tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle January 21, 2019 12:00pm-12:16pm CET
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for the following information. you can. see. this is deja vu news coming to you live from berlin trying to bridge the brig's a deadlock the british prime minister theresa may profess to presenting planning for leaving the european union but will it be enough to satisfy a deeply divided on him and also coming up on the show it was one of the world's most repressive countries not as big a song says it's changed its reigns as the country's president visits germany we
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speak to him first big journalist who says he was tortured in prison for years so to what extent has the country really changed course. and it's been called the super block the bush morning just a short while ago the moon turned this mesmerizing shade of red we have more on the spectacular lunar eclipse. hello and welcome good to have you with us i'm under thought she might it see it on the big day for break said today british prime minister to reserve may is set to announce how plan b. for leaving the e.u. after lawmakers overwhelmingly rejected her deal with the e.u. last week the prime minister's proposed us today are expected to focus on winning more concessions from the e.u. in particular on the sore courts irish backs are an insurance policy to avoid
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a hard border between northern ireland and the irish of public but the e.u. says this point is not up for negotiation. chillies found mr heikal moss also stressed the importance of the irish border issue here's what he had to say. it's a vicious vicious it's important that the decision doesn't lead to a hard border between northern ireland and ireland because as we saw on the weekend that could put people on edge now. europe is a piece project and it can take steps that would reignite previously resolve conflicts. it's a very sensitive issue and therefore i can't envision that there will be major changes to it during the talks. for the very latest i'm joined from london my d.d. obvious mom to visit mother of the year hearing to resume is plan b. hinges on getting more concessions from brussels on that backstop what can you tell us. yeah her plan b.
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pretty much seems to be her plan a and many people here in london are quietly desperate about that fact because it seems to come from the little self-help books for politicians if you fail try again try harder and then maybe fail hard in the end because what she's going to do next week is then take this sort of revised original deal back to a parliament and say if i could possibly gain more concessions from brussels would you then be willing to vote for it it's not quite conceivable how that is going to work out however driesum a is adamant she has tried or she is at least has made the attempt to formally cross party talks last week that to four different sort of consensus she didn't budge on her red lines now we are exactly where we were a couple of weeks ago and she's just going to try again to sell a whole deal when one britain us trade secretary lim fox claims remain
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parliamentarians are trying to hijack briggs said what is he we lead that. that's quite clear what he means pete means the power struggle that is taking place behind us here in westminster because parliamentarians across the dividing political lines are trying to wrestle control from the government the cabinet is split at least four ways about how to proceed and what kind of breaks that ministers would want and to reason may is just stubborn and goes on doggedly she does what she does best she just carries on no solution needs to be found so pelham and terence are trying to come up with the own amendments to be able to make up their own legislative proposals and then vote on them in order to force the government into some sort of exit strategy be that maybe a second referendum be to take it take a node. off the table much softer breaks that everything is still in the game here
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and parliament really tries to assert its self because many people there think this is a moment of national crisis and what about outside parliament how divided up before you're talking to them is there any consensus on what should happen next. people are deeply divided and it seems somehow that the country after almost two years of this debate is just sort of split right among the middle the latest polls last week showed that there was maybe we always have to be careful those polls maybe now a majority of fifty six. percent of britons to remain in the european union versus forty four twos to leave but that of course is not quite certain but if you talk to people here they are so fed up with the bickering that goes on amongst their politicians in government and also in parliament and they somehow really want this
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over was one way or the other it seems that many people would now just be grateful for any kind of solution that just stops this and lets british politics return to what really people really care about which is the health system this situation in schools and so on and so housing all of the normal things that voters usually really have on the top of the agenda it's certainly not breaks it but a visit in the heart of london thank you very much. now listen to look at some other stories making news around the world israel's military says it has struck iranian military targets inside syria the israel defense forces announced the operation on twitter pictures from within syria claim to show the country's air defenses repelling the attack it's highly unusual for israel to admit attacking targets inside syria. greek nationalist and patriotic groups have clashed with
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police in the capital athens tens of thousands took to the streets on sunday to protest against a deal aimed at settling a near three decade old name dispute with macedonia. greece's northern neighbor to rename itself the republic of north macedonia. the president of his biggest. one is in berlin for talks today president shafqat and missy are your have also different ties with his visit comes at a time of change for the central asian country president mr your you have assumed power two years ago after the death of the country's long term autocratic leader he says he is committed to introducing liberal reforms and to open the doors to the rest of the wild but how much has really changed in the central asian country did you have you say you're a shadow visited. and spoke to a journalist who spent nearly two decades in prison. falling ozone
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after nineteen years behind bars around of enjoying every moment of his newfound freedom of the fifty five year old journalist was jailed in the late ninety's for supporting an opposition political. regime rather is one of hundreds of who had to pay for their political issues with their freedom. but. i was tortured in prison. they always found reasons to punish me and came up with new ways to physically torture us political prisoners. we had to unload hot bricks from railway wagons yes the bricks had just come out of the oven and we had to load them into cars there. is one of at least sixteen political prisoners who've been released from prison in the last two years.
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the main reason i was freed was thanks to our current president it came down to his political commitment his will to personally stand up and behalf of the prisoners. the governments human rights envoy has also praised president shaft partners the u.s. he's promoted it his country is over. up he says that thanks to the president finally have an opportunity to defend their rights. not g.'s to the rubbish as if. we used to receive two hundred complaints a year most last year we got nine hundred today we don't have a single political prisoner in our jails because the president personally monitors the situation we have changed as a country in the western and. a lot has changed in his biggest town in the last two years and the country is gradually opening up to the outside world but with people
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still detained on political charges in the country's prisons the rule of law still seems a long way off here in whose biggest human rights watch says there are still nearly a dozen incarcerated for their political views including priests soldiers and journalists but unlike the human rights organization the country's government doesn't consider them political prisoners. and yet change is tangible in its biggest on corrupt police are being openly criticised powerful intelligence officials ousted and travel regulations for citizens are being relaxed after four i hope there will be real reform and concrete results i want is back is done to finally become a true democracy because the. other reforms are also taking place in this biggest unknown not just in human rights. central asia smocks populous country seems to
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want to put an end to it all terry terry and passed. millions of stargazers got a treat overnight thanks to a rare lunar eclipse is being called the silver blood moon while they've been no reports of werewolves roaming around the streets the spectacle did bring out plenty of amateur astronomers. around the world people stayed up late or got up early for a chance to see a rare sight in the night sky for some lucky sky gazers the conditions were just right to catch the so-called super blood wolf moon. it's a total lunar eclipse and was visible with the naked eye where the skies were clear enough. a total lunar eclipse happens when a full moon becomes completely blocked from sunlight by the earth the earth's shadow covers the moon obscuring it from view until only
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a dim outline can be seen at all. as for the name a super moon happens when the moon is closest to the earth making it appear larger than usual a wolf moon is an ancient name for any moon in january it comes from traditional tribal naming systems and the blood moon comes from the red color. the blood moon aspect of this eclipse is actually what we call eclipses during to tallahassee the moon can take on a coppery red color and that's because some of the sunlight actually is filtered through the earth's atmosphere and bends and is able to hit the moon and it turns it kind of coppery red and that's because the earth's atmosphere filters out the blue light it scatters it if you were on the moon you would be seeing all the sunrises and sunsets happening on earth at once more than fifteen hundred people turned up at this observatory in california one of many popular viewing parties
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held down here on earth and people were in a celebrate tory mood. it's his birthday is a super special day they're also celebrating his birthday so it's special for more reasons than just the minutes on her birthday i think i'll give you the moon but i'm not like she took away. the entire transformation took about three and a half hours before the sun once again lit up the lunar surface and the moon began dropping into the horizon. if you missed the event you've got a good ten years to prepare for this particular mix of celestial circumstances to come together once again. and offer some sport the bundesliga was back this weekend after the winter break shall kill season has had a stuttering start and they kicked off the new year with a difficult clash against. coach adani cota disco is under huge pressure as you say and he made a huge corporate game which helped secure victory. a massive change the
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show could to start twenty nineteen captain ralph famine dropped for the first time in six seasons to many co today making a big call in a bid to revive his side's flailing season salmon struck placement alexander knew he was in the early stages and soon after shock had a penalty daniel caligiuri stepped up. one push on. so far so good for tesco it wasn't a loss but mimics many hitting the post while the spreads bets like cleaning up the scraps the folds for good products trust going to sleep at gold coast offense cool cold watching. one one and shell to searching francis heading into the hof time bright and they found one once again from color jury. going through the judgments of phillips one victory shall come the result saying today let's go live to fight another day. it was the need of
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a news coming up ahead for tearing domestic demand and bruising us tallis of drive the economic growth in china to slowest level in almost thirty years that concerns are growing over knock on effects for the global economy. and humphrey will have that story for you coming up shortly do stay with the dad in his if you catch. serial killers take us to use. violence rubber games. and the ugly and only prison feature of life in the one nine hundred twenty s. nationalist weekly date find close it in the mantra count for the river spray. but the criminals don't reckon with a detective superintendent comes cannot. be revolutionizes for lives of procedures
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