tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle July 13, 2018 8:00pm-9:00pm CEST
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this is good news coming to you live from berlin president donald trump takes tea with the queen she and the first lady milan come to windsor castle near london by the ninety two year old monarch trump is mostly avoiding the british capital where tens of thousands of people protested against his visit. also coming up pakistan's former prime minister nawaz sharif and his daughter addressed and within minutes apart arriving back in the country on a supply told his message through supporters i'm making a sacrifice for the future of pakistan. and controversy over an alleged former
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bodyguard over the leak of the mix al qaeda leader osama bin laden first he was deported from germany but now a german importance ordered him to be brought back. killed as well the greatest filmmakers of the twentieth century we look at the world history just director in my book man who was born one hundred years ago. in a very warm welcome to you i'm. us present dollar trump has gone from briggs of controversy to pomp and pageantry on the second day office visit to the u.k. trump got a royal treatment at windsor casa the way he was honored with the u.s. anthem being played by military bands followed by with queen elizabeth.
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walked ahead of the queen in a minor breach of protocol but otherwise the meeting appeared to. be a tramp pad porterfield on britain's gregg's it fired by criticizing prime missa tourism is proposals for leaving the european union but any differences between the pair were glossed over when they later gave a joint news conference. hand in hand with the u.k. prime minister u.s. president donald trump presented a picture of unity. after talks with two reason may at her country residence he said he what have a practice a trade policy hunt government wants to pursue you. give our relationship terms of great the highest level of special so once the brics a process is concluded. and perhaps the u.k. has left the e.u. i don't know what they're going to do but whatever you do is ok with me that's your
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decision whatever you're going to do is ok with us just make sure we can trade together that's all that matters. and with that the president completely backtracked on comments published just hours earlier and a u.k. tabloid in an explosive interview trump trashed the prime minister's backset plan. but she did agree with me. unfortunately in a negative way. the interview in which trump also criticised reason may by praising her right. the former foreign secretary boris johnson added fuel to the fire. in response to the u.s. president's visit tens of thousands marched in london to protest his presence on u.k. soil. i just find it really really embarrassing i think over the last kind of
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couple of weeks you've had a big sense of national pride and trees and i just really. holding it again like the boat crisis to really. change the face. but the president's trip has been choreographed so that he largely avoids coming face to face with protesters and that balloon depicting him as a giant baby. and for mom now joined by deed of the correspondent who is with those protesters in london and it's not theirs to welcome did alex forrest whiting in the studio with me welcome to both of you let me start with you barbara you on your trafalgar square were over a hundred thousand protesters have gathered one of the same to you. the protesters here are pretty unified and that they would. restrict and they don't want anything they totally reject any aspect of trump's politics and you can take
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whatever you want it says treatment of women his the policies against migrants it says international relations people don't want him to meddle in fact it's a long list it's pretty much everything the american president stands for that the people of london who have come out here today in huge crowds to the center of the city reject and we look at the evening standard that's the london evening paper and it says simply no mr president no to insulting our mayor said he can because he's a muslim and trump loves to just lay into him and no two insulting our prime minister and no two insulting the all the people from all nations all over the world who have come to london and who have made it such a special place so it's a pretty universal and very damning judgment that people of come out here to protest directed against trump. i listen listen to what barbara to see and looking at the skill of disputers this has been a controversial visit has it been
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a success for to reason may well look it's been a terrible start for to reason maybe because we had that article in the sun where donald trump did criticize or whatever he said at that press conference this afternoon they were critical comments that was very embarrassing for her she had to carry on she had to be professional and she did get what she wanted because he was positive in the end about the u.k. possibly pursuing a free trade agreement with the u.s. when brics it actually happens she was also able to point out that they have very strong relationships the u.k. and the u.s. over shared intelligence military cooperation she said it was sending more british troops to afghanistan and we're going to be spending billions of pounds buying u.s. military equipment so she got her message across despite the humiliation and that she in the end did seem to play ball a bit more with her and i think actually admitted that he apologized to theresa may
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before the press conference about that sun article ok did you know barbara looking ahead that donald trump is set to meet president vladimir putin on monday our european leaders concerned about that given what happened at the nato summit yesterday and what we've been hearing from him today. people are pretty petrified because what trump has shown here in britain that he is completely erratic completely unpredictable now we have seen that before in the two days during the nato summit and then all the assurances does donald trump gives to somebody there last just as long as he pulls out his mobile again and sends another query that says the exact opposite so of course european leaders know when he goes to putin on monday after having sort of said we've had a great nato summit and we're all sticking together there is no telling what he might possibly do he could offer putin and that was some of the fear is that we have voiced before you might offer putin some sort of weird priest deal he might
quote
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offer him to pull out american troops out of europe he might just unilaterally lift sanctions against russia there is no way you can wait you can know beforehand and so everybody is really waiting was baited breath for the next bad news that is probably coming from donald trump when he reaches helsinki and talking about his tweets it was interesting because a reporter also him yesterday really tweets something different to what he's been saying in brussels and he replied no i'm a stable genius he reiterated that doesn't go to you alex the list of donald trump this is the you can he's spending the weekend playing golf in scotland but we don't know who's who he's meeting there is that barring well this is a private affair that's been stressed by the white house and she by downing street as well so he is of great he owns term bring go for so which is an issue on the west coast of scotland that's where he's going to will he be meeting who will he be
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playing golf with we don't know we know he's good friends with brixton nigel for raj there's even been talk about when he meet the former foreign secretary boris johnson who he's also said quite publicly would make a good prime minister is a rival to theresa may we just don't know we do know one thing though and. that is that balloon baby will not be a temporary because it was not given permission to be floated there. never a dull moment in this visit. thank you very much for your analysis and in london barbara result thank you very much for your reporting from that. let me now bring you up to date with some other stories making news around the was british police say they have found a small bottle containing nobby chalk nerve agent in the home of charlie rally he's one of two britons who fell ill after exposure to the substance last month his partner dawn sturgis died on sunday release an investigating how the body came to
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be in his house. the u.s. justice department says twelve russian spies have been charged with hacking into democratic e-mail accounts ahead of the two thousand and sixteen presidential election u.s. intelligence agencies have said the interference aims to have done or trump's campaign and harm his rival hillary clinton the indictments come days before a summit between trump and russian president vladimir putin. in pakistan dozens of people have been killed in two bomb attacks targeting candidates campaigning for the country's elections an explosion in the southwestern town of must the killed at least seventy candidates including a candidate earlier at least four people died when a blast hit a politician's convoy in the now northwestern town of fun nor. lasting in pakistan where former prime minister sharif has arrived in lahore the three time prime minister immediately was arrested together with his daughter malia on
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corruption charges as the plane landed in lahore last week a pakistani court sentenced him to ten years in prison over the purchase of luxury properties in london the ruling came ahead of national elections at the end of this month. lockdown on the streets of lahore pakistan deployed thousands of security forces as former prime minister nawaz sharif prepared to touchdown sharif's backers say the country's powerful military is colluding with the judiciary to damage his political party ahead of elections. they're prepared to confront authorities if challenged. i am ready to give the last drop of my blood. i'm ready to face jail i'm ready to die let them do whatever police and their police want to do we are here to face
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that we will not turn back. while in office sheriff had been critical of the military's involvement in civilian affairs he served three times as pakistan's prime minister and was widely viewed as a political survivor. but in twenty seventeen the country's supreme court barred him from office over graft charges a year later the same court banned him from politics for life sharif is gambling that turning himself in will galvanize support for his belabored party. i'm making a sacrifice for the future of pakistan. so join me walk with me join hands with me and change the direction of this country. pakistan's army has denied meddling to tip the scales in favor of national security conservative imran khan and his p.t.i. party pledged to ensure
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a fair and free election on july twenty fifth. joining me now live on the line from pakistan is in school he's an analyst and director off the center for research and security studies. in the us now why do you think what is your assessment as to why nevaeh cities came back given that it was quite clear that he would be arrested along with his daughter malia also the quarterly last week. well both have been brought to islam by the on board especially. being at the shifter too especially with a guest house of a police institution i think the all previous object to our family turning to august on is to salvation of fledgling bhatti because there was a bit of fracturing all within that anger of its bugs on mostly and i think head of the election said for that i can differ if that made sense for him to
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dun himself and with the hope that at some stage it would create would be able to walk out of the jail and secondly i think he wants to keep the hopes alive for the political future of his daughter much him no vase who is really grooming as he's a parent and now the daughter has also been convicted and shall have to so. if the entire judgment of the court is implemented but we don't know what happens behind the scenes and i think it will take a few days if not weeks to figure out what eventually happens to both father and the daughter so it appears to be a political gamble india's on the bottom no boss should he tell much support does he and his daughter money actually having the country. when i watch it is he's
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a popular leader does have support in the central park of foundered largest. province are focused on the print job where it originates about sixty five percent of markets on certainly banking on his popularity in this province. territory to turn an opened. would turn his party again into power at least in print garden where were controlled can also control their pocket on because of the group numbers that turned out to present in the national condiment right in down school on the line from islamabad thank you very much for that and not assist. a managed to be a form bodyguard of terrorist leader osama bin laden was to did deported from germany to his home country tunisia but now a german court has ruled that he must be brought back again the man identified only
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as saw me he was still in back to his homeland despite a court order blocking his removal on the grounds it violated jimmy's view of nor the suspected is the mist had been living in germany for seven years with his wife and children he was arrested again in june guidant it was sobbing not killed by u.s. special forces in may two thousand and eleven. for more on this story i'm joined live by a political correspondent from a fundamental soon as you know what are you hearing from the court about this ruling and why now. well the local administers have called has said that that just still is no diplomatic reassurance from the to new zealand government that somebody a will not be tortured in tunisia and you have to keep in mind that here in germany protecting people under the rule of law and that includes protecting them from the risk of torture applies to everybody you know whether they're considered
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a potential terrorist threat or not and in fact this is the same reason why it took so long for the deputation to actually happen because for years the german intelligence services had considered some e.a. potential threats they have tried to deport him but that guarantee from to his ear was simply lacking and that process of to protection only got sped up after hospital for took over as interior minister earlier this year so to what extent was the interior minister whole safe siegel for involved in this case because costs a whole for has very hardline views on refugees and asylum seekers and he almost brought the government on the brink of collapse over this issue well they were from may they skip this special case of some e.a. his very personal case and a top priority after six weeks in office he outlined his priorities and said that he would personally get involved to get the deportation to move forward and he has
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clearly made migration a number one topic you've just said that the government coalition with under michael almost collapsed because he openly challenge the chancellor on the issue of asylum policy so he did lose a lot of voters support in that row and it looks as though he's trying to win a few voters back by speeding up the process of deportation of somebody who is considered a potential terrorist threat. vice political correspondent thank you very much for that. getting joins me now on another major trade under threat danielle thank you very much amrita yes could the multi-billion euro deal trade deal between the e.u. and kind of the collapse italy's new government says it won't ratify the agreement kind of a says almost all of the new rules of come into effect anyway rendering the protests pointless but rome says it's time someone stood up for italian agricultural produces. parmesan cheese is just one of many italian regional specialties
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but only a few of these have a name is protected by an official seal. italy fears for the survival of its agricultural sector the main reason why the new government says it doesn't want to ratify the agreement negotiations between auto and brussels have been going on for years the agreement was finally signed in twenty sixteen but needs to be ratified by all twenty eight e.u. member states canada and the e.u. trade goods worth more than sixty billion euros annually with the removal of tariffs the volume is expected to rise by around twenty percent but from the beginning there have been protests many fear that sæter will allow large corporations to become ever more powerful most e.u. countries have already ratified the deal italy's refusal comes at a difficult time for europe as it tries to actively present itself as
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a champion of free trade. chinese exports for june have beaten expectations but that says the growth in imports east the new stats but china's trade surplus are just over forty trillion dollars forty billion dollars its largest since december that is but donald trump may have a reason to be happy amid swaying tension over china's exports to the u.s. the growth in exports united states has actually slowed that's as trump threatens to hit a further two hundred billion dollars of goods with terrorists. hunters of the frankfurt stock exchange you gave us his thoughts on a turbulent trading week it was a pretty rough. week of course. president. there was of course there all the way part one in which the president. was in china of course. little bit earlier already with the first but now on monday we have
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a second round of care. products among them consumer product exports now worth two hundred billion dollars. or we have a much higher. relevance here we have imagined on. the docks frank for those about who only point. out when they look at that. relevant here. it was already or we. were. president on his european trip. up in pressure on me with regard to. making the case. that the president doesn't really know what's going on for the u.k. what they lose in terms of the financial services industry or trade in goods and services. when you look at of course the president.
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there was a pretty good week i think. frankfurt book of the week is over. and washington's tariffs against china took effect hundred or six trying to retaliated with more tariffs on the same day as merve is said to impact a slew of u.s. agricultural products and industries including. u.s. exports forty billion dollars worth of soybeans are trying annually. oh in vail louisiana is soybean country raymond checks knight a says his crop is coming along well this year. but if the train spat between the united states and china doesn't tend soon his market is gone check snyder says he could lose more than one hundred fifty thousand dollars thanks to the twenty five percent china slapped on u.s. imports in response to trump's tariffs. i don't know if we realize from the start
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how big of a buyer. you know everybody talk about the imbalance in trade but this was a really big. big big deal. china is louisiana's biggest export market roughly fifteen thousand jobs depend on the state's agricultural exports to china meanwhile beijing says the trade conflict will have limited impact on the chinese soybean market in twenty seventeen most imports came from brazil and argentina and in early july china removed tariffs on soybean imports from some asian countries may only way that no one can create without us soybeans we can import soybeans from south america and countries along bills and road routes to meet our needs to at present or to soybean reserves are abundant. we share meet the requirements of the country at any time to ensure market stability
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so use. analysts say the chinese targeted soybeans because the plant is grown in many states that voted for donald trump in twenty sixteen for a large number of u.s. soybean farmers the decisions made by the white house signal bankruptcy. more business later on but now people have been remembering a chinese human rights icon a region that's right daniel hundreds of pro-democracy activists had a memorial ceremony in hong kong to mark the first anniversary of the death of the chinese dissident. you co-founded a petition calling on the bit on beijing to reform china's one party system and went on to win the nobel peace prize he died of liver cancer in chinese custody while serving an eleven year sentence. ok you remember loser that's what residents of hong kong are doing one year since the
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human rights activists died in a hospital bed under the watchful eye of chinese state security agents the protesters marched to mainland china as liaison office in the semi-autonomous chinese territory they held photos of lu and tied black ribbons to the perimeter security fence for them it was a chance to highlight the chinese government's assault on human rights. so what we really want peace he needed a visa of all these. and also people fighting for democracy. lou bust gazes at passers by on a busy hong kong street began his activism efforts during the pro-democracy tenement square protests in one nine hundred eighty nine in two thousand and ten the nobel committee awarded him the peace prize for what it called his long and nonviolent struggle for fundamental human rights in china he was never able to accept it in person that struggle he won the prize for is also what landed him in
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prison on multiple occasions his longest sentence would be his last detained in two thousand and eight for subversion the crime taking part in the publication of charter zero eight a human rights manifesto. in may two thousand and seventeen lou was diagnosed with terminal liver cancer he died in chinese custody just two months later his ashes were buried at sea following a hasty funeral process heavily controlled by chinese authorities. now lose widow lucia has been released from eight years of house arrest with conspicuous timing she landed in berlin on tuesday it's been labeled as a conciliatory gesture but the protesters in hong kong see other motives at play to soften the tension between the u.s. and e.u. role with china. and an excuse for the european union to get close to china the chinese government has defense for lose death on mainland china making
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hong kong a rare outlet for political speech. you're watching the news coming up ahead a disaster that shouldn't have happened if black rhinos have died in kenya after one life book has moved them from nairobi to a new national park we'll go live to nairobi took on the business to find out what ben drawn. and he was as one of the greatest filmmakers of the trenches century swedish today bergman was born a hundred years ago david leavitt's from desperate talk about his work and legacy. one does and more coming up with don't forget you can organise good deeds of the news on the go just download apps from google or from the apple still. does he give you access to all the latest news from around the world. as well as
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push notifications for any breaking news. in the course you can also use the deeds of the after send us your photos and videos. and also check out our website the v.w. dot com and follow us on twitter or on facebook i'll be back with you shortly. the. european stores deliver rousing performances. pump's wisdom you know so i am a single upbeat dance tunes and catchy balance to la monica goodling the man on the moon. well british singer and the owner who is reaches deep inside which are in the room introduced into the felix t.w. . state by state. the most colorful.
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life and. the most traditional. find it all any time. check in with a web special. take a tour of germany state by state. w dot com. big fun beethoven. his works and that goddess fortuna. the maestro and famous. beethoven's first twenty teams. did before brown really love adult hitler. or did she love the life he provided for her. she was the dictator's
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mistress. only an insignificant concert at his side. or pursuing her own ambitions. certainly no other woman got some close to. life and death with the. starch july twenty first on d.w. . welcome back you're watching the diving is coming to you live from berlin our top story president has been having tea with the queen on the live stage of his trip to britain and earlier in backpedaled on his criticism of british spinup prime minister tourism a strategy on leaving the european union the. guns of instance are calling the incident a disaster and asking how it could have happened in kenya if black rhinos have died after wildlife workers moved them from the camps in nairobi to
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a new national park kenya's why last ministry believes the animals die from drinking too much sortie water after becoming dehydrated. it in then you look asian three surviving right who's being closely monitored the species are critically endangered they're just a few thousand of them left in the wild. lesson who live to nairobi and dr paul are now the chief she's the chief executive director of why i live directing that's a kenyan conservation ngo that's fighting for endangered species in east africa not welcome to you today it doesn't incredible it vinyls died shortly after being transferred to a new location how did that happen. well the government has just put out a statement in the last few hours trying to explain what happened the theory that
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they drank salty water on arrival in this new location is perhaps could be one of the reasons but there is an investigation ongoing there are two veterinarians have been flown up from south africa to help understand and conduct a post-mortem i don't think at this stage we actually know what went wrong but this is an unprecedented loss of more than eighty percent of the rhinos that were trams located in this particular operation now what are you looking conservation what are the security arrangements when these kind of transportation off animals is made. well kenya has a lot thirty the kenya that service they have been conducting. trend occasions of animals not just rhinos including elephants and many other endangered species and they've had great success in the past so the security arrangements are quite precise there are very clear protocols just followed they are international protocols which include very very heavy security the animals are dotted in their location it could be nairobi national park or the crew national park in this case
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they are transported by vehicles under very heavy security because as you know every rhino is worth probably a million dollars or more so the security arrangements a very very good i don't think this was a security situation this is something else went wrong and we are yet to find out what it was and of what can you tell us about the black rhino they are an endangered species how many of them are left and how many of them do you have in kenya the black rhino is there only about five thousand left well kenya has a population of around seven hundred fifty and they are a unique subspecies found only in this part of eastern africa we are home to eighty percent of that subspecies this is why the loss of eight of these animals is such a disaster that represents one percent of kenya's overall population or rhinos. right dr pollack i'm with the chief executive director of wildlife direct at kenyon
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conservation n.g.o.s thank you very much for talking to deja vu. thank you turning now to south africa where fears are growing of election chaos in zimbabwe the country will head to the polls on the twenty second of july with the ruling party vowing the votes will be free and fair for the first time in decades but on friday opposition supporters stormed a police station in zimbabwe a second city only postal voting was under way this said police officers had not been permitted to fill out the ballots in secret and a drip presented an attempt by their commanders to rig the vote. to go. over to daniel and bright hopes for a similar comeback that's why amrita sometimes what it takes is a little pivot to get you back in the market will germany's once high flying solo world photovoltaic photovoltaics is if you to say sell maker crashed out of the industry spectacularly years ago as china dumped solar panels on the market of
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bargain basement prices but now the company is back on the scene. this solar cells in these modules are completely encased in glass instead of the usual plastic film. solar what manufactures two thousand modules every day in the german city of dresden at just two millimeters thick the glass is almost as light as plastic but it's more environmentally friendly and durable. because of fortune if you have a module like this on your roof it has to cope with wind and snow several things every day making the module move even if you cannot see it so after a while you get micro cracks and they break the cells so the cracks may not be visible to the naked eye but they reduce the modules performance over time. the lives of those models. in contrast plus modules should last at least thirty years
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without a reduction in performance the company began making the following its bankruptcy in twenty twelve if wanted to differentiate itself on the competitive global market for mass produced. you know be here. everyone wants to be a player in a market where asian companies have been established for several years. size and speed code and there are already many companies that have fallen victim to this competition not only in germany but worldwide as well. so what's succeeded in reversing that trend. in addition to its long lasting glass more jewels two years ago the company turned to battery storage to save energy that is not used immediately. and we believe the battle against asian producers for the mass market is lost so now comes the transition to renewables two point zero it's a systematic approach that's technically many times more demanding and innovation
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is something that we've always been good. that so now we have a real chance to regain our technological market leadership in the world. division customers should become energy self-sufficient with a photo voltaic system on the roof and palace storage in the basement and they would op to mys energy flows in their households using energy management systems. in a given the energy manager displays your energy balance it clearly shows how much electricity is coming from the roof what is used in the household how is the batteries storing and what ultimately goes into the power grid that's innovative solutions that secure solar wants three hundred fifty jobs that's despite its modules costing more than those may fight chinese competitors. football fans will have to wait until sunday's world cup final to see who will be the next world champions but the battle
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of the brands has already been decided and the winner is nike and back to the added us have bet on germany spain and argentina well we all know how that went nike though has the last laugh both france and croatia will wear the bronze logo in the final. no matter who wins the world cup nike is claiming victory at least among sports outfitters along with their colors the french players will be bearing the swash as well the croatian team the final marks the milestone for the company we've had three of the four teams make the semifinals and two of our teams made the finals which is a first time for nike we've been in the game of football for over twenty years and it's the first time that we've ever had it all like the final with both teams were . one thousand the kids from both teams are selling like hotcakes but it's not just about the presale spike for nike but the longer term boost to the brand that could
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prove helpful for the sports apparel maker at a time when it's trying to extend its reach. we see china overall as a tremendous growth opportunity for us as a company that we believe for and the ourselves support will help us accelerate our business so one of our biggest opportunities is that you have. chinese consumers connect with sport in football will play a critical role and. that's less than good news for adidas which has had the firmest foothold on the market around football for decades it's rivalry with nike is only going to get more intense and extend long after the world cup is over. and now to dashed wild dreams turning into an adventure. story that's what did you when you were at the last couple of countries being knocked out of the tournament you can either return home or jump onto the midnight express to continue storing the host nation that's exactly what one fan from mexico did his his journey
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into russian hospitality. the night train sets off from st petersburg two o'clock in the morning it's a long journey to moscow twelve hours in a packed compartment fifty four people fifty in his third class sleeping car one from mexico was at the semifinal in sin petersburg he was surrounded by fans from all over the world. now he's on a train with russians heading to moscow. tried to play and see what. i like. to be on the train with some russian. talking about what i like about his country and something like that. but now it's time to rest it's late and there's a long way to go. the next morning it's stuffy in the sleeping car. one hardly slept. others have been up for hours. the people
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next to one are having fish for breakfast one has enjoyed the experience he's managed to have a conversation with nikita despite not speaking russian one hadn't thought about bringing breakfast so his new friends offered him some of theirs he seemed similar hospitality at other world cups he has attended. usually people are kind to each other and helpful i found that in germany i found that in brazil and now in russia. his own country mexico were kicked out of the world cup almost two weeks ago but one is still having fun and he'll remember this journey for a long time. and not a disturbing story and a side effect of football are you kick campaign linking the ones cup with higher rates of domestic violence has gone viral on social media it's based on
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a study which found that reports of domestic violence increased when england played in the world cup matches from. we have a budget from a social media disco with us of welcome for the first afford before we go into this campaign how much of an issue is domestic violence in the u.k. so we have figures from england and wales that show how widespread the problem is actually a survey from the office of national statistics last year found that around one point nine million adults aged sixteen to fifty nine experienced domestic violence and that's three point four percent of the population with the majority of victims being women now during the world cup these numbers get even worse and the lancaster university conducted the study together with local police looking at how many reports of domestic violence were filed during past world cups on days when england played or day after and when england lost
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a game domestic violence rose by thirty eight percent as you can see in that graph and even when england drew or one is still rose by twenty six percent now cases have been more or less severe they range from physical to verbal violence a woman in the u.k. a blogger vixen meldrew a shared her experienced with us take a listen relationship i was in the guy i was with was obsessed with book four if his team went doing so well he would get really angry he would smash them and eventually being a relationship was a mark that. i would be the one at the end of the. so in this woman's case emotional escalation led to verbal violence and fear there have been other cases also more severe at is it's a violence women being beaten up for example this is really shocking stuff. now
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this is a campaign which is trying to resist awareness about this issue here and it was launched by women's rights groups and also domestic abuse groups and centers in the u.k. they tried to raise awareness they also tried to let's women know that they might be more endangered during the world cup and this campaign went viral we can take a look at some of the pictures from that campaign this is one it's absolutely room as you can see it shows a domestic violence victim looking like the english flag this picture went viral on social media and others shared this statement no one wants england to win more than women really heartbreaking and even police stations across the u.k. they have picked up the kind of the campaign they've been tweeting out warnings and health numbers this is the humberside police station in northern england they say that they have noticed a spike of domestic violence reports during during this year's world cup and we
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actually got in touch with them and this is what their chief inspector told us take a listen. to have noticed in the first ten days of this year's time the increase of six percent on the domestic abuse calls we were tending. following a national. excessive use of alcohol and other stimulants can have an effect on the number of people. family and friends. if it because anyone just blame alcohol and football for domestic violence well that. exactly what some critics are of this campaign are saying they feared that the complain takes away the blame and the responsibility from the aggressor and many women activists prominent women's activists in the u.k. have been making the point for example sandra harley she is she runs
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a refuge which is a women's aid organization specializing domestic violence and she sent us a statement in which she says football and the alcohol that tend to go with it can be aggravating factors when it comes to domestic violence but they are not the root cause blaming football or alcohol absolves the perpetrator of responsibility for his actions so she's saying women experience violence even when at the hands of their partners even when football is not on t.v. at the same time hopefully when england plays for third place tomorrow emotions will not escalate into absolutely horrifying statistics thank you very much a physical for sharing your thoughts and shedding light on this very important issue of domestic violence and it's link with football and the world cup in britain ok let's not go into iran where many women and girls have protested against the
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government's compulsory headscarf you know some have been removing the had jobs in public and waving them in the air cooling their movements of revolution street tehran has cracked down arresting several protests as we spoke to two women who are free on bail awaiting their trial. nargus hussein is apologizing to her mother i'm sorry i made you worry she says but you should have known what i was doing. her mother response did you think i didn't mind it almost seems like you enjoy being in prison. today mother and daughter can joke about it but a few months ago it was no laughing matter husseini had demonstrated in public against the obligatory islamic headscarf at home i also protested when my parents tried telling me what i was allowed to wear until two years ago and wear the full body should or should i love my family and i didn't want to fight with them it took a long time to persuade them and it was hard work.
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for them. but in the end i achieved my goal. one day she came across a website called the girls of revolution street launched in twenty seventeen it brought together women from across iran who were taking to the streets to protest the compulsory huge oblong they stood waving white head scarves tied to sticks this idea of a peaceful protest appealed to her. but i felt that if i was going to do something to further women's rights then i needed to do it right now. and it was such a peaceful protest it wasn't something that felt frightening the main thing i was worried about is whether or not to climb up on top of one of those electric boxes. on january twenty ninth she waved her headscarf into ron's open ear as.
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i stood there expecting to be moved along in just five minutes i was so nervous i was shaking. and i was just waiting for a voice to say ok get down from there. on it eventually that's exactly what happened. she was arrested friends rallied in support while she was in detention she was given a preliminary prison sentence which she's now appealing. try as a hashimi where's the hit job because she wanted to even so she doesn't think women like her seine should be thrown in jail she's been campaigning for women's equality for years. after the government thinks the republic of iran will collapse if a new policy is introduced and the compulsory his job law is overturned but iran is no different from other dynamics societies in a state of flux if the leadership can't adjust to change it will become obsolete.
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recent statistics show seventy five percent of women in iran oppose the compulsory job law hashimi says women should be allowed to decide for themselves if they want to wear it. and if the peaceful protesters are a good thing it's a grassroots movement they're expressing their opinion without resorting to violence and i support the girls of revolution street. round. the girls of revolution street continue their peaceful protest in their own small way grasping a bit of personal freedom. but whether this freedom has a future is unclear it's one of the uncertainties of living in today's iran.
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directed in my book when changed the way movies are made forever his months including the seventh sea off the big questions about life and death novena tillman and they inspired generations of filmmakers if you would still alive birdland would have been telling hundred areas this weekend. and to mock this into ninety two new documentary sticking a look at the man behind the legend david levitz to walk us through this is here to tell us mall but before we get into these films david tell us a little bit about what is bergman's legacy it's not action films as we just know but bergman really set a new standard for what film could do he made movies that are deeply philosophical and entertaining at the same time and he even changed camera language i mean something as simple as a close a long close up on an actor's face that's an exist before bergman so he really changed film language and his impact can't be overstated but there are some people
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who love to hate his fans yeah absolutely well he himself so they're depressing they're slow they're intellectual some people say they're bores was even pretentious but the film world for the most part. the cannes film festival proclaimed him the greatest filmmaker ever and the list of directors he inspired includes martin scorsese and steven spielberg almost drove our cars from true is only good you get the picture. and then. another film america he inspired is the jail and a victim of a taught and she made lot the new look out of documentaries the bottom what was their relationship well she actually started making movies because of him he was her idol and they didn't meet a number of times and there was a sort of mutual respect there he actually claimed to be a fan of hers as well and now a decade after his death she's gone on this very personal journey to find out who
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he really was the film is called searching for in marburg men. one of the world's most distinguished directors paying tribute to another marburg man who inspired margaret a fun trotter to make films and now she's paying homage to her hero kristen i saw the seventh seal and it was like an explosion a tribute to the old master of cinema and von trier's first documentary at first she was unsure about setting out on this journey in bergman's footsteps. in bergman's films have been constant companions and when i was asked if i would like to make a film about him for that i hesitated. until i remembered that one of my films had been important for him as well. along the way from trotter meets those who knew the director and no one could have told her more than this woman bergman's great news liv ullmann that was the beginning because suddenly said would you like
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to be in the movie with me i said yes. searching for ingmar bergman looks at recurring themes in his work like guilt in the dark night of the soul as a director bergman explored his own childhood but when it came to being a father it seemed he might not have always been so present. one of my sisters out here in the sofa. and in most of here and you said you felt sorry for himself and is that by mr actors by mr actors and she went how would it be if you just for one single second said i miss my children or i miss my grandchildren alive and he looked at her but i don't look at that as a human portrait of the man and the artist. the
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actor stands there with their body and their face. there are with their voice they stand there under the spotlight and they absolutely have to be protected well the thing is. if it can be searching for ingmar bergman office fresh insight into the man who's stunning psychological work who sought to explore the human condition. so that was one documentary but the other want to take a look at him it doesn't there was a lot to be critical about the film is called bergman the year in a life and it shows him as a notorious womanizer it actually shows a period in his life where he was both becoming a huge director and having relationships with four women at the same time including his third wife swedish filmmaker jan magnussen. takes a very critical look of
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a man who was actually a swedish national hero so this is actually quite groundbreaking david leavitt's from augusta thank you they wish to bring that story to us thank you. you're watching the job news that's it for me and with that she and david davis will stay with us because common movie in a few minutes is more news and information about. food .
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zero. so far no just couldn't get this song out of his head. ecologist began searching for the source of these captivating sounds. and found that deep in the rain forest in central africa. the buy a couple. that i am. looking at lists books and the like to bullock was a baby book. in well anyone fitted suits my new legal costs he was needed by their culture that he stayed. only a promise to a son was a son only to the jungle and return to the concrete and glass trunk. the result
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reverse culture shock. a flood back you realize how strange the artificial was really connected to life. the prize winning documentary seen from the forest starts august ninth on d w. mondello one hundred of us on facebook and experience what nelson mandela means for young africans today. keep in mind the people who are the middle people who are the means to fight with the open minded people. how did the shape and influence their lives i mean dauphin island alabama i didn't know my feet just as bad as i live maybe but sure if you call that a leaflet but no i said i know the area and it's a. part of it find us on facebook and on t w dot com.
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this is due to every news coming soon as wire from berlin president truong takes tea with the queen and first lady maloney a welcome to windsor council near london by the monarch trump is mostly avoiding the british capital where tens of thousands of people protested against his visit also coming up pakistan's for prime minister not want sharif and those daughter arrested within men.
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