Skip to main content

tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  November 18, 2018 9:00pm-9:16pm CET

9:00 pm
good morning. digital. storage twenty thousand dollars. this is w. news live from berlin a day to remember the wars that europe pledged never to repeat the french president urges closer collaboration with berlin during ceremonies marking germany's day of remembrance by pronghorns a future dangers that europe must face together also coming out. ahead of the
9:01 pm
european leaders meeting to discuss brags it does i'll tell you visit one english town where the leave boat was among the strongest and where some people are now switching signs. you're. welcome to the program i'm mary and i haven't seen we begin it with a call for unity from french president metal mock wrong as he addresses german lawmakers here in berlin and his speech was part of germany's annual remembrance day which honors the victims of war and oppression from across a chance to rally germany to his vision of a new era in europe. on the day of remembering the war and division a strong show of unity. speaking to the german bundestag the french president said france and germany had overcome two hundred years of wards and now is the time to
9:02 pm
look to the future. to get someplace. new. today we must find the courage together to open a new chapter. we owe it to europe because we are not yet fully aware of the importance of the times we live in. an impassioned call for france and germany to work together only that way could europe tackle challenges from climate change to migration. that is why europe must be stronger that is why it must be more sovereign because it will not be able to play its role if it becomes the placing of the world's top powers if it doesn't take more responsibility for its defense and security and its content to play a secondary role on the world stage. as was met with applause
9:03 pm
also from the german chancellor with whom i call has been holding talks on e.u. reforms this last week. it's wonderful that you are our guests here today and i'm sure many and such an impressive speech that made it clear once again just how important german french cooperation and friendship is and just how important it is in a peon context earlier on sunday america than my car laid wreaths at germany's central memorial for those killed in war their countries through time opposite sides and both world wars making the two leaders remembering together a strong symbol of re conciliation and peace. and with me in the studio now is t.-bone milan he's a journalist from lizzy call paris to both things that for being with us so we heard micron there talking about greater european integration but at the same time
9:04 pm
we heard him speak quite a bit about sovereignty how do you reconcile these two somewhat different priorities well i think for marco the both go hand in hand what it promises to the french that is and is to protect them and also to european citizens to protect them and sort of europeans over and he economy can political civility the only way to achieve that is being stronger together and more and what good goes through more integration if you take the year of his conviction. the euro won't be stronger against the dollar that's called currency seventy if we don't how you was in the budget for instance a strong currency that's goes hand in hand for him but these are of course difficult times we have the u.k. poised to leave the european union there's quite a lot of euro skepticism elsewhere in europe how does mark on think that
9:05 pm
a greater integration can be achieved i think that's precisely the point. michael but also america i think see those threats like the brics it or maybe direction of the donald trump has one more argument to integrate the european union more than before of course you have this. force was against integration we have the one i see a lot of us in the us not in france you have been in germany. and it makes it more difficult to achieve more integration but exist same time this thread to make it's more i think understandable for the other part of the population to to to make a strong effort. join forces together and now you're talking about these external threats but we have to mention internally micron and merkel also are facing quite a lot of pressure and do they have the necessary authority to get these e.u.
9:06 pm
reforms to happen briefly if you can. well we obviously we we've just seen this weekend has been quite difficult for michael he's popular overseas very low we have to these demonstrations yesterday against the governing tax so he's a three to easy challenge and also medical authorities used is challenge but. i don't think they have any choice really. journalists from lizzie called paris many thanks indeed for your insights. and now to some of the other stories making news around the world. after a manual recount for the u.s. senate race in the state of florida on going republican governor rick scott has been named to the winner beating democrat incumbent bill nelson by about ten thousand votes scott's victory means republicans lose their majority of the senate by at least one more seat. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu says holding early elections would be irresponsible and he's called on his coalition partners
9:07 pm
not to bring down the government he's taken on the duties of defense minister after of a door lieberman resigned in protest over a ceasefire deal reached with hamas following a flare up of violence in gaza. police in madrid have arrested members of the feminist feminist group who were demonstrating against pro franco marchers some of them attacked the women the far right rally was held to mark the anniversary of the spanish dictator's death. at least three people have been killed by a grenade attack on worshippers in india's punjab state followers of the neuron cari spiritual group were targeted in the city of amr it's our denomination is considered heretical by most sikhs the religious majority in that region. british prime minister to resign may's says the next seven days in the breaks of
9:08 pm
process will be critical for britain in an interview she said she would not give her backing to a plan to leave the european union until the two sides agreed on what their future relationship will be european ministers are set to discuss that plan this week but as briggs it begins to take shape many who voted to leave the e.u. don't like what they see d. w. visited an english town where it seems that a number of people have even changed their minds. this is one of britain's most years skeptic communities here it's just to the east of london seventy percent of people voted to leave the e.u. many of them were young people after a week of drama at westminster but did the under thirty's think now was the point i believe in this is going to be a lot of hassle we want to break we want to europe to set off far more of a benefit from levy and. i don't think we want to stop arguing and.
9:09 pm
young adults have been following the political show in london closely the result is that many are not sure whether leaving the you is the right thing to do after all i was in favor of leaving and went to leave. i knew that there would be short term struggles all of the mess that is going on is has brought me to a point where i almost regret the decision to leave twenty four year old mitchell in the technology industry he had trusted british politicians to deliver on their promise to secure a good deal now he has doubts about whether that is possible to see how much of a mess everything's actually come into there's no structure and no one knows where it's going to go there's lots of uncertainty but the moment i feel that we should probably we should stay not far away sue connelly of the local conservative party is just as unhappy with the draft breaks a deal as mentioned but for her the answer cannot be to stay in the i think that with greyman this is rubbish basically it's not what we want it's not what we voted
9:10 pm
for we didn't vote for a load of idiots up in westminster. the whole deal they've made a total mess of the and the snow so we won't we will lay out we want to help now. to connelly things the young people from are wrong and doubting they leave out but back in the snooker club mitchell and i believe that britain's perhaps shouldn't have been asked to vote. the issue in the first place i want to kind of. a decision like this was something as complex as europe has been put in my hands because being honest i don't understand it. the prime minister understands it so how we making the decisions. this is the thing everyone has an opinion but no one knows what should happen now with all of the unfolding uncertainty and chaos young people i'm not sure that the breaks a game can be won any more. than joining us now from westminster is d.w.
9:11 pm
correspondent barbara vessel so barbara i think it's safe to say that may has had a rather difficult week she says so herself in a t.v. interview today and she also of course continued to defend her breaks the deal how does she come across. or she comes across as a woman who is decided to determine to fight and to call this last week for her a rather difficult week of course is the understatement of the day it's been me it's been completed not to can use reason to divide but to resolve me to get this interview that she would not step away that she would push this deal through and she didn't mind it from her opponents and groups so far enemies to fall over unless and there was a stretch implied let's hear what the prime minister has to say. you know change of
9:12 pm
leadership at this point isn't going to make the negotiations uneasy and it's not going to change the parliamentary arithmetic what it will do what it will do is bring in a degree of uncertainty that's uncertainty for people and what it will do is mean that is a risk that actually we delay the negotiations and that's a risk that wrecks it gets delayed or frustrations. what she telling us there it's quite obvious to be if she's telling her enemies and the whole gang go off for opponents within her own party and of course on the opposition benches if you shoot me down things will get worse because then we might end up was no breaks it and everybody in britain seems to begin to understand what that means or you will get no bricks at all and then of course is directed at her enemies with in the tory party telling them if you still want to break that this is your only and one chance well there has been some talk of possibly renegotiating the draft deal or at least
9:13 pm
parts of it but barbara what is brussels likely to make of this. process of course is wringing their hands and tearing their hair for days because they watched the kaos in westminster and massive store job what are they doing there is it mean these mean negotiations have been dragging on from months and months in many late nights and now there is this call to a negotiate however spirit driesum a knows that it is not doable the bricks and deal the actual divorce agreement those five hundred eighty five pages of legal text they will not be true or not and they will not be reopened there is nothing going on there however what she can achieve and what she's trying to do at brussels in brussels is to put some more let's say a sweet language and a bit more love into these so called political declaration dealing with the future
9:14 pm
relationship between the united kingdom and the european union and that of course can still be achieved it means nothing legally but if the other leaders can help or to go to cross the virtual here they might do so. barbara vai's all reporting for us from westminster thank you. tennis now in germany is alexander's there of has defeated world number one of a joke a vigil to win the prestigious a.t.p. finals in london a day earlier is there a shock for roger federer in the semifinals and on sunday he carried that form into the final to defeat java vision two sets winning six four six three it's the biggest success of the twenty one year olds a fledgling career and extreme athletes have flocked to oman to compete in grueling desert conditions for a one hundred sixty five kilometer race over six days the oman desert marathon
9:15 pm
began saturday with a relatively short twenty one kilometer warm up and of allowing competitors to adjust to the oppressive conditions about one hundred fifty runners start of the race which will be held completely on sand crossing the oman desert to the arabian sea. you're up to date now on d w news will be back again at the top of the hour with another update omarion evans team thanks for watching. where i come from we have to fight for a free press and was born and raised in a military dictatorship with just want to be shot no and if you just pay for this one official information as attorneys i have work on the streets of many characters on the wall those are always the same fourteen social inequalities that can the
9:16 pm
freedom of the prez.

29 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on