Skip to main content

tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  July 11, 2018 4:00pm-4:59pm CEST

4:00 pm
this is deemed to be news coming to you live from berlin u.s. president donald trump lashes out at his nato allies for germany as far as i'm concerned this captive to russia because it's getting short of coverage for all. it's not only germany in trumps the line of fire he says who are neutral members are taking advantage of america we ask what all this means for the trans atlantic alliance also coming up with a new nazi goes to jail for life beyond
4:01 pm
a cheaper is found guilty of ten murders in germany most of them racially motivated the evidence of the five did long trial shocked the nation. in the next sixty minutes the first pictures showing the thai cave boys recovering in hospital they all said to be in good condition reports say they have a sadistic to keep them calm during their rescue their ordeal trapped in their flooded cave system had lasted almost three weeks. and the sport from south to to the world cup final assignment entities go and push the blues past belgium france and play the winner of the other seventy five in the grisha and england face off tonight. something of a warm welcome. sparks already flying in brussels ahead of the summit
4:02 pm
of nato leaders which is just getting underway u.s. president daughter trump arrived at nato headquarters a short time ago he made clear that he expects america's european allies to create more for their defense this morning at a meeting with nato head start and but trump took particular aim at germany here's what he said. dirty as far as i'm concerned this captive to russia because it's getting so much energy from. so we're supposed to protect germany but they're getting their energy for explain that to me you know. now the german chancellor responded shopping to those comments by donald trump this is what uncle america had to say a while ago. it's because he gave them i would just like to say that i experienced
4:03 pm
in person when a part of germany was controlled by the soviet union what would you i am very happy that today we are united in freedom and that we can death but also say that we determine our policies independently and can make independent decisions and that is good the good side of the secret that we now join our brussels bureau chief marks hoffman was at the nato headquarters max shah was from the german chancellor talking about making policy independently i'll be heading towards a show down between these two leaders at this summit. at least she took it to a personal level as you just heard that i'm reading connecting what trump said about russia to her past when she lived in east germany which was occupied by the soviet union so apparently you know i met her doesn't show too many feelings but she is not amused i think that's safe to say and also difficult for her that donald trump recently has started establishing
4:04 pm
a pattern connecting different topics that in the past were separated on an international level for example trade and defense or now the relationship between germany and russia and defense trump is connecting them creating these conditions through them direct or indirect and trying to add up the pressure on some of the nato allies especially germany to pay more but it was given the context to why trump raised this issue of russian gas supplies the runcie use that in germany is captive by russia thanks film comments to make. it's especially confusing when you know that he well it be too much to say he's a fan of letting your pooch in but in the past he has said some rather kind words about the russian president and he's going to meet him next week on monday in helsinki so he's contradicting himself in many ways here but what's important for him seems to be at least a relentless well attack on germany from different angles take the car industry for
4:05 pm
example now the payments to russia to payments to nato their relationship to russia so that seems an endless supply doesn't really matter to him whether it makes sense if you look at the whole picture but to keep up the pressure on germany he really seems to think that the germans are free riding in nato that it's unfair when you look at the trade picture and all that and for germany it's getting harder and harder to really try to respond in a coherent way to all these accusations that's inside the gym and john says rejected his criticism that germany is not doing enough wouldn't need to but what does all this bickering mean for the trans atlantic alliance the u.s. and its allies seem to be drifting further and further a pot. well to be fair the germans have pledged to spend more and they do for now they're spending one point two percent of their g.d.p. on defense and nato his goal is to spend two percent so the germans are trying to
4:06 pm
increase that amount but the problem here of course is trust can the other nato allies still trust a partner in this case the most important partner of the u.s. to really do in their eyes the right thing if there really is an emergency if there's a problem to stick to the article five meaning common defense to protect the other allies as if it were your own territory and even if there's not a huge change on the ground here i mean the military direction has remained basically the same even with trump there is doubt among our allies that when it really comes to the situation that trump will be ready to sacrifice american lives and also more american money to help other allies like germany maxell funded obviously brussels bureau chief at the nato headquarters thank you very much for bringing us up to date and of course you'll be keeping an eye at that a nato summit in bring you more developments as soon as they become available now caught in the southern city of new nic the german city of new nick has found
4:07 pm
a member of a neo nazi terrorists and guilty of murdering ten people in a decade long spree began to chip a has been sentenced to life in prison she belonged to a group calling itself the national socialist underground and as it gathered out the racially motivated mud just two bombings and a series of robberies between two thousand and two thousand and eleven. the verdict was a long time coming guilty of ten counts of murder the out achievement the only survivor of the new nazi murder cell that life in prison. outside the court media politicians and lawyers gathered as the judges were still reading the full verdict . this club is consequent it's right that she was sentenced for life imprisonment and was found grievously culpable which means she will not automatically be released after fifteen years cheaper pleaded not guilty although she was part of the neo nazi to you for fourteen years she claimed that she did not know about any
4:08 pm
of the murders as lawyers regard today's verdict as judicially flawed in their view she did not actively take part in the crimes would be so you go to the grounds for the judgement up until now are downright flimsy the court's clearly disregards the unequivocal specifications of the federal court of justice regarding complicity we will contest the verdict with an appeal. although the trial has ended many questions remain unanswered at all possible accomplices the involvement of the intelligence services and the failure of the police to properly investigate the case. as the school has assumed that there is a clear and unequivocal verdict today what is also very clear is that today's verdict should not put an end to the discussion and it should not put an end to the debate surrounding a resolution of the be real mean sign for other and as you accomplices were charged along with be out to cheat them relatives of the victims suspect that there are other people who knew about the crimes and facilitated them demanding that
4:09 pm
investigators stay on the case until they have oncet all the questions. and you have a correspondent frank kaufman is in munich standing outside the courtroom where the verdict was a given fact they have been large protests going on there was a demonstrator is so angry about. it but i'm rich why about it i'll be out to cheap at the main accuse received a very strong verdict with life imprisonment. that the people that are accused of that also accused in the courtroom. here looks a little bit different for example one supporter of the terrorist group. even can leave. the courtroom as a free man to die he will not stay in prisons another person. miss of only one who was actively supporting the group by searching for weapon.
4:10 pm
that the terrorists use for their killings he is on he's imprisoned already for six and a half years and he got a sentence of ten years so this is why people are angry and they think that additional day the network support saying the national socialists on the ground are not really properly investigated and fanning of this is a trying the chimney and made headlines around the world why didn't shock germany so much. it's for the first point the sheer monstrosity of these crimes ten people were killed. in the course of all these years from two thousand and seven two thousand from two thousand to two thousand and seven undercover and very often police were convinced. the families had connections with the murders or respect party responsible so the victim's family also mostly under investigation then two thousand and eleven it
4:11 pm
became clear no it was a terrorist group that really shake the political debate and germinate between immigrants and other people and. the whole society say what are really play are able to play a role here many of them especially during the course of this study feel that they are second class citizens to fund this to so many open questions about this trial and including allegations of institutional racism within the security agencies what lessons if any have been done from this case. you have to say what the future brings i have the feeling off to the state of the dissipate is not over especially when you keep in mind the. coach the police investigator said at the beginning that i know one example of the same sex family the first victim for example his brother in law to tell you a broken man because he was under suspicion for several years and the question is
4:12 pm
whether police is really thinking about their approaches after this tried and really is going to learn from what has happened here what people call the and it's too complex frank kaufman in munich outside the courtroom where the verdict was delivered and a protest is going on thank you very much for that life update from that. and we had frank talking about to just activists want to ensure the victims of the new nazi mud does remain front and center of discussion about the case and one left wing group pasted over more than two hundred german streets to commemorate the victims the chills streets that carry the names of figures from the nazi era all this the group's aim was to make this is to violence in germany visible police in at least one city of opened a criminal vandalism investigation saying the sticky signs but difficult to remove now there's
4:13 pm
a tweeting about the case using the hash tag kind sloth's strace wiping the slate he has won from a woman who says this still so much to clear up hundreds of accomplices a probably walking around free the links to the states still haven't been clarified so no wiping the slate clean and this from a man who's say's the verdict in the end is your trial is the legal appraisal of the misdeeds of the accused but in the social reckoning this nor wiping the slate clean only to the victims and their families to fund new project racism in order forms. you're watching the devaney is going up ahead destination moscow which is to kick off creation and fanciful taken over the russian capital and we have everything you need to know ahead of today's big class . but first let's talk again about alpha's and he's going to be talking tablet
4:14 pm
every day these days but can we call it a trade war yet no but while donald trump and. exchanging bob remarks over trade at the nato summit tensions between the u.s. and china have gone up a notch as america announces yet another round of tariffs on chinese imports on the most recent list of products diverse products as alive eels human have bicycle speedometers dog leashes and toilet paper sounds funny but it adds up to two hundred billion dollars worth of products and the measures are already putting chinese consumers off buying american made products containers apply ling up in shanghai and now to mistakes apparently from the u.s. that no one will buy because they're too expensive since last week chinese customs or thirty's have been searching for meat and so imports from the u.s. and slapping them with terms of twenty five percent customers in supermarkets of
4:15 pm
feeling the effects and the food industry is already looking for other supply is outside the u.s. . but washington insists on china changing its unfair trade practices and opening its economy that's why the trumpet minister triumphal faces the situation in the united states. for an account deficit trade deficit for thirty four years and he's no longer willing to accept that she does something was done in brussels so here really is and trouble to to get the right cuts where it's all said can you decipher a strategy behind all that and if so what is it not some disruption of we'll try. you know it's not to know to hear you misunderstand it. a person who says deficits and surpluses should not belong to share and free trade and free trade is right and that is trump those people in europe who say where you do whatever you
4:16 pm
want you have surpluses deficits are wrong the whole idea of free trade is not about deficits and surpluses about comparative advantages the money guy has and the other guy but not about absolute atlantia. doesn't deficit reflecting absolute to plan such and so for trump isn't principle right he's doing it not very smart i mean he should manipulate a bit the dollar down by thirty percent or so and the whole thing would. be done and it's much more effective than all the terrorists up and down again debt it's not it really not smart and sooner or later i think you are militias that there's much credit to to get the dollar down better presented then yes no problem at all anymore but what's the way he could do that getting the dollar down doubt many many ways of bringing a currency if the euro you talk it down for us presidents either talk it down he would give a press conference and say well we want the dollar down the trade is would believe
4:17 pm
that the federal reserve the american set of banks they would remain down i mean look at switzerland and other countries many countries have weakened dekker and that's what it's all about to protect their trade and that is what we're term could do and nobody could complain nobody could say oh that's unfair we know the right value of the dollar it's all nonsense then he would be out of there of the critic interesting suggest from economists conifer thank you very much. and that's all for me for now of more business for you a little later in the show for now it's spectrum into. the. close to zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero zero. zero zero s. are you ok with just hours left until kickoff fans of england in creation have
4:18 pm
taken to the streets of moscow ahead of the semifinal clash england fans seem to be the most vocal so far. joining me now from moscow is the w.'s emily sherman emily you at the moscow fan might at the second semifinal of the world cup that is of course course have us is england what are you hearing from fans. well yes that match will be taking place just behind me here at luzhniki stadium and i've been speaking to some of the russian fans here at the fan mile and the views here are very much mixed about who they will be supporting on the one hand people say the croatians are kind of a brother nation they have kind of a shared soviet past but it was the croatian team that kicked the russian team out of the world cup so people aren't very happy about that of course and when it comes to england on the one hand there was all this sort of diplomatic wrangling ahead of
4:19 pm
the world cup over the poisoning of russians by. and people have said here to me you know that has really discredited england in their eyes even the team but on the other hand a lot of russians really like english people so use a very much divided about who to support tonight now that the russian team has been kicked out but it really does get the lowdown on the seven finals coming up a crucial was anyone from jonathan crane from us let's just let's stay with russian fans as you've been talking about them how is this world cup actually transformed does this tournament transformed russia. well absolutely it certainly has electrified the whole country i mean even in moscow you could really watch all the world cup games all over the city even in the metro trains and it also has renewed russian people's faith in their own team i mean the russian team got much farther than anyone had expected and people when they were kicked out you know were crying in each other's arms and also tens of thousands of people came to
4:20 pm
the found zone which is right across from me just after they were kicked out and were chanting in support of their team chanting russia russia and the atmosphere even for those who are not very interested in football has been amazing out on the streets as well real festival atmosphere as fans here have told me ride any shelling in moscow i'm sure they're going to be post was caught booze once they don't know meant is over but enjoyed the excitement for the week that it's still out. ok let me now talk about tonight's game creation against india in the second seventy five and don't increase from it's not for me it's doing my best to reign impostor all through snyder this is uncharted territory for both teams it's been a very long time since it was them of course for a semi final of the world cup croatia you have to go back to nineteen ninety eight it was with their previous golden generation the so-called golden generation by cats of comparisons between that scene and the current crop of players england if
4:21 pm
you go even further back it was ninety nine c.m.'s ended in a penalty shoot out defeat against west germany so that shows how long ago that was teams have had their fight for a share of heartbreak since then but exceeding expectations about threats were a lot of hope and optimism we've seen this coming home mean for england that's a reform a song when england hosted the european championships in nineteen ninety six a lot of hope for both sides you could argue england may have had the slightly easier path to the semifinal croatia have had to come through two penalty shoot outs to get here but that let's take a look at what's at stake for both sides. this flight from london heathrow should be packed with england fans but the check in desk is seen busy a day's political tensions fears over russian hooligans and costs mean the number of england supporters usually at a will cope is well down this year even ahead of a first semifinal in twenty eight years. organizers of brought out
4:22 pm
a former miss russia to try to encourage more england fans to make the trip. i says i want to say to english fans guys that get it together and come to russia and support your national team because they have gotten into the same in final four. croatia's wealth of talent could also be scaring off some england fans real madrid's luka moderates event to strike a mario man to catch and barcelona midfielder even rockets have shown so far a knock out wins by a penalties hoffenheim forward andrei kraemer each knows england well from his time at leicester. england play more attractive an attacking football than in previous years. it's hard to say what suits especially because we have our own style. i'm sure the match won't be off to a fast start because there's so much at stake we need to stay focused especially in defense. they could go the distance but
4:23 pm
know the saying them fans don't want penalties. ok jonathan so who's going to win tonight on the story obviously have to say inside your i think that if they felt that it does have one thing in their favor in theory they should be fresher croatia had that penalty shoot out tree penalty shoot outs to come free england rested a load of players in their final group game against belgium south they criticized for that at the time it could be masterful now i think on paper croatia have a technically better side with luka marc rich and even racquets they also have more experience than hafez scored has played in world cup about the last world cup in the youngest one of the youngest in the tournament but southgate says really kind of instilled some calm into the side and i think if they can contain moderates not let him dictate the play they do more than half a chance ok you know we already know who will tonight's game is on sunday it's francois d.b. to bed you what do you make of that game i was a bit disappointed with huge expectation that the away match would be an exciting
4:24 pm
game but in the end it was a big does different fronts it was so they did fun spectacular they did what they had to do it wasn't the open free scoring game that we might have expected but they defended well they were looking to hit on the counter-attack and as you say we were expecting goals and in the end the goal came from the most simplest of source is a header from a corner let's take a look at the action. it wasn't until the twenty second minute it's k.g. semifinal sprang to life belgians toby and a viral tonight on the turn a stunning say from hugo to reese fronts attack next kilian impact pay feeding benjamin providing the thirty eight minutes of vital stuff from tivo culture this time the breakthrough arrived early in the second tough francais someone in t.t. rose highest and not home and swung griese wins corner in the fifty first minute. nothing called swat could do about that one above france turned on the magic to produce one of the game slick his moves shortly after
4:25 pm
a lucky escape for belgium the red devils three men forward in the dying moments but the blur held firm under pressure to illyria the final whistle the first world cup final appearance for france in twelve years croatia england line wait a heart breaking into the tournament for belgium. the villa from its. now little statue and if you like berryman's entities go with the twenty six from a corner at this broke up not seen more of the world cup since nine hundred sixty six the one that broke up in the end. ok revision see thank you very much i think again for your insights and good luck and the best team will. you're watching news coming up ahead the first pictures showing the thai cave boys recovering in hospital there was said to be in good condition reports if they were kept sedated a to keep them calm during the rescue we've been going live to time and to find out
4:26 pm
the very latest from that. list of additional picked up and do check out a web service did every dot com follow us on twitter you can also check us out on facebook i'm going to step into a break and i'll see you shortly off that do stay with me as if you can. every journey begins with the first step and every language the first word the most critical the coaxing germany. why not come with him. it's simple all morning on your mobile and free. t.w. zealand in course. germany maybe.
4:27 pm
the nationalist socialist underground this mayor nazi terrorist group committed ten murders within seven years. the trial against main defendant got to chapter and her called this is coming to an end the reports from the courthouse in munich. there were in the end it's your trial today on the interview news. stories that people have a rollover information they provide the opinions they want to express d.w. on facebook and twitter up to date and in touch. did brown really love hitler. or did she love the life you provided for her. she was the dictator's mistress.
4:28 pm
only an insignificant concert at his side. or pursuing her own ambitions. but certainly no other woman got some close to. life and death with the fun. starts july twenty first on d w. come in welcome to what you did on the news coming to you live from berlin i'm under touch even great to have your company our top stories sponsor been flying at the nato summit in brussels u.s. president dummer trump criticizes european allies for not being enough for their defense trump to particular in i gem many unexcused on members of taking advantage of america. a german court has sentenced this woman be out it's cheaper to live in jail for two. and muddles she was a member of
4:29 pm
a neo nazi terrorist group that carried out a decade long motivated killing spree and lawyers have launched an appeal to. the time ministry has released the fullest images of the trav boys and their coach being very skewed from the flooded cave it's been reported that the boys was sedated to keep them from panicking as they were carried on stretches to the dark and narrow underground passages the group was taken out in batches of the course of three days in an operation it's chief core mission impossible at the rescue went ahead with oxygen levels inside the cave thomas said and more rain was full cost the youth a soccer team has had been trapped in the cave complex for the three weeks by high water caused by monsoon rains the group is said to be in the hospital making a full recovery. it was the outcome the world had been hoping and praying for there
4:30 pm
was jubilation as news reached the volunteers helping with the rescue operation twelve of the boys and their coach safely out of the cave and recovering in hospital but today is a great day older boys to say no i'm not. trying to for the regional governor who let the has a to smelt a national mission and to get the boys out no one thought we could do it but we did it it was a first for the world thanks to the thai people government agencies and the private sector. specialist foreign divers and members of the time navy's elite seal unit succeeded against all the odds in bringing out the group a difficult and dangerous process with two divers leading each one of the boys and their coach through more than four kilometers of dark narrow and partially flooded underground tunnels one diver told later of his fears as the first boy was brought to would say when i saw. the dive on the. record probably
4:31 pm
about fifty meters are still. up it was a good. so i was i thought i was very scared it didn't fair court but i saw that he was alive and breathing and seemed to be all right i felt very good a fleet of ambulances transported the rescued boys from the cave entrance to a hospital in the nearby city of chiang rai. for the families that had been an agonizing wait eighteen days hoping against hope that their loved ones would be brought out to life. i want to thank everyone who took part in the government and all the officials the police the soldiers and the seals both from thailand and abroad and. joy and relief on all sides that for the football team known as the wild boar was their harrowing underground ordeal is
4:32 pm
finally over. now these obvious foreign news is standing by for us near the cave complex in chiang rai in northern thailand welcome a sort of a you've been covering the story since it first broke and it turned from mission impossible to mission successful authorities have now released new pictures from the cave what more have you learned about this operation. that was really stunning just watching those videos that were released at the press conference that finished just about an hour ago we saw footage of rapidly flowing water of how narrow this cave actually is i mean we've been reporting how narrow it is but once you see it that is that makes the whole of the difference. asked for facts we were told that the distance that the boys had to go through water wasn't actually all that long because the water pumps have pretty much taken out water
4:33 pm
from most of the areas so it was basically a distance of two hundred fifty meters that the boys had to go through swimming they were basically is supported by divers so they didn't really have to do any any any work themselves they only have to breathe underwater now i'm a diver myself i know that it's not only it's it is really quite an effort especially when you're not experienced if this first time that you actually have to breathe on the water so this was really an effort and these boys managed to come out and we still have to wait for a few more details it was quite a lengthy press conference but the bottom line was everything went quite well with the boys and the coach in the hospital in quarantine what do we know about their condition florian. you know we've also seen videos from the hospital and
4:34 pm
a few of the boys were already walking around they were showing the peace sign so that was quite encouraging we learned that a few of them are suffering from mine a lung problems but all in all they're in good conditions they will have to stay in the hospital for up to ten more days after that they will have to recuperate from home for thirty days so they won't be back to their school that soon but they are in good spirits they still. been able to embrace their parents because they're still under isolation but that's just a precaution so all in all the boys are in good health in fact or if you visited the school some of the boys attend this must be a litter of the classmates. yes everyone that we talked to was smiling they said we can't wait to have them back they told us the cost mates of the boys told us that they were actually were they had been taking notes for their cars made so that they would not fall behind too much so there's
4:35 pm
a lot of children solidarity shown but why don't we let the boys or some of the boys and girls also speak for themselves. when i first heard the boys were missing i went to the cave myself to help look for them but the authorities wouldn't let me so i followed the whole rescue mission on social media. and my friend don was in the cave i was so relieved to learn that everyone had been rescued and that they're ok. we were told not to ask them any questions about the case and we should just wait for them to tell us if they feel like it but we're planning a big welcome ceremony when they come back. home. so a lot of very happy children there florian who spoke of course in this moment of joy he must also pay tribute to the one time navy seem to lost his life trying to save his voice so to be a nurse in northern thailand thank you very much. that now bring you up to date with some other stories making news around the officials that have gone in
4:36 pm
stance a gunman have stormed the department of education in the eastern city of jalalabad at least eleven employees were killed and ten wounded security forces exchanged gunfire with the attackers of five oz before killing two of them is the second attack in jalalabad in as many days. brahman chinese political campaign conman has been sentenced to thirteen years in jail after a court fontanne guilty of subversion of state power. jailed as a counter-revolutionary in the one nine hundred eighty s. and has already spent a total of twenty two years in prison. see a suicide bombing at an election rally in the country's northwest has killed a secular politician. and at least. fifty people were also injured in the attack at the yvonne ridley party event in the city of. this comes ahead of national polls should do for later this month the pakistani taliban has claimed
4:37 pm
responsibility. japan's prime minister shinzo abhi has visited flood stricken boss of the country as the death toll reduced to one hundred seventy six from the wasn't flooding in decades to rancher rain course floods and triggered landslides last week with dozens of people still missing government officials are admitting more could have been done to keep people safe. towns that are now muddy fields of debris this is how many areas of western japan look after more than a week of torrential rain has triggered historic floods the death toll is reaching into the hundreds that's likely to rise as some seventy five thousand search and rescue workers comb flood zones for the missing but landslides and overflowing lakes and rivers aren't the sole cause of death government officials have said they could have done more to keep people safe prime minister shinzo has visited the affected region canceling a trip overseas to meet with flood victims with
4:38 pm
a leadership election to win in september he's promising support for places like the ok yeomen hiroshima prefectures. we will put all our efforts into rebuilding people's lives in the disaster hit areas as soon as possible with great things but it won't be easy scorching temperatures have followed up the heavy rain putting relief workers and those in shelters at risk of heat stroke it also means more storms and more flooding may be on the way. you're watching news coming up ahead family planning in kenya we look at the efforts being made to have teenage girls to challenge their own sexual and reproductive health. and french actress catherine deneuve and talk conducted. among those on the japan's first to just being an imperial awards culture desk with small.
4:39 pm
but fast it's over to get hot and cuba is liberalizing its economy even all. owners of small businesses in cuba welcomed the country's reauthorization of private enterprise offer here long but it will see tighter controls them before the communist nation wars that increasing the role of the private sector has fueled inequality mainly because tax evasion and illegal employment in the sector have become widespread small private enterprises such as beautiful loans student cuba since two thousand and ten when from the president raul castro lunch reforms to modernize the economy. but many entrepreneurs haven't been watching the rules closely enough tax evasion undeclared staff and failing to pay employer contributions have become common that's why the government stopped issuing new licenses for some business segments last year now they're also rising businesses
4:40 pm
again but with stricter rules. it helps us protect our work and to some extent it will end illegal practices in terms of fuel regulations and other things. we got here. although running a small business has transformed the life of many cubans for the better the regime fears successful business owners could threaten its grip on power so to keep individual invasions at bay when you rule states that business licenses will be restricted to one person despite stricter regulation cuba badly needs the private sector to revive its crumbling soviet era economy. donald trump is increasingly targeting agricultural products from europe in his tariff spree just take spanish olives which have been under fire since november last year the u.s. department of trade up held a decision on tuesday saying all of production is unfairly subsidized farmers and
4:41 pm
depend on the american market and sales plummeted. only if trees as far as the eye can see in southern spain they shake not only the nonstate but the economy taking trumps decision to include spanish olives in his trade war has been a pleasure to the people of undiminished sierra under source of heated discussion even during the world cup. alongside all the other negative measures trump has decided to implement the g t's on a very harmful to the agriculture of under including our village. could be a lot of the real. agro sivia is a co-operative that's been hit especially hard it's spain's biggest only of exporter and the us is its biggest market by far. only if there were very popular products but since trump introduced his import tariffs sales have practically
4:42 pm
hogged. fifty people who've already lost their job for a severe and the remaining workers are worried. you had their political fight where angry but mostly stands in gaelic i'm not sleeping well and i keep wondering what's going to happen to. my family in the mortgage depend on my salary so of course it's a big burden market don't. know if the u.s. is accuse pain of dumping selling its products too cheaply in the us and outprice in california olives trump says he's just hoping american farmers. you know what the u.s. is saying is we'll impose tariffs on all products that provide competition to american products and there are simple reasons why we are a competitor we produce more cheaply more healthfully in greater quantities and with more for i.t. than californians a little more about luckily for me i know. these new measures every threat to the
4:43 pm
european agricultural policy in general the u.s. . mint has criticised subsidies of enabling speech selling its products too cheaply in the us and outprice in california olives trump says he's just hoping american farmers. what the u.s. is saying is we will impose tariffs on all products that provide competition to american products and there are simple reasons why we are competitive we produce more cheaply more healthfully in great quantities and with move right here in california and luckily for me i know. these new measures every threat to the european agricultural policy in general the u.s. government has criticised subsidies of enabling spanish farmers to sell below a fair value french and german agricultural products could also end up in the firing line so i got up with the attack on the common agricultural policy as an
4:44 pm
attack on a cornerstone of the e.u. would trump is looking to play europe apart with this behavior but. you know i mean that retro. brussels has already threatened countermeasures the trade conflict between the u.s. and europe is entering the next ground. allan's budget airline ryanair is set to cancel ten percent of its flights to and from auckland on thursday as it prepares for a twenty four hour strike by pilots who will be the first in the series of planned industrial action staff in spain portugal belgium and italy will carry out their own strikes later in the months ryanair is known for its low cost fast but critics say they come at the expense of good working conditions and bad salaries. so for me it's back to my staff thank you very much. we take you now to kenya where marriage is still common specially in rural areas girls often do not have access to
4:45 pm
the information or tools that could have them plan their families and while still their partners often don't support them so non-governmental organizations are working to empower us to take charge of their sexual reproductive health our correspondent. visited a school near mombasa. moony is a small village about an hour's drive from kenya the city. social worker halima ali has come to see how the youth club at the local primary school is very. we have clubs school health clubs schools. so the clubs brings them to talk about issues of sexual and reproductive health it's here that eighteen year old jessica can get the information she needs.
4:46 pm
the so much as one when my parents separated and left us alone for a period of time i met a man and then got pregnant last november. he told me not to have an abortion he's a year older than me and also in school. and. when i said this to my father he told me to go live with the man who made me pregnant. she's married now and is due to give birth to her first child in september. i did not want this i'm still a child myself. mad and don't know any as population grows by two point nine percent annually that means over one million babies are born every year especially to mothers who are under the age of nineteen and rarely have access to family planning. aside from excess there is the issue of support from their male partners
4:47 pm
authorities here at the coast are trying to address what is known as the minute syndrome loosely translated as the onus syndrome about them when a syndrome about a woman being owned by the husband that is what it is such that any decision you know like women of north korea to make any decision. is the man who makes the decisions for them so that is what the witness in the room is so some women would go to a facility get counseling when asked to take a method they say no i have to go and consult my husband because you know how they put it. when you yeah i belong to somebody else so that somebody else is the one that brings the news decisions everything. the club teaches its members to be more assertive when it comes to their reproductive health. food that once they started getting in the. discussion they're able to grow up to be responsible
4:48 pm
citizens disposable males what it will to address even if you don't fix or productive health like that or that victim even the female that. jessica says she now knows what family planning method she will use up to the delivery and hope that it will give her time to finish her education. the premium imperial the most prestigious prizes in the country was the awarded annually while the japanese art association and this is been as have just been announced robin miller from this is here to tell us more and with me welcome festing involvement and before we start hearing about the recipients tell us why did you stop despise it fills a gap left by the nobel prize actually because there's only one sort of cultural prize the nobel prize for literature and when japan was wealthy back in the
4:49 pm
ninety's prints talk about so who's the younger brother of the emperor thought it was time for the japan to contribute to the global community in a meaningful way and he chose the arts sadly he died before they were established he died not to eighty seven they were established in his memory in ninety days you know i look into it and i think it's too wealthy but now coming to the crisis when those with a short while ago tell us they were civil china stay in london new york tokyo paris and hear about lin and there would have been five categories this painting the sculpture because. of this music this film it's and there's also a grant awarded every year to an institution that sports starts this year it's the shakespeare schools foundation in britain and the field of painting is the ninety year old bells and pains appear i would. since the abstract expressionist this is the sculpture prize we just missed start as a bit behind the picture is that that is
4:50 pm
a sculpture of fog by fuji kodak kyra famous for fog sculptures the move i was going to say but you saw move but i see the picture behind me of the wonderful cuts we didn't see one capture cre of film stripes let's have a look back at last risk korea. in the nothing film legend known for her timeless and iconic roles. elegant independent captivating and cool at the same time catherine deneuve has been on the screen for more than sixty years she says she's fortunate she had a good start. most rational but most especially young actresses are often judged for their beauty but i was lucky that early on i was able to work with directors who also gave me strong like good roles and the whole clip for. roles that threw herself into and her career flourished she's worked with some of the most important
4:51 pm
directors of her time like roman polanski propulsion louis bruno for his risque below the shore. and together with your are deployed for francois to force classic the last metro but a letter published in for time has not slowed kathleen do nerves she's a prolific artist with more than one hundred movies under her belt how she chooses her roles remains simple. i think i am still on the same it's the same thing that i felt you know years ago it's always the desire you know for. the characters but the film is about most of all it's the film the director that they choose in recent years didn't have start together with beer can last one trees dancer in the dark. age women this isn't easy and martin provost the midwife in twenty seven training. than any clothes.
4:52 pm
for her work catherine deneuve has received dozens of awards and accolades and now she's got another one. ok so now you tell me of all those fries but that two more demeaning music and. and from what i understand these prizes are given for a body a what not just want the tequila yeah yeah that's right this kind of lifetime achievement award to the not given to asses who are twenty years old prince of the people of a body of work to say and in the cash a great architecture it's being given to a french been as well this is chris jones oc and this is a concert hole in luxembourg that he designed is that fabulous just the film on a cold in fact a lot like he's actually already won the pritzker prize which is the all star in
4:53 pm
architectural so but this is a wonderful prize for him and finally the music prize has gone to the great conductor the my store all the italian my survey colorado moves here and we've seen a lot of him here in berlin as he's a favorite guest conductor of the burden for the monica currently the music director of the chicago symphony orchestra and for nineteen years he was music director of los you know he's had an extraordinary career he's very much renowned for his interpretations of verdi opera with his nineteen years. which isn't surprising and he has varied in his veins because verdi was also a scholar of eddie's lots of very operas were pretty had a scholar various riccardo muti i think has very well just a prize for him indeed i should finally say that all these prizes a well financially rewarded with over one hundred thousand jurors but it's the press stage of course of the premium and parry of it as well here and i could
4:54 pm
understand why this appears to just the web so dry meant absolutely old the winners i mean we had to rush through all the winners that they're all there on the website at d.w. dot com slash culture much more information on the premium and carry on as well robyn move from uk us it is such a pleasure to have you on the program. you're watching did the news just a recap of the top stories if you're following few spots have been flying at the nato summit in brussels a u.s. president donald trump criticizes european allies for not paying enough for the defense are trying to particularly in my germany and accuse all members of taking advantage off america. and german club german court has sentenced this woman be out of chips with her life in jail for ten murders she was a member for near enough to terrorist groups that kind out a decade long racially motivated killing spree. more news coming up for that in
4:55 pm
a few minutes to stay with the of. the.
4:56 pm
time for an upgrade. from. our house with. zine highlights you can make yourself. trends tips and tricks that will turn your home page something special. upgrade yourself with d w's interior design channel on you tube. go just couldn't get this song out of his head. musicologist began searching for the source of these captivating sounds. deep in the rain forest in central africa.
4:57 pm
to find their culture in the state. only a promise to his son to leave a jolt returning to the concrete and glass jungle of new york. the result of reverse culture shock. the cruise documentary from the forest starts aug ninth w. . europe. what unites. what divides. the driving force. what binds the continent together. answers and stories aplenty. spotlight on people. focus on girls on t w.
4:58 pm
mandela one hundred of us on facebook and experience what nelson mandela means for young africans today. the mind of people who are the middle beautiful you are the means to place the way for me to open my did you feel. how did in shape and stuffs. me now think i am. that moment when they leave us to say. i leave but before but sure if you call that home including one to the end of the way i really became a. part of it find us on facebook and on t w dot com. this
4:59 pm
says you know when it was live from berlin a blistering attack at the nato summit u.s. president donald trump singles out drove a need for his anger but in germany as far as i'm concerned this captive to russia because it's getting so much from the energy from russia it's just on the american strikes back and that to hold a frosty meeting trump also been.

64 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on