent on steel and ten percent on all the many other as far as we know he is exactly demanding photos he has demanded from other countries as well for instance to south korea with which he could already give they accepted quotas and i think that there's something there we can of done a drum to piece the situation a little bit without hurting our exports too much what you just mentioned that something similar happened in two thousand and two and i the george w.
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bush was actually imposing tariffs on steel and he had to basically take all of that back because of complaints off his own industry. if there isn't a deal by friday could we see trump being forced into basically making the same mistake i absolutely think so first of all we have to see this is nothing new he's . the only one who demonstrates the international trade system george bush already did that this is also something that we have to you know it's not that of selling everything and doing something completely new and the other question is really yes of course it's only two hundred thousand people working in student aluminum but a lot of industry construction manufacturing is dependent on steel it's twelve point three million people work in those sectors they will be hurt by the terrorist by the higher prices and we've already seen that also playing out in two thousand to two hundred thousand jobs were lost because of the increase in prices and then
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a lot of pressure came to president bush and that he had to withdraw from the whole terror thing so i think that will play out similarly or is very likely to play out the same way in the united states now well given that scenario that you were just describing there why do you think the u.s. agreed to extend europe's exception from tariffs in the first place plans i'm not quite sure because this is a quote or park process we don't know a lot about this and we know that dogs on this really a little bit flip flopping here and there and perhaps he doesn't have really a strong hand he knows that there's opposition domestically so he also tries to get a deal and this is why he's backtracking so much so i'm not quite sure whether he is as we feel all right thank you so much phil filling us in on all this fog in the economist at the macro economic policy institute of the hans butler foundation thank you so much. the e.u.
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says it is now can compliance with a ruling that prohibits subsidies for european aircraft maker airbus a block hopes to avoid possible retaliatory sanctions over the matter source of dispute between apple and its american rubber boeing for more than a decade both boeing and the us claim to the use below market loans for airbus models a three fifty and a three eighty amounted to unfair subsidies the w t o agreed in a may ruling the u.s. is pushing for a negotiated settlement in the case one of several major trans atlantic. staying in the united states a starbucks is closing the doors of eight thousand stores in america today to give mandatory and racial bias training to its one hundred seventy five thousand employees and this follows an incident in april in which two black men were arrested for trespassing while waiting for a friend in a philadelphia branch the company says the sessions will give employees that better
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understanding of how racial bias works starbucks c.e.o. kevin johnson apologized swiftly for the philadelphia incident and the company set of the both men for a two hundred thousand dollars charitable donation. well a conference is about to start are underway in paris certainly is trying to bring peace back to libya not going to be an easy task at all marco libya's rival leaders are meeting in paris today in an effort to secure parliamentary and presidential elections by the end of this year that country has of course been rocked by violence and chaos and two thousand and eleven when moon market often was toppled from power since then human traffickers have taken advantage of libya's strategic location thousands of migrants and refugees transit through libya to europe and those who survive are talking about experiences of kidnapping torture and extortion . another rescue by the italian navy.
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this time it's sixty nine migrants on a rubber dinghy among them for pregnant women they're brought to a ship called the aquarius whose crew give them medical treatment. many say they are distressed by their experiences in libya where they began their journey. which we were tortured with electric shocks they pulled would reverse and then shocked us they told us that to stop it we'd have to pay the money st pete beach. they beat and raped us. it wasn't nice. i thank god that i'm coming here at. the shocking stories that the crew of the aquarius hear time and time again for the past two years they've been rescuing migrants off the libyan coast. so that people you know know in europe
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and united states and everywhere what's what's happening and really the catastrophe and crisis that's happening in. the mediterranean. torture rape human trafficking reality for hundreds of thousands of african migrants in libya. their goal is to reach europe it's a potentially dangerous journey the crew of the aquarius help many of them but they've been accused of aiding human traffickers critics say migrants have taken to the seas counting on being picked up by the rescue ship. and we would so. this was. the ring and it. was. the aquarius crew have also strongly denied any connection to people smugglers i know you're trying to over match and shit and always give our position. everyone
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can see where we all. i would not be hit if i had to slightest suspicion that we ate smugglers. an evening of prayer for the sixty nine migrants who were rescued there thankful to the rescuers for making their journey to europe less difficult. it's to peru now where archaeologists have found more than twenty five geo glyphs large motifs etched into the coastal desert in the south of the country now they're considered archaeological enigmas no one knows what their purpose was or why they're in this remote location. they were etched into the landscape more than two thousand years ago. just simpering have discovered more than twenty five ancient books. we found the figures of a monkey and a dancing woman. they belong to the top are
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a culture and they date from around two hundred to one b.c. . on this at least. the figures stretch for hundreds of metres along the desert heroes is a mystery what they mean and why they were drawn so big. best viewed from above the discovery was things to be use of drones. if used to take weeks if not months to survey an area like this it was also very expensive now we can do the same work with much greater precision in minutes. identified. visits for joint drawings on foot time. great. football training camp in northern italy the big question this week who will make the final
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. for the world cup. twenty three. home four of the players. the sky looks set to clear at germany's training camp after a relaxed bike ride instead of training on sunday the coach has now tightened the reins as he tries to pick his final world cup squad. we're just getting started it's a different team. our team spirit has to develop. but that's a balancing act for the players yes they need to build the kind of team spirit that led to winning the two thousand and fourteen world cup but they also need to compete with their team mates for players from the current squad will not make this year's tournament. within their home you know we have to maintain the hunger that
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the coach always talks about we'll have to do even more than we did in two thousand and fourteen to win it again. this team is mentally sound and we know what this is all about. twenty five players are currently in training. goalkeeper manuel neuer is making progress from day to day after next saturday's friendly in austria it will be clear whether he goes to the world cup or not and mats hummels is waiting for a partner in central defense jerome boateng is still rehabbing an injured. if he doesn't manage in time and tonio diego would be a candidate for the vacant spot. to be honest i'm staying relaxed about the whole situation i know is there's a chance to play be ready and the coach knows that. this is the fourth time germany have trained for
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a world cup in italy's south to roll region they ended up winning two of those tournaments and hope to do it again this year. all staying with football liverpool have started to move on from their champions league final defeat to real madrid agree to deal with monaco to sign on on july the first the brazilian midfielder will cost liverpool about forty five million euros he's been one of the standout players in the french top flight scoring twenty nine times for monaco and five seasons is expected to replace the german midfielder. who could move to event this now here's something to get your pulse going and perhaps your appetite as well a cheese chaser that's right the cheese chaser has broken the all time record after winning the annual cheese rolling race every year ago in the southwest of england. becomes the stage for this spectacle before kilogram double glocester cheeses roll
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down cooper's hill then people chase after it. chris anderson one again this year has now taken home twenty two double gloucester's over the last fourteen. apparently he doesn't eat them though because he only likes cheddar cheese. is a reminder now of our top story at this hour germany's marking the deadliest racist attack in this post war history twenty five years ago neo nazis set fire to a turkish family's home in the city of soloing and killing five people just are all a macro studio host one of the survivors at a memorial of the. this is the interview news live from berlin i'm brian thomas for the entire news team thanks for being with us.
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kick off. he's the world's biggest football star says jon when i know. we wanted to find out what to do is like off the field. so we traveled to madrid discount some of his favorite.
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peaceful appearances can be deceptive. evil. gangs fighting turf war on chicago's west side and hundreds of people are murdered on the new streets of this city every year. found there was once again later today he's a social worker helping young people find the courage to change their lives global three thousand and sixty minutes. europe. what unites. what divides. the folly of travelers. what binds the continent together. sensors and stories aplenty. spotlight on people. focus on their own on g.w. . much of it. good links to newsgroup
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africa and the world or links to exceptional stories and discussions from use and visit our website dedicated come snuffy come join us on facebook at g.w. ever got. close. to us they spent hours behind barriers. born.

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