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tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  June 29, 2018 2:00pm-2:31pm CEST

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i know what i'm going he said but our current going on with the new front you. can see it because as you say. you're watching due to the news live from berlin it took more than fourteen hours of talks through the night but leaders say they have reached a deal on migration french president among one mccaul is helping the agreement as a victory for european cooperation but will it be enough to defuse on the americans crisis at home and what will it mean for the migrants also coming up a deadly attack on journalists in the u.s.
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a gunman kills five people at a maryland newspaper police have the suspect in custody and said the attack was targeted. and no more second chances were down to the final sixteen at the soccer world cup in russia belgium beat england to take the top spot in the bring in rob i like that match and talk about all the world cup news but are you that the sports team. i'm simply so much going to thank you for joining us we'll have more on our top stories in a moment but first reports are coming in that some one hundred migrants are feared dead after their boat capsized off the coast of libya while on route to europe a spokesman for the libyan navy says it's not yet clear if all of the passengers have drowned it is also not known yet how many migrants were on board the vessel
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when it went down close to the capital tripoli. and we will continue to track that story for you but it comes as european leaders announce a deal on stemming the flow of undocumented migration to the e.u. after a long night of difficult negotiations and brussels leaders agree to tighten the u.s. policy on migrants and asylum seekers the key points of the deal processing centers for asylum seekers will be opened within the e.u. external centers in north africa are also planned and they'll be tighter controls on the e.u. border now italy which no longer wants to be responsible for all the migrants who land on its shores has threatened to veto an earlier statement now it says it feels its demands have been met. let's go right to brussels and bureau chief max hoffman who's been covering this story for us hi max good to see you there was a lot of relief on the faces of e.u. leaders this morning is this agreement a breakthrough. well if you look at
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a two step process the whole migration issue then on the first step which is my controlling illegal migration knowing who comes to the european union then yes this is a european solution it is you could say it's a success but at the second part what do you do with people who've made it to the european union especially with those who've been granted asylum then it is not this has been a very contentious topic as you know sue me for the last years there is just no solution for the redistribution of migrants within the european union and referring again to that first you know controlling the borders maybe setting up sort of some kind of migrant camps in northern africa and also setting up reception centers in the european union for now this agreement consists of political guidelines and that's why for example the austrian chancellor said buster coltan says when he came here this morning to the second part of the summit that now it was crucial to actually put this into action max i want to go back to those reception centers you just mentioned are these essentially detention centers within the e.u.
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. it depends what kind of reception centers we have the french president in mandarin michael in fact mentioned that these would be accorded to him closed reception centers and yes then you might get some ugly in the just on the other hand one of the problems that the e.u. has at the moment is secondary migration meaning that migrants arrive for example in italy they're registered there they apply for asylum but why the whole process is ongoing they move on to the next country often to germany this problem of course would probably be smaller if you had closed reception centers if that's what you want to call them on the other hand many n.g.o.s have already voiced their their concerns with that and that that's especially an important point for the german chancellor angela merkel that migrants should not be able to move between member states and we have a clip from her and what she said on that let's listen and. will contest this. we
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realize that we have to stick by the rules and get a clear direction. no asylum seeker has the right to choose the country in which they will apply for asylum seeking almost all says it all right next to the chancellor very clear there with what she wanted to achieve get what she wanted. this is lisa something she can take back home that might be useful in her negotiations with her coalition partner c.s.u. and on the other hand this is the basis for her to negotiate bilateral agreements with southern countries to take back or possibly take back migrants that made it to the german border but were previously registered in countries like italy or greece although i mean i need to add here italy already excluded that the populace government one on the promise to be tougher on migration so this probably won't fly with italy but there seems to be a willingness on the side of greece to actually hammer out a bilateral agreement like that with the germans max huffman reporting for us from brussels max thank you. so what could this deal mean for the migrants already in
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the e.u. since europe began cracking down after the height of the refugee crisis in two thousand and fifteen thousands have been trapped in greece some have been in camps for more than two years unable to move on it'll be a spoke to some will fear their hopes of a new life could be dashed for ever. larger viki is not a place many people in europe know of it's a small village in northern greece eight hundred refugees are housed in a camp here that is twice as many as the camp was conceived for this is due to more refugees coming to europe via turkey despite the refugee deal between turkey and the e.u. eight thousand people crossed into europe in the first half of twenty seventeen in the first half of this year that number has risen to twelve thousand and the current discourse in europe regarding refugees is unsettling for those sheltered here. in greece for two years before i came here i was in last boss a future is being stolen from us with all this going on in europe. that i couldn't
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greece for one and a half years but what's going to happen with all this no one knows. just down from the refugee camp is the village of lager v.q. with only six hundred citizens it is smaller than the camp many residents can relate to the situation facing refugees they are the descendants of people who were forced to leave pontus in what is now the eastern black sea region of turkey. nevertheless there is a lot of sympathy for the rise of right wing parties in modern europe. i understand why people would look to right wing parties francis' they want fewer refugees that's just a really serious. but it have a problem with right wing extremist parties getting elected elsewhere i'm just concerned about what happens in greece or facilities. and what about their neighbors the refugees. as the weeks in the camp turn into months or even years are they where the political developments in the e.u.
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are making it harder for them to leave here. although we definitely do not want to travel illegally into another country like we did in iran and then get to greece i was hoping at some point the borders would open for us but now it's looking like just the opposite to me just read a bit of a little. bit after crossing deserts and oceans of the refugees and could end up getting stuck here if the political winds in europe continue to blow in their current direction. now the state of saxony and germany's east has one of the country's larger reception centers for asylum seekers and we can speak to market gaertner from the refugee council of saxony that's a german ngo mark thank you for joining us i want to ask you what do you think of the e.u.'s proposal to create reception centers within the e.u. and also external centers beyond e.u. borders. i would say the. current regimin you
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interview but imperative. to know who you are and beyond its borders this is a reason for concern of course but he's expected to earn especially american so it wouldn't be that he's had a student would get a company to buy you know the guy who's minority. is a necessary condition especially when it comes to mix and procedures people need to know how he's had a future. because of the reasons why scale they have to bring in the interview. so. we are the kind of shockwave you think that is small and concerned that these camps might not need might not meet the necessary legal conditions now your city in dresden has first hand experience to host a center there housing about five hundred people and i understand most of whom they have little chance of actually receiving asylum according to migration officials how well has this center their address and worked. this interview is actually very
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bad we had my home trash a. couple of months more and more if you spend all of our. security here. and this is not surprising to ask people quest made it there they are you know they get a sick nobody with. the conditions in the can or who are. the bad whom some of cremated borrowing is not limited. to cities. like that and people might close to the power opposite purity post and. so. you're saying this this is a working class and mark for people who are not refugees though and will have to go home at some point what option do you see besides these types of detention centers . and they have to have
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a suspicion by any refugee agency of europe doesn't necessarily mean that we're stationed. right so quite a legal. legal rejection that i could go into administration court. trying to get inside it and also who who would be a recent. thing against the case for example although health conditions for people who are your sickness cannot be treated in the country so these are rights which are given to people to human beings of which we are remarkably. well people who are going to access to those rights and more we're talking about migrants and asylum seekers and refugees who have already entered germany and europe but there are unprecedented number of migrants on the move globally now don't we need an orderly management of migration at europe's extra no borders. it's course not good in that people are dying in the military. but also in order
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could be get out to them don't see that military not to people who are going to see the european union. actually enable legal base of immigration office for example a period we're going to pick a few. this will be in order all right mark to get more from the refugee council of saxony thank you so much for joining us on the program today thank you. moving on now to some other stories making headlines around the world in thailand rescuers searching for a soccer team missing inside a flooded cave have lowered survival packages into a fissure in the mountain hoping they might reach them there's been no sign of the twelve boys and their coach since they entered the cave complex on saturday despite warnings it is prone to flooding. a huge fire at a market in the kenyan capital nairobi has killed fifteen people and injured dozens some of the victims were children it is the seventh fire to hit the market in less
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than a decade kenya's president who can yet us says there will be a thorough investigation. and police in washington d.c. have arrested nearly six hundred people demonstrating against the trumpet ministrations hard line immigration policies the protesters mostly women had occupied a government building they were demanding an end to the separation of migrant families more rallies are planned across the u.s. this weekend. and staying in the u.s. a gunman has killed five people and injured two others at newspaper offices in the state of maryland police say it was a targeted attack and that the shooter walked through the newsroom of the capitol gazette in annapolis looking for his victims. police say officers were on the scene within sixty seconds after the emergency call came in. officials have praised the drop in response saying it may have saved lives. they
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went immediately into that building without a moment's hesitation and demonstrated incredible courage we are so deeply appreciative of their great work it could have been a lot worse. more than one hundred seventy people were evacuated from the building and brought to safety one reporter gave a harrowing account of what he experienced. there is nothing more terrifying than hearing multiple people get shot while you're under your desk and then hear the gunman reload. the suspect has been identified as a white male in his late thirty's he was taken into custody at the scene police say he talked to the paper reportedly because he had a grudge against it's tough. president donald trump tweeted that his thoughts and prayers were the victims and their families but he later wouldn't answer when reporters asked him about the shooting the problems that.
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the. certainty that. you. have that remember. the capital because that has been an institution in maryland for centuries today in annapolis surviving staff at the capitol worked through their grief to put out the paper. here watching d.w. news still to come a change in tone on the streets of moscow as russia ups its game to make world cup visitors feel welcome but what will happen to the festival feeling when the fans go home. but first helena is here in georgia banks business is still looking risky of course this is the bank that the i.m.f. once called the world's most dangerous bank it seems that there's been little improvement since then deutsche bank's u.s. divisions failed the second round of the us federal reserve's annual stress test
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and that test passed by thirty one of the thirty five banks which were examined shelled is a continuing to question the overall health of germany's top lenders shares have taken a tumble as the banks new boat boss struggles to bring a bank back from the brink. bank's u.s. division had passed the first round of the stress test the quantity of section that measures coupled the levels against a severe recession. in the second qualitative round of the test however the fed cited three critical deficiencies for deutscher. weaknesses in its data capabilities revenue and loss forecasts and its internal control systems. the message from the fed the us armed suffers from poor management. the report comes one month after the us deposit insurance regulator added the lender to a list of problem banks. germany's flagship lender has seen its image plummet in the wake of the global financial crisis. georgia has now posted the last three
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successive years with its share price repeatedly to all time lows. the bank stock is down forty percent this year alone. it remains unclear what the future holds for the american division its new c.e.o. recently announced the unit will be scaling down some of its operations in the u.s. . i want to bring in our financial correspondent now daniel died of course at the frankfurt stock exchange close friend at the home of deutsche bank daniel clearly this is a big blow to the bank yet rather bizarrely shares are going up why is that. yes kind of like a slap into the face on the one hand this is really bad news for daughter banking on the other hand i was just taking a look at the share price shares of deutsche are with one point two five percent at the moment at some point of the day there were even the strongest performers in the exact investors are telling me that they were already prepared that most likely
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dodge a bang was about to fail the stress test also in general we have to say and i guess you can see it in the back row at the roots of index stocks today back in the winning zone we are up with one point four percent and that's helping the shares of torture as well meanwhile we're also hearing from bloomberg that hundreds of bankers are being investigated by prosecutors in cologne no validations of tax evasion tell us more about that. yeah this is a very interesting story and it's just it's not just the bankers who are part of the investigation we're also hearing that brokers accounting companies and law firms are under suspicion as well there is against a geisha includes trying to actions handled by lenders including big bangs such as barclays goldman sachs bank of america and also b. and b. of perceivers and initial indictments are likely as soon as in the course of this year we are hearing that the probe has been underway for about half a decade and is picking up speed because several witnesses have agreed cooperate to
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. operates with officials according to bloomberg a team now based in cologne and also here in frankfurt is monitoring and taking a closer look at all of this started about fifteen years ago a big bang supposedly help investors exploit an interpretation of the tax code that seemed to allow two parties to come to claim ownership off shares and then to get a refund of withheld in taxes paid on dividends a big story they're watching it for us from frankfurt daniel cooled off and on to correspond thank you. well the price of goods and services in the eurozone hit two percent in june that is a tick higher than may's level of one point nine percent the european central bank's annual inflation goalie's close to but actually just below two percent now a jump in and you prices including oil fueled inflation followed by a move modest increase in food alcohol and tobacco prices the cost of services and
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non energy industrial goods rose only slightly. more business news a little later time now to catch up with all the latest from the world cup. the group stage of the world cup is over we have nic mechanic line from sports with us to wrap it all up for us so nick yesterday saw the last matches of the group play there and we saw belgium against england and belgium still looking really good surprising actually sent out there between both teams did because there was more there's less to play for they didn't want to go in the group they want to finish second but last night they were very good the teams. to go for belgian quested lime go there it was his first for the country and the interesting thing is he used to play for manchester united in england at the time it was about making a naturalized citizen so he could play for england one day so that the people at the f.a.a. last night he's from scratch their heads thinking had we had we just done that he would've been scoring for us instead of for belgium but what about
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a number because they've lost a bit of momentum and they've arrested the starting line up in the last time they did that was two years ago the euros and they went on to lose to iceland in the next round so it doesn't bode well but there's no iceland so i couldn't it was going to happen this time around well there's certainly a lot to play for a group if you look at colombia yesterday looks like they've got things back on track absolutely yeah they start the tournament with a defeat against japan but one next game against poland last night they want to get the only goal in that game coming from gary mina in the seventy fourth minute and it meant that colombia won the group the tougher thing though is actually for senegal who the news in this particular game they were the last african team who could have qualified for the last sixteen and because of the way this game ended they were the messi of the fi fair play rule and of course japan who play the same time yeah let's talk about that japan game there's some controversy there against poland and so poland won their first game atonement is a good thing but you knew the results went the way they would advance the last sixteen so the situation here is that beginning with the goal for poland young bednarik scoring that only goal in the fifty ninth minute quite
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a nice header. this was his first goal for the country but after this scene we're seeing here that they had a myth. and it's a shot of the head of the japan players here just part of the whole lot of back and the reason why they were doing that is because they were trying not to lose the ball to concede a goal because they were on the same number of points number of goals scored. as senegal will but they had to be less yellow cards so this fair play rule means that if everyone's equal then the yellow cards counts because japan had less they went through and that means as you said senegal is going home and that means there's no african teams going to the next stage of the tournament why is that exactly i mean that's is there was because the african teams west before and since one nine hundred eighty two and we've seen some decent displays of the last years cameroon one thousand nine hundred ninety gold two thousand and two ghana in two thousand and ten who almost made it the semifinal in the reason why these teams aren't making any further in my opinion is just chances they're not given the chance if you put into perspective africa their fifty five african countries you could in
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theory qualify for the world cup but only five qualifying spaces the way from the hand also fifty five countries get thirteen fourteen if you include russia who are the host this time around or the south americans there are ten south american countries who can qualify for the world cup four and a half places going there so it's just there's no equilibrium african teams have a very small chance of actually going to the world cup it's all and then they're in groups against pretty big teams and they just don't have the opportunity to advance the same way as teams from europe south america to the right they're not the only ones or sixteen teams now going home who you missed the most probably. even though they lost six want to guessing than just the way they celebrated scoring a goal being at the world cup it is incredible to see and it was so nice to see a team gets the world cup for the very first time just enjoy what it is right will definitely a lot to look forward to in the knockout stages nic mechanic line from good news for thanks very much well today is a rest day for the remaining world cup teams before the next crucial knockout phase begins on saturday so how is russia handling the world's biggest football festival
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it is the halfway mark so let's take stock. there's everything from russian folk music. to dance a multi-cultural festival to delight the eyes and ears of thirsty football fans no matter which team is winning or losing on the pitch. yury rich chateau went to take a look if you want to know what is the mood is like the hall for a point of the gold cup here and also you have to come here to nicole's castrates in the heart of moscow because so much is going on here this is why the party is. owners have issued a drastic warning be surprised could be running low but even after two weeks of the tournament this still plenty of russian hospitality left. going out earlier than normal and try to close on time we don't always manage it
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because the fans just don't want to go home if it's fantastic fun for us would like to have well cup fans here every summer. the stadiums are naturally a top priority during the world cup and experts say all eleven venues a tried and tested some up brand new others have been completely refurbished. it is well the couple is a matter of great prestige for russia the team cheer is it's an opportunity for us to show our country in a new large way different from our image in the west everything in russia has been meticulously prepared. for. fifteen thousand volunteers have been recruited to help the fans from all around the world extra english lessons have been laid on to counter the cliché that russians can't speak any other languages think you'll build
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a dam might get us out of the most important thing is to smile. so this if he's this is a feels welcome. when we aren't you and we keep smiling. a little but yet it all feels very positive but many are asking what will happen in russia after the final whistle blows. russia will be what it has always been an all star a tarion state reactionary and listless the football will be quickly forgotten internationally putin may not be seen as so isolated for that but that doesn't take anything away from the importance of the world cup. for the next two weeks the world will be watching as the fans pop in some abrasion of the world's biggest sporting. our top stories we're following for you here on as many as one hundred migrants are feared dead after
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their boat capsized off the coast of libya on. the libyan navy says it's not clear if all the passengers have drowned it's also not know yet how many migrants were on board the vessel when it went down. leaders say they have reached a deal on migration after marathon talks in brussels the french president says european cooperation has prevailed over nationalist german chancellor angela merkel has welcomed the deal that says much work still needs to be done to overcome the divisions. and five people have been killed in a shooting at the offices of a newspaper in the u.s. state of maryland police believe it was a targeted attack the suspect now in custody had previously sued the newspaper of her story about him stalking a former class. thank you for watching we were back in about thirty minutes.
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the be. more intrigued by international talk show for journalists to discuss the topic of the week can you preserve bitter divisions over migration or will it just set its longstanding humanitarian principles and turn its back on refugees time for fortress europe that's our topic on quite recounting choice.
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quadriga next on d w. it's lawyer. car culture. hair. color superman. superfood stylish style icon to lead a horse. lifestyle during. the moment. sixteen. cultures in india. a clash between those who believe in arranged marriage
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and those who want to marry for. because that's shaking families and society to the core. my father will be angry sometimes i think the way he did. commandos starch joining d w. hello and welcome to quadriga this week's european union summit was set to be dominated by a deepening political crisis over immigration whether a compromise can be found and its outcome could decide the fate of germany's governing coalition and the ultimate.

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