tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle January 8, 2019 7:00pm-8:01pm CET
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this is you don't really use live from berlin a student confesses to stealing personal data from thousands of prominent germans a twenty year old tells police he acted alone and that he was the hacker behind a twitter account which exposed top politicians and celebrities details online also coming up assailants attack and seriously injure a far right german politician police say the incident could have been politically
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motivated plus the mission not accomplished adult security advisor angers turkey by attaching conditions to any u.s. withdrawal from syria and chris says he is making a serious mistake and heavy snowfall over the alps brings chaos to parts of austria and southern germany rescuers say they found dead bodies and several people still remain missing. thank you so much for your company everyone. we begin in germany were a twenty year old student has confessed to stealing the personal data of thousands of public figures including politicians and celebrities the youngster who has not been named released a slew of information via twitter exposing private messages pictures and even
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credit card details he's the latest high profile hacker to expose the holes and german officials cyber security. the attack on a string of high profile victims has caused concern nation now the twenty year old suspect has apparently told police he was behind the message data breach. so as i am with you what's your concerning his motive i hope you understand that this point we cannot provide you with the final picture up to the underside but the suspect said he searched for and published data the reason was that he was angry about specific statements the injured parties made publicly. the hacker is thought to have acted alone he used twitter to publish personal information including phone numbers and e-mail addresses as well as photos and private messages the attack targeted as many as thousands celebrities journalists and politicians including the chancellor i'm going to merkel all the political parties except for the far right f.t. were hit in the. thirty's acted very quickly very efficiently and
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around the clock. i can say with full conviction that our security agencies are guaranteeing the safety of the public and our politicians at all times . despite data being leaked in december in the form of for the advent callender the cyber attack only came to light last week the investigation is continuing and questions about the security of the german government's digital infrastructure have yet to be answered. well with me now is christoph abel's he is head of the cyber security research program for poli someone eighty a berlin based think tank so good to have you here with us in person christoph all right so the suspect is a twenty year old high school student still living with his parents and the scrubber police as not a great computer expert i don't know which is more worrying the fact that he's
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twenty years old or the fact that he's not really a computer genius. i think what makes varying in some kind of. david against the light situation we have this one guy hacking the government to somehow it's frightening but i think if you look at the quality of the heck it's not actually hacking it's more like collecting data and it's not about technical expertise it's about commitment truth tried to hurt people to try to leak these data in order to achieve a certain goal as you mentioned that he wants to do that he does not doesn't agree with some of those proportions because it begs the question though how easy is it then to get your hands on this private data of these very prominent politicians and celebrities because it's quite scary that is true. i think the case here is that that guy is not hacking the government itself it's having private accounts and. the degree to which our data saved depends partly on us so that we change our passwords
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do we update our software or do we take care about basic privacy data security concepts and rules if we behave in the way and try to. moved in a secure way all across the internet i think then we are more or less safe but of course as we see today that's not that easy and many people do not change their passwords do not update their software and of that sense they expose themselves to these kind of attacks but these aren't just everyday people though ari we're talking i mean top of the the top but almost i mean what i wonder is why doesn't why are we so you know after so many hacking advance and messages that we have to start you know being careful with our passwords and all that why are we not heeding that advice i think the fundamental problem here is that even if we take care of all of these issues there's still some risk because if you use the internet
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you can never be one hundred percent certain that you're not getting hacked it's a point it was complete security is just impossible to achieve depends on the infrastructure but also on your own behavior and still both work so well you might look at all right now this isn't of course the first time that german politicians and a lawmaker is have fallen victim to cyber attacks what can the government do i mean it's also the government's kind of duty to secure. internet operations i know you know these were like private accounts that were targeted but still i think in my opinion what the government can do is actually not trying to protect the people it's also possible that it's more difficult but's deal with the fallout those leaks and hex create i mean what we are seeing today is that they have just said that we have to ask currently for example twitter to delete the accounts that should be
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changed in the future in order to like. cope with the problems that's where creates jobs due to the head so just for example which should be legally bound to the accounts for example to be asked to do so thank you so very much christoph abel's research center in a national security policy and also head of the cyber security a research program for police one eighty thank you affairs of. and we're going to stay in germany where a far right german lawmaker has been seriously injured in an attack in the north of the country frank magnet says the leader of the anti immigration a of d. party in braman he says he was assaulted by three men in the city center on monday evening if they published this photo of him in the hospital and said he was beaten unconscious with a piece of wood police suspect the attack was politically motivated.
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well earlier today when you spoke to one of the of diesel leaders alexander gall and he said the mainstream political parties in germany are partially to blame for the attack because of their efforts to sideline the far right party and its anti immigration rhetoric. and about to the democrat disagree it is a democrat when you call a democratically elected party undemocratic you're socially inviting thugs to get violent and that's what happened here this is it's an escalation of the type of undemocratic behavior we're seeing even in the during the parliament as. well the a day's political opponents were however quick to condemn the attack foreign minister heiko mosque tweeting violence can never be an ounce or two political arguments regardless of the target or motive there is no justification for it whatsoever anyone who commits such a crime must be punished meanwhile the leader of the social democrats sundry a novice at this to say the a of d. is a political opponent of our tolerant and peaceful society but those who fight the party
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and their part. missions with violence betray our values and jeopardize our coexistence i strongly condemn the attack on frank magnets and jim as the mayor of the greens one of the fiercest adversaries tweeting i hope the assailants are caught and prosecuted swiftly there is no justification for violence even against the if you fight hate with hate hate always wins. next up washington's unpredictable treatment of its allies turkey has rebuked the u.s. national security advisor actually called for the protection of kurdish fighters in syria kurdish president rich of tayyip erdogan scolded john bolton after bolton seemed to make their protection a prerequisite for america's withdrawal from syria listen to what are the ones that are earlier. regarding this matter bolton has made a serious mistake and whoever thinks like this has also made
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a mistake. it's not possible for us to make compromises on this point the us call those who are part of the terror corydoras in syria will be taught the necessary lesson. yet on them up there is not a single difference between the p.k. y.p. g p u i d islamic states though it's not as them. well during the course of the war in syria kurdish forces spearheaded the fight against so-called islamic state with support from the united states kurdish forces and most importantly the why p.j. also managed to gain control over a large area bordering turkey but on her own regards them as a terror organization because of their ties to turkey's outlawed kurdistan workers' party commonly known as the p k k. e. r let's get us some analysis now i like to welcome ghetto a steinberg
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a mideast expert at the german institute for international and security affairs always good to see you again i know where to begin i mean ever since president trump surprise decision by tweet to withdraw from a syria that has been so much confusion we've seen national security advisor john bolton today visiting turkey it was meant to reassure the u.s. this key ally and yet it all went wrong. did go wrong especially because john. bolton in israel already demanded guarantees for the kurdish allies of the u.s. in syria guarantees that the turks don't want to give and i think the events today show us that relations between turkey and the u.s. are at an all time low and an invasion of eastern syria might be imminent having said that i mean further complicating this tensions that you were just outlined one came out just a short while ago before we came on air and said the u.s. opposes any mistreatment of its kurdish allies in syria is he basically telling her
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to back off yes yes he is but the only guarantee that the kurds have that the turks don't intervene in syria is the american presence it was always always the only guarantee they had for the survival of the autonomy zone in eastern syria without the us the kurds are helpless and their only chance might be. to approach the assad government in syria otherwise the turks might intervene and might even occupy a larger portion of syria meanwhile turkish president seems to be under the impression or at least is insisting that he actually does have a standing agreement with president donald trump that he is and can take action against kurdish militias in northern syria do you think that he would defy the u.s. and go ahead with the offensive against the kurds yes i think so because for the turkey for turkey the fight against the syrian y p g six is tension because turkey
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believes that the syrian people's protection units the y.p. g. is an entire world part of the turkish p.k. k. so it's a matter of national security and that is more important for turkey than relations to the u.s. and the country has learned in recent years that even if it opposes u.s. policies in the in the region the united. doesn't react forcefully so there are no consequences so therefore you know they can do whatever they please what i'm wondering though peter is with all this confusion over u.s. withdrawal from syria and we have these contradictory statements between you know on the one hand present time saying well we are withdrawing immediately and then you've got. bolton coming out and reassuring allies in the region well actually you know that timeline we haven't really decided on that saying something else what does it do to an already volatile region where the region is is already in
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a mess although in syria the government has won and the only question is whether the turks all the syrians occupy parts of parts of eastern syria and fight the kurds over the american position was untenable for a while already but now it seems as if they as if this very quick withdrawal. unnecessarily complicates the situation and this specially threatens the kurdish autonomous zone in eastern syria and i've got thirty seconds left you already pointed out to how the turks view the kurds in syria as an existential threat could you just maybe flesh that out for me a little bit well the g. according to turkey is an integra part of the p.k. k. which has fought the turkish state at the since one thousand nine hundred eighty four with more than forty thousand people who have died who have died and that is
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why the existence of this autonomy zone in eastern syria is so important to turkey and that is why relations with the u.s. have already deteriorated in recent yes. you know samberg mideast expert at the german institute for international and security affairs thank you for weighing in. all right and now i've got some breaking news they're just coming in london's heathrow airport says it is halted all departing flights this after a drone was sighted in the area and here is now a recent radar image of the airport which is the second busiest airport in the world he through officials say police have been called into this to gate while drone sightings at london's gatwick airport led to flights being grounded for several days last month you may recall all eating thousands of passengers stranded will bring you more on that developing story as soon as we get more details.
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but for now i want to bring up to speed now with some of the other stories making news around the world. the united nations says it has moved the eighteen year old saudi woman who fled her family over the weekend to a safe place for. remains in thailand while the u.n. process is her application for refugee status australia says it will consider the case if she applies for asylum there. north korean leader kim jong un has arrived in china by train for talks with president thing the surprise visit is kim's fourth to beijing in less than a year the two leaders are believed to be discussing a planned second summit between kim and u.s. president donald trump. the german foreign minister michael moss has urged members of the british parliament to approve the brig's a deal negotiated with the e.u. speaking after talks with his irish counterpart in dublin must said no one could
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predict what would happen if the deal is rejected the british parliament is expected to vote on the agreement next tuesday. was a. frustration is mounting and the democratic republic of congo where the public are still waiting for the results of a landmark election at the end of december well voters are choosing a replacement for president joseph kabila who's been in power for almost eighteen years but the results of the poll have been delayed sparking accusations of election rigging and fears that fresh violence could break out in sub-saharan africa's largest country. congolese voters have had enough of waiting they want the results of their country's presidential election. but after the vote itself was postponed three times over two years now the results of being to late to tell you no no. the electoral commission says the delay is due to technical problems. but the opposition says officials say using the time to tweak
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the results in the ruling coalition is favor which it's needed deny. these the. food of if you see. is full of really good. they've called for calm but patience is wearing thin. you because it's waiting for the results to be announced is painful. now number on the side of power they're celebrating their victory already it's on the opposition side they're doing the same in the end we don't really know who won we live in fear. and independent commission tells you in forty eight hours you will have results they postpone it for a week after a week it's postponed for another two weeks and then we had held there not yet sure of a timeframe at this point we don't have any more trust in that those in the least. president could be less preferred successor former interior minister emanuel rehman
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sunday show dari was up against strong opponents the clear front runner in pre-election polls was newcomer martin for you knew and the well respected catholic church is claiming he's the winner but even when the official results come from the electoral commission a lack of trust on all sides means a peaceful handover of power is looking less and less likely. to albania now where students have again taken to the streets of the capital to run up the protests to protest the government of prime minister in iraq demonstrations have been going on for months now demanding more education spending lower tuition fees and better living conditions while use unemployment in the country is high with many young people leaving in search of a better future soon demonstrators hope to stop that exodus. outside the small balkan country the plight of albanian students is largely unknown but they're determined to be noticed on monday hundreds took to the streets after
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syria is a second place in the world. and this is because there is hope this is what student accommodation looks like surveys suggest four out of five young albanians want to leave their country egli torah law says that's no surprise when most people lack the basics while government is embroiled in corruption scandals you toy this is the bathroom we all use there's just one toilet on every floor it's awful. the government of prime minister eddie rama appears to have gotten the message it's been making efforts to apiece to students and. to the students they come sit down. and join all the conversations about how to do this practice but the students aren't interested they've lost all confidence in the political elites. a number of professors have falsified
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doctorates including two ministers the students are demanding their dismissal of the prime minister because they're some of his most important cabinet members. so the students continue to protest by the hundreds sometimes in the thousands they're demanding more humane living conditions better libraries and more competent professors they're fighting for a better future and they appear to have much of the country on their side i. guess is here with me an embattled automotive executive pleads his innocence. we're talking about a man who was a true legend in the car business hailed worldwide as a visionary executive and credited with turning nissan into an industry powerhouse that was until carol's go and found himself in handcuffs charged with financial crisis two months on he's finally had his first hearing in court but his lawyers say it could be another half year before his case goes to trial. cameras ready
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they were waiting but carlos gone never had a chance to make his case to the media a police bus delivered him to the talk your district court handcuffed and with a rope around his waist. was described as thin he is set to last more than ten kilos over his last two months in prison the charges tax avoidance and under reporting his salary in documents prepared for investors and unique opportunity mr golan concluded his statement saying he is innocent and there was no evidence or grounds but has been wrongly accused and detained with what he must. industry sources have long speculated whether the charges against gold were real or whether there was foul play gone has forged an alliance between french car make up an old and japanese competitors nissan and mitsubishi for years he has been criticised for giving it one or too much power within the group some in the industry say the
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future of the company is at stake. levy of the us there are three possibilities for the future of the alliance there's the status quo but that seems difficult to envision today they might go further into the alliance with an outright merger or takeover of one of the two companies all will see a rebalancing but today who can say what will happen perhaps we have reached the limits of this alliance as it was conceived at the beginning. pl now carlos golan is out at both japanese automakers he is still chief executive of the no. say in the auto branch of the world's largest car maker is about to begin selling green energy. and has created a berlin based subsidiary called l. e to sell a tricity generated from renewables the plan is to offer charging stations for electric vehicles in homes and in parking lots v.w. says the company will also sell household electricity all of it from carbon free
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sources the push complements the carmakers existing new focus on mobility. and earlier we spoke to our financial correspondent in frankfurt and asked him what the move actually means for v.w. . there they can certainly use some help from the green faction if you will at the moment it is all marketing though you're right on that basically it's public relations because all the things that volkswagen wants to establish aren't there yet but if it does it right and if it does with a lot of drive then it will be part of answering all those questions that people who are skeptical of a car is have about the whole concept where do you charge is the energy that i'm putting into the car really clean how do i pay for it and how is the infrastructure going to look if folks wagon makes a go at that then it will be part of an answer to putting a cars on the road. that's all for business i'll be back with more business
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headlines later on for now it's back to lay low and an incident thank you so very much for having snow fall in avalanches in austria and germany have claimed at least five lives some one point five meters of snow has fallen in the northern alps and was then a week thousands of sort tourists are now stranded in villages and more snow is expected this week train services and roads have been disrupted and authorities have warned that the risk of avalanches remains high. this ski village in austria is all but deserted roads are closed rescue helicopters grounded residents and tourists were forced to evacuate after it was inundated with snow there's an old in the thread the first for the light there was only took this necessary precaution because we couldn't guarantee that there would be adequate food and medical supplies. rescue teams are on standby but the
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extreme weather is hampering their efforts. residents were also caught off guard. you know what i was alone and raced here i'm never seen anything like this in the last fifty five years. in southern germany officials have declared a state of emergency schools are closed and train services have been suspended residents are overwhelmed. hi rose you've been in the loft. i've been getting up at three am to clear the snow otherwise it's not manageable i'm never seen so much snow fall in such a short period. we're going to need to leap into could to. daily life has been up ended here as officials struggle to clear the snow many people are unable to go to work or buy groceries. in this knee is that if he should be at or not the snow is too heavy and wet to move with the plows. the trees are also snapping under the
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weight of the snow which is dangerous for motorists and why we've had to close a lot of streets if i don't like guns he just gotten out of this had some fresh bread. more snow is expected in the coming days and the risk of avalanches remains high. you're watching it every news or so have a lot more to tell you about including. the refugees we're turning to somalia that we meet one woman who's returned to east africa from the united states to open ferntree bakery. and the own fun of the french literature is back with a new novel that tops into the anger of the country's rules heartlands we get the verdicts on the show with max saratoga. don't forget you can always go to your news on the go just down the road or out from google play or from the apple store i'll give you access to all the latest news from around the world as well as push notifications for any breaking news you can also use the v.w.
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app to send us your photos and videos. a lot more news coming up right after these messages strangled her. playing has been some doubt as soem love devotion menachem pressler. the acclaimed musician has been thrilling audiences for decades and he's well and truly acclaim in the twenty first century as well as the pianist menachem press
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into the life i now know. the final minutes. we make up oh but we watch as of that and at that if we are the similar services. they may want to shape the continent's future. part of it and join our youngsters as they share their stories their dreams and their challenges of the seventy seven percent platform for africa chart. how do you. discover your concept discover it with the power. school a legend after one hundred it is the ideals of the favs are more relevant today than they were a. hundred years ago visionaries reshaped things to give all the
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people understood designers and with shaping society. the bauhaus and does crossover. with ideas that are part of our future. what makes the bow and its creation inspiring to the spirit. it sounds the type of . pulse world mark you measure it starts in january thirteenth on w. very to have you back with us you're watching that we knew someone who are rock'n'roll and these are made headlines this hour. here in germany a twenty year old student has confessed to stealing the personal data of more than one thousand public figures including top politicians and celebrities that brewer says he was working alone to share the information on twitter in the run up to
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christmas. u.s. national security advisor john bolton has angered the turkish president by saying the u.s. will only were drawn from syria iraq guarantees the safety of kurdish militia who have been fighting alongside the u.s. and syria on press says the kurds are terrorists. now the year twenty nineteen has just begun but already it is clear their refugee crisis will remain an urgent issue on the global agenda millions of people around the world are fleeing war disease and poverty some however are returning to their homelands one example is somaliland in the horn of africa somaliland declared independence from somalia back in one thousand nine hundred one though not internationally recognized somaliland has a working political system government institutions a police force and its own currency the former british protectorate has also scared
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much of the chaos and violence that have plagued somalia for decades we met a woman who moved back to somaliland from the u.s. to open her own bakery. trays of freshly baked treats they don't just look good they're the fulfillment of a lifelong dream if. grew up in the u.s. and is an american citizen she planned to open a tea house there with homemade cakes but that's rigged to difficult after visiting her parents homeland the self-proclaimed republic of somaliland but she decided to try her luck here in its capital hargeisa that was three years ago. and her fulfilling my dream here just feel so good it wasn't easy it's taken time because the country is still getting on its feet. i have to be patient as somaliland still has very little infrastructure but there are many of us here who have got things
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moving. now he fret employs four people to do the baking and two service personnel she trained them all herself . to escape somalia a seemingly endless cycle of war parents fled the country when she was just a child in one thousand nine hundred one somaliland declared independence from the rest of the country it's still officially part of somalia but now it has its own democratically elected government and it has peace the economy is growing although most of the population is still poor a few years ago the bad economic situation also prompted businessmen up the rattlin blacky to leave the country. and. the day that i left this country i was convinced that it had nothing to offer me i think everyone who leaves their home
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and thanks that way but if they only knew how sweet how precious and deserving of respect their own country is i'm sure they'd all stay. oh he tried his luck inside. rabia but eventually returned to solution a draft. today he has a flourishing business in hargeisa he sells food exchanges money perceives other opportunities. it was a. new idea and after largely hasn't had things quite so easy he too is a former migrant he left his business and family behind in somaliland to cross the mediterranean to europe today he's back working as a day laborer in a warehouse. i was in switzerland but didn't get what i had expected and hoped for well it took me by surprise i had a good life here and then suddenly i was just
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a migrant. and that didn't allow me to achieve what i was aiming for. after spending two years in a refugee shelter abdulahi applied voluntarily to return to his family in somaliland the swiss authorities even paid for his flight back but he still has debts it cost him ten thousand dollars to get to europe is now slowly paying that money back on who. i wasn't even able to provide for myself in europe i had nothing my wife would often call me and ask me to send her money i was helpless in switzerland and she was helpless here. step by step he now hopes to rebuild his life here in somaliland in spite of everything he says he's happier than ever before back with his wife and children.
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former migrants and now opening businesses everywhere back in somaliland teahouse owner of the town is visiting a friend who used to live in canada she's opened a beauty salon. the women give each other business tips and tackle problems together. one of our country needs everything and so whatever kind of business you can open you can succeed in that match but you have to be patient and not give up at the first hurdle and. that's what's needed she says is more training opportunities for young people in somaliland and more information about the risks and the challenges of trying to start a new life in europe or elsewhere. abdirahman blacky to return from saudi arabia for greece. i tell you how i describe it migration is a virus and it's infected our society. people need to pull together to fight
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against it politicians academics the whole of society needs to come together to find solutions. on one solution would certainly be to invest more money in education and lucky composes letters that those are able to read and write because so many are illiterate here business is booming directly he doesn't regret his decision to return the mission have. i always say i spent two years abroad for nothing i tell everyone how tough i was went why i decided to come back they say why do you come on we know you love money if even you came back then we're not going to bother trying. at highgate airport the latest flight lands bringing more young people back from libya what are their plans now. i'm going to look for work i don't care what kind before i went away i couldn't be bothered but now i'll be the first to look for
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a job. perhaps some of them will even manage to live out their dreams here. like. turn he returned from the us for her somali land has now become the real land of opportunity. on life's looking sweet. and next to have years back here with the latest from the tech industries big jan brewer e that's right it's also very sweet at least for tech companies because whether self driving self rolling or self walking it's all there of currently taking place consumer electronics show in las vegas a growing number of traditionally non tech companies have also set up shop at c.v.s. trying to give their product line a digital make over. i catch ing cell driving cars connected to the drivers home devices one of the trends last week that season and for b.m.w. an opportunity to go the extra mile presenting its driver less model cycled for the
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first time in public the way we think there's going to be doing and for is certainly a motorcycle that's connected to marvel but also somebody that helps writers be better writers and also safer writers the stuff lee than me that made the minus sheets robots a rubber clone for the folder. sharable electric skateboards smart beauty devices as one of the biggest tech shows featuring startups alongside established companies c.s. is expected to draw more than one hundred eighteen thousand visitors hoping for a chance to see the kind of tech likely to dominate consumers' agenda that seems we expect to emerge this week artificial intelligence will see a lot of products powered or enabled bit by ai that force recognition and facial recognition things like that five g. connectivity which is one hundred times faster than four g. l.t.e. with forty five hundred exhibits worse the show is expecting another record. and
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the overall buy tends to be optimistic on the tech console problems that's what the industry's message seems to be this year in the speak us. or. right let's get a closer look at the c.e.o.'s and we'll get a first hand the four that are now joined by u.c. santa director of strategic communications at the consumer technology association the organizers off the c.e.o.'s thank you very much for joining us tonight know this year's c.s. is certainly taking place in a very particular context some fear the trade dispute between the china and the u.s. might hurt the sector do you see a difference in the sentiment and the mood if you will of the show taking place this year. we're having day one today and the mood is exciting it's thrilling it's the opening day of the show we have over four thousand attendees four thousand exhibitors one hundred eighty thousand attendees coming so
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the energies here trade is always going to be a topic of mind because no one likes the uncertainty of paying extra taxes for their products and the we're aware that the tech industry is going to pay one billion dollars more every month to the trade war isn't resolved to china but don't be fooled c.s. is in full circle we have just tons of exhibitors here and the energy is very high you're talking about tons of exhibitors but looking at the product launches it seems like it's getting increasingly difficult to actually surprise the audience with groundbreaking innovations if you will how do you handle that pressure to keep the visitors coming. i think i told reject the premise of your question because that's not what's happening here at all we're seeing innovators coming to really showcase the latest in technology they really improve people's lives i'll give you an example where bulls is the hottest thing at c.s. you want to know why because people want to have over the counter solutions that help them with their diseases or their medications so right now you're seeing that
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more ai is incorporated in wearables where i can help medicate myself clear my sinus pressure to a wearable so the technology is here it is fresh it is exciting and let's not forget about. cars c.s. is the car ship there are eleven automakers here and you are seeing them for it is having an integration with amazon's alexa where you can open your car via your voice so i think you should get over here and when i walk here and you'll see that that is not the case at all i would love to but maybe next year as i still have to work here the next few days thank you very much you see santa joining us from the c.b.s. rachael will definitely cover all details here at the dock. that's all for business especially when i'll and we stayed in the u.s. to thank you so much you should have taken it out on now to i'm not all for art we're going to stay in the u.s. have your said on a more serious note a new study shows up to or forty percent of women say they were abused by
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a male while at school or in college a school in press for pennsylvania is trying to change that statistic by teaching young men how to interact with women. reports that. testosterone is in the air the wrestling team that carried high school is preparing for the next competition but coach leonard arm of it doesn't just teach sports he has another topic on his agenda respectful behavior towards women and girls after each training they gather food cool down talk today's topic the problem of learning goals for sexual harassment how do you how do you think something like that affects the person. the god grabbed you know you not only did you get assaulted not only were you disrespected but your fault. is never a moment like have depression and suicide anxiety but even the smallest thing
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can have the biggest impact on someone's life the conversations they have resonate with the bonus women who are looked like powerless as he said in society and you know it's a problem i mean we should all be created before you know they should be doing the same thing but. you know it's just it's something we need to talk about fully comprehend it's made me look at them from a different perspective like see what they have to go through on sometimes a daily basis and it just makes me respect them more and it makes the way that treat them you know change i learn that there's a huge issue that isn't the reason we don't aren't hearing about it before is because it's not being brought to light like it should be and that this program was really good to help you know that our bitch and his restaurants take part in a program called coaching boys into men it uses the trusting relationship between coaches and their team to discuss healthy relationships and violence prevention
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some the most rewarding stuff that that has come about with doing with the kids is here in the conversations that they have that i'm not involved with. her overheard holding each other accountable one kid says something that another kid finds disrespectful or that there are comparable with i've heard them correct each other at the moment only the boys are being coached and the girls on the team think their fellow female students also have a thing or two to learn about respectful behavior it's sad how many girls like hate on each other and like they are. you you can't get a compliment from the girl when you get a compliment from of those like she don't really mean and stuff like that so. we also need as well as we degrade each other a lot. of each believes this sessions will benefit everyone in the long run and he's sure his athletes will be role models for their pain use.
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it to soccer's asian cup now in the u.a.e. where two thousand and seven champions in iraq have beaten vietnam in a five goal thriller iraq came twice from behind in a scintillating match adding pressure at the right moments of non with the game winner as he scored in the final minutes to seal a three two victory for iraq and in the days other match saudi arabia beat north korea and convincing fashion the three time champions thumbed their underdog opponents with a four nil win. egypt has been awarded the hosting rights for june and july is african nations cup soccer tournament the egyptians edged out a bid from south africa the event had been due to be hosted by the holders cameroon but delays and security concerns meant they were stripped of the rights african football chiefs will also announce their player of the year later with egypt and
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liverpool forward mohammed saw the favorite to retain the award at a ceremony in the cynical east capitol car. and tell him that racing a driver alex is an r.t. lost his legs after a crash here in germany back in two thousand and one but he never gave up his passion for the sport and has enjoyed a successful career since and now he faces one of his toughest challenges yet a twenty four hour race. alex sonorities pretty static legs have been anything but a hindrance to his will to win the former formula one an indy car driver who didn't lead a horrific two thousand and one accident at a race in germany and his driving career sonority was back behind the wheel just two years later. the italian racer is now preparing for the twenty four hours of daytona in the us the grueling competition will be a challenge for his an already especially if he's only recently returned to in
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durance racing still has approach to racing hasn't changed even if the mechanics behind it have to the fact that you have no leg to stand next to obstacle but that doesn't mean that you driving the car with your life will you decide when this time to break when it's time to go back on the wood with your hat so you can find a way to connect your brain. to the car you driving efficiently there's no reason why you cannot be the same driver as you used to be before sonorities had plenty of success since climbing back into the driver's seat he's won races in the world touring car championship and finished first in the italian super trees no championship in two thousand and five and sonorities not just an auto racer he won gold medals in hand cycling at the london in rio paralympics still competing at fifty two years old and nearly two decades on from his life changing crash sonority has always looked forward things happen like you convoy that but you can see when
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we tried to surf that and many years after my ex and i can tell you that my ex and then you start to believe i'm going to stop it's in the you know my luck because all the things that i'm doing these days that i do you need to do when you finish. and maybe has positivity will deliver another victory in daytona at the end of the month. and he said welbeck is considered by many to be france's greatest living officer and when a new book by him is published is treated like a national event there has latest a book called serotonin has just been published and robin merrill from our culture desk is here good to see you robert a literary star but also a notorious author yeah indeed i mean he's idolized and hated by some in france most probably idolized by more to be fantasy but he's very controversial
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because he holds up a mirror to some of the a number please of french societies. and he supports many right wing causes he recently wrote a sort of praise to the donald trump he's also peen accused of islamophobia controversial but very successful i should just say normally first print run of a book in five thousand copies last friday they released three hundred twenty thousand copies of well beck's new book you know because people are going to buy it anyway his books always controversial he's at the time by taking a poke at a town in northern front of vats where we're headed right now. it's just one sentence in the novel but one that has a certain angle the protectionists flaw and cruelty that proust takes the motorway to new york and says that this is one of the places in for you to do and that's
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very odd it's not true which part of our town is ugly so much has been men evaded and repaired. but there is discontent here and a number of yellow vests but testers but what concerns you know look the wealth tax needs to be reintroduced the people who contribute to the general welfare have to be rewarded we don't want to drive ferrari's but we do want to be able to eat to bring up our children and go out occasionally we want social. in the novel the north west is increasingly impoverished a victim of a global economy that france's helpless to keep it by the farmers in the novel resistance to the marginalized station by blocking the motorway this has led many to conclude that welbeck predicted the yellow vest movement but the novel is actually about as visionary as new york is ugly. and obvious you know this scenario is perhaps a bit too much the novel does not explicitly depict yellow vests protests there is
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just one passage about agriculture supposedly being ruined by the e.u. . on a journey into his own past frustrated by his present situation encounters mostly the farmers debilitating resignation in the face of e.u. agricultural policy so the parallels are there but also not the novel it's really a deeply sad book about love welbeck tortures his readers with philosophical discourses involving can't shop and how and plato and their ideas about the relationship between men and women and all this to no avail as the anti depressants for bruce is taking set serotonin free entry to listlessness and impotence it's all one big dilemma. we'll be back is doing what a writer does it's a very dark novel all very bleak and new york is bleak in it too i sent him a basket with our famous angelica root this will make you happy it's better than
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sarah tone in. maybe the local remedy could have helped well becks protectionist by the tragic end to the proust is so depressed that we no longer think about kant and shopping and the vagaries of love we are reminded of sophocles if the author had consulted him he would know that tragedies always stem from thailand and usually end badly. how is that for an alpha lifting her now a lot of people attribute to him this ability to predict events so why is that well i mean in this particular book i don't think it's you know as they said in the report i don't think it's so true but actually this reputation comes from previous books in two thousand and one he wrote a book where terrorists attacked a paradise island this was just before the bali. terror attack in the
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indonesian island then three years ago he. submission and mentioned a muslim president winning power in france in the future and enforcing sharia law now put where they called the cover of the french satirical magazine charlie abdul which was then attacked by islamic terrorists only the day of the novel's publications not because of his novel but it sort of coincided with that as we know twelve people died in that horrific attack including one of the good friends it's really ever since then that he's been considered a bit of a visionary about these things some of his books i have also been filmed and he often appears in front of the camera as well as he mean he and he's direct as well in his films just like in his book he sort of plays the antihero i mean a very good example of his is the title of this documentary which was called the kidnapping of misha back where he plays himself being kidnapped by
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a gang and the believe it or not it's meant to be a comedy drama which is based around the fact that a few years ago nobody could get in touch with him and rumors started about his possible kidnap and mr li he's something of a recluse doesn't give many interviews but in this case it happened that his internet connection had failed and that's all these rumors abound of the the eye. i mean he and he went on to make this film straight i mean he is a difficult complication is. a way of putting it. i mean he seems to be attracted by being unattractive but his books fly off the shelf they do linger around the world they sell they sell like hotcakes. before i let you go you've got something about iggy pop what if he's got a big friend of iggy pop they've actually made a film together. about mental health problems which perhaps both of them have i
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should say that too much but and yet they seem to have this extraordinary friendship and than if you call who knew who would have. arrived or not thank you so much as so much for michelle as well back and thank you so much for spending this part of your day with us some way la rock and borough land bank off is up next and i'll see you again tomorrow same time same place.
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and the life i now know is tonight's moment you don't lose. i'm not laughing cabbage and well i guess sometimes i am but i say laughing when it happens we seem to have been thinks deep into a general culture of looking at the stereotypes clad in ears think the future of the country guide on the time. needed to be taken as grandma down to you it's all about ok bob no i my job join me from the german sunday to be a post. her first day of school in the jungle. first the clueless and. then doris crane the moment arrives.
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join during a taping on her journey back to freedom. in our interactive documentary. toronto bringing tame returns home on d w dot com among its hangs. where is home. when your family is scattered across the globe. on the basis that you didn't listen to me because the journey back to the roots should get a minimum of the. bush on family from chicago to move around the world. i did urgent assistance. finally starts. on t.w. . with different languages we fight for different things that's fine let me all stick up for freedom freedom of speech and freedom of press. giving
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freedom of choice global news that matters w. made for minds. this is d w news law from berlin tonight police say the suspect responsible for one of the country's biggest cyber attacks is a student living at home with his parents the twenty year old telling police that he acted alone and that he was the hacker behind a twitter account which exposed politicians and celebrities details online also coming up
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