tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle November 22, 2018 7:00pm-8:01pm CET
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this is utopia news line from berlin a critical moment in the u.k. subrings it negotiations prime minister theresa may tells parliament she'll do everything she can to deliver a divorce deal from the european union but as the next seventy two hours will be crucial european leaders are set to sign off on the deal at a special summit this sunday also on the show. hopes for
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a nation ravaged by violence and famine the u.s. secretary of defense says yemen's warring parties have agreed to peace talks they're due to take place next month in sweden. also the board of miss on fire is its chairman carl is gone that's after his shock arrest earlier this week over allegations of financial misconduct what's next for the japanese carmaker and its alliance with france those who know. and an important anniversary for lovers of pop music everywhere. see you on a red. sack lead fifty years ago today the beatles released their white album some call it the best album ever will find out how the fab four went about making it. blasts say in the chess world the world championship is going down to the wire defending champion magnus carlsen face. sing
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a tough test against challenger fabiano caruana. your. heart thanks so much for your company everyone while we start with the u.k. that country's prime minister to resign may has been facing heavy opposition in parliament after delivering a statement on a draft deal agreed with the european union on the two sides relationship after the u.k. leaves the block on speaking in the house of commons some time ago when may said it was a good deal for both for britain and for the european union but opposition labor leader jeremy corcoran tore into the deal saying nothing had been agreed and described as a quote blind fold brags that well you leaders are hoping to sign off on both the declaration and on the break that treaty itself at a summit in brussels this sunday of the documents are i want to be
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a good mass is standing by for us and of brussels bureau chief max hoffman is at the e.u. h.q. to talk more about these latest developments first guys let's take a quick listen to what to recent may said in the parliament some time ago. mr speaker the draft text that we have agreed with the commission is a good deal for our country and for our partners in the e.u. it honors the boat. it honors that those of the british people by taking back control of our borders all doors and our money while protecting jobs security and the integrity of our precious united kingdom it's free movement once and for all instead we will introduce a new skills based immigration system based not on the country people come from but on what they can contribute to the u.k. here. it is the jurisdiction of the european court of justice in the u.k. . we will make our own rules in our own parliaments here in westminster and
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in edinburgh cardiff and belfast and they will be adjudicated on by u.k. courts and it means an end to sending vast sums of money to the e.u. . now abir get this was at the beginning of the debate that of bait went on for quite some time and ended just a short while ago there were furious commons clashes did she make in your estimation a convincing case and will she be able to get this agreement through the house of commons and over the finish line. that is really a big question will she in the end survive and be able to actually negotiate this through the house of commons i mean it was very very lively debate and what shone through for me was how did tim in nation to go ahead with it the really stressing how independent the u.k. will be she spoke a lot i think addressed breck citizen her own party who are very very critical of
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this deal over being too close to the e.u. being too tight too close to the you for a long period of time but she also i think stressed that the british people want to get this done and that she wants to move on for the british people that i think she did may very clear case for this time right now very early on in the debate we heard also from the opposition leader their labor party leader jeremy corbyn let's take a listen to what he said the prime minister said nothing is agreed until everything is agreed it's clear from this document that he did nothing is agreed to this is the blindfold bricks that we all see a huge leap in the dark a leap in the dark beggar does he have a point. well if you take the political declaration which this debate was about then of course it's nothing that's legally binding so from that point of view yes he does have a point but on the other hand i think the direction of travel that tourism may want
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to go and also possibly that the e.u. wants to go i think has been made here close economic ties close economic integration by parts very close economic ties but no immigration no free movement from the e.u. i think this is the direction of travel and this is being made pretty clear of course will it in the end be this way it's going to be years of negotiation but the direction of travel i think is clear max want to go to you in brussels or if the e.u. does sign off on the brakes a deal then what. you know if that happens on sunday then we think it's likely by the way at the moment that this will happen they will have signed off on the withdrawal agreement so this is the legally binding part that settles how the united kingdom divorces from the european union and also on this political declaration that we've been talking about that began just mentioning that was also the subject of the house of commons debate today which is not legally binding but
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which has been worked on all week and that's the reason once reason they came here to brussels on wednesday evening by the way and the reason will she come again on saturday evening is at least that's what we assume now let's say they don't sign off on this then really it's hard to tell what happens the only thing we could think of is we negotiating the deal in favor of the european union including maybe things like gibraltar i'm sure we're going to talk about this topic later but to be quite honest nobody really has thought about this part everybody thinks of what happens if the house of commons so the u.k. does not agree. to the braggs the deal but really the approval of the european union at this point seems kind of built in our right now let's continue our conversation after we heard again from theresa may she said that there won't be a hard border between northern ireland and ireland let's take a listen and we'll continue our conversation after this is speak to the text we have agreed is explicit about the determination of both sides to avoid the backstop
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altogether by getting the future relationship in place on the first of january twenty twenty one and in the unlikely event that we ever did meet the stone to ensure it is quickly superceded either by the future relationship or alternative arrangements as part of this there is an explicit commitment to consider facilitate the arrangements and technology which could afford to home school on the identifying and. max this is the crunch issue in the talks. it still is although it's been settled at least in the withdrawal agreement and they found a solution where the you and at least the government or what's left of the government of two recently can can live with but of course that was the whole problem from the beginning because if you look at the political agreement now what they're setting out is a free trade area basically and there are some of the examples for free trade areas that could work you know free trade agreements for example with canada that's been often cited but the main difference again it is they don't have that trouble you
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know they don't have the trouble of having to make sure that there's a horde border between parts of the territory of of their country in this case of the u.k. and the european union if than if they have our border to fear a civil unrest because of that so this is the political problem that's influencing the economic model of the future and if you look at what's written down in the political agreement really the solution isn't there yet because if they really go through with the free trade area and don't find some kind of solution maybe technical logical solution then we're going to be at the same point we are now in the discussion about a hard border between northern ireland and ireland a couple of years down the road right now beggared want to go to you i did she managed to reassure briggs the tears who are furious with her over the issue of the irish border the brits it is still don't really accept it and they wanted to go back to brussels and basically take out this amendment on the irish but they don't
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want this back so they say it's a trap that was said in the debates today by one of the prominent threats it is so they really don't accept it and i think this is why a lot of m.p.'s in the end not going to vote for this withdrawal that remains to be continued biggest massive reporting from london and max hofmann in brussels thank you both. so a critical couple of days ahead for politicians on both sides of the briggs's negotiations and equally a critical few days for british citizens who wish to remain in the european union while one of their more prominent representatives is known as the quote stop briggs it man welshman steve has been demonstrating outside the houses of parliament every day since september of last year and he's got a number of tools in his and he brags that arsenal they include posters flags a special outfit and a knack for crashing live television interviews take
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a look. see oh he wants to be heard. and he wants to be seen. bray has become the face of the anti bricks and protest in london sneaking into the background of live broadcasts like this one has become his daily exercise. for your steeds home in south london has become a storage space for signs swords and european flags the forty nine year old welshman has made it his mission to stop britain's departure from the european union every single morning for over a year he's packed to the quitman and driven to parliament to protest. to go for such a well apparently. a counter protest at downing street so we're going to get there now which is a little bit earlier than normal sacha we're going to see what's happening in the
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street for whatever happens at times st we've always got to have people upset parliament. while protesters rally outside. inside parliament opposition to bracks it is growing as well. a prominent conservative m.p. n.s.a. and labor politicians. have joined forces to battle the government's breck's of plans this is still very good you see and you feel like saying this isn't there's a live in surprised look on the first did you ever think it was going to be not everything both m.p.'s things are no law being for a second referendum it must go back to the british people and now we see the reality of bracks it and the fact that actually we still don't know where all final landing place will be simpler it if it goes back to the british people and we have face people's vote which is a choice between remain and mrs may still where you deny
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a people's vote state and a handful of other protesters are echoing the call on the street oh it's the most important thing that this nation faces the most important thing that my generation my in my life is nothing more important than making making the change and this is an absolute disaster. for the boy his dedication to the cause has earned still support from across britain i mean people are fighting all over the country i'd like to think that all these people here have made it big difference not just me i'm carrying the message when i go take all this off nobody knows who i am outside parliament though steve has become a hero to many and he's determined to complain to look better and to make sure that the european flag will always fly in front of the british parliament.
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are let's get you up to speed now as some of the other stories making news around the world. a courts and israel has sentenced an american israeli man to ten years in jail after he was convicted of a string of hoax bomb threats against your wish community centers in the united states the court said he had threatened some two thousand institutions before his arrest last year. the iraqi prime minister added i've been mehdi has met with kurdish leader masoud barzani and by god that's a sign of a thaw in relations between the two sides ties soured after a failed kurdish bid for independence from baghdad last year eight employees of a french drilling firm have been killed in south east a new share the company said gunmen attacked their crew while they rested in the village of two more officials at the attackers may be members of the hottest boko haram group from neighboring nigeria peace talks between yemen's
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warring parties looks set to take place in sweden in early december on us at least according to the u.s. secretary of defense for the people of yemen the talks can't come soon enough aid agencies estimate that more than eighty thousand children may have died from extreme hunger in the past three years of yemen's civil war and the u.n. says half the country's population is now on the brink of famine. this is one year old new site when this footage was taken on the twenty third of october he's mother said he'd been diagnosed with money tradition twice in the last six months i personally want to know that he keeps having a high fever during the night so i don't know how to get his temperature down when it's high in the battle. now come we don't know what condition musayyib is in at present but his story resonates today as an aid group warns eighty five thousand children in yemen may have died of hunger since the civil war broke out in two
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thousand and fifteen. it's a country literally on the brink of famine half a million young lives immediately a risk we need to focus on this crisis because it is the single greatest humanitarian crisis facing us as an international community. as the world learned of the probable extent of the country's humanitarian crisis the u.n. envoy to yemen martin griffiths arrived in the rebel held campuses sanaa for talks with who the rebels he said both sides in yemen have agreed to attend peace talks soon to in the country's civil war. but the fighting is still raging in her data and other areas making life a daily struggle for people in yemen. i am better than i. when i make breakfast i pray that we'll be able to have lunch and when lunch comes i wonder what we'll
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have for supper. and when you go to sleep you start thinking god's what's my going to feed them tomorrow. peace talks have been scheduled for early december in sweden but similar if it's in the past have failed to produce any agreement to stop the violence. are stephen is here now with the big business story of the day how to get rid of a c.e.o. that's right little especially one as influential as carlos go on the board at nissan voting today to kick out chairman going he remains in jail on suspicion of falsifying financial reports japanese carmakers french partner renault is meanwhile keeping going on as chief executive at least temporarily naming an interim c.e.o. just yesterday a major rift is threatening to open between the two companies in danger in their alliance the french and japanese economy ministers even met today over the matter. it was an eagerly awaited decision in tokyo and around the world for hours nissen's
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top executives held consultations with their c.e.o. hero to sign a coward then it became clear go and must leave his position as chairman of new. site is expected to be his temporary successor cornerstone has plans from the plush surroundings of his executive suite to a spartan cell behind the walls of this tokyo jail rumors that mr management was behind his fall from grace spread like wildfire. it's a source of coup de tat by nissan those who didn't like him to ninth him internally to make him full. carlos ghosn is one of the most successful also company bosses of all time in one thousand nine hundred six he began restructuring struggling french carmaker ran zero three years later he engineered the alliance with nissan he soon had this company back on the road to
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success as well but a no holds a forty three percent stake in a sand giving the french a lot of power in the company through to even appointing this on board the japanese company has only a fifteen percent stake in reno leaving it with no effective vote or power in its french partner a complete merger would have cemented possession as the weaker partner even though the company is performing better than ran over the ousting of goan could signify that the japanese automaker wants to expand its influence in its alliance with france's renel. it's complicated story. further let's turn to andre spicer of the cast business school in london andrea we heard french and japanese officials met today on the subject what do you know they're talking about. on the one hand you can imagine the french officials perhaps making a case for going he's a representative of all of right now i represent of the french company and also i
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was turned around the company the japanese officials i could imagine are presenting the evidence which has been put to the knesset and boards about guns misuse of company assets but also misreporting of pay this would probably raise logic questions about corporate governance in the group after all if a company cannot tell you how much exactly their chief executive is getting paid what can i tell you. now you heard in the piece there that there's some speculation about what's really behind this or if there is something more to the story is there any reason to believe that the accusations presented by nissan are true well at this stage is there's not that wall we have is the accusations which in essence has put forward clearly there's a clear interest on the part of me send the push for these allegations and and present them fairly but on the other side you could argue that there is a clear interest on the part of bread no two to cement and keep their position and
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try and keep together the alliance which if going indeed does go could begin to fall apart or at least be called into question. now both sides say that they want a profitable alliance to continue but obviously they face a lot of challenges maybe you can tell us about the. well the most the biggest challenge is some ways is the question about the equality between the different groups so we know that. nissen makes around about sixty percent more cars than what then does. its partner but renault holds forty three percent of control in sound so it means that a right now is the stronger controlling partner despite being in a weaker position there's also kind of questions about japanese corporate governance at stake here so japan has been through a kind of larger reform of corporate governance in the last few years this is
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boortz into the prospect that logic companies could from external companies could have a stake in the japanese economy and perhaps this is an example of some of these anxieties being expressed through this particular tussle obviously a lot of national interest at stake here two well known car companies with big histories where would this alliance be or would this alliance be where it is today without going considering all these complications. gone was the absolute lynchpin of this alliance is the kind of ideal they've also man some people have called him so it's spent his average month one week in france one week in japan then two weeks anywhere in between so he was clearly trying to bring together a global alliance now with him removed it's like removing the lynch pin which holds these companies together which then brings many analysts to question whether they're going to move towards closer integration such as some analysts were speculating a merger was on the cards or begin to kind of go their own separate ways and that
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would raise rather large questions for the actual future strategy of h three of these companies so plenty more to watch in the weeks ahead under aspies or in london many thanks thank you. and dr marshall is there was a great interviewer thank you delegates from a latin american countries are gathering in ecuador today to talk about how to deal with the around three million people who have now fled venezuela fleeing economic and political hardship for the majority of refugees and migrants are spread across latin america and their caribbean colombia has taken in by far the most with more than a million people peru has taken in more than five hundred thousand and ecuador two hundred twenty thousand panama has granted ninety four thousand people and this year so far while some governments and communities are struggling to cope with the rising numbers of newcomers indeed over use affiliate harms reports from
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a migrant camp in colombia's capital book with up where hundreds of venezuelans are struggling to survive. dozens of venezuelans waiting for food many haven't eaten since the previous day when they were brought to this refugee camp in bogota it's the first of its kind. the people here are angry they say the authorities haven't kept their promises the tents are cold and wet their few belongings were confiscated for hygenic reasons. carlos adriaan is here to take care of his grandmother who fled venezuela a few months ago he says they were better off when they were living on the street. or put it on water or so they offered as many things we've never received a decent bed we had our own mattresses that even on the floor were less called than what we have here where we virtually sleep on the ground it was so cold last night
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my bones were aching imagine how cold it was they took our blankets almost all of our stuff and food. now we're making a fire over there but we have nothing to cook because they took it all. the work the media isn't allowed inside the camp. after some refugees come out to talk to us the guards won't let them back in a little detail about you because it would be that what you. mean your pick a look at the there are small children inside who've had nothing to eat they want to feed them with a single banana and water we have no showers we're not animals there are no human rights activists or any other agencies here to tackle the problems i think i like that a lot i don't like and i know i'm not up but many colombians have helped us and we appreciate the help we got on the street some came here last night it's so unfair they brought food for us but wanted out inside and we want allowed to go out and
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get the food for our kids they were inside crying because they're so hungry you're right i'm good i'm going to put out but it's not good at that. i did a few days later videos shot by neighbors overlooking the camp show some refugees stealing food or. shortly after the police arrived riots began. the authorities respond to the unrest saying they will deport fifteen venezuelans. are introducing the two key measures. the first is biometric identification. and that the start. now refugees will be identified not only by name and number. but also by a metric to. look. at those they're going to think and
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we will boost security in the area in addition to the beefed up security measures we've already taken. but local say those steps don't go far enough. they fear for their security and their businesses. and others and we oppose the officer and she's decision as if they were arbitrary they've moved the venezuelan community to a camp with very bad conditions twelve bathrooms for four hundred eighty people. or entities can they give to people who have to leave their belongings and their children at home when they have to go to work and. locals are worried that there are hungry people who will go out to ask for food and money yesterday there was an incident at the bakery they came in and asked for bread when they didn't get it they just grabbed it you got to know most venezuelans are grateful for the
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reception they've received in colombia they desperately want to settle down and start a new life outside the refugee camp. you're watching you know we have a lot more to tell you about including chinese online retailers are pulling don't you go back after goods from their platforms italian luxury brand is under fire in china for a series of controversial ads. that story an all out war coming right up. through a child's eyes. three children document their daily find for surviving on camera. airstrikes the traumas and the desperate hope. for help from.
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yemen gives them all. in forty five minutes on the d w. six first day at school in the jungle. the first clinging lots of. doors grandma with arrives. joining a regular team on her journey back to freedom. in our interactive documentary tour of an orangutan returns home on t w dot com arena 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.
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or compulsory veils. their messages are spreading like wildfire. social media is quite critical as in the uk and thousands of dollars are joining the cause on the streets. women are changing the world to bring. the digital city starts nov twenty fifth on digital. great to have you back with us you're watching we don't use only iraq and really in these our main stories this hour you can prime minister teresa main has told parliament that brings that negotiations are at a critical moment ahead of an e.u. summit on sunday on me was outlining the terms of a draft deal on post regs that relations between london and brussels but she failed to convince opposition labor party leader jeremy horan who called the deal quote
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the worst of all worlds. there's hope for the people of yemen who are who are suffering from famine and violence in the civil war now the u.s. secretary of defense jim mattis has said yemen's warring parties have agreed to take part in peace talks next month in sweden. earlier this year kenya's ministry of health signed a two year contract to bring in one hundred doctors from cuba the move is supposed to help improve access to health care in rural areas but it has attracted harsh criticism from some local doctors wus a correspondent catherine and one though caught up with two of the cuban doctors working currently and sembler rule one of kenya's least developed areas to see what their first four months on the job have been like. yes yes. dr eliana sees her first patient at maryland hospital in northern kenya of
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a shooting the specialist physician has been here for four months now. in some brew most people speak swahili or the local language somebody's making it difficult to communicate with the patient. sometimes the people coming from a community and speak no english is no also heeded by the names of the forests. eliana and her husband are among one hundred cuban doctors hired by kenya's ministry of health. because we don't. work every day for a man that the people know that he won the day here even now in the community that people are coming to. but we sizwe lives we respect the system from the hospital. the government says the controversial decision was part of a plan to improve access to primary health care especially in rural areas.
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the government. five. this is this is. a help to a number of dispensaries which. i also so this is but of the. working distance it is a good thing about a hundred different. we visited one of the health centers in an area called on the tin and you keep. this maternal and it was built by the county government in two thousand and sixteen tremaine is closed for now. the dispensary right beside it is run by a local volunteer. and gotten a new key is about a two hours drive from our town where you can find the main hospital now this hospital is meant to serve a population within the seventy kilometer radius but the maternity ward you see
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behind me has barely been used and the dispensary has barely enough to supply to the people around and the doctor well he doesn't come here regularly. some local doctors have criticised the move to higher fine professionals saying that it will not cure kenya's public health care system they say the government has its priorities wrong. have only been hired on contract for two years. and say they are here to learn and hopefully make a difference in kenya some blue county. chinese e-commerce sites are pulling dolce and gabbana goods from their platforms in luxury brand is under fire in china for series of ads and they were supposed to promote a fashion show in shanghai this week. on social media. he's not the
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player who had the pill a chinese woman struggling to eat typical italian food like pizza with chopsticks of course that is accompanied by traditional chinese music which critics claim critics call outdated and stereotypical that have been canceled and now so has the show. and the backlash in china is strong and the fallout is growing and to take us through this a little more we have a social media editor called announcement here. luxury meets one of the world's largest consumer markets here how much trouble is. yeah they're in trouble because of the way they're in trouble doting obama does these ads are not being received well in china we can start by just showing you some of the fallout on chinese social media where many are calling out the company and you can see that even close the company's own brand ambassador in china his name is kerry wing here he is publicly actually resigning from that post the stating letter that he just posted to wait on this version of twitter and still chen she's a chinese french model speaking out here as well you say she says of the company
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you don't love china you love money china's rich but also rich in values and culture and the chinese own spend a penny on a brand that does not respect that there's been plenty of backlash from chinese citizens as well as all these ads and that can be summed up pretty well in a really well done parody video of those ads here's a little bit of it take a look. worker you don't. even read that so during. the day we had this you see there on the right the parody video of a kind of the opposite right a western man struggling to eat chinese food with a knife and fork you know how do i do this of course the joke is it's ridiculous the chinese people would know how to pronounce it right as those original ads they've been taken down now in china but they are still available right now i just checked before the show they're on dolce and gabbana as instagram account they're still up so their own spokespeople come on some of the social media channels you
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could kind of call a semi apology here's a bit from that letter it says in part what happened today was very unfortunate not only for us but also for the people who worked day and night to bring this a venture firm to that canceled fashion show to life from the bottom of our hearts we'd like to express our gratitude to our friends and our guests i mean what's missing from the statement write the words i'm sorry you don't find it there now the company is in more trouble yet again apparently screenshots have surfaced that allegedly show a conversation with stefano gabbana in which he makes bore insulting comments about china he says that's not him that his account was hacked but clearly the the anger is far from over in china and speaker this is an executive from dolce and gabbana artificial from a company so what does this potentially mean for the company again one of the world's largest consumer markets here you probably don't want to anger it yeah i mean this could have a pretty big impact on their bottom line i mean the company's products as you mentioned they've been pulled from online retailers are also being pulled off shelves real shelves in stores in china as well and it's
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a big market for these kind of luxury brands right chinese consumers spent more than one hundred billion dollars last year on luxury items that's nearly one third of the global market so they really can't afford this kind of bad publicity so a lot of stick their across the social editor of social media editor thank you very much. award winning bangladeshi photographer and social activist. who has been released from jail this week after spending more than one hundred days behind bars along was arrested back in august on charges of spreading false information about a protest for better road safety in bangladesh his arrest sparked international protests and calls for his release by human rights and media organizations around the world. shot he was greeted by a crowd of supporters as he left a jail in bangladesh's capital dhaka on tuesday used to capturing social injustice
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with his camera he has himself become the face of bangladesh's struggle for freedom of expression. was arrested in august after being accused of spreading false information and anti government propaganda on social media and in an interview with al-jazeera t.v. . supporters insist these allegations are fully concocted his lawyer sara hussein told the w.c. she was confident that the case against him would not stand in court. high court has made very clear in its judgement that actually the allegations which the police made in the initial report have got no connection with anything that he said on facebook or indeed even on a given there's already been this terrible miscarriage of justice and that he's been held in police custody and then in jail for over one hundred seven days i think at this point the right thing would be to drop this case completely. alarm
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was one of the many people held after massive protests groups bangladesh in july he was detained under the country's controversial internet laws which critics say are being used by prime minister she has seen or to stifle dissent ahead of a general election planned for later desir. is free for now but his still under police investigation he could face trial and if convicted up to fourteen years in jail. are to chess hour the world championship is in for all and friends around the world defending champion magnus carlsen and his challenger fabiano caruana remain in a deadlock after nine matches with the tenth game currently ongoing. this final is guaranteed to go down in the history books magnus carlsen and five yana carolina have drawn all no one of their matches so far a world record carlsen the undisputed king of the chess world has been world
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champion since twenty thirty this year he's facing his toughest challenge in quite some time is known for his aggressive openings and experts have noted his meticulous preparation if the wind doesn't emerge after twelve matches the top right will decide the top hole that would hand the advantage to carlsen who hasn't lost a tie break in thirteen years time i call not the world champion will be decided within the next week with the window receiving one million dollars in prize money. that's a lot of money here with me now is days when you say he is an international chess master we're so pleased to have you here with this in a very very very warm welcome let's talk about this nail biter of a of a match between carlsen and carolina neck and neck do you expect there to be a winner over the next couple of days because it's got to end some day difficult to
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say because both players had chances in the recent games and. that playing on a very high level and it's not so easy to say maybe tomorrow is a day to have decision and maybe today. maybe we find a decision today so we are not sure how will it end because they're burned so really and young and young exactly we're going to talk about that in just a second first i'd like to get some insight from you can you talk us through how you train your brain for matches i mean do you exercise specific chess moves or do you train your memory in a different way it depends on what you want if you just know if you know you want to play one opponent you will be. good to prepare playing what is going on to do and what is the reason games of him and. everything but normal preparation and. even in the game you don't think about twenty moves in from the
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because it's concrete just thinking maybe of twenty moves in front. of it into three moves you just more feel the position instead of really counting about the moves so i mean chess requires such an enormous amount of concentration and a great memory how many scenarios do you run through your mind when you're in a match. for example of in comparison with other sports is you have to. through a lot of hours for example it was a football player is maybe in the second and action in the movement and shooting to go but and she has you have to keep to maybe four four five six hours and it's very . how to say that it's very very difficult to give the cause of fashion so what's the secret how do you do it well it's all the teachings maybe for example you know
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it depends on who will get the concentration on the highest level of the both opponents in the next two days or the next three days who breaks first basic really who makes the first to say who fails ok well let's talk about these two very very young are world champions i mean what they're like not even thirty it's fantastic you know twenty six and. thousands but it's seven and. twenty six i think why do you think i mean this is such a such a shot in the arm for the sport i mean having these two very young guys are brilliant but the just sports and the future of just forces especially more and more younger players and the future for example from iran from india from china i don't know what we will see in maybe in five four years who play the championship in chess maybe maybe both players will have no no place in the chess championships in the reasons. for five years so nobody knows exactly the evolution of chess
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because she is getting more and more modern and you have more access to information and chances than forty twenty or thirty years ago so more and more younger players can reach very very fast the highest level of these sports beans are such exciting tires beautiful that. seeing young people playing jazz mean jazz will be there that . exactly well congratulations on the game preserve news international chess master thank you for giving us your very little window into your very special thank you so much. all right we're going to talk to football now and former chelsea striker didier drogba has called time on his career at the age of forty of us known for his time in the english premier league draw by one twelve major titles which elsie he's also a much beloved personality in his country of birth the ivory coast for his exploits both on and off the pitch. prokofiev. park
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your. car or star secured her. last car error but the ivorian striker's done just a back to school for phoenix rising which won the second division american side a western conference championship was the last of his storied career the forty year old announced his retirement via twitter thanking fans and teammates drug was best known for his two stints at chelsea he won four premier league titles and west london including the league and cup double in two thousand and ten drug but also led chelsea to champions league glory netting the decisive penalty in the two thousand and twelve final against byron munich his one zero four premier league goals for the blues make him the best african scorer in league history drug has drawn crowds from all over the world he's played professionally in three continents including a challenging six months at shanghai shinhwa in the chinese super league. making
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a lot of money from here because the difference on him from what i've seen in europe. that's very. disappointing to be one drug who was equally prolific for his national team he's the ivory coast's a record goalscorer with sixty five straights and he was voted african footballer of the year in two thousand and six and two thousand and nine drug has influence in his home country isn't limited to the field he's helped build hospitals and schools throughout the ivory coast though he hasn't announced post retirement plans drug was good work off the field is unlikely to end with his playing career. now it's been a long time coming but tourists in rome can now become digital time travellers and step back into the days of their woman empire roma reborn as the largest computer simulation in the world so far well for years u.s. researchers have been digitizing all existing information and now they've recreated
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the entire city as it stood about seventeen hundred years ago take a look. cutting edge computer technology that takes us back in time a bird's eye view of around the year three twenty at this point in history the eternal city was at its zenith there were about one million inhabitants almost fifty thousand homes to amphitheaters twenty eight public libraries and thirty six triumphal arches. it was the cultural and political center of a vast empire here power and might were not just wielded they were chiseled into stone. rome's opulence economy was at the time financed by the spoils of war but the wind of change was blowing constantine the great was the first emperor to tolerate christianity a new currency was introduced society was reorganized. this digital project was
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twenty years in the making. but i'm going to show today which has over fifty people we think of accurate list would be at least one hundred people who have contributed in one way or another rome reborn cost three million dollars to develop it was created with the forty million tourists in mind to visit the eternal city every year and also for those who stay at home. fifty years ago on november twenty second one thousand nine hundred sixty eight four from liverpool released their names and studio albums a very simply titled the beatles and thanks to explain a wide sweep it came to be known as the white album a record that went down it is straight as a turning point and provoked very mixed reactions and karen helps that is here for
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our culture test of talk all about it first of all learn something new i didn't know that that was the reason why it's called the help of all right now. product that's this is the reason they call it the white ok that is very simple you can see i mean this is the real mccoy this was lent to us very kindly by a colleague from our culture department it's not exactly white anymore it's sort of getting a bit yellowed around the edges that's a bit more white on our on our background here but this is what it looks like and you can see that i don't have the serial number is imposts. there so that was the only way you could keep track of them what makes this particular album so special you know it's a combination of things leyla first of all it's a double album as you can see here two records thirty eight tracks so that was a lot of music at the time and completely white cover the concept there was to sort of strip things down to the very bare essentials especially after coming off of sergeant pepper's lonely hearts club band in the as that madness of colorful
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psychedelia that that was about they were just coming off a meditation retreats in india they wanted to simplify things and you know you mentioned those mixed reaction some brand of this record as a colossal nests but if you were a diehard fan obviously part of this album's charm is its unbelievable diversity in the songwriting you know they proved with this record that they were not just rock n rollers that they could be musically very sophisticated and the white album was also reflecting the year one thousand nine hundred sixty eight and the fragmentation that was taking place and of course the band itself was fragmented as well. we all want to change the world john wrote with a hint of sarcasm in his song revolutionary war and student unrest in paris provided the backdrop to the beatles' first and only double album. this version
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took shape two months before the white album came out the release version is slower and more reflective. pretend it has been a people's fan since one thousand nine hundred sixty four he loves the white album . and i think it's brilliant because so many different influences went into it the psychic delic stuff from india played a major part if they had just returned from rishikesh and got straight to work on this album. the beatles were in india to get away from it all to meditate and look for new ideas. left after ten days to escape food and insects paul mccartney followed the couple of weeks later to take care of business george harrison and john lennon stayed on and wrote music.
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by the time they recorded the white album the family four were already falling apart the beatles worked on the white album separately then together bring out star even threw in the drumsticks and disappeared for two weeks george harrison took advantage of the tensions between then and mccartney to spread his musical wings. one of his wife very best songs. while my guitar gently weeps became one of harrison's signature. now the white. officer and trio. ultimately did use a. mic to mix that makes it one of the band's most popular.
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and carrie might add also very mythical yeah it really is it was it was such a wildly experimental album you know the beatles were really more or less at their at their creative peak it was a real swerve of styles for them they wrote a lot of songs during that period that then appeared even on their two later albums and so there's a lot of there's a lot of pastiche on this album there's a lot of humor a lot of political statements and a lot of poetry but you know it is also an album where one of the standout tracks helter-skelter has the tragedy associated with it that has nothing to do with the beatles really the american cult leader charles manson became obsessed with that song and perhaps he didn't know that british fairground slides are actually called helter skelter as he thought the beatles were the four horsemen of the apocalypse and heard the songs that coded command urging him in his manson family to commit murder which of course very tragically they did killing nine people in one nine
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hundred sixty nine but you know. to give it its due helter skelter was really an unbelievably innovative track that many people credit with paving the way for heavy metal and possibly even for pollack what's being done to mark the half century here the album is back in the charts in the u.s. and the u.k. thanks to a special reissue fiftieth anniversary and the thirty tracks have been remastered expanding greatly on the technical abilities of nine hundred sixty eight recording technology so there's a deluxe box set of six c.d.'s and a blu ray disc they've also contributed to or included about twenty seven early acoustic. demos and fifteen sessions takes most of which was previously unreleased and that's going for about one hundred thirty years ok in the couple of seconds that we have a left foot scene of original white album going for these days so our life it really depends on this on this funny little number that you can fairly read here ok i was torn as the first hundred obviously going for many many thousands i was about
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wow this one yeah there's a this one still has a long way to go i think five seven seven six six zero all right although in some regard anyway all right i'm away though i will exactly how are we going to leave it here i mean we were heraclea in berlin along side can now start thank you so much for watching i'll see again some are circularly is next.
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or design highlights you can make yourself. against tips and tricks that will turn your home to something special. upgrade yourself with d w's interior design channel on you tube. look closely. listen carefully. don't know the suit she needs to get. discovery. subscribe to the documentary to. look at
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a little bit of the. this is the w. news live from berlin and britain's prime minister says that a great deal is within reach speaking in parliament to reach the may defend a draft agreement on post brings it relations with brussels but with several key issues still to be resolved she says that the next seventy two hours are critical leaders are set to sign off on the divorce deal at a special summit on sunday. also coming up the board of nissan fires its chairman carlos goans that's after his shot.
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