Skip to main content

tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  January 21, 2019 3:00pm-4:00pm CET

3:00 pm
this is deja vu news coming to you live from berlin trying to bridge the brig's a deadlock british prime minister to resign may have to press to present a plan before leaving the european union but blessed be enough to satisfy a deeply divided parliament we ask the full british diplomat. also coming up it's have been one of the world's most oppressive regimes but now it was because the un says it's changed its ways as its president visits levy speak to his big journalists who says he was jailed and tortured for years it's
3:01 pm
a hostile regime really changed course. and hopes for an end to any fifty years of unrest muslims in mindanao in southern philippines voted in a referendum on autonomy we talked to separatists who've been fighting all their lives. plus it's being called the soup of blood boil smoldering overnight the moon turned blood red we have more on the spectacular and not all that theodore shows lunar eclipse. played. on a very warm welcome to you i'm on the thought she might it's a little the big day for bags at british prime this it is a may is set to announce a plan b. for leaving the european union after lawmakers overwhelmingly rejected to deal with the e.u. last. week the promises proposals are expected to focus on
3:02 pm
a winning no concessions from the e.u. in particular on the sort or irish back stop an insurance policy to avoid a hog between northern ireland and the irish republic but the e.u. says this point is not an option for negotiation. i'm john joined on the studio by peter tory he's the former british ambassador to germany welcome sir peter a very messy situation rich briggs it has been mentioned tourism me is expected to announce a plan b. within a couple of hours what are you expecting from her you know very much i'm afraid i think plan b. is going to look an awful lot like plan a plan i was voted. by. majority that was colossal i mean two hundred such votes we haven't seen since the middle of the nineteenth century i fear that the party talks of the prime minister was trying
3:03 pm
to hold over the weekend very much so as you said in your introduction she's going to go back to brussels like she's going to try to get brussels to make compromises on the backstop by offering some sort of. some language which will. assure people and reassure people in britain that this is legally binding language of this is not a permanent arrangement would be limited to talking about the back still one of the leading newspapers in britain says that tourism a might try to in fact make amendments to the historic good friday agreement which ended decades of violence in northern ireland what do you make of that well i mean it's very difficult to get our partners to agree to reopening the withdrawal agreement the legally binding part of the text so i don't i'm very doubtful whether the prime minister will get this language is looking for and therefore has been speculation about possible alternatives one of which is a bilateral negotiation between the u.k.
3:04 pm
and the irish republic which would focus on some sort of mechanism has yet to be defined and one idea that has come out of the washington that is a member of the good friday agreement that has been completed a comprehensive it denied by number ten during the course of this morning that she wants to go back to brussels babson renegotiate some stuff but brussels has so far categorically rejected any kind of renegotiation at any point do you see a way out of this impasse of the to what brussels of said is they can reopen the legally the majority of which is the legally binding part of the premier that i think they would be prepared to find language in the political declaration that talks about the future relationship and there may be scope for for improving making changes to that language the trouble is that is not going to reassure of the skeptics in the house of the house of commons who want some kind of legal assurance that by entering into the backstop we're not going to be permanent. locked in i
3:05 pm
find it very difficult to see where the have been so i think the risk of a new deal is growing by the day because if nothing else happens between now and the and march no deal. is the default option that is what is going to happen the law has got to be changed in britain to prove to stop that happening there will be various amendments tabled during the course of the next couple of weeks by parliamentarians seeking to avoid the sort of heart breaks it and some of the amendments are calling for a second referendum firstly i would like to see a second referendum but whether that will happen or not is very very so we're now facing a choice basically between this is made deal mrs may's deal which has been comprehensible or rejected already by house of commons a new deal really on the brics it the if you yo yos as ambassador here in germany how far do you think germany is prepared to go to help britain on this mess
3:06 pm
i think one of the mistakes the breakfast is made all along is to think that at some point the chancellor merkel and the germans will come right into our risk of on a white horse. arguing that the british market is so important that in the end german industry would put it put pressure on the german government to do that and while it's true that the british market is important i mean we're still. by some calculations the fifth largest economy in the world. much more important germany is maintaining the unity of the of the twenty's the germans do not want to undermine the integrity of the of the single market of the of the e.u. so i think it's misguided to think that the germans will come to our rescue even though as you mentioned in your introduction they wrote a very nice letter over the weekend asking us to stay but it's that they did to a full month british investor jim many of those had to have you with us thank you. let me now bring you up to date with some of the stories making news around the
3:07 pm
world protesters dratted in the northern part of sudan's capital khartoum on sunday night they've been reeks of sometimes stuffy unrest. greek nationalist and patriotic groups have clashed with police in the capital athens tens of thousands protested against a deal aimed at settling a nearly three decades old name dispute with macedonia the deal would allow greece's neighbor to rename itself the republic of north macedonia. if he is ready military says its jets have struck iranian military targets in syria including it says munitions facilities and an intelligence site the announcement is a rare departure from israel's usually ambiguous statements concerning its activities in syria the strikes were in response to a rocket that iranian forces fired towards israel on sunday that in turn was in
3:08 pm
response to israel's earlier air raid near damascus international airport. explosions in the skies over damascus on monday morning the syrian observatory for human rights says some syrians have been killed israel's military has confirmed that it targeted at radian and syrian positions including arsenals and training camps seen in this footage. during a visit to chart yesterday israeli prime minister. who called it an early warning of a long term military strategy. pursue a policy of attacking iranian positions in syria and everyone tries to harness. the policy was developed after a drone attack on israel from an iranian position in syria in february last year in the months that followed israel did hundreds of military bases arsenals and radar
3:09 pm
stations across syria the goal was to destroy the iranian infrastructure there as much as possible. increasingly views the expansion of iranian positions on the deployment of iranian revolutionary guards in syria as a direct threat to israel's security. after a rocket was fired over the golan heights israel has now warned of further counter attacks by syria syria's ally iran. the president is in berlin for talks with german chancellor merkel today president. wants to deepen ties with but in his visit comes at a time of change for the central asian country the first event is you. after the death of. autocratic leader micio you have says he's committed to open the
3:10 pm
country's doors to the rest of. complimented him on recent political reforms. but how much has really changed in the central asian country in a moment we'll speak to a human rights campaigner but first this report from the capital by. he spoke to a journalist who spent nearly two decades in prison. so it really goes on after nineteen years behind bars yusuf is enjoying every moment of his newfound freedom of religion the fifty five year old journalist was jailed in the late ninety's for supporting a new position political. prisoner rod of is one of hundreds of who had to pay for their political views with their freedom. but. i was tortured in prison. they always found reasons to punish me physician came up with new ways to
3:11 pm
physically torture us political prisoners. we had to unload hot bricks from railway wagons yes the bricks are just come out of the oven and we had to load them into cars if there. is one of at least sixteen political prisoners who have been released from prison in the last two years. 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. that the government's human rights envoy has also praised president chef back near zero five he's proud to that his country is opening up he says that thanks to the president finally have an opportunity to defend their rights. not g.'s to them i wish as if.
3:12 pm
we used to receive two hundred complaints a year mostly 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 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 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 his biggest corrupt police are being openly criticised powerful intelligence officials
3:13 pm
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 smokes the populous country seems to want to put an end to its or three tarion past. with me i have hugh williamson he's the director of europe and central asia division office human rights watch i welcome. now what do you make of this because stan's attempts to improve his humans' human rights record is it really a change of course for the country or is it really an attempt to improve its image to impress european leaders on the u.s. that's a really good question is definitely a large dose of trying to improve its image indeed or the bank officials since mr
3:14 pm
mayor you have came to power have told us that they have a real problem with their human rights record they need to improve that image in order to get more foreign investment on the other hand when i was in those back is down last year i talked to a former political prisoners like the one interviewed in your piece and they also said the change is important some real things are happening so what's happened so far a little bit more release of political prisoners are small but important steps in the right direction for the country as a long way to go remember this is there was no parliamentary democracy there and of never been free elections it was pakistan has very little free speech internet is still blocked so it's a very low level of development in the country still many steps to go and it's important to germany takes a strong position in the talks to to push pakistan in the right direction so where does this all fit in with president. gives a visit to germany at the moment well germany wants a couple of things from foremost pakistan i mean those pakistan wants more credibility from germany. germany wants two things they want greater regional
3:15 pm
cooperation within within central asia was pakistan has made some important positive steps in that direction and germany wants obviously to be in the front of the queue when the country opens up for business but business also has an aspect of human rights to it because business also wants a level playing field a good rule of law predictable courts the moment there's no real rule of law or independent courts and it's but it's done so it's in the interest also to try. investment that makes human rights reforms that will speak to stand is geopolitically quite important in the region in central asia to what extent is jim you prepared to push was big a start on human rights given its political importance is very low as these street interest that you talk about because there's often a tradeoff between human rights and security and economic interests again it's a good question because in the past germany has made that trade off in a very bad way ten years ago there were sanctions on north pakistan because of
3:16 pm
human rights but germany was keen on lifting those sanctions too early in our view because of security issues and cooperation with those on afghanistan now it's a new situation a reformist government i think germany has some political commitment to pushing on human rights but they need to see this is a first step is taking place as pakistan needs to make some commitments what they're going to do before corporation is intensified right here williamson from human rights watch thank you very much for sharing your thoughts with us thanks for having me. here watching the news coming up ahead digital detox and what's called blue monday today is that depressing day in the calendar and of british universities suggests we should fight this by ditching mobile phones and everything else that's digital. but first you get hot and has more whining figures from the one second biggest economy that's right summaries i'm
3:17 pm
trying as growth rates slipped to its lowest point in almost three decades fueling concerns over a knock on effect on the global economy prompting questions us to what is behind the slowdown and whether the rest of the world should be worried. once upon a time chinese economic performance wasn't global news those days are long gone the country's growth rate now act as an indicator for the health of the entire world's economy no wonder then that this a ninth month was so hotly anticipated. according to preliminary estimates the total value of china's g.d.p. was ninety point zero three trillion you won the awesome ninety two a six point six percent year on increase that figure outstripped the anticipated goal to. six point six percent it may not sound too shabby but take a look at this a decade ago chinese economic growth was hovering around ten percent in the year
3:18 pm
since then it's slowed steadily and what's worrying investors is that no one knows when that decline is going to end the reasons for china's slowdown are manifold domestic issues like a slowing property market are putting pressure on growth. but even more worrying to the global markets is the continuing trade dispute with the united states the two countries are currently holding a ninety day truce which their leaders agree to after dining together at the g. twenty summit in argentina for their trade talks are set to take place next week but after months of volatility a resolution may still be far off a further escalation could have a dramatic impact on the chinese economy potentially setting in motion a decline in the rest of the world too. so let's bring in our financial correspondent. singapore new figures there china's growth actually is the slowest
3:19 pm
since nearly thirty how much alarm is there in asian markets. well look at market performance in asia today get hard you'll be hard pressed to find any sign of along with most numbers on the up but that doesn't mean that isn't concerned obviously is the u.s. street where the trade war with the u.s. has taken a toll on china's growth china post its weakest number for q four in the last decade of six point four percent. another there is another deep rooted cause behind this little piece of growth and that is this is china's really chronic debt pile that's been plaguing them for years and investors are not entirely convinced that these fresh stimulus measures that were announced last week including tax cuts as well as an easing bank lending policies are going to help in the near term. and support thank you very much. allstate's cars wreckage of cars going again claim
3:20 pm
he is innocent and vowed to remain in japan if granted bail is also promised to wear an electronic tracking bracelet the tokyo district court will consider goans latest petition but has already rejected previous applications to grant him bail own has been jailed for over two months now he has lost his chairmanship and mitsubishi motors rhino is expected to meet later this week to discuss removing going as chairman and c.e.o. . stan the car industry where b.m.w. and di mirage joined forces to develop self driving cars german financial daily hundreds flood says the aim is to split development costs and establish an industrial standard for autonomy is driving both comic has fear that tech giant google is going to dominate the market with its also motors operating system the paper says this new competition from silicon valley could end a legendary rivalry that turned both brands into global market leaders to industry
3:21 pm
big shots after last year was the permission to merge that cost sharing businesses drive down and talk to go. that's all your business for now a little bit more later in the show but for now it's actually a minute. thank you get what millions of stargazers go to really create overnight thanks to a rare luna kits it's being called the soup of blood would moan and while they've been no reports of werewolves roaming 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
3:22 pm
a full moon becomes completely blocked from sunlight by the earth the earth's shadow covers the moon obscuring it from view. until only 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 years atmosphere and bends and is able to hit the moon and it turns it kind of a 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
3:23 pm
sunsets happening on earth once more than fifteen hundred people turned up at this observatory in california one of many popular viewing parties held down here on earth and people were in a celebrant tory mood. it's his birthday it was a super special day they're also celebrating his birthday so it's special for more reasons than just the moon on her birthday could be the. shooter the way. 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 got a good ten years to prepare for this particular mix of celestial circumstances to come together once again. from blood moon to boo monday today is a third monday of january so what's so special about that you might ask well it's known as blue monday the most depressing day of the year to brighten things up from
3:24 pm
the new social media desk joins me and she's here to tell us about an experiment of the united kingdom suggesting a way for students to improve their mental health at this time of the a welcome federico love you see if you bet is seeing you. all these blue monday thing does it really exist well there's been quite a debate to surrounding this the term blue monday it was forged by a british psychologist dr cliff arnall in two thousand and five and back then he came up with a formula that income past a difference of variables as to. why we may feel particularly sad at this time of year in the third monday in january and he said it's that time when we're already maybe we might have already breached some of our new year's resolutions the nice christmas time is over the weather is bad at least in some parts of the world and you know we're lucky maybe motivation but as much as january i'm
3:25 pm
a generally be of course a tough month for some people this is not really scientifically proven and there's been you know some have argued that the blue monday concept was has been turned into p.r. material by some companies on the other hand on a positive note it's also become an occasion to raise awareness about serious issues like mental health and this is where the university experiment comes in exactly and i mean one of the big ongoing debates is the kind of impact that social media especially over engaging on social media is having on mental health particularly among young people and on this note a university in the english city of leicester the month fart university they decided to launch a detox a week from it and decided to go offline for the time leading up to a blue monday and they also encouraged their students to take a break from tweeting from posting on social media and this is how the principal of the university explains the reasons behind the experiment take
3:26 pm
a listen. because somebody who's obsessive about social media i'm a quitter and through it every five minutes i got seven thousand followers. and they said we would want to sort of we calibrate our relationship with social media because it talks about you know the great pressure of facebook sharing your instagram large not having enough of them or twitter trolls but it will become a social media per se but there's a lot to sort of as a sort of recalibrated relationship. so there is a serious message there how is this experiment being received well we seen that some students at the university as well as some members of staff decided to take part in this experiment and this is what some of them shared online before the experiment took off an employee for example she tweeted as she was getting ready for the experiment and she wrote i'm both nervous and intrigued if you need me call send smoke signals or notes by a pigeon back to basics and this is also the university's men's football team they
3:27 pm
took part in the experiment as well and they tweeted this is well this will highlight how much time is spent on social media and will give everyone time to focus on their own mental health now we are yet to hear from the people who took part in the experiment because they are still offline or they should be still offline but meanwhile for those of us who may not have the possibility or may not want to go offline today on so-called blue monday it's also world day so that could . be something do feeling blue on blue monday mutely was hugging the i come from a part of india which is big on hugs from punjab and you're a talent so let's give the was a nice hug absolutely. dave from both of us thank you very much and that's really is via filming isn't it is. if you want to do it probably was a little you know what you do wus we have more coming up for you shortly do stay with us meanwhile because i have another baby. and
3:28 pm
a. tough . going to come out. six her first day in school in the jungle. for first climbing less of them in the door as grand the moment arrives. joining your ring in ten on her journey back to
3:29 pm
freedom. in our interactive documentary tour of an orang utan returns home on d w dot com a ring of tanks. and gemini with john w. at any time five funny place is a new medium as yet i don't like a bit of pop songs to sing along to see just a combo of teeth from super fun seats up for tight interactive exercises. i buy everything is online metafile and interactive benjamin to frame uplifting w. . time for an upgrade. our furniture grows all by. our house with no roof. or design highlights you can make yourself. trends tips and tricks that
3:30 pm
will turn your home to something special. upgrade yourself with d w's interior design channel on you tube. this is did i've been using live from berlin i'm a touchy must such a pleasure to have you with us our top story british prime minister tourism is our route from official residence to unveil his so-called plan b. for breaks it she's expected to set out how she plans to end the country's parliamentary deadlock that's after lawmakers rejected her divorce last week. muslims in mindanao in the southern philippines have voted in a referendum that could grant them more autonomy it's the culmination of a peace process aimed at ending decades of separatist violence some two point eight
3:31 pm
million people in the volatile mindanao region where i asked if they'd back a plan by muslim separatists and the government to create a new self area our correspondent boston heartsick traveled to the region and sent us this report. has been a muslim rebel for half his life. for him like for so many other men in this part of the country not becoming a fighter was never an option. join the rebels because of my religion but it's more than that i also saw the injustices and the oppression against my community that's why i decided to join. he and his comrades are part of an armed struggle between muslim insurgents and the philippine army that has marred this part of the country for fifty years.
3:32 pm
as in many areas of southern mindanao here in the village of tooken ali powell the majority of the population is muslim in a country that otherwise is almost completely catholic. the main reason for the conflict is oppression we're defending our rights our land we feel that we're being occupied by outsiders nothing is ours they're taking away what's ours and they're not giving it back we always lose out this is our home and we have nothing. now many here have real hope that could finally change. in a referendum the people of muslim in the now are voting to ratify a law that would grant them more autonomy in return the rebels have
3:33 pm
to give up their fight like these two gentlemen here many in this rebel camp have been fighters for all their lives often it's the only thing they learned how to do but if the autonomy law gets passed they'll have to take off their uniforms lay down their arms and start a new life as civilians the deal has been in the making for decades but in the end it took this man to make it happen. internationally president do territory is notorious for his draconian war on drugs and his verbal outbreaks but he has been pushing hard for enhance the autonomy for the country's muslims. to many here in mindanao he's a beacon of hope for the city. take him by his word we trust him on television we see how he handles the drug problem in the philippines
3:34 pm
offenders are either killed or in prison that shows that he really means what he says. but all money. but success is not only in the hands of the president the new law for seems that muslim mindanao will be governed by the rebel leadership but feuds between powerful family clans rampant corruption and islamic terrorist groups could undermine the fragile peace deal of peace many of abdul's comrades have sacrificed their lives for. a year i don't want my children to experience what i've been through all i want for them is to get a good education to learn to read and write for fighters like me there is only violence and war i want my children to have a peaceful future. but abdul is also wary if the agreement fails he says everyone here is ready to go back to war.
3:35 pm
that report by the deadliest basti and how tickell now joins me live from the quarter bottle city welcome boston a big day for mindanao what we're still in iraq like and tell us why this vote is so significant. it's significant because for the first time in a long time in this area there's real hope for peace in a conflict that's lasted for fifty years and. this is not only that also the leader of the biggest rebel group in this area said today he said if this works out then it's going to be a move away from a revolution towards a democratic process if that's important if it actually works out because then it could be a blueprint that might also be applied in other parts of the country and then. to
3:36 pm
change the political system of the philippines towards a more federal a federal state and that of course is one of the key political projects that president the territory has put forward and one of the strategies that he's following and one of the main election promises which on the grounds of which he was elected back in two thousand and sixteen and we don't and thus it doesn't detail to is himself from mindanao how important was his role in these developments as we could in your report people see him as a beacon of hope. he is an extremely important figure in all of this because the people trust him you have to understand the rebels are putting down their arms they're handing over the responsibility for their security to the philippine army who has been their arch enemy in their fight for the last fifty years now you only do that if you trust them and they trust president to terror to not only because he's from mindanao but
3:37 pm
because they feel he's one of them because he's not part of the manila based political elite which has been running this country for decades and of course broad he's been criticized a lot for his policies like this brutal drug war that he leads but you have to understand here in the philippines i read a completely different story he's hugely popular and that's not this fight these policies it's mainly because of them because he has the reputation of getting things done and on the pulling through with the things he said that you do invest in we could begin to put people tell you that desperate for a better life and one stability if this referendum leads to autonomy for mindanao how difficult will it be to ensure this. that is the main challenge how is this going to play out in the long run what's going to happen after tonight especially with all the huge problems that this
3:38 pm
region has been facing in the past take corruption for example which is rampant here take the threat of islam is terrorist groups that the so chaos here and want to destabilize the region and then of course maybe one of the biggest challenges that all of all with all the new for the enlarged funds that this new administration will have at their disposal from the federal government and from natural resources for example some of that has to trickle down to the wider population and improve their livelihoods because if that doesn't happen people here will be dissatisfied and they feel like they'll be been betrayed again one more time and then if this fails i'm rita a lot of people here believe that the peace process has come to an end at least for the foreseeable future that it's dead in its tracks bussin hadzic thank you very much for your report as well as your insights coming live from cotabato city in the philippines. this is seized on british transitor is
3:39 pm
a maze expected to reveal plan b. for briggs it within the hour guess what his small so i mean whatever suggestions will be off the initial break deal was turned down by lawmakers businesses and governments in the rest of europe i increasingly making plans for no deal scenario some of the trust funds that would feel the immediate effects based just across the english channel in the french force colley. the wine store can't they've just a few kilometers away from the ferry relies heavily on british business at the moment british customers are allowed to pretty much fill up their cars with duty free alcohol if they wish but that will change dramatically if a trade deal isn't approved by march twenty ninth and britain crashes out at the you. will be going from ninety leaders of wine per person one hundred twenty leaders of beer and leaders of spirits to a single bottle of spirits four bottles of wine and sixteen leaders of beer the
3:40 pm
amount of wine people could take would be cut by a factor of twenty our company's business model would have to change completely. french prime minister ed watt phillipe took a trip to the port city to address concerns france has announced its no making contingency plans including the possible hiring of hundreds of new customs officers to address the problems new customs checks would cause not only business leaders are worried residents are to. find mostly we're concerned about the big stores and the potential impact of a hard graft said since that would mean a lot fewer british shoppers and the stores probably won't be able to cope so i think. if a trade deal isn't approved the mayor of cali has requested a duty free zone be set up in the area around the port but that won't make any less of a disaster for business owners here. and you billionaire was minted every
3:41 pm
two days while the poor are getting poorer that's according to a new report published by oxfam the nonprofit organization says the fortunes of the world's wealthiest rose by twelve percent last year while the poorest half of humanity three point eight billion people saw their wealth declined by eleven percent oxfam accuses governments of exacerbating the income gap by other taxing large corporations and the wealthy while under funded public services. some economists criticize the charity saying oxfam ignores evidence that the number of people living in extreme poverty worldwide has actually been falling figures. very vulgar news to coincide with the opening of the annual meeting of the world economic forum in davos a gathering of the global financial elite also in the others so called change makers social entrepreneurs doing business for a social cause you know you caught up with a few of them in the swiss alps. some are enjoying the
3:42 pm
piles of snow and icy temperatures but others are taking a little time to adjust. ernest darko arrived from south africa this morning for the social entrepreneur has made it his goal to improve his country's health care system and he's come with a message from a demographic point of view a lot of growth is going to come from africa most of the world growth is going to begin to slow down africa is just rising and it is critical that we get it right for africa and part of getting it right is ensuring that you have a healthy population and that their social and physical wellbeing is maintained. other social entrepreneurs have come with provocative ideas that they want to grow like it on eichler he knows it won't be easy to bend ears at this heavyweight event but he's going to do his best his project in israel organizing jobs for disabled people has been very successful the main difference is that all business and
3:43 pm
entrepreneurs are looking for the same same thing for profit social entrepreneurs are trying to solve different different problems so we bring another thing to the table we bring different things to the table and it's a great opportunity for us to give it a different angle of things to the business entrepreneurs and to the government and vice versa they want to move mountains and change business as usual foundation has supported the work of social entrepreneurs for years now at least by giving them a highly visible stage its network will continue to grow. i know people and we are all caught up in the same problems and this way we'll be able to better solve them one person alone will never manage that the social entrepreneurs can't do it the governments can't and businesses can't either but if we all work together and include researchers and universities there will make it a lot farther down the road competency a field see invited the social entrepreneurs are also here to discuss new business
3:44 pm
models with experts from all over the world working together rather than at cross purposes that's what indian social entrepreneur has come here to emphasize in the social sector you can't acquire another and you but you can collaborate with that into you so in the new social order collaboration is going to be the key word and globally collaborating social enterprises are going to make the change the vision of a more just world the need to work towards common goals ideas that have arrived in davos. and we're going to talk. to a watch he did win in the bundesliga on sunday and it took us to that match in the best of the weekend's action i'm pleased to welcome johnson crane let's welcome johnson the industry guy wasn't a winter because it seems the way you yes i have been having this out for a. shock
3:45 pm
a bit low spoke to one of the coach it took a very risky move do it to get there didn't he do you think when your back's against the wall the last thing you want to do is drop your goalkeeper who's also your captain but that's exactly what so many go to death row did and reach a clearly not convinced by ralph famine in the past few days and also perhaps his performances in winter training now tesco does have form for this because last season the axed benedicto the desert captain at the time over this went on to leave the club but that dabble paid off shocker finish second in the book as legal last season and was about to see if they paid off on sunday. a massive change the shell cut to start twenty nineteen captain ralph femen dropped for the first time in six seasons to many co to desk making a big call in a bid to revive his side's flailing ses and salmon struck placement alexandra new poll showed he was in the early stages and soon after shocking death penalty daniel
3:46 pm
caligiuri stepped up. one nil fish out so far so good for to disco it wasn't a loss that mimics many hitting the post elvis read specify cleaning up the scraps devolves to accuse products to us in this league of gold shelters defense school bowl watching. one one and shell to searching for answers heading into the hof time break and they found one once again from caligiuri was he going for the john and just feel like she was the tree fell cuz the result saying today it's going live to fight another day. to look at how important was this win for shaka very important because we know the expectations shall her fans have of that team and even more so given that second place finish that i was talking about last season but they really have been underwhelming this time around so pressure temporarily off the desk that's now two wins out of c.
3:47 pm
but i think the problems still remains a very very wasteful inference of go with the worst conversion rate actually in the league and they had to rely on a fullback daniel kind of jury against his former crop to rescue them at the weekend so i think if dominate could dominate her to death because being totally honest to strike a store would probably be the top of his shopping list for the january transfer window ok for now they've lifted them sounds a bit out of danger but nuremberg. seven points out of the relegation places nuremberg as you say rooted to the bottom of the table now they were to head to ballin at the weekends i think has been a team that. the word inconsistent seems have been especially created for their winless in five games where we're less than five games going into this one so the nuremberg fans probably they were thinking this is a great opportunity for us but i just don't think they have the quality that's required to survive in the burned his league let's say let's take a look. at the new year brings new hope with the home fans cheering them on
3:48 pm
nurnberg wanted to finally end there winless streak but if your defense seems to invite your opponents to score it won't be easy i'm the one to between davey selkie invader to be severe jan the bosnia made it one nil for berlin after fifteen minutes shortly before half time nuremberg struck back captain hano bear ends making it one off from close range the cellar dwellers spirits got a momentary boost. but after the restart had to showed their class this time a piece of each turn provider and andre duda finished the job to one of the slovak playmaker had a great first half of the season and looked better than ever against nuremberg twenty minutes later due to strike again his ninth goal of the campaign three one the final score when you score and also your team is winning and it's this feeling is like. feeling from me. and i am good as brace helps
3:49 pm
had his chances for a spot in europe next season well nuremberg haven't tasted victory in thirteen outings. now i just a word on on for a do down reason not only did he come away with a match to go with your came away with a rolex watch that's because he won a bet with his teammate salomon kalou kelly said if you get eight goals this season i'm damned if you are a student did it it was a good motivation for him it probably never be late for training again as well as easy is that if i wanted to go jonathan what was let the other highlights from this weekend pretty good rain for eintracht frankfurt three one. freiburg the first time this season they're attacking the trio will get on the scoresheet in the same day. and i'm sorry rabbit said they've got twenty nine goals this season now between them comparisons with liverpool's front three most the amount i regret there for me very flattering indeed and i think the most exciting thing we have a tighter race this season in the burn this league
3:50 pm
a bye munich one on friday three one in hoffenheim that put the pressure on dortmund to close the gap at the top of a three points the brits you don't respond it accelerates we're getting there and go as they be light sic one difficult place to go so you don't really showing the type of credentials it's really getting exciting it's the senior absolutely a little bit looking better to have been lost and it was like i thank you so much i think really great to chat to you are welcome to american football and we know the two teams who meet in next month's super bowl the los angeles rams will face the new england patriots the rams beat the new orleans saints twenty six to twenty three in overtime after a controversial refereeing court the patriots also went the distance against favorites the council city chiefs with the veteran quarterback tom brady inspiring a thirty seven thirty one win in the patriots to play in the league record eleven
3:51 pm
super bowl in atlanta on the third of february brady featuring in his nine and if an showpieces right down that date in a dive. scored a national disgrace the talent in something it truly was known for its extreme poverty then for decades. now has bonds back. how this is a european capital. and i'm going to put that question to david leavitt's. welcome david first of all tell us what is for this incredible transformation from
3:52 pm
a ghost into. you know it goes back even farther because my terra is one of the oldest cities in the world it's about nine thousand years old and for many people living there it is quite a shock that they are now finally the european capital of culture it's been a long time coming this is a town unique for its honeycomb network of cave dwellings carved into limestone you may actually recognize these from films such as wonder woman or the passion of the christ people have been living in these caves since the cave people basically never came out of the caves now that was a big problem for the town because well into the twentieth century people were living in squalor in these caves they were living together with animals there was a huge infant mortality rate fifty percent people who are contracting the leiria parents couldn't close their children it was so bad that in the early one nine hundred fifty s. the prime minister of italy ordered thousands of people be evacuated from the city
3:53 pm
and it was essentially empty. life started coming back in the eighty's in the ninety's unesco declared materials oldtown a world heritage site and things have been getting better since now to the point that it's a place that tourists from all over the world want to get to know well if they can get their panties. the third easy to get that you know what i mean it is not that easy there's not a highway to the nearest airport there's not a highway at all there's the fastest train connection to the nearest city of bari is two hours for sixty kilometers these are problems that should have been solved before the city was named european culture capital or became that this past weekend here we can see some of the opening of vents from this past weekend marching bands from all over europe this is the beginning of a year of wonderful performances and exhibitions it's not easy to get there but if you're going to cider in southern italy you should take some time to take in his sights and all the food anyway according to me let's take a look at one highlight from this weekend's opening ceremonies in particular.
3:54 pm
hash that looks mildly list not of course martina is one of the two cultural capitals of europe for this yet some seven hundred thousand guests and visit is expected to go into this doll and how do they cope maybe they live you know i think a lot of people in metairie are asking themselves the same question there has been some efforts to create some new places to stay if you book early enough you can probably snag one of the near hotels or air b.n. b. holiday apartments that i should say that are being built into the caves why five
3:55 pm
some of them supposedly even have jacuzzis hard to believe that these are the same caves where people lived with their donkeys and chickens just sixty years ago but that's the world we're living in absolutely and the transformation of course is or this campaign. oh. ways camping. fits your tent in mobs as it was i don't know the answer you don't know if the authorities are so cool with that but you know you and i will be on our time there if we don't get one of absolutely but i think it's really worth going there from what you're saying just the transformation is incredible david levin struck out today thank you very much. you're watching the news coming to you live from but i live in a do stay with us because philly game will be with you shortly he have the news for you mean money can always check out our website that's g.w. dot com you can also follow us on twitter as well as on facebook for me on the touchy mother and the news team as well as david levy it's a pleasure to have your company.
3:56 pm
owns.
3:57 pm
half. black forest ranger. based in her element. i'm really into winter sports and i'm going to my very best to try to everything the last person has to offer. because there's so much to do. the black forest a winter wonderland. ninety minutes w. .
3:58 pm
where is home. when your family scattered across the globe. with the kids if you do that because it's a journey back to the roots of government to muddy. the shah's family from somalia live around the. time when i did urgent assistance of. global family starts january twenty third on t.w. . four. and on demand. casts language courses. video and audio. anytime anywhere. w. media center. every journey begins with the first step and every language but the first word i looked into the coaxing germany to
3:59 pm
learn german. business why not learn with him. to stuff its simple mind on your mobile and free. w z e learning course. german made easy. celebrate one hundred years of college and join our photo competition show us the palace movement impact your world for a chance to win one of three like the cameras follow us on instagram tag and post your pics using head. house one hundred so gets nothing. like old terms and conditions and d w documentary on instagram.
4:00 pm
visiting don't lose live from trying to break the bread said dead long words prime minister leaves number ten on her way to present her plotting painfully leaving the euro peon union lawmakers throughout teresa mayes original deal last week will the new world satisfy the nice size will bring you live coverage of from london also on the program won't the world's most repressive regimes says it has changed its ways people speculate downs' president's visit to germany we hear from him back a journalist who says he was jailed and tortured.

32 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on