tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle January 16, 2019 2:00pm-2:16pm CET
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powerhouse one hundred so it's nothing. like all terms and conditions w. documentary on instagram. player . playing. this is g.w. news live from berlin british prime minister to resign a face is a no confidence vote after parliament the bros out her breaks a deal will may and her government survives she told lawmakers that backing her governments will enable her to find a way forward on threats that will go live to london plus.
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the siege of a hotel complex in the kenyan capital nairobi is over president kenyatta says that fourteen people have been killed two of more than seven hundred were rescued unharmed we'll have an update from nairobi. i'm sorry kelly welcome to the program. british prime minister to resign may and her government faces a no confidence vote later today after lawmakers threw out her bribes if it was the biggest and the most humiliating defeat in modern british history she's told lawmakers that backing her government will enable her to find a way forward on bragg's that it's thought that may will survive the confidence vote but some remain supporters see the situation as promising.
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to remain supporters gathered outside the british parliament to reserve me she really ition was a sign of hope defeat for the prime minister's bragg's deal could open the door to a so-called people's vote a second referendum on e.u. membership of the ais to the right two hundred into. the nose to the left four hundred and thirty two. the government will despite her resigning defeat to reason may says she is determined to deliver brags it to the british people but even some within her own party believe a second referendum is no the only option parliamentarians do have some cheese and one of them is to prevent people from committing national suicide and no deal breaks it all star panel. the issues that have first may faces a no confidence vote in her government the rebels within her party have signalled that they will back her position is secure unless the very precisely worded motion tomorrow goes through which seems very unlikely that she'd come in to deliver it
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and that that was what she was going to do such faith is in short supply in today's british newspapers and the labor made of london a city that voted overwhelmingly against briggs it also added his weight to calls for a fresh referendum. surely the best option is to give the british public i say for the first time or they accept the promises deal with the option of remaining in the there's no need for this panic but for some panic is clearly beginning to set in business is booming at this english storage firm with companies stockpiling goods and fear of a new deal inspired catastrophe in just over two months time. let's get more now let's bring in a mass who is standing by in london so a devastating defeat barrett yesterday from a plan a vote of no confidence now leader for her government is she likely to survive and what does all of this mean from bragg's it. yes it's another day of high
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drama here in london here in the u.k. when really the whole of europe is looking at what's going on the end why is this country about to maybe commit suicide like it was said in the in your report treason may look set to survive this vote of confidence today for now she has the backing of those in the right of a party over it against the dia and also of the northern all and unionist party who are basically propping up the government for brics it means that's reason they now has said she's trying to reach out she's trying to speak to other parties and see what it is that parliament actually wants something that her critics through for now what does the british public the voters out there think of parliament's rejection of teresa mayes deal and about the future of the prime minister. many people are very worried about the future of the country really and what's what's going to happen to them i have spoken to speak who all have started
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stockpiling goods like you've also mentioned in your report others see this as no problem at all they think that well britain has survived much worse atrocities and can go it alone and not even a deal this is is necessary however there are many people who are here in the u.k. who are really sort of puzzled by what's going on and also they really want this whole bricks it saw got to end i think this is what is shared a sentiment by a lot of people and we have been out on the streets and people and here is a little solvable of what some british people make of this whole saga here the parliament and. i think that we need to vote the national vote was to get out to break say i was to remain a and basically but the tory party tearing themselves apart the labor party got no options they should have gone with the deal and made it better i think it was
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inevitable i think everybody knew that was going to happen you know i think politically it wasn't feasible for her to admit that it was going to go through you know but yeah i think everyone you know pretty is happy remain is on happy the right wing into politics david cameron was trying to piece then they leave us all happy it's just a completion of the mess we have for our high order. and no i don't think she should resign because i don't think that will solve it all anybody does is resign nowadays people should stay in and try and get the job done incredible you hear all these positions basically on opposite ends of the spectrum much like what we're seeing play out playing out in parliament recently so bear let's let's go to the scenarios because it looks like she is indeed going to survive this no confidence vote what is next for theresa may what is next. for the country. when it's most likely that she's going to talk to
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parliament and find some sort of common ground and maybe some form of soft of rexx it like the norway model the so-called no way model where britain would stay either maybe in the single markets. or customs union these are all options that she's going to explore it doesn't really look like any of them are going to have a majority in parliament so another default option would then to call for a second referendum however its reason may has said again and she said it again today in prime minister's questions when she was also to move her red lines and give ground to those who want to solve the wretchedest she said she's determined to deliver bricks that this is how top priority so she really wants to help make this happen and she is not there to talk about the second referendum but it might be an outcome or that really view the u.k. creches out at the end of march with no deal this is of course what many here paula meant really trying to not have happened at any cost so many different possible
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scenarios and it's interesting to note that the deadline is really looming in just a couple months now. at the latest from london thank you. hugh let's get a quick check now of some other stories making news around the world french president emmanuel muskaan has become a grand tour of the nation in response the yellow vest protest movement on tuesday he listened to the grievances of some six hundred mayors from the normandy region the protesters are opposed to my parents' policies which they say favor the elite. several hundred one doron migrants bound for the united states have crossed you guatemala immigration authorities say that people who lack the proper documents will be turned back caravans heading toward the united states have inflamed the debate over u.s. immigration policy with president trump insisting on building a wall. on the us mexico border. and brazil's new far right president jaya adipose
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an out o. has signed a decree to make it easier for many people to own firearms and keep them at home civilians over the age of twenty five with no criminal record no longer need to justify their interest in purchasing a gun and auto has promised to crack down on crime in the country. rescuers in spain are working to free a toddler who is believed to be trapped in a well a tunnel is now being dug in an attempt to reach the two year old boy who went missing in mali on sunday the bore hole is around one hundred meters deep and is too narrow for adults to enter. the siege of a hotel complex in the kenyan capital nairobi has ended after about twenty hours in a televised address president who said that the attackers have all been killed and while fourteen innocent people have lost their lives more than seven hundred had been rescued unharmed. relieved and finally free after hours of hiding in toilet stools and under desks
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and. things were disclosed and then also with us be spread all over i don't. know from the top i think they went to the. spring. just when it hits the ground floor i saw a woman get short and that's when i took. all of this to the truth of the possible and then someone actually looked me outside cause i'm not philadelphia. and then we went to the washroom swe one leg. seven people in this in washroom from outside the hotel a friend tried to give reassurances by cell phone that he had to keep taking this week to help is on the we. c.c.t.v. showed the gunmen entering the hotel complex before the attack within hours somali
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based terrorist group al-shabaab had claimed responsibility. the morning after the attack kenya's president gave a defiant televised address confirming the siege was over and that all islamists involved had been eliminated we have dealt with the threat decisively and shown our enemies and the world that we as a country are ready to deal with any threat. to our nation. but many kenyans remain skeptical of the government's ability to protect them we have blaming our entire no security staff because. how did these people get into our country and we have all our security or all of our rights oh no. this latest deadly assault in nairobi shows the al qaeda linked group remains a force for the kenyan government to reckon with. absolutely horrific let's
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bring in our correspondents nicko who is joining us from nairobi what more do we know about the victims. well i'm at the funeral home mortuary here and there o.b. it's not far from where the talk actually happened and so. many so so that many family members here they were very sad before especially after the family members identified their loved one and and they were also stories about there was one man who told us that he managed to escape but his relatives were another part of the building and they didn't. and another thing that some people in the muslim community have been telling me is that they are very that that they're really trying to get. their people out and i don't alex today because they have to have to you know all right and they have to bury their loved ones today so absolutely sad
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there the somali group al-shabaab has attacked a number of targets in kenya we know over the last couple of years tell us a little bit more about the group and their motivation. yes while they claim to attack the kenyan government hasn't officially said that they believe the public responsible though it said a terrorist attack. is the most extremist group based in. somalia and regions of somalia which which the government hasn't been able to control their. somali government in kenya. kenya is partly their recruiting ground there. the auto between kenya and somalia is very porous and historically both somalis ethnics a lot of these have been living in. kenya and have crossed the border so. it's not really just a somali group it's also this they also have a base in kenya and i mean that's among the challenges really when it comes to the
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kenyan government getting this group under control tell us a little bit more about the challenges. yes well after the initial let's talk about ten years ago the kenyan army went into somalia. and tried to get the situation under control there. the african union group is also present in somalia and the somali government is also trying to control parts of the country but it's proving difficult especially as it's a terrorist group. that has the time to have a lot of funding and. they conduct their types even with three or four people are. are quite quite a large sect and with this we had two explosions and several in the hotel so that was so basically about what was the seeds of these tragedies and that is very difficult to control. the neko in nairobi thank you. you're watching news
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more coming up at the top of the hour but in just a few minutes time it is business with ben fizzle and just stay with us if you can i'm sara kelly in berlin thanks for watching. i'm not something out of the germans because sometimes i am less than nothing with the germans think deep into the german culture. you don't think it is ground zero you know it's all about who knew i'm rachel join me for me to get from the post. where you said. when your family scattered across the globe. it was an.
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