tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle November 20, 2018 3:00pm-4:00pm CET
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this is deja vu news live 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. so judge in california says trump cannot deny them the right to seek asylum even if they enter the country illegally also coming up every day innocent yet many are starving and dying because of a conflict that is entirely manmade well the latest calls for a cease fire at the united nations change anything and if not what will it take to end the suffering plus the she's just
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a small child and has to carry so much weight it could break the back of the work that's hard for her we meet so my an eight year old refugee from syria forced to work in the fields of lebanon to help her family get back. plus guatemala's volcano of fire wars back to life this is its fifth eruption this year lava flows in the ash are threatening towns and villages and thousands are fleeing the area and will take a look at what the future holds for germany's football team after a two two draw with the netherlands sums up a miserable year. 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 now the ruling comes as the u.s. steps up security at. its border with mexico over fears that migrants might try to
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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. a trump ed said that a ban on asylum for people who cross the border illegally was necessary to prevent a national security threat now in his ruling the judge said the trumps order to block asylum claims represented quote an extreme departure from previous practice he said quote whatever the scope of the president's authority he may not rewrite the immigration laws to impose the condition that congress has expressly forbidden now the temporary restraining order will remain in place until there is a permanent legal ruling. let's bring in correspondent jason campbell dony he's the los angeles bureau chief for n.b.c. news radio has been following the story hi jason good to see you know what does this injunction mean for migrants who are currently in shelters at the border right now will they be able to cross into the u.s.
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so the department of homeland security hasn't come out and said anything official yet but i'll tell you the one thing that it's got to do is boost morale for the people who are in the shelters right now we're getting reports that conditions in the shelters are worsening as more people pile in and more people are seeking asylum for one hundred people have entered into the shelters their fate is unclear now but it does look like that they're going to be able to be processed and maybe process even more quickly jason if it raises morale among migrants right now in those shelters what about for president trump how much of a setback is this injunction for him. one thing that we do know about president trump is that he likes a good fight and there hasn't been any formal appeal as of yet but i'm sure that that will come before the thanksgiving holiday on thursday here and i'm sure that at some point he's going to come out with maybe an executive order on the issue or even try to get republicans behind some more legislation here in the near future we
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know that the president has made immigration really a cornerstone of his presidency changing immigration laws tightening border security building a wall how will this injunction change or affect those plans. you know when he's talking to his base he goes you know around the country and he talks to republican voters and when he's going to do that it's really going to fire up that crowd i think that having covering covered presidents for years as they really liked it det cord with their with their their voters and immigration is huge with the republican party out here and it's going to fire up those voters to even be a little bit more let's just say excited about the issue maybe you know a little bit more upset about the issue i don't think that this is going to affect him negatively in any way because he's just going to vowed to fight back jason
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let's talk about the court system because this is not the first time that a court has blocked president trumps immigration policies and we saw courts block policies on sanctuary cities for example on the ban on muslims from some countries entering the u.s. and about how effective can courts be in pushing back on the president's immigration policies in the long run. the courts can do basically anything they want and we've seen in this section sanctuary cities situation some cities have taken votes in their city councils and they have fought back against the sanctuary city laws saying that local law enforcement will continue to work with immigration enforcement authorities of the federal government so it's kind of one of those deals where everybody's going to take this information and then they're going to vote on it on the local level and hopefully you know that will help the president trump push that agenda if you're a republican voter all right jason kemp a donia from n.b.c.
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in los angeles thank you very much thank you. let's catch up on some other stories making news around the world president trump's daughter and white house advisor ivanka trump is reported to have used her personal e-mail account from government business that's according to the washington post her lawyer says she sent the e-mails before she was properly briefed on the rules last year the f.b.i. investigated presidential candidate hillary clinton's use of a personal e-mail account when she was secretary of state. four people have been reported killed in a shooting at a hospital in the u.s. city of chicago a police officer and a suspect gunman are among the dead police said the attack was sparked by a domestic dispute a separate shooting in downtown denver colorado was left at least one person dead and several more wounded. the lawyer for a pakistani christian woman acquitted of blasphemy has appealed to germany and other countries to help her leave pakistan bibi was convicted in two thousand and ten after she was accused of making derogatory remarks about islam her lawyer says
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baby and members of her family need citizenship from any western country for their personal security. and yemen the fighting has again flared between who the rebels and the saudi led coalition despite calls for a truce earlier the two sides have signaled a willingness to hold military 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 ceasefire between the warring parties. for yemenis young and old the ceasefire comes come soon enough. 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 no 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.
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we received twenty five malnutrition cases every single week. pasty here is very limited and marcus ahead. of us if they get renewed fighting flared up in the port city of her days again on tuesday but the u.n. is pushing ahead with his 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 me style attacks on saudi arabia the yemeni government's major backer but as ever in this conflict skepticism remains well i can see and i believe this is just a way for the saudi led coalition 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
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a sign of weakness at. the u.n. hopes the suspicions are proved wrong and that fighting around the key battle ground of her 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 carolus from the charity save the children in sennaar in yemen tamar thank you so much for joining us here in the w. as we said there is fresh fighting in her data this is a very important port city what does this mean for the millions of you many's who are reliant on food aid. well it is a very dangerous situation of course this is the third escalation since july the sitting now is almost encircled as one maimed out always support supplies eighty percent of the supplies from yemen including obviously much needed food and fuel
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but also commercial crude. he was well. but it's not just about that i mean i guess the situation right now in the city is also are dire on the house you know a lot for the last few days with fighting. item this morning we've heard from our staff this the airstrikes we've seen hospitals destroyed we've seen that large number of civilian count. and injured especially with children in the last time shooting days you have to support about fifteen children that have been injured because of shrapnel or bullets and even yesterday we heard that some of the suppliers who didn't secure their stocks were fearful of 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 the critical
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issue on the figures we working on right now in terms of a half million people who are extremely food insecure meaning they don't know where their next meal is coming from they are lying to me but again figures coming out close to three hundred this month will show that the numbers increased by millions i think at one point it's not just about the money but obviously about stopping. inflict but it's also about our capacity to respond and i think if we reach a tipping point where many more million yemenis or should insecure or perhaps even pushed to be on the brink of famine it will be very difficult for us to be able to respond 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 there is no viable solution to to this conflict except through
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peaceful negotiations the alternative is catastrophic this is the world's worst around the term crisis and if the fighting continues not just around today the but elsewhere in the country we could see their situation give you an even worse tonic carol us from save the children in sanaa thank you so much for joining us and we recorded that interview a little bit earlier in the day all right ben is here now and then our bitcoins heady days over it could well be i know a few investors who are a little uneasy right at this hour the rapid ascent of critical insisted to a sudden d. set a value has been dropping for days with traders fearing long term instability because it is the oldest best known digital currency is those the rather third of its value in just awake a record high of almost twenty thousand dollars for one bitcoin about a year ago has fizzled to below four and a half thousand dollars the other well known crypto currency is are also under pressure and analysts say the downward pressure is increasing. so is the body over
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economist free to what the shop declined mates. there's a lot of insecurity cryptosystem in the ecosystem to invest in secure and why instead it's not because failed. as a lot of progress in the technical way like lightning payment etc but as in security the cost it was a fog of a fault and a calling it a crypto currency called be cash and a two eccentric found us get into a fight and they decided to separate each other so now they separate to call ins and it's a lot of insecurity which. showed up in the ecosystem and the other thing is we might be a market for one year now and we need to find a depression we need to total capitulation for establish a bottom and we are right now and they have to buy them it's clear we're already in a bear market is that all it takes a squabble between to found
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a fight between two founders that can be cleaned plummeting and there was also last week announcement from the s.t.c. to find two companies for not regulating and i c o initial initial call an offering so and it was also a reason why the people got nervous into the system and actually it's because of the bear market as well that technical analyzes that you see that the market for too long in the in the don't want to trend and is now getting more aggressive brutal was this something i mean what did they do wrong what did these companies do wrong because there's been lots of i.p.o.'s that we've been warned about that. really following the rules yeah but the security tokens you know down with real estate of diamonds or whatever and not not. listed under the s e c so and this is breaking the law and that's why they had to pay the penalty do people still need to really watch out for what's going on in the crypt
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a currency market is. absolutely you know it's easy money it was the wild west last year and it was incredible high in the prior. a lot of people coming up gangsters actually criminals to rip off people and at what's happened you know it's everybody was creative and if people get creative they get insecure and if they see ten percent of the price rise to at the end then day invest money and lose money of course as well you're an investor as well in because you worried no not at all actually not cause and fail it did not get banned or it did not get hacked or something and technical side you see a lot of progress. and proofing and makes me really optimistic in the long term this is a necessary shakeout for the weekend so i think in one and two years we see different price patterns so is a leveling ality is it is it actually finding. a realistic price basically because i mean we were talking about what twenty thousand dollars a year ago now it's down to four and a half thousand and that's
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a quarter of its value that's been lost it's a problem but we had like ninety percent loss in two thousand and thirteen to two thousand and sixteen you know it's like a tradition and a trip to market that you have to shop declines but you have also bull runs which are incredible and just established for the next bull run you know we just have to wait till the next holiday in two thousand and twenty and then we will see different prices again but what happens when cripple currencies with eight hundred thirty billion and now suddenly just one hundred fifty billion dollars who's losing out their investors people lose money if you paid like twenty thousand bucks for one big con and you sell an awful five thousand bucks give us fifteen thousand bucks that's mathematics it's really easy so people lost money of course and i just thank you very much for coming in thanks for having me. hit a record of the company was connected to the widening money laundering scandal involving a danish bank investor flight has left the stock at just over eight euros a share traders were spooked by the testimony of
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a former employee of bank in. a major european bank helped clear one hundred fifty billion euros worth of the transit. since the bank is widely believed to be too much about help danske a few years is accused of using it's a stunning branch to launder money from russia. i asked our financial correspondent in frankfurt on advice but if torture is in trouble again. so what has happened is that the banks the banks have those fraudulent transactions had an account with the boy and. executed order so that say it wasn't their clients it was the bank account or they couldn't really follow through through their clients and see what they are doing but nevertheless they have fired various suspicious activity reports that's what it's called to the regulator before
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terminating the account for with the bank in two thousand and fifteen so there was an inside thoughts of bank that something is not going right. football now and in the last match of a frustrating twenty eight hundred for germany they drew two two with the netherlands in the nation's league at the point sent the dutch through true the final four and we have all removed from d.w. sports with us here to talk more about this somehow fitting for this year isn't for the term if you're pretty disappointing result it was always going to be a relief for your goal of the twenty eighteen is over for the national team as he was been a truly abominable year for germany only six wins in thirteen games that they played obviously that catastrophic world cup as well it was two nil with five minutes to play to germany in this guy and they still managed to throw it away and only take a point from the game against the great rivals world netherlands you know always
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a big match when these two play each other regardless of what competition is a love will be especially disappointed with the way that the team dropped off in defense towards the end of the game they allowed the netherlands the spice to get those goals in the last few minutes bit of an experience on this by perhaps but also the experience plays on the pitch should have known better to. say there was a as we both said it almost inevitable that something would go wrong even with the . need to know up very early let's take a look and relegation from league a was bad enough but could this also affect germany's chances of qualifying for euro two thousand and twenty it could indeed the players will be glued to goes much against poland tonight because if poland get anything out of that game then basically germany slipped down the nation's league rankings and that means that they would have to play a top tier side they have to share a group in qualification for euro twenty twenty with a top tier side making it obviously much more difficult then to qualify for the tournament if that happens questions have to be raised about your lives position
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again you know the catastrophe of the world cup was one thing but if now germany's chances of qualifying for the next tournament are also in jeopardy then maybe the d.f. b.'s trigger finger will just get itchy again love himself of course isn't thinking about these going to things at least not this is not telling us that he's thinking about these kind of things let's hear what he had to say after the game. this is for lloyd over. conceding the late goals is perhaps the price you pay for having a young team that needs to learn from these matches. normally you have to close out these sorts of games not playing them all but some of the approach plays from this young team was very good and that's a great base we can build on most of only two groups low be overthrown could. be let's talk about the other side of the coin the netherlands you know they played really well and this puts them at the top of their group doesn't it that's right and they'll compete in the inaugural nations league finals as well next summer this
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is a bit more like it from the netherlands the last few years have really not been what we used to from then since the twenty fourteen world cup where they finished in third place and have a brazil in the third place game it's all gone downhill they failed to qualify for europe twenty sixteen failed to qualify for the the world cup in the summer just gone as well but they finally look like they're getting it seen together again you know virgil van dyke who scored that late equaliser he really looks like a leader in central defense there he's got the talents like quincy promise who also scored of course memphis to pyatt as well and we've got some young players coming through as well we know the netherlands for their brilliant kind of youth development and finally we're seeing that come through again with the latest and frankly the young as well so it really does feel like the netherlands back and it's good to have them even if they are germany's big rivals all right the future looking for it for the netherlands at least dollywood different sports thank you very much. well one landmark from germany with the dutch was thomas miller playing in his one hundredth game for the german national team the twenty nine year
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old forward is only the eleventh germany player to reach the milestone but despite scoring thirty eight goals for the national side his place is now under threat from younger players after he struggled during germany's world cup debacle millet always fully behind the new look. thomas' mother began his journey korea back in two thousand and ten he soon started banging the goals then and was a key part of the side which lifted the world cup in two thousand and fourteen. birds he lost his luster as germany were dumped out in the group stage of this tournament. came off the bench in monday's two two draw with the never learns with the dutch scoring both their comeback goals after his introduction his one hundred cap was not what it might have been. in business. it was a bit of a bitter pill to swallow that we ended up drawing the game so it hasn't been so
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great but of course my team mates and the coach have congratulated me. quicker forward such as serge gnabry and lee roy sunday looks set to be first team isn't a year cumulative going forward and muller understands he may have to take a back seat. in fact. we've given ourselves a new impetus we have to see how that pans out we are not a top team again yet but we have seen what is possible and what sort of football we can play with the changes in the team so we are on the right path. this brings him . he made no mention of international retirement though he may now be a substitute but thomas miller's one hundred the parents is unlikely to be his last . ride back to some news now and to pop a new guinea where a group of police and security guards have stormed the parliament building breaking windows and smashing furniture the whole thing is over
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a pay dispute the guards were furious that they had not received the money promised to them after working at last week's weekend's international summit hosted by the south pacific island. from smashed plates to broken windows but this was more than just a break it was carried out by the very people who should have been protecting the building security guards and police stormed proper new guinea's parliament to demand paid wages from a summit that ended on sunday. in chinese president xi jinping was among the guests at the apec conference hosted by this south pacific island but it's an extremely poor nation and there's been growing anger at the expense of a tool a fleet of luxury cars was bought by the government in which to ferry around the dignitaries some local residents claim they're living in tents off to their homes
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were demolished to make way for a new road the government has reportedly promised to pay the security personnel for their work at the summit but that hasn't ended the rest tires have been set on fire in the capital port moresby and there are reports of looting a heavy price to pay for a summit that failed to reach a trade agreement between the us and china and which is left this nation with little to show for its. overall kaino when guatemala has begun erupting violently sending out dangerous flows of lava and ash and putting thousands of lives at risk the volcano of fire as it's called killed some two hundred people and destroyed several villages when it erupted in june thousands of people have been evacuated from vulnerable areas. pillars of thousand meters high the night above volcano of fire
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a towering display that made the danger from before you go volcano plain for all to see. the mountain has been sending bursts of lava 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. a good one that i saw you have to find a way out as soon as you can and that's it. because when the lava rugs you barely have time to leave. even if you run because it comes 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 mud and debris that buried entire villages back then
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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 volcano is the most active in central america and will remain a hulking danger for the people who live here. you're watching news still to come she says scaife the terror of islamic state now. is forced to work to feed her family a fate shared by thousands of syrian refugee children. and spain's prada museum celebrates its two hundredth anniversary with a special exhibition take you there. those stories and more coming up in two minutes time.
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children as commodities it's a business worth billions in europe minors are abused for child labor or not graffiti and prostitution. but it's hard to bring those responsible to justice. tracking down the traffickers we talk to people who are trying to prevent this appalling five child trafficking in europe. in forty five minutes on d w. six first day at school in the jungle. or first clinging less of. doors grand moment arrives.
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joining a regular chain on her journey back to freedom. in our interactive documentary tour of an orang utan returns home on d w dot com tanks. they are digital warriors. for women for internet activists one mission. the battle for freedom and dignity. courageous and determined they campaign for women's rights and for peace. they mobilize against femicide. or compulsory they are. their messages are spreading like wildfire. social media is quite critical of the food and thousands of dollars are going to cost on the streets for the women who are changing the world to the
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reading. to children. start to try to feel. welcome back you're watching news our top story as thousands of central american migrants head towards the u.s. a judge has temporarily barred president trump from denying asylum to those entering the country illegally the president had wanted to restrict their ability to claim asylum on american soil. and in yemen fighting has again played out between who the rebels and the saudi led coalition despite calls for a truce after more than four years of conflict that have driven the country to the edge of starvation the un security council is due to debate a resolution aimed at bringing about an immediate cease fire in yemen. to lebanon now where refugee families who've escaped jihadists are being forced to hire out
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their children as day workers to make ends meet some one hundred eighty thousand refugee children in lebanon are working long hours for little pay no place has a higher concentration of syrian refugees than lebanon's bekaa valley. travelled to a un camp there and it's been looking at one family's plight. it is six in the morning and lebanon's bekaa valley eight year old so my just woke up 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 my issue is this tiny makeshift bed with three of her six siblings. she doesn't go to school there are no schools in the camp where would she go to school. so may is mother is sick and
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cannot go to work her older siblings also work with the mayor 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 some are collect 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 her where. 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. have been forced into child labor in the country through a lot more through i don't know when she goes to work and i stay at home of course
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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 that. here so 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 so many will be able to start working anytime soon. that report from for him and she joins us now in our studio for more on the story. you know it's a question that some people might be asking themselves after seeing that report is why is the mother is not working herself well i mean this is trisha's complex but to make a very short so my as mother can't really work for a number of reasons she's is she has knee problems and given the fact that she's completely illiterate her access to belabor market is really restricted to physical labor such as farming or perhaps cleaning and houses or construction work but even
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if so my his mother was literate one has to remember that you know this is just one case of a very very many and there are many parents that find themselves in the situation that my as parents find themselves in because the syrian labor market part of the lebanese really labor market is extremely restrictive for syrians there are a lot of jobs that there are not allowed to work and so. a lot of a lot of parents who would be qualified who would be littered with still might still find themselves in the same situation as mother you give us an idea of what you found in visiting these camps you know how common was semi a story i've been to the cob alley a number of times covering the syrian refugee crisis there and seeing refugee presence there and it's extremely common it's disturbing how common it is and you know we've seen so my eyes she's a child in the truck full of of adults but there are other sites as well where you see trucks to need taking just children to the fields and they also are sometimes
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engaging in labor that might actually be very dangerous to them such as construction or even working in a mechanic shop like things that could really hurt them physically so it's it's quite common to it's a common sight unfortunately why is there no schooling provided in these camps part of the reason why there are no schools is the construction of these camps in lebanon has not allowed for official refugee camps to be established on their territory there are a number of reasons for this that perhaps. might be too complex but the outcome the sort of more most direct outcome is that a lot of these camps then lack basic infrastructure so things like schools or sewage or even having concrete houses instead of makeshift tents they're not allowed to build concrete so this makes things much much more difficult he would see it very differently in a place like jordan or turkey for example i've also been to the zaatari refugee camp in jordan the because syrian refugee camp. for syrian refugees
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and there the situation is much different where you have more than eighty thousand people and it resembles like a small town that has all of them and it is that you would need like schools and even recycling recycling centers of course it's still a refugee camp and and needs help but this explains so my a situation because these are really not official you and run camps the there are small informal settlements in the bekaa valley what did some i and other kids you spoke to tell you about schooling and how important is that for them i mean i've done this is part of a larger series that i did on syria in growing up syrian and lebanon specifically and i was really always struck by even children like so many that have never been to school if you ask them like what do you want like what is the one thing that you want they would say like i really want to go to school and that was really striking for me they had like a sort of instinctive. inclination towards education and they really talked about it as if it were right if there are rights of theirs that they just instinctively knew about and i think on this day it's an important thing to remember. for him
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thank you so much for bringing us to maya story. now taking care of a child with cerebral palsy can be a huge challenge for parents it's a neurological disorder that affects the child's movements and also motor skills it can also trigger many other health issues parents in many parts of the world often don't get the support they need and in many african countries there is the additional problem of the social stigma attached to having a child with special needs but as we found out in ghana things are changing. three year old a ram has cerebral palsy her mother had. has virtually put tech area as a generalist almost completely on the road to ensure a row gets all the kaisha needs i have practised a lot of pussy t.v.'s i'm a making sure that telling myself that it's not her fault that's. who i need to do it for he and then ordinary the it's difficult because in the stress.
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we're doing things. today he's taking his daughter for f.s.u. a therapy session at a facility for children with disabilities like many mothers of children with special needs don't have the necessary training to help their kids. they see more tickets academy also provides counseling for mothers like hannah it is a place of refuge for them money just of the academy. in physiotherapy from zero up to let each mothers how to care for children suffering from disability with no other party conversely private institutions like these are vital but parents of children because abilities don't just have to worry about finding their rights physiotherapist or school and yet children often face book in discrimination
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in one person hoping to change such attitudes is farida bitchery she has believe in her with cerebral palsy for years and has just written a comic about a superhero. comes up with cerebral palsy. using. her. but to the. hopes his story. many parents of children with cerebral palsy. and with help from rumor use like a one hundred four weeks to a future where it can grow into a heartbeat goes. and we have some of breaking news that's coming into us here.
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at least forty people have been killed after an explosion in afghanistan's capital kabul now the blasts happened at a religious gathering and health officials and police say at least sixty other people have been injured this is a developing story we bring you more details on that on the story as they come in to us. for now though let's catch up on some other stories making news around the world 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 a police say the motive is unclear and a commuter train has derailed outside the spanish city of barcelona killing one person and injuring dozens five of them seriously 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. snap chat and
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instagram look out there's a new kid on the block so. ok that. video sharing it's already here isn't china it's quickly becoming one of the world's top social media apps. are we have or social media editor called last minute to tell us more about this girl just how big is this app bigger than i thought probably bigger than most people would think we have some numbers for you as more than five hundred million million active monthly users that is more than twitter and snap chat combined. it was the top non-game download and apple's appstore earlier this year and it just hit number one in the u.s. charts as well with some six million downloads in case you're like me and you're just hearing about it maybe just like you as well so me here's how it works here's what tiktaalik is all round you see the videos here users can create short videos
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we're talking a maximum of fifteen seconds you can easily add music special thinks filters and it's got some pretty advanced editing tools right there in the app as well of course you then upload your video you watch other people's creations on the app you see a lot of this kind of special effects and tricks music lip sinking some weird camera tricks and users that also compete to make the best video based on the theme every week it's pretty fun it's already here but many of these videos have tens of thousands sometimes millions of views it's definitely becoming a new phenomenon how do you get so popular so fast yeah i mean the thing is you know it's really difficult to compete with these social media giants is actually one of the first really popular social media apps from china is a chinese app for one thing its parent company in terms of money it's the largest startup in the world has a lot of cash and it's using it to really just flood the internet with
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advertisements it launched. about two years ago it's really focusing on recruiting teenagers and celebrities of the platform starting in asia now in the u.s. it brought on jimmy fallon he has a big account boarding legend tony hawk the other secret is it's kind of fun i have to admit it i am a journalist i did have to try this out for myself take a look at what we came up with. that's just a little taste if you do that right before the show it's harder than it looks like kind of come up with something fun but a little bit of help from one of our producers there to do a little camera magic yeah i can see why people like this stuff ok that's the fun side of what are some of the dangers or concerns that people have i mean just like any big social media people are saying it's a bit addictive some users of said they'd spend hours watching these fifteen second
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videos parents will be concerned there is some sort of teens going to extremes in terms of what they're filming maybe even going into the middle of a street a busy street for example others simply say these videos are a little bit annoying i could see how that might be true as well the legitimate complaint to be looked at some of these videos earlier though i would think it kind of made us laugh out loud a couple of times at least so it's fun it's kind of a cool app all right time to try out tick tock our social media editor carl that's been thank you so much. turmoil for two global comic as there are growing fears the arrest of renault nissan chairman carlos cowen on allegations of financial misconduct could de rail the company's alliance the second largest cassella last year now there are reports the investigation is widening into the finances of nissan itself so how does the alliance operate it began in one nine hundred ninety nine when french comics were
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no port a large stake in the sun the purchase helped the japanese manufacturer with its most pressing issue its massive debts the two firms later form the partnership train shares in one another and forming a common board of directors in two thousand and five carlos gone became c.e.o. of both companies and chairman of the board is on later purchased a stake in mitsubishi and go and became chairman there the alliance has made the comic is powerful by pooling resources but it's on will be the alliance and has been called the glue behind it now the old world and the sun's home country of japan and trying to make sense of his arrest. at first glance it's just a normal day as the employees from nissan head into work but in reality it's the day after their boss carlos ghosn was arrested. put in we have pretty tight there no stick with bones arrest is regrettable as he's the one who helped nissan turn
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around its business. i hope management can work hard to regain the public's trust most of it almost from what i take the place of. trust that carlos ghosn is accused of abusing the superstar auto manager is said to have under reported his income for several years and to have misused company money from asia to europe the news has had a ripple effect groans alliance is a major force on the global automotive market. i understand the nissans chairman carlos ghosn was arrested it is extremely regrettable that we are seeing a development like this. i declined to comment on details of a case as prosecutors investigations are underway regarding its impact on the economy the japanese government will closely watch this development. beyond any potential economic consequences many japanese say they've experienced a sense of betrayal after the revelations. we didn't get if they were actually
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we also have a nissan car so i do feel deceived because essentially he was being dishonest. and then when i hear nissan i think of a company that japan is proud of my family drives a nissan leaf but as the head of a company you shouldn't do something so irresponsible and as a japanese person i thought it was embarrassing. now a decision needs to be made about cohen's future on thursday nissan's board will determine its course of action. indonesia is one of the biggest countries in the world with two hundred sixty five million people half of them connected to the net and use it regularly that's a high rate and young entrepreneurs want to take hold of their potential. this man is out to revolutionize indonesia's struggling education system. the man is the founder of the ron group online learning app platform helps students study
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up on the topics they find difficult in school and in visual interactive ways it's a new concept in the country where millions are now using the service. here. in the news it is the fourth largest education system globally you have fifteen million students four million pictures but you also one of the lowest performing for a lot of different reasons but one of the things that i want to highlight is the quality of the teachers according to what bank what if you two percent of our teachers are not qualified for teaching. after raising his own venture capital in money founded the company and twenty fourteen when he was still a student himself lessons are available for a diverse range of educational levels from primary school right up to university users can also book private lessons via the app for many it's opened up a new world of knowledge but i got. to do at first i didn't tell my parents that i was using it to study. i just said that i was working.
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but finally i had the courage to inform them that my parents are really proud of me because i have achieved so much. for years after its founding the company now has over a thousand employees growth has been rapid and plans are in the works to move into a larger space. in the last one year on the we have gone from four million to ten million users now we are now the largest education player inside is easier. and we've seen how millions of students learning every single day . it's education for the masses thanks to innovation and it's a promising concept particularly here in indonesia where the population is young and over sixty percent of people own a mobile phone in the future grew and grew will also feature job ads to help students find work that suits their skills and it's developing plans to expand
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across asia. two thousand one thousand the problem is the spanish capital madrid is celebrating its two hundredth anniversary it's widely considered to be one of the greatest art museums in the world with the single finest collection of spanish art anniversary celebrations kicked off already on monday with a grand exhibition that's on until the tenth of march and we have current helps out with us from culture to talk more about this karen this sounds like a great collection hope of a deal is this bicentenary it's a very big deal indeed because first of all the product is really considered to be something of a monumental symbol of spanish heritage and really no visit to madrid is complete without a good tour through its hallowed halls and galleries and people flock to the kickoff ceremony yesterday in madrid eager to see the unveiling of the special decorations
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for the show. patio eighteen nineteen to twenty nineteen a place of remembrance and the staff very proudly saying happy birthday even though it's actually only the ninety ninth yesterday the spanish king philippe and his wife were there to mark the occasion and the king said that since its inauguration back on nineteenth of november one thousand nine hundred the temple of art has witnessed. the great transformation of spanish society he also said that it's not just about spanish heritage but also that it has universal dimensions and let's have a look at some of the treasures inside. it's a great backdrop for a. major tourist draw and the pride of the homeless by the prado a must see for all this is a bedroom doesn't disappoint you but if you're not sure if ache. wonderful will be back. the museum is full of masterpieces spanish french and from miami originally bought by the spanish royals two hundred years of the museum's
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history are now on show featuring the work of such great authors. the show also reflects spanish history. there's a famous politician once served that the prados more important than the moment of the republic because the essence of spain is that in the museum and in its paintings. the prado also inspired many artists including the impressionist the nude my art was painted by who we are in the eighteenth century hundred fifty years later picasso reflected on the theme millions of visitors have passed through the prados rooms the museum went through dark times and survived the spanish civil war. because a bomb fell on the museum and it had to be closed the paintings were brought to safety first to the length then to catalonia and on to switzerland before they could return. there were three million visitors came last year the museum is now
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ready to shine on its big birthday. karen yourself a visit to the program many times you're just telling me what are some of the most famous paintings that you've visited there well obviously the list is incredibly long but i guess you would have to concentrate on the paintings of francisco the great spanish romantic painter and the most extensively represented artist at the museum we just saw his nude my are there in the report but you definitely cannot miss the extraordinary downstairs gallery devoted to his fourteen black paintings so those are really incredible painted these later in his life on the walls of the house actually they portray very intense and haunting and there's the famous saturn devouring his son from the early twenty's the best snow work at the prado is a last minute by. his famous and very complex portrait of the princess margaret to rest up in sixteen fifty six and then ask of course the leading artist in the spanish court of. the fourth. and another must i would say is
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the incredible garden of earthly delights that's a trip taken by the. netherlands. her run in with bosch it dates back to the late fifteenth really sixteenth century and it's really one of the most enigmatic and puzzled over paintings in the world sumi so that's just the beginning because obviously el greco also deserves a mention but i couldn't bring quite that many paintings. on you know you take a lot of time and you need to have comfortable shoes. obviously like any big museum you know you do not need the time you're going to need at least a few hours in there if you're going to do it right there also offers the works by public because. the spanish graphic artist royal who just passed away in october and there's interestingly you know very very little female artist representation in the prado but there are a few hidden gems like for instance rose a portrait of
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a lion and feed it's called so lots of stuff that's definitely worth tracking down and the interesting thing is that as you mention it's on until march the tenth admission is free on saturday evening suttle good to know is it ok for your. care and how is that from your culture thank you so much pleasure. we just have time for a minder for our top stories at this hour as thousands of central american migrants head toward the u.s. a judge has temporarily barred president trump from denying asylum to those who enter the country illegally the president as wanted to restrict their ability to claim asylum on american soil. and in yemen fighting has again flared up between who the rebels and the saudi led coalition despite calls for a truce after more than four years of conflict that have driven the country to the edge of starvation the u.n. security council is due to debate a resolution aimed at bringing about an immediate cease fire in yemen. thank you for watching give you a little of iraq will have an update on your headlines at the top of the hour don't
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children as commodities it's a business worth billions in europe minors are abused for child labor or not griffey and prostitution. but it's hard to bring those responsible to justice. tracking down the traffickers we talk to people trying to prevent this appalling crime of child trafficking in europe. close up fifteen minutes on d w. the fast pace of life in the digital touch shift as the lowdown on the web it shows a new developments useful information and anything else worth noting. presents
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or design highlights you can make yourself. trends tips and tricks that will turn your home page something special. upgrade yourself with d.w. interior design channel on youtube. the technology digital advances were transforming the moment it would be easy humanity ready for. the second season of our documentary series founders kelly. joined german founders in asia as leaks more power to. sally starts nov twenty fourth on t.w. .
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this is it reviews life for a role in the ruled out a us federal court deals a blow to president trump's asylum battle that's thousands of central american migrants have towards the u.s. a judge in california says trump cannot deny them their right to seek asylum even if they enter the country illegally also coming up every day innocent yemenis.
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