tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle January 23, 2019 7:00pm-8:00pm CET
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this is d.w. news live from germany's chancellor calls for the reform of global institutions speaking in davos i'm going to change would help counter what she called the fragmentation of the multilateral world. also on the program to of syria's power brokers look to settle the country's fight os russia's president putin holds talks with. the results of their influence and the water whole country.
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hopes of finding missing football that emily on osama alive after his plane disappeared over the english channel fading his family reveals he sends messages sent me at crufts for the hawks. taking out the trash in space we look at why there is sort of much junk. what on earth we can do about it. welcome to the program. germany's chancellor has told the world economic forum about the global institutions need to be reformed in order to avoid what she called the fragmentation of the multilateral world and a makeover told the gathering of political and business leaders in davos switzerland that institutions like the world bank and the international monetary fund must be ready to compromise but not be downgraded if we look at the history of
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mankind basic decisions for the order that we have today while they were taken about seventy five seventy four years ago that if you like is the age that the average person lives so after the horrors of the second world war and the people who were then in power and the people who invest consequently had certain insights and they knew what they were doing so we shouldn't these days cast their decisions aside and the system and they set up and treated lightly because they did so against the wealth of experience so let's get more on this from idea because we're going to have you our gate us live in davos. welcome have very how has how did the the great and the good reacts to the chance of the speech. well you know phil there was an enormous interest in what i'm going to mak had to say especially because she was maybe the most
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prominent leader of the european union considering that imminent a call could not attend this conference as we know nor could the reason he's still in the european union so the room was full not only of leaders but of course of journalists and now if you take a look at what she had to say in a forum that usually has very inspiring and very calming words for the future it was remarkable that the chancellor actually made this warning that we're talking about especially considering the fact that this year's topic is about reconsidering globalization and she of course made an appeal and also a pledge to reform these institutions but based on the fact that they are not performing and not delivering what they were conceived for and that was definitely remarkable and welcomed by the audience because it was different from what you usually hear from leaders on the stage and she also this year she also appealed for multilateralism and against protectionism and populism they did it seems obvious
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who those particular comments were aimed does. indeed as of course the world economic forum as such is a multilateral platform and of course if you sorry i might interrupt. it's hard to tell that kid continue. yes i was just i was just mentioning the fact that. chancellor of course it was appealing to an audience that was part of a multilateral institution which is the world economic forum if you will but again we are living in times where many of the institutions like the world trade organization just to mention one have been heavily criticized by some of the most important leaders in the world so it is therefore necessary to wreak commit to the foundation of these institutions and that is something that will always be applauded here. not a chance also some spoke about the strength of the german economy what was she
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saying that. well she had a message that of course was very clear in the fact that the germany call me is in a solid state it is still growing despite the many challenges that are ahead but she also recognized the fact that the economy here in germany sorry were not in true or in switzerland but the economy in germany is facing many challenges especially and its question its core which is the auto industry recent developments in recent years have shown us already that the german car makers and the brands that people know that folks like b.m.w. have had not only scandals in general like the diesel gate scandal but also are not really making the headlines when it comes to innovation for example when it comes to sell through in vehicles and also electric mobility germany is might be starting to lag behind and that is something that the chancellor is definitely recognizing. this in davos thank you so much for that let's bring into the conversation w.'s
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chief political correspondent lyndal crying welcome melinda the theme of this is comes globalization of four point zero shaping the new architecture in the age of the industrial revolution so how did the chancellor's message tie in with that. she's basically saying don't tear that architecture down she made the point to that as we just heard from havea that the international order that was established after world war two includes institutions that definitely need to be adapted to change circumstances the main circumstance being a change in the balance of power away from the western industrialized countries to rising countries like china like india like some of the emerging economies and her essential point was look these institutions need to change but we don't simply need to jettison them all together in fact if we do that she said we will face what she
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called misery so i think you asked who that message was directed to about against populism and so on i think her message was very much directed and she said as much to all of those who think that the answer to today's challenges lies in every country sort of going for itself in america first as i'm so clearly not very they old message they are to the united states and also to its secretary of state who recently said that institutions that aren't working should be essentially thrown overboard she's saying no we need to change them on the chance of a sort of role for europe in terms of internet regulation and the regulation of big data. she did she said you know we're looking at this polarity now in terms of the internet and digital ization where in the u.s. it's all about privatization data in the hands of major corporations increasing concentration of these huge tech giants and in china data is essentially controlled
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by the state and she said we need a middle way and there is a role for europe and that will is to find a way of shaping the internet shaping the use of data that puts human beings at the center and that is the social market approach to economics and not pure privatization or all public so she's looking for that important need for europe well in the crate thank you so much for that. europe's winter weather has claimed its first victims that eighty people have died of hypothermia and hungary have died in brugman one and then emergency accommodation is supposed to protect homeless people from the cold but many make use of the shelters as we see in this report. mike has been living on the streets of berlin for about six months now a days he sleeps under this bridge his bed consists of blankets and three sleeping
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bags. as well. many people in berlin are in a similar situation it's estimated there are four thousand to ten thousand homeless people in the city but even at minus seven degrees celsius mike and other homeless people don't want to stay in the shelters but. if it gets called or i'll go to the railway mission and get two or three blankets or camping that will go away otherwise i'll stay here it's much better than in an emergency shelter. there are around twelve hundred beds in berlin's emergency shelters on average two hundred twenty of them remain empty each night mike says there's a reason for it. yeah i know you're i have my piece here i also have my people who look out for me i really have he's here i won't deny that alcohol place role but i really have my piece here which is more than i can say about the shelter at the entrance to the emergency shelter all homeless men undergo
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a stringent search people who spend the night you must follow the rules tobacco alcohol and drugs are all forbidden. if you turn up drunk or drink a single sip of beer in front of the building they throw you right back out the. mullen tears take care of the homeless people who sleep outdoors they drive an outreach bus through the city looking for people who are in danger freezing to death staff provide them with what they need to survive. the dimension of war and many people don't want to go to emergency shelters and that's why i try my best to offer individual assistance to the people consisting of a sleeping bag warm tea and conversation. mike relies on the assistance he wants to stay at his bed under the bridge in spite of the freezing temperatures but if it gets colder chances of dying of hypothermia arise from mike and for other homeless people in berlin. and let's take
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a look at some of the other stories making news around the world asylum requests in germany are declining the country's migration agency says it's ready to just one hundred ninety six thousand applications last year that's down sixteen percent numbers have been falling steadily since the twenty fifth a migration crisis when meeting one hundred thousand people applied for asylum here . thousands of mourners have attended the funeral in northern israel and i have betrayed the students killed in australia twenty one year old. morris raped and murdered in melbourne way home from a comedy show the death sparked protests the caves violence against women. a claim to zimbabwe and the musician. who could sing has died at the age of sixty six in a career that spanned forty years and sixty seven albums he became the most successful artist to emerge from the country took who he was known. diabetes.
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developed where there were hundreds of thousands of taking to the streets capital caracas and cities across the country to demand the resignation of president nicolas maduro they say that his government is illegitimate that did not think you'd be term power to the country's national assembly opposition leader one guy grade zero has declared himself the country's interim president and the u.s. has officially recognized him as such the rallies follow violent clashes overnight that lasts that left four people dead. and the latest from d.w. correspondent. in caracas a welcome. so who is let's let's start with this this this this opposition leader declaring himself the president what do you know about that. well a though of this the president of the national assembly which is our congress our current and in the constitution it says that if there is an server of power like
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they are considering matter which of the dead that's why take that power would be the president of the national assembly so he's got an answer from the constitution and taking. residence in charge of this where he's now longer from the supreme court which is spoiled child person and legal as of who they have asked not an attorney general to take care and answer good action against those are. wary of why not and now we're expecting to see what's going to happen with that because there are other powers the us and other it's third on the leaders from the government that have supported my way no one are supporting this new us we're in as president in charge of the next month and how has this news been received. well i just did
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a quick of you around the different mile protests that are happening about this right now there's a lot of people that have attended the opposition march and they already expect and high hopes are up with one way though so there is even the names of up obviously the supreme court that's loyal to my room the mother would have never met one obviously there well they say probably that it is something to do with us and meddling in that as well and serious and we are expected to see what is going to come of that if there is going to be violence or if there is going to be some kind of action against. the president of the national assembly which is up one way so you said the supreme court it's not all to the president if that is a power struggle then the army's role could be a decisive whom to the general support well the general support we go let's not go to the generals the higher command of the military that
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we've seen that there is a rupture in command in that structure because we've seen in the past year and in this this week some uprisings from low level military and police forces so that there is a break in command and the national assembly has an actor who are and misty to any military forces that defends the constitution and supports what's going on with the opposition at this moment unclear shanker in the correctness of venezuela thank you very much for that. that's news to broke in the last few minutes opposition leader venezuela. has declared himself the country's interim president. movie on pope francis is due in panama city later as part of the catholic church's world youth day festivities tens of
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thousands of young people are already gathered to take part and greet the pontiff world youth day is an international event which is typically held every three years in his speech pope is expected to highlight the issues of poverty immigration and human rights and this report from panama. an image of unity flags from around the world waiting together. with all the music they evoke a rock concert. but the youth here are not singing along with their favorite artists they're singing to god. i but many worry about their generation's future drug addiction over consumption of material goods and bullying on social media. which a whole in is in the many young people end up on a path to crime problem is they drop out of school and that's one reason they end up as criminals must oppose it because that victim alcohol is affecting
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a lot of young people in our country. and social media is having a great impact with cyber bullying but the book i watch are willing cyberbullying but the loss of the family we aren't as much of a family we're not as family oriented as we were in the past and everyone has their own problems like where we're from it's a lot of violence it's a lot of lives lost in other places it's probably it's hunger it's hate crimes there's so much racism but i feel for us we're just here to try to figure out where is it that we're fighting or plays about how is god helping us with their problems . and climate change is another big concern for pope francis and his church. he'd like to set an example by demanding dioceses around the world to work with renewable energy starting in the year two thousand and thirty the severity of pieces go look at that it's the fact that we need to do it it's like you know when our common is in danger when my home is on fire i don't sit back and say i'm sorry
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you don't have time you just jump into action and that's what we also feel now diecast i mean everyone i suppose scientific community as well but our world our home is on fire. getting their voices heard isn't easy for us. in this part of the world but the pope who is mired in crisis due to sexual abuse by clergy around the world is calling for young people to address governments that have a track record for listening mostly to voices with economic power but i really think we need to put public pressure on governments with civil society movements so we have a right to vote and so many other ways to be heard but we need to speak out at the first. thing out of the federal i'm a country. that young people that. i've probably had the greatest hits and have a good morning are they probably. many here also think that as the first latin
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american pontiff francis understands the problem better than any other pope so far if during his visit to panama he speaks from the heart in his mother tongue he might win back some points for his discredited church. scientists from the european space agency are meeting in the german city of darmstadt this week to address a looming crisis a few hundred kilometers above our heads space is becoming increasingly littered with junk daybreak orbiting the planet is a danger to spacecraft one hundred when it tumbles back to earth researchers are looking for ways to clean up the mess. this space debris dangerous for earth. earth is enveloped in a cloud of manmade debris more than seven hundred thousand pieces of it are orbiting the planet most are only a few centimeters in size but they're also fuel tanks rocket components and
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decommissioned satellites they travel at phenomenal speeds. and just one piece could cause serious damage. that's why space junk is monitored using radar and laser systems they can detect objects the smallest ten centimeters in size and pinpoint where the debris is in its orbit if need be satellites and even the i r s s space station can be steered out of the way. still there have been collisions which released even more space debris into orbit. when russian rockets take off from their baikonur launch pad debris often rains down over siberia and kazakhstan but not just their large pieces of space junk have been found in regions far away from launch sites. this came from america's sky lab space station increased solar activity destabilized skylab
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orbit and sent it tumbling to earth around midnight on the night of july the eleventh one nine hundred seventy nine parts of it came down in western australia reportedly killing a cow. in january of one thousand nine hundred seventy seven in tulsa oklahoma lottie williams was struck in the shoulder but wasn't hurt she's the only human so far to be hit by space junk. research as want to find ways to clean up the earth's orbital junkyard the technology is still in the development phase though until that's done the planets cloak of space waste will just keep on growing and with it the danger. not loser in the chanter head of the european space agency is clean space initiative and she joins us from a dumpster welcome to you so i think this assembles great minds that come up with
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any great ideas for cleaning up space. yes in a way we have been studying this. project to clean up that space since there are two thousand and twelve and it's for sure very difficult because it is read by the finishers and no control of the object and you can use different way to capture it like before the count even nets or arc and we are progressing this stabbing at the clinical difficulties of it. and so the european space agency is doing their spur to the obviously the united states assisted chucked lot lots of the stuff about as well as russia and now india are you or are you working together or of a separate initiatives going on trying to do this and actually it's frozen or the european space agency's the only agency which is looking at cleaning up the reason
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in a moment. because yet its powers are not yet looking at this problem their model get anything from the point of view of the servicing in orbit satellite which are still alive let me tell you something which she's else on board that these gnarly to clean up the breeze the most important point is to stop leaving our junk up there at the end of life and on these we are all working together wore white. so it did that the same problem that we have here on earth wait wait have out in space in as much as we should be using recyclable materials up there and putting a taking of rubbish back home with us. yes but it's a very difficult. technical endeavor to recycle what is in space and the moment we don't even know how to capture it debris nobody has entered that any war wide so
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the first point would be to have a mission which captures a degree we had put forward and yet to capture a very big debris belonging to ease a some years ago and eight counts are alike now we are a little bit three scoping the mission and to possibly capture smaller braised and still be long and too easy so first we need to learn how to capture it once we know how to do it and its mission would anyway not fly before two thousand and twenty five. that we could try to after we know how to capture the breed maybe we can open up to new ideas like recycling but we wish you well with your end of a cycle so much for joining us and we say in a can take from the european space agency thank you thank you very much by now to hong kong where if you don't like this song. persist you may soon have to keep your feelings to yourself that this is the
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national anthem of the people's republic of china and some hong kong or make is supposed to bill that would criminalize disrespect for the health of critics believe beijing is behind the move and that pushing back up what they say a censorship. china's national anthem as performed two years ago at the twentieth anniversary of hong kong's return to chinese rule. legally in spain just a song in hong kong like any other now a proposed law would make any mockery of the anthem a crime. the lyrics are a call to rise up against oppression opponents in hong kong are doing just that for what they see as meddling from beijing. pro-democracy group has been campaigning against the bill they say the enfamil erodes hong kong's freedom of
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expression and will make political parodies like this punishable with jail time. we just hope to let the new generation and nonsteroidal know that this kind of national and from law is not far away from all that they live and one just make a joke all i just hope to is that the from way to play the national and from already face to face to be prosecuted by the government. and the political debate has crossed over into sports hong kong soccer fans have been booing the chinese anthem at matches to protest beijing's growing influence over the territory scenes like these have angered conservative lawmakers. holden child of the probe aging d.a.b. party says activists have crossed the red line. to me is very simple you can always
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express a lot of different opinion against the government and it won't get you into any trouble here in hong kong because we have the freedom of speech brought the national anthem as i say is same bully. we are not compelling people who is all we do is and it turkey both from showing its roots back only. to and from bill is up for a final vote later this year and is expected to pass easily. after that the only place to hear china's national anthem in hong kong might be officially sanctioned occasions. that is the canadian border and the wonder of that is that the niagara falls where a winter storm has taken temperatures time to minus twenty five degrees celsius causing possible freezing and transforming the falls into an icy spectacle dividing a stunning sight for visitors. this is d.w.
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news live from bob and still to come to have serious power brokers made to try and settle the country's fight russia's president vladimir putin her subsurface project in moscow will take a look at what could be in store for the war torn country. obasanjo to start world news in just about this is. where he's home. when your family is scattered across the globe. with the kids if you could do is that if it was turney back to the records get money. from somalia live around the. country want to go to urgent assistance. there's a global family forty five minutes on a double. you're going to unofficial estimates more than
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one point two million venezuelans live in colombia legally and illegally. why return to venezuela. to visit friends yes i don't think i'd ever go back there to live you know where i live there again i don't know so i'm not sure. witness global news that matters. made for mines. the. people make fine about their own social economic and political problems. in mozambique the state that you have to last so you don't write it's how people call me in dated april. as a journalist i often talk about this caucus in the back by listening to less eloquently than i actually staff my day by checking out all those jobs finding out
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what people are talking about what is moving them. my father taught me how to ask a first of all questions about my country and about books that is what i keep doing to state my name's paddy stuff and i work at g.w. . top stories at this hour hundreds of thousands of people have taken since that is where the streets demanding the resignation of president. has declared himself the country's interim president. germany's chancellor has called for reform of global institutions for the rest of the world. it would help counter what you call the fragmentation of the multilateral world. into the major players in the syrian
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conflicts have begun talks that could have significant implications for the country russian president vladimir putin is hosting his turkish counterpart. in moscow. gender is the future of syria's kurdish controlled areas after withdrawal of u.s. forces announced by president trump president wants a turkish controlled safe zone along the border the striped area shown on the map because it guards the coach molesters as terrorists the threat to national security so he's also seeking control of my beach town the kurds captured from so-called islamic state in twenty sixteen. of establishing an autonomous region in northern syria but strategically the position of kurdish forces has become precarious in the wake of washington's planned withdrawal. this was the scene in northeast syria two days ago when a convoy of u.s.
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and kurdish led troops was bombed in an attack claimed by islamic state. and exactly one week ago in kurdish held man bitch near the turkish border. another apparent i asked attack that killed four americans. despite the ongoing fighting washington remains committed to withdrawing its troops meaning syria's kurds are about to lose a powerful ally then there's the issue of a safe zone along the border with turkey a u.s. proposal. but who should create it and who should police it for russia which backs syria's government forces the answer is clear. we are convinced of the best and only solution is the transfer of these territories to the control of the syrian government of syrian security forces on the ministers
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of functions. if you look. but turkey equally wants control of this buffer zone to protect against what it sees as the kurdish threat. if you are a liberal you take the view of his own proposal for a safe so he comes with the goal of keeping terrorists and terror organizations away from our borders. ancora insists syrian kurdish fighters are linked to the kurdish rebel group the p.k. k. widely branded a terrorist organization it doesn't want syrian kurdish militia gaining power on its borders fearing that might encourage the kurdish insurgency inside turkey. this time last year turkey launched its military operation on the former kurdish enclave of a freend in northern syria kurds marked the anniversary with protests they have reason to fear that turkey will strike again that's why kurdish fighters are now
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reaching out to syrian government troops for protection. let's get more from w.'s and we show in moscow was those talks between the had been russian president taking place or dorian jones joins us from istanbul welcome both let's start with you i was shown in moscow of the two presidents have just spoken to the media was there any agreement. well both presidents seemed very satisfied with the talks they both talked about how they were constructive. even called them useful and effective and used a word that basically implies that there were actual results now what those results war though was a little bit more vague for us mere mortals they agreed to battle against terrorism as they said of course the problem is that the way they define terrorists is different with for example the turkish side defining several of the kurdish
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groups on the northern border of syria as terrorists and putin wanting to push forward talks with the kurds so that could be a question going forward and they also agreed to continue talking they talked about the fact that there would be a summit between iranian the iranian leader and go on and putin again and they also agreed to continue talking in the peace format which is a peace format which those three countries have been they get our interest for. dorian jones what do you think the president is going to make of president putin's idea that the syrian government of the begin talks. well i think you'll be very unhappy about that this is really a nightmare scenario for ancora corrals not only can engage in a military conflict against the white peachy in it's critical affiliate of p.y.t. it is also been working very hard to diplomatically isolated groups of the
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prospects of this group now reaching out to damascus into talks will be sending alarm bells in ankara and this is really part of a very sophisticated game that moscow has been playing but it has people relations of ankara the same time it has been courting the syrian kurds trying to drag them away from the arms of washington and push them towards damascus as part of this goal of uniting the whole of syria and this opening of talks with damascus will be seen as a major victory and possibly moscow will be using this as leverage on korea to persuade them to to start talks again with the mask of at the moment earth one of any reopening of diplomatic relations with the prospect of the kurds are now starting to talk damascus could force onco to rethink its position another key objective of moscow so empty show in the syrian province of idlib was another big topic on what was said there. well that the province of course is a deescalation zone which turkey has been controlling since september aired on and
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putin agreed that in september and that was really top of the russian agenda ahead of the meeting they said that there had been provocations there there had been terrorist attacks against syrian government troops so it seemed like ahead of the meeting that the russian side was pushing for an assault. there and today put in emphasize that turkey which controls the area controls the zone was doing its best that it but that it needed to do more and that they had agreed the turkish side and the russian side to put in place measures that they as they said very vague but they did say that the defense ministers of both countries had met and decided on a course of action going forward and it live so whether we will see an assault there in the coming weeks or months remains to be seen but there did seem to be some sort of agreement there going forward so that dorian jones how much influence does he have on those rivals in.
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the major setback the key rebel forces that has been supporting have suffered a series of major defeats to the linked groups and in fact according to the russian seventy percent of it is now under the control of these groups and there are rumors of the turkish by groups all trying to negotiate with the al qaeda linked group so this does put to work in a very difficult position and observers point out on course on very little to militarily support the rebel groups you seem to many ways on who could be stepping back from it live and bracing for a possible offensive and that brings with the risk of a major exodus of refugees into turkey another big fear of encore or injured from the emily show win in moscow thank you both. doesn't bode well is facing fresh and raw stuff the government employee said they would go on strike from friday. the council representing off a million civil servants announced the action after pay negotiations failed this
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follows president hammers and god was pledged to investigate what he called unacceptable violence by security forces during a crackdown on protests against an increase in fuel tax twelve people were killed and hundreds injured but medical sources say the publish to death toll may be just a fraction of the real figure. victims of the army crackdown are being treated in hospitals in the capital harare. this man was shot in the leg. he says he doesn't want to show his face because he's afraid of being targeted again he will. be in a harare resident fair i'm a posse also suffered injuries after being attacked by the security forces. of i don't want on your knees they started beating me with metal rods logs and barbed wire my hand was broken twice and i have
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a crack on my left leg after beating me they left in a hurry. to violence erupted just over a week ago after the government dramatically increased the price of fuel. the army and police were deployed in harare and other cities to disperse protesters and prevent looting. but the security forces were accused by zimbabwe's human rights commission of using extreme violence and in some cases torture. they seem to resort to use of brute excessive and disproportionate force in most circumstances thereby causing upgradable loss of life and also always in this situation. the opposition m.d.c. is also accused the government of deploying the military and its heavy handed tactics to intimidate and silence its critics. unfortunate and very tragic
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that we are back to the past what is clear is that is part of victimization on the basis of freedom of conscience or we are having these m.d.c. members m.p.'s being victimized. the president schultz a trip abroad to deal with the crisis he's promised a national dialogue and an investigation into the alleged abuses that mistrust and tension in zimbabwe remain high. business news now davos of course stephen beard is here looking at one participant in particular that's right phil we're talking about chinese telecommunications giant while way it's also president the meetings this year and more governments are accusing wall way of taking orders from beijing and therefore prohibiting their internet carriers from partnering with it now as the defends itself while way is going on the offensive against the backdrop of the ongoing trade war with the u.s. while ways relationship with
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a range of western governments has grown strained germany for example is currently debating whether to ban its technology from new five g. networks and davos while ways deputy chairman said in the tech sector companies needed to start being more vocal in their relationship with governments or it would have serious knock on effects on other industries. i would strongly advocate that the business community to opinions to the government to let government understand the requirements from the business community ottawa eyes i worry that the trends will expand to many many hard industries and countries in fact while ways problems have already spread to other countries in an ongoing drama on the other side of the atlantic in canada it's c.f.o. main one jew still stands accused of violating u.s. sanctions on iran and faces extradition to the united states on the sidelines at
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davos weiwei chairman lee young told reporters his company doesn't pose a threat to a future digital society but convincing western governments of that is easier said than done. now another big focus at davos is of course africa experts say that creating wealth and battling inequality there depends on encouraging more private investments through stock markets for example but there are hurdles our correspondent gave us is joining us again from davos to tell us a little bit more. the trite stephen of course as representatives of the financial world have always been and continue to be very important here at the world economic forum and representative some of the african countries especially now i spoke to the c.e.o. of the nigerian stock exchange and asked him how to relate this sector of the stock markets in general with the topic of this year's world economic forum which is how to make huge global ization more accessible in the future here is what he had to
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say when i asked him the fact that stock exchanges are usually more related to the corporate world or rich people than to a broader audience. you're right that the topic for this year is globalization four point zero and how we can make globalization more inclusive and the contest before to industrial pollution and what we see as significant divides significant gaps in that digitization process and the stock exchange is a good example where people believe that the stock market's only for the rich. but that is not true where really working very hard to be more inclusive to create its products. resonate with the retail public and to create products that help to make financial inclusion in a very possible for all countries so if you take nigeria for example who are very
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instrumental in bringing in the government savings bond. away you can invest. five thousand ira which is less than one hundred dollars. you know in government securities. you know with all of the sovereign government is the dot coms right so the number of products like that that we've brought to market to be to include people would not actively participate in on the market right now. ology . we've done very well in deploying technology to try to make it accessible for people to use their devices to participate in a market in a very cheap and easy way and looking at some of the discussions about industry four point zero don't you think that some of the problems that nigeria has for example corruption or lack of infrastructure things that are mentioned very obviously are more basic than the solutions that we are now thinking of ahead. you
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know the first of all let me say that some of the problem problems you've highlighted as a stiver where you know but in varying degrees for less developed economies you're right that you need to have some basic building blocks to actively participate in the fourth industrial revolution so you're not going to have to fish on intelligence with electricity you know we're very mindful of that and that is why i believe that african leaders need to really take a deliberate effort. make a deliberate effort to design struck chose with bring us into the fourth industrial revolution right from the primary school level you know where students can be taught how to cook right from when they're small like speaking their language so even the curriculum would change you know walking on basic
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infrastructure like. electricity and real. really providing. opportunities that encourage innovation because there's a lot of innovation everyone at the very low level of society and we need to encourage that and bring that up so it's a long road ahead. thank you very much i just got an email from the nigerian stock exchange for your insights thank you. and that of course was hard you know again it's there for us in davos now back over to for. well with a story that's stuck in a sports world thanks so much steve yes this is the search for the missing football . it's so far failed to find any definite trace of his fight in the english channel identified their brain is being examined authorities say there's little hope of finding him all the plane's pilot alive the argentinian striker was on his way to join his new team cardiff city when the plane disappeared his family has revealed that in his last message the plane looked like it was about to fall apart.
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hope is rapidly fading here in the cold waters around the channel islands. this search and rescue aircraft is one important cog in the team's afeard to find a light aircraft carrying and. if they're in the water will said the chances of. a diminish to almost zero because it's very cold in the water has been rough even though it's as well if they're safely in a lawn for oft the. chance to survive much greater because. from the cold to the piper malibu aircraft with sila on a pilot on board took off from the french city of nanda on monday evening headed for cardiff but the plane disappeared from radar on passing guernsey in the child line and. only signed as a card of player from mont on saturday he said he couldn't wait to get started but it returned to france to say farewell to his team mates media reports have revealed
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the last what's up messages silas sent to friends and family i'm on the plane it looks like it's falling apart if an hour and a half you do not hear from me i don't know if they'll send someone to pick me up because they'll not find me i'm scared. thousands of non-fans have held a vigil for twenty eight year old salah in what had become his adopted city back home in argentina sallis father was crestfallen let me with that wish i spoke to him on sunday. well he was very happy that he was moving to cardiff to an even bigger club that he liked he was doing well he was playing well and this news when these things happen there are no words. is the most expensive player cardiff ever bought the club's fans are in shock still hoping he'll be found a life. if
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you were to try and visit the warsaw ghetto these days you would find there's not much left to say almost nothing remains of the three and a half square kilometers where the nazis imprisoned almost half a million jews they murdered most of them before they book the district to the ground in one thousand nine hundred forty three but a group of jews inside the ghetto made sure they would never be forgotten. if they created a keeps the stories of polish jews alive to this day that account is the basis for an important new documentary called who will write history. if you believe it's from a culture that has a history here with welcome that day but this is an incredible story and it all really comes down to one incredible person actually emmanuel remote bloom was a historian who was imprisoned together with his family in the warsaw ghetto they actually survived the warsaw ghetto survived the destruction of the ghetto only to
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be shot to death by the nazis in one nine hundred forty four but emanuel spent the last years of his life leading a team called own eggs or the joys of the sabbath in collecting all kinds of evidence of life from within the ghetto to preserve these people's stories so this is that is the film about that and being shown all over the world this weekend being shown over the world this week and particularly on sunday that's the holocaust remembrance day being shown in cinemas all over the world including at one of them in paris france being organized by unesco because big ghetto archives are actually you know asco world heritage we can take another look now at this film crew or write our history for a long long months to matter to selves in the midst of our suffering with questions . about our suffering. and if it
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knows. why is it so. and it was the fear of being forgotten that dr emmanuel ring will bloom to create his walsall ghetto archive in it countless records diaries photos and poems collected by ring or bloom and his sixty help his insights into suffering and the human spirit that without their efforts would have been lost forever. we would know what the germans wanted us to know or the nazis we would know what the nazis wanted us to know but we wouldn't know how people lived what they thought what they felt how they cared for each other. the documents was stored and buried in water tight metal boxes and milk jugs. after world war two parts of the archive were recovered with the help of survivors. historians are still analyzing the documents to this day. and are still able to learn from the sources how the people experienced their own persecution and what
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courses of action or recourse they saw available to them and we can see how different these people were these individuals and either one the film who will rush our history shows how ring or bloom and his helpers continually risked their lives to preserve the voices of the community. sometimes i worry that these terrible pictures of the life we're looking at every day. will die with us. i pictures of a panic on a sinking ship. sorrow. let the witness be our writing. so david leavitt's you have seen this film who will write history but what struck you most about what struck me the most was the terrible moral dilemmas that the people in the warsaw ghetto faced questions like what does it mean when we
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walk past children who are dying in the street does it mean that we are horrible people to let this happen or does it mean that we've become strong enough to do what we have to do to keep our own families alive should we be feeding everyone just a few spoonfuls or should we let a few people starve and other people survive these are questions that no one should have to ask but there are the questions of the people living in the warsaw ghetto we're asking here is another clip from the film very much left an impression on me . i live by the wall that divides the ghetto from the every side. we can observe scores of jewish children stealing over to the area inside to buy few potatoes. yesterday a jewish boy shot dead in front of my window. it was committed by a polish policeman. i wanted to show this clip because
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poland's current government is very much in the business of rewriting its history just last year they made it illegal for people to suggest that poland was complicit in the holocaust and this film will be showing on sunday across poland as well and i'm really interested to see what the reaction there is going to be and it is amazing watching this that people in the water get so was able to preserve the humanity even in the east extreme circumstances does this film give us an insight into that it does another part of the film that really struck me is that even though that it was clear to many of the people in the warsaw ghetto that they probably were not going to survive. they continued their religious practices they put on theater productions they organized secret schools for their children and a library for the children so that the kids could have some sense of dignity i'm not sure that everyone would have done that under those circumstances so that was
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move move move. move. move. move. move move move. move. move move move move more. new family scattered across the globe. with this is to do the business move move move move as the turning her back to the words can and. move from small to move around the more good morning no need to purchase a system some of. the family. says enough small details.
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more more more more more more. her first thing in school in the jungle. her first clean lesson and then doris grand moment arrives join the arena tango on her journey to freedom in our interest in georgia true story and around it and returns home. hey listen. that's what video game music sounded like thirty years ago. today's tracks take the experience to another level a sense to him talk compose at nobu boycotts are. featured in many well known games his music is bound to keep your response sounds good. video game music starts february twenty fifth on t.w.
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. the music so long gets an update. curves with the good morning stephanie stole. the party and chats with musicians from around the world. groups starts feb second on t.w. . celebrate one hundred years of college and join our photo competition show us the pulse 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 cash take our house one hundred so gets nothing. like all terms and conditions at the w documentary on instagram.
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this is d.w. news why from berlin tonight who holds the power in venezuela is the opposition now on the verge of forcing president maduro. hundreds of thousands of taking to the streets across the country to demand his resignation the opposition leader has declared himself venezuela's interim president we'll go live to caracas for the latest in this fast moving.
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