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tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  November 20, 2018 1:00pm-1:30pm CET

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[000:00:00;00] player . this is due to the news line from berlin a u.s. court deals a blow to president trump's immigration policy as thousands of central american migrants head towards the u.s. the president wants to restrict their ability to claim asylum on american soil but a judge in california has now locked trump's order. also coming up every day innocent yemenis are starving and dying because of a conflict that is entirely manmade all the latest calls for a cease fire at the united nations change anything and if not what will it take to
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end the suffering the toxicity and she's just a small child and has to carry so much weight it could break her back of the it's hard for her that i point out she should be at least thirteen or fourteen if you do act like. we need some minor an eight year old refugee from syria forced to work in the fields of lebanon to help her family get awkward. and in sports a frustrating end to a catastrophic year for german football they go to goes off against the netherlands but two late goals by the dutch send them to the nation's lakefront. i'm sumi so much going to thank you for joining us a judge in the united states has temporarily barred president trump from denying asylum to migrants who enter the country illegally through mexico the ruling comes as the u.s.
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steps up security at its border with mexico over fears that. migrants might try to overrun the checkpoints thousands of migrants from central america are currently waiting in the mexican city of tijuana to apply for asylum in the u.s. now in his ruling the judge said the trump's order to block asylum claims represented quote an extreme departure from previous practice he said whatever the scope of the president's authority he may not rewrite the immigration laws to impose a condition that congress has expressly forbidden now the temporary restraining order will remain in place until there's a permanent legal ruling let's get more on the story with robert from lancaster university he's a former journalist and author of several books on trump's rhetoric and his relationship with the media and he joins us to tell us more about the story hi robert good to see you so how much of a setback is this injunction for a president trump well donald trump has told us repeatedly that he doesn't deal.
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he can't lose so i think we're going to see in this case a decision about whether to continue to fight this in the courts which probably will happen but also. donald trump's going to start to find other ways to deal with what he considers to be an immigration crisis and that might mean to continuing to ramp up the military's ation local ice agents people who deal with immigration enforcement or other forms of sanctions against people who enter the country illegally as you said he sees immigration as a crisis robert and this is something that has become a cornerstone of his presidency changing immigration laws a tightening border security do you think we're going to see him continue to push this agenda in this way or changes to it because of this injunction. well i think you know if you sees this as at a loss you'll never he'll never tell us but we may see him slow down his rhetoric i mean certainly the intel immigration rhetoric was something he used in his campaign
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for the presidency and then very strongly again with the use of military force or threats of military force here in the midterms and just end it so we're going to have to see what happens with further court cases related to this but certainly this is one of the topics that resonates extremely strongly with with his base and now in a split congress this could become one of those big issues going into the twenty twenty. where he's seeking another term so we have to see what's happening and in the courts just certainly but also what new things he might concoct to to make into domestic and international affairs proper let's talk about the court system we have seen courts block president trumps immigration policies in the past for example on sanctuary cities or on the ban on muslims from some cunt countries entering the u.s. do you think we can expect to see more of that in the future. well i think
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a split congress has something to do with this and. i think if we see one side of congress being held by republicans and the others by democrats they're going to have to decide what issues they're going to going to fight and so how court systems fix these types of answers is going to be that dependent upon the types of approaches that congress itself is going to take so it's going to become kind of a battle field on capitol hill about. the degree to which federal judges get involved in discussions about policy continues to step federal judges in his favor as he's done for the supreme court so we're going to see this this sort of meddling by the courts as he would see yet continue as things heat up on particular issues but again it's going to be up to congress also to see what types of strategies they're going to use to either fight donald trump or fight for donald trump
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especially over the next two years as they go into the next presidential bid all right proper good chere former journalist and author from lancaster university joining us thank you very much now to some other stories making news around the world president trance daughter and white house advisor yvonne khatron is reported to have used her personal e-mail account for government business that's according to the washington post her lawyer says she sent e-mails before she was properly briefed on the rules last year the f.b.i. investigated presidential candidate hillary clinton speaks of a personal e-mail account when she was secretary of state. in the belgian capital brussels a policeman has been stabbed in front of the city's main police station his injuries were not life threatening but the attacker was seriously injured when he was shot by the officers calling police say the motive is unclear. a commuter train has derailed outside the spanish city of bet's alona killing one person and injuring dozens five of them seriously
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a landslide triggered the crash causing two of the carriages to jump the tracks the rest of the one hundred thirty three passengers on board were unhurt. and chinese president xi jinping is in the philippines on his first state visit to the country protesters rallied outside the chinese embassy in manila to protest against beijing's claims over most of the south china sea they say president is turning a blind eye to the issue because he wants china to invest in the philippines. yemen fighting has again flared up between who the rebels and the saudi led coalition despite calls for a truce now earlier the two sides had signaled a willingness to halt military operation operations after more than four years of conflict in a few hours the un security council is due to debate a resolution aiming at bringing about an immediate cease fire between the warring parties. for yemenis young and old the ceasefire can't come soon enough.
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as many as eighteen million people more than half the country are close to starvation. four years of conflict have brought yemen to its knees. we have more shelter we have nothing we don't even have water our children are sick . doctors just can't keep up with the number of malnourished patients. we receive twenty five malnutrition cases every single week our capacity here is very limited and marcus ahead. of us if they get. renewed fighting flared up in the port city of her late monday but the un is pushing ahead with its efforts to broker peace talks between the warring parties the yemeni government has said it would send a delegation to talks. that came after the rebels said they'd stop missile attacks on saudi arabia the yemeni government's major backer but as ever in
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this conflict skepticism remains. i believe this is just a way for the saudis. coalition have to establish an excuse for themselves and abandon their obligations the coalition will not stop the aggression. the aggressors do not usually stop when they see these sorts of cease fire agreements as a sign of weakness of. the u.n. hopes the suspicions of proved wrong and that fighting around the key battleground of data is soon stopped for good. beyond that yemen needs a long term plan for peace. even with all sides at the table that will be a major challenge. we're joined now by tamar carol us from the charity save the children inside not in yemen tamar thank you so much for joining us here in t w as we said there was fresh fighting in her data this is a very important port city what does this mean for the millions of humanity's who
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are reliant on food aid. well it is a very dangerous situation of course this is the third escalation since july the city now is almost encircled as one main engine out and always supports supplies eighty percent of the supplies from yemen including obviously much needed true to fuel but also commercial who. he was well. but it's not just about i mean i guess the situation right now in the city is also. on the house you know a lot for the last few days with the fighting. on this morning we've heard from our staff this to airstrikes we've seen hospitals destroyed we see not large number all civilian count duties and injured especially children in the last ten fifteen days you have to support about fifteen children that have been injured because of shrapnel or bullets and even yesterday we hope that some of the suppliers to them
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secure their stocks for fear of the fighting which creates. a situation for about three hundred thousand people still trapped in the city tomorrow we are hearing that more aid is coming it's been reported that saudi arabia and the united arab emirates will contribute around five hundred million dollars in a new aid program for yemen a will that make a difference if the fighting can't be stopped. no i think this is that the critical issue on the figures we working on right now in terms of it's a half million people who are extremely food insecurity meaning they don't know where their next meal is coming from they are lying to me eight but again figures coming out close but the end of this month will show that the numbers increase by millions i think at one point it's not just about the money but obviously about stopping. on flaked but it's also about our capacity to respond and i think if we reach a tipping point where many more million yemenis or food insecure or perhaps even pushed to be on the brink of thumbing through it will be very difficult for us to
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be able to respond to to to to roll that back time or on the diplomatic front just briefly few can the u.n. security council is going to discuss a draft resolution later today how hopeful are you that we're going to see an end to the fighting while it's rather than being hopeful it's more of hoping i guess the issue at hand look there is no viable solutions to to this conflict except through peaceful negotiations the alternative is catastrophic this is the most worst around the term crisis and if the fighting continues not just around today the but elsewhere in the country if we conceive our situation get you on even worse . damage carol us from save the children in sanaa thank you so much for joining us u.s. president trump says he will reveal information about the murder of saudi journalists today the president had previously said he's not convinced that crown prince mohammed bin salman ordered the killing but trump is coming under pressure from both democrats and republicans to take action against riyadh here in germany the
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government has taken steps to punish saudi arabia. the death of saudi journalist jamal khashoggi has placed a great strain on relations between germany and saudi arabia germany's foreign minister and i was troubled by arms for eighteen saudis allegedly involved in the killing that's provided to we're going to investigate this more we're following this case closely and reserve the right to take further steps. the german economics ministry says it will no longer export to saudi arabia previously approved sales have now been cancelled. the result of this action means we have seized all weapons exports from germany to saudi arabia. the move will impact the piano shipyard in the baltic sea town of gust here they've stopped building coast guard ships for the saudis arms sales to saudi arabia also controversial due to the kingdom's leading role in yemen civil war millions of people there are starving and the un is backing
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a halt to weapons deliveries but it's always a good step and will benefit civilians men and women and children who have nothing to do with the war conflicts. but also met lee saudi arabia receives only a fraction of its weapons from germany neither the us know britain its top supply is say they'll stop selling weapons to riyadh. now to lebanon where refugee families who've escaped jihadists are being forced to hire out their children as day laborers to make ends meet some one hundred eighty thousand refugee children and love it on are working long hours for little pay no place is a higher concentration of syrian refugees than lebanon's bekaa valley. brit hume traveled to a un camp there and has been looking at one family's plight that is similar to many others it is six in the morning in lebanon's bekaa valley eight year old so my i just woke up
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a splash of cold water in the face and she is ready for work. her family fled syria to escape i asked her now they're in lebanon where they can't always afford breakfast so mayor shares this tiny makeshift bed with three of her six siblings. and mother she doesn't go to school there are no schools in the camp where would she go to school so may as mother is sick and cannot go to work her older siblings also work but so my is still needs to pitch in to help the family make ends meet so instead of getting on a school bus so mayor gets on the strike every morning where she is the only child among many adults. for two dollars a day collects whatever crop is ready for harvest in the bekaa valley. today it is onions and her hands are too little for the gloves the adults around
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her wear. when i came here from home today can collect the onions but i would rather have toys to play with. three quarters of syrian refugees in lebanon live under the poverty line according to unicef an estimated one hundred eighty thousand syrian refugee children like soumaya have been forced into child labor in the country so a lot more to do i don't know when she goes to work and i stay at home of course i'm not happy with that she's just a small child and has to carry so much weight it could break her back it's hard for her. she should be at least thirteen or fourteen to do work like. there were many refugee families in lebanon rely on their children to pay the bills and the resources of aid agencies are overstretched it's unlikely that some i will
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be able to start working anytime soon. football and in the last match of a frustrating twenty eight hundred for germany they drew two two with the netherlands in the nation's late in the points and the dutch through to the final four and we have had mccambridge from sports with us and this started well but it ended pretty disappointing for the german said it was a disappointing result in the end that it could have been so different i mean maybe very useful side for this clash with the dutch and it was actually the very young team advantage that got him off to a cracking start scoring his goal in the ninth minute and it was leroy sonnie who double believes the forgotten man in russia but he got on the scoresheet first half and it looked as if germany might finally in this year on a high note but it wasn't to be and quincey promise bike for the dutch with five minutes to go before the captain virgil van dyke made two two so a very disappointing result for germany in the end but it is worth pointing out that they were relegated from the way for nations of the group going into the match and if anybody's wondering how on earth you know you love has managed to keep his
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job until this stage it's worth mentioning that he did sign a deal new deal for the world cup so that if be the german if they would have to pay a lot of money to get him out now and it doesn't appear as if they want to and he's also beginning now to play a few of the youngsters that germany fans are desperate to see at the world cup you know one of those youngsters who looked at terrific and he didn't go to the world cup as you said people must have regrets about that but i think they certainly do i mean the form he was in last season you know going into that world cup made him a shoo in for most people when picking the germany scored. the somebody with such pace which was something germany lots of the world cup could be left behind actually hear from the man himself leroy sohn and now he sees some positives now that he's back in the fold despite a disappointing result against dutch. sure it's a bit annoying that we gave away the lead at the end but i think we played well and just like in the three no friendly win over russia last week and i think everyone can see that coach has a plan and that we're set up well on the field in training role highly motivated to
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come back stronger. so disappointing for the germans for the dutch their third to the final four they top their group i mean that's pretty good yeah they've turned it around they weren't the world cup because they didn't qualify but they're really turned everything around on a new boss and he came in start of the year and draw against germany was hugely important monday because it's actually not france out and put them through to the final four and they're joined by the likes of portugal switzerland and england so a surprising group of teams have actually made it to the final four which will take place in june next summer and i mean they'll be looking around at those teams and thinking that they stand a good chance i mean a lot of the big teams are out and yet cracking result for the dutch and looking for the twenty one next summer all right ed mcmahon bridge from sports for us thank you very much. oh a volcano in guatemala has begun erupting violently sending out dangerous flows of lava and ash and putting thousands of lives at risk the volcano fire as it's called killed some two hundred people and destroyed several villages when it erupted in
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june thousands of people have been evacuated from vulnerable areas. pillars of lava a thousand meters high lit the night above the volcano of fire a towering display that made the danger from the volcano plain for all to see. the mountain has been sending bursts of lava hot rock and ash rushing down its slopes areas to the west have been bombarded with ash and flaming rocks thousands of people have heeded the call to evacuate. make it there. you have to find a way out as soon as you can and when that's it. because when the lava arrives you barely have time to leave. even if you run because it comes
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down really fast. many people in this area are still traumatized by an eruption earlier this year in june some two hundred people were killed when the mountain exploded sending out flows of ash mud and debris that buried entire villages back then authorities were harshly criticized for not ordering evacuations this time they're taking no chances. it's likely this won't be the last time people in the area will need to seek safety the wake of all can know is the most active in central america and will remain a hulking danger for the people who live here. chris office here with business now and chris a bit coin has had a bump that's right sumi the rapid ascent of cryptocurrency is like bitcoin seems to be over for the moment of their value has. dropping for days with traders fearing long term instability on tuesday the price of one bitcoin fell to four thousand four hundred eighty five dollars the lowest level since october twenty
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seven seventeen that is rather since last wednesday it coined the oldest and most well known of the digital currencies lost more than a quarter of its record high of almost twenty thousand dollars in december of last year is a thing of the past and it's not only been calling the other group the currencies are on their pressure as well. for more let's bring in our financial correspondent on advice problem frankford and what is behind the slump well it's an interesting story because if you take into the detail it can become the stocks meaning that essentially what has happened is that current has been separated from the car and that's why. so why logically the reason behind that is that the developer off cryptocurrency they couldn't agree on which
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day has to be so essentially what that means for the kids that can happen again and again and that is something which one has to factor in if you are going to invest it in its current cryptocurrency. an added another news are leaders of the european union and italy are said to meet labour's week over the country's controversial budget plans pose the market mood ahead of the meanie. actually people are getting more and more nervous i think it was quiet sort of contained when it comes to yields but it also comes to the banking shares for the time being but now people as i was saying getting nervous we're seeing it with banking shares they're fulling in for italy but also elsewhere we're seeing it on the bond markets yields forger for italian rose to a one month high so tomorrow it will be the d.-day for the the european commission they will issue the pinion on what has to be done that and most likely they will.
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say it's a first step towards splitting procedure meaning that in the end it's illegal to have to pay fines or even could be frozen out of e.u. funds which normally would be channeled through rome so all in all it's a very unpleasant situation and quite stable so for the future and advisable in front for think you. are. shares of dodgy bank at a record low after the company was connected or allegedly connected to a widening money laundering scandal involving denmark's biggest back investor flight left the stock at just over eight euro's traders were spooked by the testimony of a former employee of a bank in copenhagen that quote a major european bank helped clear one hundred fifty billion euros worth of transactions the bank is widely believed to be dodgy bank which helped dunster for
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years and is accused of using its stonier branch to launder money from russia. france as finance minister says finance minister says he is not or you know the stability of french carmaker renel after its chairman and c.e.o. was arrested and removed from the board car has gone is accused of massive financial misconduct including under reporting more than four hundred forty four million dollars of his income over several years from state all fifty percent of rental stock the carmaker has for over ten years been in alliance with its japanese counterpart. at first glance it's just a normal day as the employees from nissan headed to work but in reality it's the day after their boss carlos gone was arrested. put it in we'll put it out there no stick with it goes the rest is regrettable and he is the one who helped nissan turnaround it's business. i hope management can work hard to regain the public's
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trust most what it did almost and what i take to the place of. trust that carl is gone has abused the superstar auto manager is accused of underreporting his income over several years and embezzlement of company money from asia to europe the news has had a ripple effect gunns alliance is a major force on the global automotive market. i understand that nissans chairman carlos gone was arrested. it is extremely regrettable that we are seeing a development like this and i declined to comment on details of the case as prosecutors investigations are underway regarding an impact on the economy the japanese government will monitor this. beyond any potential economic consequences many japanese say they've experienced a sense of betrayal after the revelation. we didn't get it they were actually we have a nissan car so i do feel deceived because essentially he was being dishonest. when
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i hear what i think of a company japan is proud of my card and the head of a company shouldn't do something so irresponsible i thought it was embarrassing. first a decision needs to be made about future on thursday nissan's board will determine its course of action. and here's a reminder of the top story we're following for you at this hour as thousands of central american migrants head towards the united states a job. fair. denying asylum for those entering the country illegally. to restrict their ability to claim. on american soil.
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more coming out the top of the hour for now thanks for watching. how can we free the pacific ocean from plastic waste. a young dutchman is pointing the way he said course for a world full of plastic trash floating off the coast of california his ocean cleanup system is like a garbage truck for the high seas the maneuver is not without its risks. will his
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mission succeed. tomorrow today next on d w. beautiful and in mesa installation. stunning shadow was. magical the mind. exceptional artists looking with lights. now on the bright shiny is a series of this week on the euro back in sixty minutes. a continent is reinventing itself. as africa's tech scene discovers it's true potential. inventors entrepreneurs and high tech professionals talk about their
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vision successes and day to day business the difference. it's in to us history in the everyone stops or. concerns that matter to a vision that i was trying to. digital africa starts december twelfth on w. hello and welcome to tomorrow today the science show on d w. coming up. breastfeeding nursing doesn't just protect babies but mothers this well. motivating a teacher from germany on

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