tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle October 22, 2018 8:00pm-9:00pm CEST
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i am awfully . odd to be an audience b.t.w. . this is it it really was live from berlin evolving explanation new details emerge in the killing of saudi journalist jamal khashoggi as the kingdom doubles down and denies the crown prince's involvement turkey's president is tightening the screws and promising to reveal how official he died also coming up u.s. of national security advisor john bolton is in moscow for talks amid fears of a new arms race this after washington said it's ready to pull out of a historic treaty on intermediate range nuclear missiles plus president trump says
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thousands of central american migrants marching towards the u.s. border are a national emergency he says he's putting the u.s. military and border guards on alerts. and also coming up the terrible choices facing families fleeing syria. but i think i stopped going to school in the seventh grade because i got engaged my mother knows him he came and told her that he wanted me and that was that. we have the story of a syrian child bride living in lebanon her mother says marrying off her fourteen year old is the only way they can all survive. coming up monday evening we should leave no nanny tell us it is illegal to come back in ethiopia is counted only just the baba will get a tour of the moving scene from a local music shop. with.
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iraq is great to have you along everyone we begin with saudi arabia's evolving explanation of how saudi journalist was killed turkey's ruling party has said his show he was the victim of a monstrously planned murder at the hands of riyadh saudi arabia meanwhile says his show he died in a brawl in the saudi consulate on how u.s. broadcaster c.n.n. has released c.c.t.v. footage which it says shows a saudi operative dressed in her show his clothes leaving the consulate on the day he was killed c.n.n. quotes a turkish official saying the man was brought in to act as a body double in a separate development and apparently abandoned car belonging to the saudi consulate has been found in istanbul parking garage turkish president richard
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tayyip erdogan is set to present details of the investigation to the turkish parliament on tuesday well to help shed some light on all this let's cross over to d.w. correspondent yulia han in istanbul for you yulia first to that video that's been released by c.n.n. what exactly does it purport to show and what does it mean for the ongoing investigation. well yes later this is one of the latest pieces of evidence in this very complex and mysterious puzzle security camera footage obtained by c.n.n. showing a man apparently disguised as jamal leaving the saudi consulate here in istanbul through the back axid this a man we're seeing there is reportedly dressed in mr suit with a fake beard and glasses we see him leaving the consulate then taking a taxi to the world famous sultan ahmed mosque here in istanbul and then according
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to this food she see him going into a public bathroom and then reappearing in a different outfit now turkish officials seem to believe he was a body doable and part of a fifteen member team from saudi arabia civically to istanbul to target saudi writer jamal khashoggi they also seem to believe this charade was part of the plan from the very beginning you have been citing an a.k.p. spokesperson there saying it was a seven planned killing that were his words and he believes that after it had been made to cover it up now let's briefly recall the saudi narrative here after two weeks of denying any involvement in mystic disappearance they later admitted he was killed at the consulate but blamed his death on a fist fight a war a chokehold in another version they now say it was a rogue oh peroration without any involvement of the saudi leadership. there we've
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also heard that a car belonging to the saudi consulate has been found in a park car park in istanbul what more can you tell us about the. well according to turkish media reports this car has a diplomatic plates suggesting it belongs to the saudi consulate here in istanbul it was found abandoned in a parking lot in the sultan ghazi district here in istanbul which is about fifteen kilometers away from the consulate investigators are expected to search it now but the reports say this car matches one of the cars seen outside the saudi consulate the day mr. disappeared so this car as far as the theories go go here might have even been used to dispose of his body. in conclusion. the new development president and one has announced he will reveal details of the investigation in a speech in parliament on state firmly get go there has been this drip drip drip
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of information being leaked by turkey why not just release what they know now well that's the big question of course maybe to keep the attention live but for everyone as journalists as well covering this story it gets more complicated by the day more complex it's more difficult to distinguish facts from fiction so we really waiting for the statement by president out on the big question is of course what will he say will he openly blame the saudis of murder he has so far refrained from doing so or will he as some theories go adopt the narrative of the rogue operation the saudis are trying to establish in exchange for some kind of deal the spokesperson of his party yet today denied these claims that there are some kind of negotiations going on between turkey and saudi arabia but of course all eyes on turkey tomorrow all eyes on this out on they are in the driver seat at the moment
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in the story here leon reporting from istanbul thank you. and as pressure mounts on saudi authorities senior finance and trade officials from various western governments are shunning an investment conference kicking off in riyadh on tuesday siemens chief joe kaiser is the latest dropouts we'll have more on that from our business colleagues later in the show but now we shift our attention to russia where the kremlin is calling on the united states to help fix problems with existing nuclear weapons treaties u.s. national security adviser john bolton is in moscow for what are expected to be tough talks after the trump administration announced it would pull out of a cold war arms deal the i and f treaty was seen as a major breakthrough in nuclear security when it was signed by soviet leader mikhail gorbachev and us present ronald reagan in one thousand nine hundred eighty seven it requires the u.s. and the soviet union to give up all their nuclear and conventional ground launch
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missiles with ranges of five hundred to five thousand kilometers as a result of the i.n.f. treaty the u.s. and soviet union distort almost three thousand short and medium range missiles now president trump has accused moscow of violating that historic treaty russia's foreign minister sergei lavrov has warned of consequences. we're just focused here which they should but it would be stupid or start again actions that in fact the reaction. because the treaty stability can only be ensured when there is heresy but it's because i'm still you so much yes there's a character you must be maintained under all circumstances under such authority and yet casualties of so you go to say we are responsible for global stability had expected that the us want to announce you know this share of that responsibility in the huge list of little sharing that was away from war on the subject i'm now
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joined by alexander graf lamb star she's a member of the german bundestag and deputy leader of the opposition free a democrat certs good to have you with us this evening does president trump's announcement worry you yes of course particularly here in germany we are extremely worried by this announcement because it concerns a category of weapons that would reach europe not the continental united states it is a bilateral agreement between the united states and russia which europe's security which has greatly enhanced europe's security and i think it's very sad not only to germans but to poles to the french to the dutch to everybody here in europe but to president trump's point he says that russia is violating the agreement is that how you see it as well. well i find it slightly ironic to hear the russian foreign minister saying and i quote every action create its own reaction as a matter of fact since two thousand and fourteen we know that russia has deployed
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a system in myside s s c aid that violates the treaty that is in clear violation of the treaty with a reach of two thousand six hundred kilometers and so the united states action today is can be seen as a reaction to that violation of the treaty now president to trump security advisor mr bolton john bolton is in moscow as we speak for talks are you encouraged by that is that a good sign is that i think that is very important and i hope that this trip and these announcements will be the beginning of a series of conversations about strategic arms about control rather than the end of a treaty that has served everybody rather well and therefore i believe that john bolton being in moscow and briefing the russian side on the intentions of his administration is a positive sign i believe however that we need briefings from him or other senior
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officials in the united states administration of nato as well which is why we are calling on the german government to ask for a special nato summit on arms control and the i.n.f. treaty and what with that special nato summit meeting accomplish. well in that context the united states could explain what the strategy is behind their announcements because so far we have the announcement we cannot recognize a strategy what is the intention is there a change in the nuclear posture is there a pushback against russian hybrid warfare that is intended what exactly does washington intend with that and we need unity in the west because it would require countries to accept missiles off that kind in europe and for the united states to have countries welcoming such systems on their soil it would be good to involve them early on still i hope that all of this can be avoided and we can keep the
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contract the treaty intact can this treaty be salvaged i hope so i hope so because i think that it has served everybody well the russians are in breach and it is good that the americans react i criticized the german government for not having done so violating the treaty is even worse through was drawing from authorities announcing that but i believe that the treaty can be selfish if all sides are serious about it and if all sides share the intention of avoiding a really ruinous arms race alexander graf lamb star thank you sir for joining us thank you. and let's get you caught up now with some of the other stories making news around the world these days britain's prime minister theresa may has told parliament that ninety five percent of the breaks that would draw agreement with the european union is now settled you may says there might be circumstances in which a plan transition period is extended beyond twenty twenty something which has angered
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both pro and anti e.u. factions in her conservative party. the number of people killed in a coal mine accident in eastern china has climbed to three state media says eighteen people remain trapped underground two days after a part of a tunnel collapsed in the mine more than one hundred fifty rescuers are involved in the recovery operation. armed soldiers and police and india controlled kashmir haven't forced a security lockdown in downtown the rivers in anticipation of more anti in the protests it comes amid rising tensions after seven civilians were killed in a gun battle between government forces and militants on sunday. and though to stephen with a look at business and the latest on a controversial investor conference in saudi arabia. that's right you mentioned before the c.e.o.
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of german industrial giant siemens announcing today that he'll pull out of the davos in the desert now that's the massive investor conference set to begin this week in riyadh the move may not be a surprise in the wake of the suspected murder of dissident journalists. but for qasr his company it's not an easy one. preparations are well underway the mood though is muted said his future investment initiative a conference known by some as davos in the desert kicks off in riyadh on tuesday but the number of participants is dwindling relations business leader to pleasure the event is this man seaman c.e.o. joe kayser he announced his withdrawal following pressure to respond to allegations of saudi involvement in the killing of journalist jamal to shoot a turnaround since last week when qasr said he was still planning to attend in a statement posted on his linked in profile he said i will not attend the future investment initiative twenty eighteen it's the cleanest decision but not the most
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courageous one and it's not a decision against the kingdom or its people it's a decision based on how much responsibility one can assume at one time for now the truth must be found and justice must be served. cave's is one of several business leaders who find themselves in a moral quandary in the run up to the side of the conference but the wording of his statement especially his eagerness not to condemn his would be host it's a reminder that for many companies this is primarily a tradeoff between profits and p.r. . now earlier today we asked our correspondent in frankfurt paul christian brits what are the latest developments would mean for the saudi economy. a lot of people are not going to want to hear this is probably going to have a very minimal effect on. her three reasons first. going to happen the russian direct investment fund is going in the u.s. and u.k.
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and not one. of their defense contracts so they're going to tender for the new. bank. morgan pulling out well they're pulling out but they're going to go second or third row second reason domestic report i just got off the phone with an analyst in divine who said just the fact that women are now allowed to drive up insurance by twenty percent with all the gun cinemas in the country now so there's consumer spending there's domestic spending that strengthens me in the third while. brown dark black is nearing oil and the price is very very high right now much higher than it was in twenty thousand when the country opened up so companies are mostly hurting themselves i mean to the to the country. are frankfurt correspondent paul chris you're brits now italy it's in the e.u.
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to stay prime minister josep picante says his country won't leave the european union but that it will stick to its deficit hike that's despite criticism from brussels contrary argues that the economy needs a lift the blocks biggest member state germany has warned rome to be careful with debt however and moody's has cut italy's credit rating. italy's prime minister has defended the deficit busting budget insisting his country needs a new approach to stimulating the economy because previous efforts have failed in the second quarter growth slowed to its weakest pace in nearly two years in. the middle of a big market draft as well constructed and well formed the provisions for growth are very good in respect to what we are doing at the moment the. county has pledged that next year's deficit won't exceed two point four percent of g.d.p. but that's triple the previous government's forecast the italian leader said it would fall below two percent by two thousand and twenty one and he cared that the
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national debt to g.d.p. ratio would decline as well he also dismissed any suggestion that italy would leave the european union or the euro zone read my lips. no chance no way to get it there's no way to get out of. many italian support runs tough stance against brussels and hope the increased spending will help kick start the economy. but i think all the election promises were kept so they did just fine even keeping their stance with europe which i think is the fundamental battle. not you hoping i think that europe does not have to tell us what we have to do. because they are prejudiced against us. harrison to other european countries are not that confident that i respect their
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yesterday by zero. on tuesday the european commission is set to discuss and decide the next steps in the procedure for assessing italy's proposed budget for next year . now for more on this topic we're joined by dr john whittaker an economics researcher and professor at lancaster university in the u.k. a doctor would occur italy says it won't be influenced by brussels rejection of its budget but what leverage does bustles really have in this case well logo's downs of the rules known as the stability pact which has been the round right since the beginning of the euro and we start trying to strengthen and change its name and those sorts of tricks to try and make it work but the stability pact has always been short of teeth that it doesn't bite the ultimate sanction has always been to find the country is running excessive deficits but no fine is ever been imposed and indeed we have all the crazy things they do to find the countries it's in budget troubles so they try to rely on lots of surveillance so cool successive deficit
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procedure makes it sound all sinister but if the stability pact works at all it's probably by causing reputational damage to a country that looks a bit running a budget that's too great well what about market pressure in this case we know that moody's has downgraded italy's credit rating what does that mean exactly and what kind of pressure does that put on italy's government well it does in the sense that it's been raising the yield on it and the telling government budget telling governments bones there now it's about three and a home percent of something which is i think it's a four or five year high if that creates something great deal more the danger is then that the taliban government will find it difficult to borrow. that's a very bad position that reminds one of greece when greece was nearly leaving the euro in two thousand and fifteen if the government can borrow well looks very much
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towards that it might have to abandon the euro and go back to visioneer zero. now we know that deficit spending is not unheard of especially when trying to stimulate an economy so why do analysts in this case look so concerned when they are to speak in such concerned manner when they look at the italian budget well you know you could make an argument for a government to do most bending or you can make an argument for government to do less spending and in both cases the objective could be to bring down the government's debt. stimulus you have that's what they're telling governments arguing but the rest of the european union and indeed other commentators seem to think that that's the moment rhogam so for it's on the i suppose it's all given its reputation even before he joined the euro it's the government there hundred reputation for spending too much that having inflation may join the euro is still spent too much but it couldn't have inflation in the event i ended up with it it's a live being the lowest during your exam country since the beginning of
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reputational problem people think that it's and his finances are going to get out of control. dr john would occur with lancaster university thanks for joining us. and now back to live with the news thank you so much the lebanon has taken in more than a million syrian refugees many live in extreme poverty and often parents have no choice but to marry off their children because they simply don't have the means to feed and raise them aid groups have now raise the alarm saying that the number of child brides is on the rise in law but on where there is no minimum age of marriage she wus a anybody who traveled to a refugee camp in the bekaa valley in the exclusive report she met a fourteen year old girl who was about to get married. last fall when it was just starting a new semester at school. this year she's getting ready for her wedding but after i
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stopped going to school in the seventh grade because i got engaged my mother knows him he came and told her that he wanted me and that was that. what his just fourteen years old when her fiance first brought her her engagement ring it slipped off her finger and had to be resized to fit her small hand. she fled war torn syria to a refugee camp in lebanon's bekaa valley. the stent is home to her her mother and three siblings it's difficult to make ends meet with. the i need to pay for electricity household expenses rent i also have medical expenses two of my children have chronic asthma when they have attacks at night there's nothing i can do. mark won't be the first in her family to be married off as a girl her mother wed when she was fifteen eight organizations say the humanitarian crisis has seen child marriages increase within syrian refugee communities. many
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like matter who no longer have a childhood with few responsibilities to look forward to. all the while the war i have to get married because of our situation there are many things i need that i can't get i don't have any married friends and don't really know what marriage is. in lebanon one in five syrian refugee girls between fifteen and nineteen is married with more than two thirds of syrian refugees in lebanon living in poverty many parents see marrying their children off as the only option to pay the bills. although if we were in syria and there was no war i would never have done this i would have let a study even my son who is top of his cluster now has to work. that
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last year our tent burned down i'm still in debt because of that we left with nothing but the clothes on our backs. but parents are not the only ones to blame there is no minimum age of marriage and lebanon and some religious communities girls even younger than fifteen can marry activists like him nor are calling for that to change. the law of the clan they call how we need a law that would set the minimum age for marriage at eighteen and to punish the shakes who officiate such marriages their giving away it goes right there marrying them just on paper but it's not officially registered anywhere. or a lot less follow it up such a law is nowhere in sight however and so in a few weeks mother who will become yet another child bride in lebanon should be sent back to syria to her future husband.
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lewis hamilton will have to wait at least another week to secure a fifty formula one world championship to hamilton needed to win on sunday but was bettered by ferrari's kimmie record in the us comping on germany's sebastian vettel meanwhile fall back after a difficult start to finish fourth and thereby keeping the championship race alive a little while longer. pole position in a potentially title winning you ascribe the dream scenario for lewis hamilton and things were about to get even better as rivals the best infertile spun out following a collision on the opening lap. but federals ferrari teammate can be right killen wasn't about to make life easy for hamilton repeatedly forcing the british drivers' attempts to regain the lead. the surprise emergence of red balls next to stepan but it started in eighteenth position gave havel to a new headache and contributed to a nail biting final few laps. fatsos recovery is
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a full of mean while meant hamilton would have to finish second to wrap up the title. but right can and fished up and held foam to hate the hamilton victory parade. will present big congratulations to you came you did a great job today no mistakes get a great start and manage your way so i think when i. also. suppose this happened did a great job as well i mean he was it was an aside but a tie the knot at the end so it naturally a bit of a struggle. of not be thought we would have been out to do better but this is the best we were able to do the end of first scrum for you victory for reichen since twenty thirty as hamilton is forced to wait another week in his bid to seal a fifth well title. you're watching t.v. news with silva lot more to tell you about including president donald trump says i care about of migrants heading to the u.s. border from central america is a national emergency and put the military on alert he's now also threatening to cut
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foreign aid to the region and the blooming jass seen in ethiopia as capital exists i'll get a tour for one of the you local musicians there. that and a whole lot more coming up right after these messages. in mali shutting down the escape loops with funding from the e.u. . the numbers of the refugees reaching europe has dropped but at what cost. we look at the measures being taken south of the supply. no entry. fees. and list all
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consuming conflict forth over our country which are. thirty years it turned into a battlefield. but cannons failed to determine its outcome. in negotiations lasting many years mediators succeeded in reaching agreement. it was the birth of modern diplomacy. sixteen forty eight took its starts october twenty fourth one g.w. . fake hair and real story. where i come from a lot of women like me 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
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people who have something to share. with others i'm a fan of the salon i know good quality hair when i see it and the good story when i hear it. my name is elizabeth shawn and i work at steve. good to see you're good you're watching you got me there is only a little rock n roll and these are amazing stories this hour. a top official from turkey's governing a kid party says the killing of the exiled saudi journalist jamal fresh oakley at his country's istanbul consulate was planned in a sandwich matter world leaders are skeptical about saudi claims that the killing was accidental and the kremlin is calling on the u.s. to work with russia and fixing problems with existing nuclear weapons treaty u.s.
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national security adviser john bolton is in moscow for talks after washington threatened to quit a cold war agreement on intermediate range missiles. now cameroon's presence paul b. has won a seventh term in office in an election marred by a low turnout be a is africa's oldest president and has been in power for thirty six years official results say he was reelected with seventy percent of the vote while his main challenger more these come to no one just fourteen percent last week the constitutional court appointed by president rejected opposition calls for a rerun of the election. do you ever use it when krishna is in the lagos nigeria you just returned from cameroon good to see adrian this win gives president paul b. another seven years in office he'll be ninety two when his term ends can he still
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govern cameron effectively well as you said he is eighty five years old africa's oldest president and you have to keep in mind that sixty percent of cameroonians are under twenty five and they went even born when i took office for the first time this been a lot of speculation going on about his state of health there was never any official confirmation what we know from local media reports is that biasa spends about two months last year abroad and then in the years two thousand and six and two thousand and nine it was even one third of the year that he spent abroad and so this of course cost a lot of speculation is widely said that the daily government activities are run anyways by the prime minister and not by paul b. himself in march this year for the first time after more than two years beyond was held in a cabinet meeting himself no cameron officials say the election was free and fair
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despite security problems in the english speaking areas in the west of the country what was your impression when you were there. well if you have a state of war in the northern part of the country in the areas and an area where nobody could go and no independent observers could go during the election i don't think you can speak of a free and fair election here that is simply not possible i wanted to go there myself to the un before an area to the angle for the region but the your thirty's the late my accuracy taishan request and my visa until the very day when the border to nigeria close i was not able to cross over on election day anymore and had to go afterwards so in a nutshell i don't believe and i don't think we can speak of a free credible and fair election here so the iris in the anglican areas made it impossible for many there to vote how do those people view the reelection. i mean many people now believe that the situation will continue the way it is
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fights between separatists and government troops will continue this year more than four hundred civilians were killed and it seems that the president is not willing to negotiate he is not willing to talk to the other side and i talk to one of the village elders in the younger for a reason to ask him so if. elected again what do you expect from him and he said well he hasn't done anything for us in his lifetime why would i expect anything from him now during his retirement age. even chris reporting thank you so very much . and next up we're going to shift our attention to the horn of africa to ethiopia cecily the way ahead lies at the rio olympics back in two thousand and sixteen not for the civil medal that he won for his country in the marathon but for the gesture he made at the finish line the athlete crossed his arms to protest government
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violence in the east african nation and has been in exile in the united states ever since but after the recent reforms in ethiopia he can now finally go home. the handcuffed gesture that forced lee last into exile in two thousand and sixteen he did it to show solidarity with his a romo tribe who protested ethiopia's government's plan to reallocate foreign land during a period of civil unrest in the country protests grew violent. and hundreds lost their lives in the process although violence has it completely subdued the left says return home is a sign some things have changed. my life united knew this day was coming. because i knew the blood of all these people wasn't going to be spilled in vain and. i knew the dictator government would
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eventually fall to my political point i was expecting this day but i didn't know if it was going to be today or tomorrow. but i had clearly in my mind that i would go back to my father's land alive they find it and because we're used to. it and ethiopia's new prime minister has pursued a reconciliation strategy to ease tensions in the region and the lesson plans to return to his profession rani. and we stay with the ethiopia because a country's capital at this about was once renowned for its just scene with its heyday and the one nine hundred sixty s. and seventy's but in recent years jazz has been enjoying a slow but steady revival in the city well one of the musicians there cinna shot legacy has given d.w. a tour of some of the his story gas side sentry to this to
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a late night music session. lisa bev if you feel sprawling capital listen carefully there's more to the sound of the city thunder hooting of ramshackle blue cops simitian guess at an upcoming new q.b. and jazz musician is going to give us an inside look at his hometown. and. what you see behind is day two hundred it is the first modern hotel in history in this old hotel you know launch gold just people used to play jazz music seven days a week i once was lucky enough to play the air five of just in this house uplifted many artists in the country this place has had a huge impact on if you can just music i think i think to look at other guests for the pure jazz has survived decades of political upheaval and more recently the burning down of its legendary headquarters that tied to the tail for yes local and
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international jazz afficionados main goal here to choose made famous by jim jim lucius movie loken flowers and played by to us that's the five out of e.q. jazz percentage shall i guess say it's an inspirational place. to go to members of a thought which in a modern new income american who is my music i often get ideas from what i observe . in the city is my inspiration trait menus. for the monkey on your team i often wake up in the morning and observe things in the city when i'm walking my music is a collection of these observations i'm never going to watch and. there's certainly plenty to write about you not the sabbat from the historical monuments to new audition like the lights real way. to the main skyscrapers and coffeehouses of the upscale ball of district get the city on and off and on more
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dignity and yet many of its. precedents struggled to make ends meet in what is still one of africa's poorest countries. ahead of his jobs session tonight so michelle needs to visit. another quarter of the city it's the shoppers paradise full to bursting with traditional clothes on seven is well this musician wants to look his best after all. how is it it's nice thank you. come back again. ok thank you. so nischelle his head into tonight's just concepts about his new purchases perhaps being decked out in the colors of the if you can flog green yellow and red bull give him some more last minute inspiration performing with well known ethiopian composers like a big guy and his renowned band members easy privilege on the bill tonight the song
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called bitter which translates as. my home. depot the. tonight senate is doing what he laughs in the city he loves to morrow will be on the hunt for more inspiration the style. stuff i'm going to hand you back over to stephen for more that's right lou and we're going to stay in africa and move on to south africa specifically where johannesburg's conservative mayor wants to use a controversial policy to turn the city of gold into a construction site now his plan could be a first test for a national policy of land and property expropriation that has divided the nation along racial and economic lines. tens of thousands of whole jana's the
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residents live in derelict buildings like this. that hang is if i live here because i don't pay rent at all and at least that way i can improve my life. and to solve this problem johannesburg's conservative mayor has a controversial plan to use the governing and seize policy of experts without compensation. we have to e.q. election perpetrate the buildings which are not taken care of because we cannot while we are developing we are asking people to come in putting their money into the city and next still is a building that is hijacked. herman mashad or wants to turn the cities over one hundred abandoned or hijacked building sites that have become a hotbed of crime and overcrowding into sprawling developments in partnership with the private sector some owned by the city and used by others
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have owners that con be traced i love money like anybody else but i like would to work for it and i know that the system that is why i like the capitalist system the left leaning and seeing wants to change the constitution to implement expert without compensation but mashad and his party the main opposition democratic alliance believes the constitution can remain and touched to achieve this goal we're not there we're not under same page. with a settler on our post saying they did what they see is purely a plane in to do this play in the city long before they would have said what i'm up or so looked at political expediency property developers have already shown interest in the move. constitution definitely allows for its procreation. there could be resistance by some factions of some people that man is clearly outlined there is only going to expropriate the buildings where you can't find the
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owners of those buildings so as a property invest that i mean as long as i'm taking care of my building maintaining it i would do so in confidence outs that invest in the city but for his plan to work the mayor may need to evict some poor city residents only the citizeness just want work that's all we want where shall we go i have no where to go because i'm not working. his idea may succeed in an overcrowded johannesburg but it does run the risk of the poorest of the poor picking up the town. now one of australia's last remaining piano makers has just unveiled an instrument the likes of which the world has never seen before the piano has an extra couple octaves which may sound like a stretch but will throwing in a few more keys be enough to restore the fortunes of an age old craft.
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a grand piano as you've never seen or heard it before which twenty more keys than you'll find on a conventional instrument these concert pianists have an extra two octaves to play with. it's the brainchild of this man wayne stewart he's one of the last remaining piano makers in a story and has been practicing the craft for the last forty years he's hoping his new creation will inspire fresh interest in the declining arce it's a twenty first century we need we need we need new things we need new horizons and this is certainly a new horizon the search for new horizons comes as instrument makers and astray and elsewhere struggle to maintain their livelihoods high manufacturing costs at home often mean it's cheaper to buy a foreign made instrument with a price tag of two hundred fourteen thousand u.s. dollars when stewart's novelty creation is certainly beyond the reach of an average buyer its new home will be here in the historic by your hands
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a theater on victoria's marring to peninsula getting it there was no mean feat. and after the unveiling the moment of truth when its new owner hears it for the first time. we have what i think the best bloody piano in the uk a grand finale for an old craft desperate to stay in tune with the times. that's it for me but a little q steve. in brazil social media companies claim they are cracking down on a flood of fake news ahead of this weekend's presidential elections is the second and final round of the ballot where a far right front runner balsam arrow is facing leftist rival fernando has died but his opponent is behind
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a campaign spreading false and demeaning claims about him in thousands of online messages and for that. social media has been tracking all the developments there good to see you for that kind of messages are brazilians receiving so we've seen a number of examples being shared on what's up in brazil has over one hundred million users and one example here is a video of how dad getting in and out ferarri you know of course that's a huge expensive card that could cost over a million dollars in brazil and it's arguably suspicious thing for one died to own since he's a former mayor a college professor the claim that he's making is that this is his own car and that he was going to the airport but actually and that's bulls on both counts and the video was actually taken in two thousand and sixteen when he had died was at an event at a racing circuit near south and the vice presidential candidate.
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was also targeted and here's an example it's a picture doctored picture of her which is supposedly showing her wearing a t. shirt saying jesus is a transvestite potentially offensive to christian voters and she herself has shared the post later singling this out as fake and saying pay attention lies shall not get through help us share the truth and these are just two examples and we've seen even a messages that were make. even more extreme claims like for example that had dodd was going to legalize the defeat for instance i mean these are such blatant examples of manipulating the media messages as both and are we didn't where did he say about all of this he completely denies any involvement in spreading these messages and he also told his supporters not to do so because in fact this comes
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after brazilian media reported that it was both some of those who are supporters who are behind the misinformation campaigns and what's have who funded these campaigns and now we're seeing also that brazil's federal police is investigating and what's up itself they've been they've been taking steps to try and combat the problem they're running and advertising campaign for example to giving tips on how to spot misinformation and they've been closing down some of the accounts sharing these messages for the week about just thank you so much for granted a story thanks. next up we have to north america to the u.s. where president donald trump says a caravan of central american migrants heading toward the country's southern border is a national emergency that has put the military and border guards on alert he's also threatening to cut foreign aid to the region mostly honduran migrants fleeing
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violence and poverty have reached southern mexico and could track to the u.s. border within a month. they feel safer traveling in a large group they say they're in their thousands men women children many are suffering from dehydration stomach infections and food injuries from their long journey. but most have one goal in mind to reach the united states for a chance at a brighter future. i mean even the because of the latest through and support us. we're not coming here we want to go here. we need transportation if we go without food for three days it's not a problem the united states should open its doors to let us work even if it's just for six years and that's it. in the southern mexican town of tapachula on sunday sympathetic villagers offered exhausted migrants food water and clothing. the
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migrants had walked thirty kilometers in the blazing sun from the guatemalan border many of them without any provisions hundreds of locals driving vans and trucks stopped to let them climb aboard. the mexican authorities have been urging the migrants to apply for asylum in mexico and offered to bus them to a shelter set up by immigration officials but most refused fearing they would be deported. since the convoy formed last week u.s. president donald trump has been threatening to call in the military up to close the border with mexico and we have the military stationed there not coming into this country in a tweet trump send the migrants should apply for asylum in mexico first otherwise the u.s. would turn them away he also threatened to cut off aid to one douras guatemala and el salvador but the migrants are undeterred whatever hardships they may face along
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their journey many say that the life back home is much worse with the rampant violence poverty and hopelessness. grade french actress got seen this many five years to the day her career really started with the this film that you see right here the umbrella of shampoo or when she was just two one zero one and she's still busy making movies today steers week she's also receiving one of the world's top prizes for the arts premium and pray all awarded by a japanese family. and a robin meryl from our culture desk is here to talk all things cut thing a good note of thank you so much for being here robin i see continues to have a global appeal as this accolade again yeah i mean it does indeed with the premium
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imperioli is really like the nobel prize for culture because the nobel prize doesn't have culture right except the literature prize and it isn't a lifetime achievement award there because as you said the career is not she is still making films she's quintessentially french but she really is a world star and she's never had a dip in her career she's made two or three films every year and she started making them as a teenager as we saw and also she she takes risks i mean if you think that this is playing a rich bourgeois housewife who who lives. fantasies as a prostitute which sounds like a plot from today to today but this was back in one thousand nine hundred sixty seven i'm talking about jewel there was also one of roman polanski's greatest films repulsion she made two years before that anyway let's have a look back at some of her mazing iran and lustrous career. in the.
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film legends known for her timeless beauty and iconic roles. elegant independent captivating and cool at the same time the net has been on the screen for more than sixty years she says she's fortunate to have had a good start but ok last question especially young mentors is are often judged for their beauty but i was lucky that early on i was able to work with directors who also gave me very strong roles. for roles that deneuve threw herself into she portrayed a schizo frantic murderous and roman polanski's repulsion. she shocked france as a housewife turned prostitute in luis to new wells bed his rule. he took and played opposite her favorite leading man. in françois truffaut's wartime drama
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the last metro there to pick up the. time has not slowed catherine deneuve she's a prolific artist with more than one hundred twenty movies under her belt. how she chooses her roles remain simple. people because i think i'm still on the same it's the same thing that i felt you know years ago it's always the desire you know for. the characters but the films most most of all it's the film the director that they choose. to unnerve is known for doing what she wants and she isn't afraid to experiment. she starred together with the icelandic singer bjork and dancer in the dark for the controversial director mars from tree are going to come any time. she appeared in the murder mystery musical eight women by force woes zones. and as the self-indulgent friend of a vegetarian midwife. the midwife. for her work tonight has received
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dozens of awards and accolades this week so receive another one the premium imperioli awarded by the japanese royal family. now robin she did earlier this year court controversy she criticized the me too movement and warned of a new her ten ism and got a lot of flak for this kind of tone deaf yes she did i mean it was a bit misguided to do it at the time and it was bad timing she said men should be allowed to fly. isn't saying they're not allowed to but i mean she's entitled to opinion but i think the me too movement movement is much stronger is much more serious than what she was saying really she did apologize she did
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i'm going to. move. up some border in africa. and mali are shutting down the escape routes with funding from the e.u. law the numbers of the refugees reaching europe have dropped but at what cost. we look at the measures being taken south of the sun harm. no interest the business news on the c.w. get on the fast pace of life in the digital modes of the
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trophy shift because the lowdown on the weather it shows up new developments useful information and anything else worth noting. presents the listening is fine so far looks over the shoulders of makers and users. should include the five minutes of the movie. careering to me. the flood not everyone who loves books asked to go to the same law the d.w. literature. list one hundred german must reads basically every you news line from
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her left us and bring in our correspondent ophelia harms of british and joins us from rio de janeiro so we're here to find out what happened here that the unsung live dean she is the head of the environment team with me is the duffy correspondent found out it's a frontal area and we do have some breaking news that's coming into us now it's all about the perspective closer up w. . thank you for joining us. frank food and. international gateway to the best connection self road and rail. located in the heart of europe connected to the who will. experience outstanding shopping and dining offers and trying our services. biala gassed at frankfurt airport city managed by from.
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this is g.w. news that. berlin tonight is seeing double new details emerge in the killing of salty journalist as your ball goes shogi as the kingdom doubles down in the noise of the crown prince have any involvement turkey's president is tightening the screws and promising to reveal how. in a much anticipated speech tomorrow also coming up.
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