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tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  July 11, 2018 8:00pm-9:00pm CEST

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this is interviews life from berlin a blistering attack at the nato summit u.s. president donald trump singles out germany for criticism but germany as far as i'm concerned this chapter to russia because it was getting so much coverage from russia to trump also grates alliance members for not paying their fair share is for secretary-general stauffenberg says members have now agreed to pay more also coming up a neo nazi goes to jail for life beyond the shop it is found guilty of ten murders in germany most of them racially motivated the evidence in the five year long trial
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shocked the nation. plus the first pictures showing the boys rescued from a flooded thai kids were covering in the hospital there all set to be in good condition reports say they were sedated to keep them calm during their rescue. and family planning for teenage brides in kenya girls are often married young we look at the efforts being made to help them take charge of their own sexual and reproductive health. in the. uk thank you so much for your company everyone we start our broadcast with that today high stakes nato summit in brussels where sparks have been flying already mainly on the issue of burden sharing and members. of the military alliance not
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pulling their weight when it comes to defense spending after a busy day of meetings the leaders headed to dinner where further discussions are underway u.s. president donald trump wasted no time suggesting that america's european allies increase their spending but the amount he considers appropriate came as a shock that's way above the target that nato members had previously agreed on. all right we can go now to w correspondent terry szell's who is covering the nato summit in brussels terria the today someone got off to an extraordinary start and there is more to come tell us what's happening right now. that's right after that breakfast this morning with the remarks about germany that nobody was expecting there wrapping up with another meal president trump and the rest of the leaders are right now at dinner with european council president donald tusk and european
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commission president john cloud euchre as well as the leaders of finland and sweden and this it's all the more interesting because yesterday president felt like he needed to send a message directly to donald trump and he said in a press availability that he wanted trump to think about the fact that the united states would never have a better ally than europe that all of europe's defense spending went directly to mutual defense and he said that the e.u. spends more than russia and as much as china and that donald trump should think about this and appreciate his allies donald to said because you don't have that many and the other thing i should say is that as we were watching the leaders arrive at the dinner sites down downtown at the same clinton air a tweet emerged from donald trump saying that it's no longer ok that the allies would just reach two percent of g.d.p. spending by two thousand and twenty five but they need to do it immediately so yes
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it was certainly not and not going to be smooth sailing into dinner tonight all right so does that mean well that the outcome no was very uncertain with him just basically not being happy with that two percent. well as you mentioned he did say in the meeting that he thought that four percent was more appropriate and that's that's a number even higher than the u.s. itself spends the country that spends the most honest defense spending and i'm told that inside that meeting there really wasn't any reaction to it it's not actually the first time that the u.s. has suggested that european allies even at two percent would not be spending enough the u.s. spends about three point five percent of its g.d.p. on its military but i'm told that there wasn't really you know any any response nobody felt in there in their speeches inside the room that they needed to to answer the four percent because as we've been discussing all day they're not even close to having all twenty nine allies at two percent and even in two thousand and
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twenty four only about two thirds of the twenty nine members will be spending two percent so it's really sort of out of the realm of possibility that you could raise it to four percent so i don't know if this means he's going to start a new sort of a new category of attacks against the european allies the ones that don't spend four percent but that would be everybody including the united states so that's not very realistic terry shuls thank you so very much reporting from brussels. all right let's get you some more analysis on what's shaping up to be a stormy two day summit like to welcome now tyson barker from the aspen institute jeremy good to see you mr barker president trump seems to have a particularly in for a german he's made disparaging remarks when it comes to germany in the past so that's nothing new but what's very striking is that he singling out berlin now why
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well you're right to point out that he has a pretty deep antipathy to germany and i think that this isn't necessarily as you mentioned new. the thing is with president trump in his white house he sees this as as part of a larger narrative which is trade imbalances interview dependency and security. and what he believes that we can question whether us going about it the right way is an economic powerhouse with low unemployment the biggest economy in europe that is exporting more than any other country in the world seven percent of g.d.p. current account surplus and yet still can't meet these defense spending goals and he says this is fundamentally unfair to the people of the united states what he said today on energy this is a new line but it's one i think we can expect more of all right now he has of course in the meantime also a tweet again because just as shortly before a dinner he tweeted this a comment on on the nato meeting would good is nato of germany is paying russia
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billions of dollars for gas and energy why are there only five out of twenty nine countries that have met their commitments the u.s. is paying for your protection that loses billions on trade must pay two percent of g.d.p. immediately not by twenty twenty five ok so i mean he's echoing some of the things that you pointed out now for the purposes of this discussion let's forget all the rhetoric and the hyperbole and all of that as does he have a point though isn't it time for europe to step up europe is prosperous part of it is due to the protection that nato has provided for decades the u.s. has let that effort they need to step up and pay up the answer from the united states bipartisan answer is yes in two thousand and eleven two thousand and eleven former defense secretary robert gates said nato faces a dim if not dismal future if burden sharing isn't included and the question is are
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we seeing that future today the good side of this if you asked for to cut through the rhetoric is by two thousand and twenty four eighteen of the twenty nine allies will be meeting the defense will every one of the allies but one has reversed the trend the downward trend in defense spending and two thirds of the allies r r. the spending on equipment what was pledged at wales' there are a lot of good stories coming out of the summit the question is can the president take a win and seal the deal and take that win and take credit for it but he's already asking for four percent it which as teri schultz pointed out this is a goal that the united states itself is not meeting and this is not something that has been agreed to nato is a community of values it's an alliance of values and it's a consensus based organization the win from two thousand and fourteen after ukraine invasion after russia's aggression was to get all twenty eight than ours now it's twenty nine to agree to that two percent now what has to happen is they do have to deliver and that starts with germany all right well you mentioned russia that leads
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us nicely in my next question let's talk about timing because on monday president trump is meeting with the russian president vladimir putin he seems to be more comfortable to to go and discuss issues with him than coming to brussels and meet with his nato allies it's not controversial to say that the president has a stronger let's say affinity in some ways and reporter with strong men with autocrats with dictators like sometimes i can do alone or the leader of china. and he's been wanting since the campaign he's been kind of salivating over the potential of resetting that resetting that relationship with russia so now he's going to have that opportunity the question is you know having a summit is what you give at the in of a negotiation that is the cherry on top of an improved relationship the relationship with russia has gotten worse they continue to be active in ukraine in syria sanctions have increased on russia from the united states united states is
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now delivering lethal assistance to ukraine so the question is with all the of the bureaucrats all the people in the defense department the pentagon the state department saying that relations are deteriorating why is the president doing this now. it doesn't work out from the aspen institute jeremy thank you so much for weighing in we greatly appreciate it thank you thanks a lot. first for all right and now to other lead story a parents of the boys rescued from a flooded cave system in thailand have visited them in the hospital but they were only allowed to see them through their sons through a glass window the twelve members of the wildhorse football team and their coach are said to be in good shape and their near three week brush with death but they need time to recover. happy and relatively well after a two and a half week will deal in a flooded cave now recovering in hospital the doctors say they'll be under
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observation for ten days and then resting at home for another month with only water from the caves walls to drink the boys underweight and exhausted they've been kept in corinth because there's still a danger of infection. the relief is overwhelming parents aren't yet allowed to hug their children but they're happy to see them alive. the time navy seals have published these astounding images of the rescue and explained in detail how difficult and dramatic this mission really was the boys were taken out of the cave just as the oxygen levels dropped to a dangerous level they were sedated in order to prevent them panicking in the narrow underwater passages doctors monitored their condition at regular intervals along the route. time navy seals were jubilant they were able to achieve what many thought was mission impossible side by side with international volunteers.
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this unity is not only with chiang rai or thailand it's a global unity this incident was more than a lifesaving mission it's gone beyond that it's the unity of all nationalities at their high school their friends are eagerly waiting for them to return. them home my friend don was in the cave i was so relieved to learn that everyone had been rescued down 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 and now when i get home was it is not just the boys high school where the spectacular rescue mission is the dominating topic all throughout the village of may side we're seeing banners celebrating their new heroes. the boys will have to wait for the celebrations. the chief of the mission says it isn't fully over our final mission he said is to
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send them back home. all right or to some of the other stories making news around the world. officials in afghanistan say gunmen have stormed the department of education in the eastern city of jalalabad at least eleven employees were killed and ten injured security forces exchanged gunfire with the attackers for five hours before killing two of them is the second attack in jalalabad in as many days. pakistani police say a suicide bombing at an election rally in the country's northwest killed at least thirteen people a politician who were on the bill or it was one of those killed fifty people were injured in the attack at the awami national party rally in peshawar are the pakistani taliban has claimed responsibility. from a chinese political campaigner john young man has been sentenced to thirteen years
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in jail after a court found him guilty of quote subversion of state power he was first jailed as a counter-revolutionary back in the one nine hundred eighty s. and has already spent a total of twenty two years behind bars. and i'm going to hand you over to funny now because the exchange of blows between president trump and the chancellor continues in trade of right with quite remarkable to say the least play loud and i'm going to be exchanging bob's remarks about trade at the nato summit today start of the day prong side against merkel asserting that germany was quote totally controlled and captive to russia as he objected to a pipeline deal to bring russian natural gas directly so to me the americal pushed back insisting that germany makes its own decisions and the two had met later this is what donald trump had to say to reporters. we have a very very good rule. with. cancer we have
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a tremendous you asians you. may be tremendous to be a tremendous success or a great way to make a success and i believe that our trade will increase and lots of other things will increase of that we'll see what happens over the next year if people. now old this will attentions between the u.s. and china have gone up as the u.s. announces yet another round of tariffs on chinese imports the list of products trump wants to slap a levy up the levy of ten percent on his two hundred pages of log and contains around six thousand different products they have some very interesting choices haves and paws of bear so for example wolf sperm is also on the list as well as human hair life or indeed toilet paper may all sound very funny if it wasn't so serious it's important to remember that all these products are companies large and
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small who until now relied on the vast u.s. market to sell their goods if they obscure or common it all adds up to another two hundred billion dollars worth of trade for fuel. containers apply ling up in shanghai and now to you stakes apparently from the u.s. that no one will buy because they're too expensive since last week chinese custom so far as he'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 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 ministration is brehm pinging its trade for on friday america raised its treaties on chinese imports china retaliated with similar tariffs on u.s. imports and now trump has ordered the u.s. trade representative robert lyon hisor to place tariffs on
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a further two hundred billion us dollars worth of chinese goods including food in our great cultural products the chinese government has called the plans unacceptable. and honestly the u.s. is being a typical bully on trade china will take necessary action to protect our legal rights i also want to add this is a fight between you need a truism and multilateralism protectionism and free trade and power and rules china plans to hit back and has filed a complaint with the world trade organization or i did all these business correspondent last halter is at the front for stocks and stock exchange rather and i have this to say about the latest trade ask away. well first we talked about a trade spat and now we should no longer be kidding ourselves we are in the middle here of an outright trade war between the united states and china now with donald trump's second list out on products from chinese that he puts tariffs on the two
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hundred page long list worth exports of about two hundred billion dollars so there is no way to underestimate how difficult this will make things for global trade not only between the u.s. and china but what implications that of course has for other countries as well and for markets in general and we should also not underestimate however what implications that has for donald trump in the end because as opposed to the first list of products there's a second to new list of products that will be faced with tariffs that includes consumer products so americans every day americans will start paying more for us from china and that will hurt their pocket of course we don't know where this is all going but we know that for sure investors do not like where it's going and we saw markets down in frankfurt as we did of course around the world. today at the
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frankfurt stock exchange i'll be back with more business later in the show but now back to you later thank you so much bonnie japan's prime minister shinzo ave has visited flood stricken parts of the country and the death toll has risen to one hundred seventy six from the worst flooding disaster in decades to rancho rains cost floods and triggered landslides last week and 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
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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 but pentagon. but it won't be easy scorching temperatures have followed up the heavy rain putting relief workers and those in shelters at risk of heatstroke it also means more storms and more flooding may be on the way. now to kenya or teenage marriage is still common especially in rural areas girls often don't have access to the information and tools that can help them plan their families and worse still their partners often don't support them so non-governmental organizations are working to empower girls to take charge of their sexual reproductive health a correspondent visited a school near mombasa. moony is
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a small village about an hour's drive from kenya the city. social worker who has come to see how the youth club at the local primary school is very we have clubs school health clubs schools that had to listen for good so the clubs brings. to talk about issues. it's here that eighteen year old jessica can get the information she needs. 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 yes to my father he told me to go live with the man who made me pregnant.
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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. and. and yes 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 authorities here at the cost of trying to address what is known as the my new syndrome loosely translated as the onus syndrome. than when a syndrome about a woman being owned by the husband that is what it is such that in the decision you know like women have more authority to make any decision. it's the man who makes the decisions for them so that is what the witness in the means so some
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women would go to a facility to get counseling when. to a method they say no i have to go and consult my husband because you know how they put it to him into and we knew it i belonged 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. to feel that once we started getting in the boat children into this discussion that able to grow up to be responsible citizens responsible of males who are able to address even issues of sexual reproductive health way letter affecting even the female that . jessica says she now knows what family planning method she will use after the delivery and hope that it will give her time to finish her education.
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sometimes us now for you and a huge shock at wimbledon the defending rounds champion roger federer is out he lost at the quarter final stage to kevin anderson of south africa anderson came from two says down and save a match point on his way to a famous victory after breaking federer in the twenty third game of an incredible fifth set he held his nerve to clinch his place in the semifinal meanwhile novak djokovic has continued his recent resurgence by beating japan's corey in four says the serb was given a warning for throwing his racquet into the ground at one point but he is through to his eighth wimbledon semi final. and to the football world cup now where the semifinal between england and croatia is underway in moscow the winner will face france who beat belgium yesterday to secure their spot in the final it wasn't the a free scoring game many were hoping for but didier deschamps aside prevailed thanks to
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a defensive master class it wasn't until the twenty second minute it's k.g. seventy final sprang to life belgians toby and a viral tonight on the turn a stunning sight from hugo to reach front so tight next kilian i'm back pay feeding benjamin providing the thirty eight minutes of vital stuff from t. vocal chwat this time the breakthrough arrived early in the second tough francais several m.t.t. rose hoisted not home and shrunk reasons corner in the fifty first minute. nothing called swat could do about that one zero france turned on the magic to produce one of the game slick his moves shortly after a lucky escape for belgium the red devils three men forward in the dying moments but the blur held firm under pressure. delirium at 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.
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all cycling showpiece the tour the falls went into its fifth stage today the pellets in the head it up into the mountains for the first hilly stage but despite the climbs it was another good day for sprinter peterson gun. so. there were five mini climbs on this two hundred four come on it's a trick to compact not to mention lots of twists and turns and i do of course then for some breakaway use which the peloton seems content to let go for most of the way but has on previous stages this time just a bit ten kilometers to go the escapees were reeled into the pack that set up another exciting finish with a tricky uphill climb to the line on mary roach not the best conditions for a mass sprint. great crime avonmouth let them off early with world champion pet assad ground in the sprinters green jersey was also in the mix he produced a brutal burst of speed when he needed it most edging out senator bradley for the
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second time at this tour belgium's phillips bash finished instead this was saga and second stage victory of this tall. man adam out stays in yellow. here watching the news we still have a lot more to tell you about here's what's coming up. and they are not see it goes to jail for life we have to shape it is found guilty of ten murders in germany most of them racially motivated they have been shocked the nation but others may now be your verdicts for some questions for me. plus french actress catherine deneuve and star conductor don't move they are among those honored at japan's prestigious premium imperiale awards a culture desk will be sure to tell us what. it means and don't forget you can always get interviews on the go just download our out for all for the apple story that will give you access to all the latest news from around the world as well as
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pusher vacations for any breaking news and of course you can also use it to send us your photos and videos. plus more coming up after these messages don't go anywhere. a mystery of the stone and. giant artworks that still captivated me today. thousands of years ago. but why. and what do they reveal about the people who make the.
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fake hair and real stories. where i come from a lot of women like me you have fake hair sometimes the hair style takes up to two days it's a lot of time that needs to be filled so people at the salon talk about what's happening in their lives. i became a journalist to be a storyteller and i always want to find those real authentic stories from everyday people who have something to share. with all the time i spend at the salon i know i'm good quality here when i see ads and the good stories when i hear. my name is elizabeth and i work at the deli. brown really love apple fittler. or did she love the life you provided for her. she was the dictator's mistress.
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only an insignificant concert. or pursuing her own vision. no other woman got some close to. a fire. life and death with. starch july twenty first on d. w. . bridge of iraq with us you're watching the news on the rock n roll and these are our main headlines this hour. at the nato summit in brussels u.s. president donald trump has criticized his european allies for not paying enough for nato secretary-general later told a news conference that members have now agreed to increase their contributions and share the burden more fairly. the first pictures showing the time who is who were trapped in a cave recovering in the hospital they're all said to be in good condition reports
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say they were sedated to keep them calm during their harrowing their rescue with mission their ordeal trapped in a flooded cave system lasted for almost three weeks. a court in the german city of munich has found a member of a neo nazi terrorist cell guilty of murder be out of shape or has been sentenced to life in prison for her role in the killing of ten people in a decade long murder spree she belong to a year group calling itself a national socialist underground or n.s.u. it carried out the racially motivated murders two bombings and a series of robberies between the years two thousand and twenty eleven the gangs other two core members were found dead after an apparent suicide back in two thousand and eleven. guilty of ten counts of murder the at a tip of the only survivor of the neo nazi murder cell will spend the rest of her life behind bars it
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was the maximum sentence but little consolation for the victims' relatives. to once known to ask them to call the evidence against and in favor of the defendant was considered but the trial didn't address the suffering of the victims' families a trial they want considered in anyway so apparently the court didn't even take note of the impact of these crimes that. our trust in the legal system suffered enormously even before the trial after the verdict it's just the same we have no trust in the system anymore unfortunately one of the biggest questions throughout the trial was whether be at the chapel was an accomplice or merely a follower chep a claimed it was her partner's move a month lows and would have been hard both of whom committed suicide who had murdered ten people she played a background role and never pulled the trigger during the trial the maintained she knew nothing about the murders even though she had lived with the two men for fourteen years chap as lawyers plan to appeal the verdict project it will be here
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as chipper was convicted as a stand in for something she neither wanted nor did the state has to deal with the fact that the real perpetrators of these horrific crimes cannot be punished anymore . after five years the trial has finally come to an end but many questions remain unanswered were there unknown accomplices what role did the intelligence services play and how did the police fail to properly investigate the case this is it's good that there is a clear and unequivocal verdict today what's 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 which. means i have four other men were convicted of being n.s.u. accomplices one of them has already completed his sentence and he walked out of court a free man relatives of the victims suspect there were other people who knew about the crimes and facilitated them they demand the investigators stay on the case
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until they have answered all their questions. and joining us now is carson alias he is a lawyer who represents one of the victim's families a very warm welcome mr alias of life in prison for being schaffer is this the verdict that you were hoping to get for your clients. i mean this was a little little tot of the verdict that my client expected or my client's expected but most of the questions ended in monza of my comments were not addressed in the verdict so. hayes caught made some all clear that for them the whole and it's too complex is closed they refer always only to three people they didn't mention the network of supporters and it didn't mention at all
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the role of the secret services they could and should have done this in the murder besides these sides unfortunately only there were only given my no verdicts to two of the most important support us as defendants of the trial and this of it's a very unfortunate signal to the nazi networks in germany and mike non-defined dog on that the nazi networks also probably supporting dennis who are very strong and mr ellison having said that now what do the families want to see happen next. i mean they always they're always they still insisting insisting on arms us to that key question so who was helping who was helping the n.s.a. who at the places of the murderous s. and s. and top want what was accepted the role of the secret services and how big really was a network the problem the problem is set now for us the means of investigation was
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on more and more and less and less and it's more and more difficult for fun for the families to get on says one of the most important the mons of course is that not more fire on the meat it was not qualified so i destroyed so that at least for the future they said chance to get access to everything what is that what it's going to be more and more difficult for the families and that's a big disappointment today what looked difficult for the families to get on says to all these central questions. but is it also maybe because this impulse the question and it's obvious that only inning the fire it's off off the other criminal cases and especially off the secret service is probably oms a lot of questions of course unfortunately there is these missing often effective investigation of the general prosecutor's office of germany and
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a lot of the options we had at that time between try two thousand and eleven and two thousand and fifteen last but still they see opportunity to open our science of the secret services of the puppy's persecutor for us and to really. try at least from the state agencies to open up and transparent investigation this hasn't happened yet can you remind us what exactly happened on those fateful days. sorry on which days are we when the victims were killed can you remind us what the families went through what happened. yeah i mean the they actually the family sniffed tries tries scandalous and it's the incredible time small moments before two thousand and eleven my family the family we are working for between two thousand
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and six and two thousand and never eleven they live through incredibly structural racist investigations by the doj on and then later on by the network of police investigating the case it's inspired off a lot of hints to not see not for its being complicit in the case especially also from draw point of thought meant the police all the time only and rest he gave it around to families and that of course destroyed part of the family's not really in our family but a lot of the families were destroyed by these kind of thing to this the cajuns and then a face to second scandal after two thousand and eleven seeing that even after two thousand and eleven the police and the public prosecutor's office of germany didn't really didn't really try to have fun and effective investigation into this nazi
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netflix involvement around so they had to leave the dry ice time before two thousand and eleven even maybe a little more difficult because being so alone in it of this structure and racist investigation personally is so a lawyer one of the victim's family representing them in this trial thank you very much. and i'd like to hand you over now to our funny for some more business news because she has a story on the fine for facebook thank you and indeed britain states regulate has fined facebook for failing to protect user data it impose the highest possible penalty and that's five hundred thousand pounds but that's less than what facebook earns in ten minutes and this after the social media giant allowed in up inappropriate access to the personal data of almost eighty seven million users to a consultancy firm can bridge analytic on the british food and denies these accusations and has filed for bankruptcy. cubans small business owners
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welcome the country's reauthorization of private enterprise after a year long freeze but will see tighter controls than before communist nation worries that increasing the role of the private sector has fueled you know quality mainly because tax evasion and illegal employment are widespread. small private enterprises and just beauty salons have boomed in cuba since two thousand and ten when former president raul castro launched 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 authorizing businesses again but this time with stricter rules. lot of it helps us perfect our work and to some extent it will
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end illegal practices in terms of fuel regulations lubricants and other things. although running a small business has transformed the lives of many cubans for the better the regime fears successful entrepreneurs could threaten its grip on power so to keep individual ambitions and pay one new rule states that business licenses will be restricted to one per person. despite stricter regulation cuba badly needs the private sector to revive its crumbling soviet era economy. and all this months of pick off salsa dance hall or season the period between the depletion of food stocks and the next harvest seven years into its independence it's a humanitarian crisis leaving half of the country's population stop. heavy rain can come any moment during south sudan so-called lean season and
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distributing food becomes even more of a challenge but it's the ongoing violence that poses the biggest risk to food security unfortunately the conflict continues people continue to suffer and people in some places where conflict still rages. in desperate situation the war has killed tens of thousands of people and displaced another four million the country's instability is also hurting its economy which is in ruins south sudan's currency has fallen steeply since the conflict broke out five years ago causing prices for goods and services to become extremely expensive and now more than half the population faces hunger. w f p food assistance is the only means of food for the whole family i live with my mother and i have no brothers i am the one taking care of the entire family when
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times are hard i walk to faraway places in search of food. last year's lean season left about six million south sudanese without enough food and without any prospect of sustained pace international aid organizations fear a repeat of the widespread hangared us month. island's budget airline ryanair is set to cancel a temper sent of its irish flights on thursday as it prepares for a twenty four hour strike by pilots will call its will be the first in a series of planned industrial action stuff in spain portugal belgium and italy will carry out their own strikes later in the month ryanair is known for its low cost fares but critics say they call it the expense of good working conditions and fair salary. now it would have been unthinkable in the past but still to guard the heart of germany's auto industry and told to mercy to make a diner is set to introduce
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a possible driving ban on diesel powered vehicles for the come into effect in early twenty nineteen the battle of fact all during the cars meeting emission standards from tool for hand earlier lawmakers hope to avoid bans for diesels knew of them bought but the bad things cost the band's coverage will depend on the fact of most of pollution control measures the city of guard is the second city in germany to introduce a diesel ban the following on board officials in cities including paris london and mexico city are considering similar restrictions. on that suv business update for now back to late with more news thank you so much frank we have a southern africa were looking after livestock is a tough job is usually done by boys who are far from their families or have been orphaned in a school is difficult but an older coward is now bring the boys together to teach them what they need to know to survive and perhaps even to go on to
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a better education. when he wants the herd following us. every day germany takes these cows many kilometers through the high lands of listened to looking for grass and water. he'll soon be fourteen and he's worked as a shepherd for more than half his life. every day i'm out here cruising the animals where you got on it i have to make sure they get enough to eat i like their work. it's also the only way to survive here. the cows belong to a farming family and some on kong a small town in central less so to germany works for them for his labor they'll get a cow at the end of the year that the roof over his head. the teenager doesn't have
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time for school his parents have died so jeremy has to fend for himself. this isn't my first job. but it's the first time i've been treated well. the last farm i worked for for example just didn't pay me. i'm great are things are going better here. you are not investing to one in three school aged boys works full time as a shepherd often kilometers away from their family and without any hope of going to school full time. most of the boys are literate and will remain so for the rest of their lives. really as much or oh knows all of this well. he had to leave school after second grade to earn money for his mother and two sisters. he says that's common and listened to but it wasn't the life he
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had hoped for. it wasn't maintained if. you're fifty five because of. this. and living on the big plane i was supposed to wear it although it wasn't nice because given the us we're breeding us like dogs they didn't even feed us they breed as like be slaves. really as quickly learned that not having an education can make it difficult to fight for your rights. he paid for both his sisters and their children's education with the money he earned as a shepherd. over the years he put aside a tiny bit of his pay until he could complete his own education. now every evening he shares his knowledge with the young shepherds in some on kong. did you know
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that. when they finish tending to the animals they come to julius's shepherd school . germany is also here. they study reading writing and arithmetic. julius teaches voluntarily he believes that a basic education can change the shepherds lives. for. and they didn't even know where they. now i am still claim by almost thirty years that. another subject is health including how to prevent aids it's an important issue unless you too which has the second highest rate of hiv infections worldwide. and a warm meal is sometimes provided when there have been enough donations for many
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it's the only one of the day. socializing is central to the time spent here. wake you have to care for the animals then you're going to have to. cope with other people but it's only happened here except at school is where the learn how to sell ice is where they live and how to speak with us is where they live if we've been. to learn everything the shepherds come from far and wide germany walks ten kilometers every evening to get here. who admire you. when i can read well you're right well i want to teach to. i want to pass on what i can. but germany still has a long way to go. the next morning he returns to his solitary work in the hills like so many other shepherds here unless you too.
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that premium emperor eola are the most prestigious prizes in the cultural world they are warded annually by the japanese art association and this year's winners have just been announced and robin merrill from our culture desk is here before we talk about the recipients why did japan decide to set up this prize well it's a got left by the nobel prize really in that there's one cultural prize the nobel prize for literature of course and when japan was very wealthy could we could say back in the one nine hundred eighty s. prints talk about su who is the younger brother of the emperor thought it was time for japan to contribute to the global community and in a nice way and he thought it to with the arts sadly he died before this was achieved he died in ninety seven but the prizes were established in his memory in one thousand nine hundred nine and be going ever since and they were supposed to their winners have been announced early yeah they are announced earlier today
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symbols heinously and in new york london paris tokyo of course where else oh yes here in berlin there would in five categories is one for painting sculpture architecture music and film all fifty and there's also a gram awarded every year to an institution that supports young artists this year with the prizes going to the shakespeare schools foundation in britain a charity which gets young people performing shakespeare plays who normally wouldn't and gives them confidence in life people went on stage the painting prize went to the ninety year old belgian painted pia since the abstract expressionist and the sculpture prize has gone to very interesting sculptures for jiko from japan who's famous for her focus sculpture so sort of moving sculptures that she does the prize for in film and theater went to the glory of some wonderful catherine deneuve
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of she's won the premium and power to impair the a for that and let's have a look back last truce career. the legend known for her timeless puti 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 i don't know 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 stronger good roles more than in the old fart roles the dinner threw herself into and her career flourished she's worked with some of the most important directors of her time like roman polanski for repulsion. luis bruno well for his risque builders' your. own together with june
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for françois truffaut's classic the last metro. time has not slowed catherine deneuve she's a prolific artist with more than one hundred movies under her belt now she chooses her roles remain 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. most of all it's the film the director that they choose in recent years didn't stand together we can learn from trees dancer in the dark. zones eight women this is a city and martine provost the midwife in twenty seven playing. for her work catherine deneuve has received dozens of awards and accolades and now
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she's got another one. another one to add to her chester for trophies so now there are two prizes there are so sick and architecture details yeah. they're both i should say very much life time achievement awards awards it's for a body of work you will get a twenty year old winning the premium in paris and in the cast a great architecture this is being won by another french another french window this is christiane to put some pock and this is a concert hall in luxembourg he designs obviously has the film on it kabul in. luxembourg as i said he's. the pritzker prize which is the architecture oscar of course but anyway now with the music prize one i particularly like this is going to the great italian maestro the conductor riccardo muti he's often
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a guest here in berlin you have to guess with the burden for the moment one of the favorite guest conductors but he's currently the music director of the chicago symphony orchestra. and he was for nineteen years music director of law scholar in milan and he's renowned for his interpretations of the opera which is not surprising because nascar is of course associated with bad he lost a number of the office as well premie a bad loan the full recount of movies but i am very pleased he's got it i should just finally say that these carry a very fine a very good finance rules like the nobel prize over one hundred thousand georgia but of course it's the prestige of the masses so that says all the pritzker prize is to be collected in. ok in october and are so you know ok great awesome and we've got more on our website absolutely t w dot com slash right robin thank you so much go enjoy that and one day. thank you all for spending this part of your day
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with the sound of a long rocket and for a landing and break up is up next some are saying i'm thankfully.
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ahd a mystery of the stone a. giant artworks that still captivating people today. thousands of years ago. but why. and what do they reveal about the people who made them. fifteen minutes tito to.
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earth home to millions of species a home worth saving. see as much as on those are big changes and most start with small steps global ideas tell stories of creative people and innovative projects around the world like to use his power to convert news to green energy solutions and reforestation. they create interactive content teaching the next generation about environmental protection and were determined to build something here for the next generation global ideas the multimedia environment series on t.w. . the nationalist socialist underground this neo nazi terrorist group committed ten murders within seven ships. the trial against main defendant beata chapter and her accomplices is coming to an end there are reports from the courthouse in munich for. their wording in this your
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trial today on d.w. news. on monday one hundred full us on facebook and experience what nelson mandela means for young africans today. keep the mind of people throughout the middle beautiful you are the means to spice with. you through the first how does she influence the. coming down in one day a lot better than a moment when it. yes to spread as i leave might be but she is difficult and wholly floating window at the end of the aerial picture of a. part of it find us on facebook and on t w dot com.
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this is g w news live from berlin tonight a blistering attack on germany u.s. president donald trump unloads at the start of the nato summit in germany as far as i'm concerned this captive to russia because it's getting so much focus from russia trump also alliance members of for not paying their fair share for defense we'll go to brussels for more on one of the most divisive summits in the history of nato also coming up the pictures that their parents and the world have waited to see.

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