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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  March 12, 2019 9:00pm-9:31pm CET

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it. malaria must go on so millions can live. this is g.w. news why but from berlin britain's prime minister made so why ask for parliament to say. this is due to snowfalls tonight if this deal is not possible and bricks it could be almost. perfect the way she made sure the most terrible east. point you'll come to those states with.
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cultural. centers and. also coming up the european union bans the boeing seven thirty seven max eight aircraft from scott you're joins a growing list of places closing their respects to the passenger jet in the wake of sunday's ethiopian airlines crash carriers around the world are grounding the world's most popular airplane. and bring it off it's good to have you with us tonight the british parliament has voted to reject prime minister teresa mayes breaks it deal the second time in as many months the vote throws the united kingdom into another period of uncertainty.
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well mrs may have lost by a wide margin of three hundred ninety one votes to two hundred forty two a majority of a hundred forty nine votes there a many of her own conservative all makers voted to join those from the labor opposition and other parties in voting video bell the parliament now faces a series of further votes this week tomorrow they will have to decide whether to leave the european union without any deal at all and. this is an issue of grief borscht for the future of our country just like the referent for a strongly held and equally legitimate fuse on both sides for that reason i can confirm that this will be a free vote on this site and. i. can i am personally struggled with this choice as i'm sure many other room board members will i'm passionate about to liberate the result of the referendum but i
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equally passionately believe if that the best way to do that is to leave in an orderly way with a deal and i still believe that there is a majority in the house for that course of action. well to resubmit obviously they're struggling to maintain her voice we want to take the story you know to our correspondents barbara visa with one didn't and max hoffman in strong both of you good evening barbara let me start with you and you first reactions from london after what appears to be a second disastrous defeat for theresa may. what is there to react to i mean everybody who was concerned was in the house and they went big sheer up here in the street behind me where the pro european demonstrators the protests against it congregate on days like this they are happy about it others i deeply unhappy about it the e.r. g. the european research group the group of the hard line direct superiors who now see
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that they may be losing control of tax it because what we have seen here brand is really treason may be finally completely losing control off this process she pushed and pushed this thing seized she ran down the clock she kicked the can down the road she has no really run out of fruit and things will now sit if become even more chaotic because she cannot say what will happen next there will be new votes tomorrow and maybe on thursday and it's a reason may has even sort of opened up voting she does not get to keep people to the to the discipline off the party discipline anymore she said everybody has to sort of decide according to their own conscience and even she said she would vote against it no deal which is remarkable but she has eaten homewards before i mean.
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we want to talk about the future of brinksmanship in just a moment more but i want to ask you about the future to resubmit or there are calls tonight from sources that really matter and have wait for her to resolve. absolutely some senior tories have started talking even around noon today when it was foreseeable that she would lose the vote again just for the record this is the third to biggest loss the prime minister has suffered in recent parliamentary history so it's the bronze medal the gold medal she had in january when she first lost the withdrawal agreement said this is a bronze medal and there are now increasing voices who say form the party leaders and the senior tory says say now this is enough and this is the end we have to figure something out and we have even heard voices calling for new elections which is dangerous because in a fluid situation like this the tories might not make it labor might sort of figure
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something out to sort of galvanize voters and all of this is totally up in the air but it seems her career might be coming to an end sooner than later ok. what about the reaction from the european union you're in strong we know that is where theresa may was last night in that. attempt to get what she thought would be enough concessions to change today's outcome has there been any official reaction. we've talked to some parliamentarians this being the seat of the european parliament here and to sum it up really most of the boys frustration with the decision of the house of commons they still feel like the brits don't know what they want because of course there's a contradiction in rejecting this deal again which most of the parliamentarians here really feel is the best deal possible and on the other hand probably going to
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vote against a no deal gregg's it so that leaves everybody in limbo but also put the question to some parliamentarians here ok so what should the e.u. do because they always talk about what the u.k. should do if you ask a social democrat now they say we should have a second referendum if you asked somebody from the european people's party they say they should agree to that deal now so but nobody really has an answer what the e.u. twenty seven should do now because simply quite simply they don't know the situation has become so complicated that even the most seasoned politicians do not see a way forward at the moment and next often they're in strasbourg france and barbara brings almost more force in london to both of you thank you. are here in the studio with me on the big table is our very own forest warden she's over briggs it analysed we have sort of the stable many times on evenings just like tonight and we've had very similar comes haven't we i mean it's almost as if you could see this
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coming you said that before as well but what is going to happen to theresa may no. you heard yeah but it's a very good question what is going to happen to her apparently her spokes person has been aussie's question in the last few minutes and the response has been that she has not discussed resignation with her team but i mean my feeling is all the way through this she has said as your favorite quote is bricks it means bricks it she does has not wanted to call for a delay to press it so she has not wanted to ask for an extension to article fifty if no deal breaks it is voted on tomorrow night which seems the most likely decision to be made in parliament but we'll come back to that in a minute and if that m.p.'s then vote in favor of a delay to bricks it think can she possibly stay she has survived so far we know that you know she's very thick skinned and she keep going and going and going
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at some point her company at those top the top team around to are going to have to say you've got to go you've done everything that you can and you can't get it through i mean before the vote for the result there was talk about coming back for a third time with this so-called meaningful vote this withdrawal deal possibly if there is an extension maybe off to the meeting next week with the e.u. the e.u. summit maybe in may i just can't see how coming back with a defeat when we're talking about being defeated by almost one hundred fifty votes that's the majority of one hundred fifty votes and when so many m.p.'s in her own party do not support her and we know. seventy five m.p.'s in her own party voted against it tonight ok it was one hundred clearly the hardline seventy five m.p.'s in her own party voted against her tonight back in january with a particularly big defeat two hundred thirty majority defeat one hundred eighteen
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votes against it so it wasn't as big but it still seventy five m.p.'s on her own side voted against her deal she just does not have the confidence that now i don't think that they particularly would want to go at the moment because who would replace her but that is why she is now saying that this vote tomorrow on a no deal breaks it will be what's called a free vote that means that she will not be say the government will not say we need you to support our motion which is saying that they do not want that to be an. assault to the breakfast it is that important means of viewers around the world you know what is what is that an important part of the story that members of parliament can actually vote according to their conscience because it is so clear that so many m.p.'s on her own side and she's only saying is to her own m.p.'s we don't know what labor what they will say what they will say to their own m.p.'s she knows that so many of them are against a deal and would be quite happy for that to be
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a no deal brecht it so for the u.k. to leave the e.u. in seventeen days time on the twenty ninth of march without a deal and in fact said graham brady he is a very senior conservative backbencher he's head of the nine hundred twenty two committee that's the main committee of bench conservative m.p.'s saying that he is ready to vote for a no deal because he believes that that would bring certainty to business because they would know what is going to happen anyway seventeen days to believe since i guess if you were a betting woman would you say yes or no to an extension to briggs yes ok as always thank you very much. right here is some of the other stories now that are making headlines around the world. u.s. backed syrian forces say some two thousand fighters of so-called islamic state have surrendered to them during the battle for bog earlier syrian troops killed dozens of jihadist in heavy fighting there the village in eastern syria is the last pocket
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of territory still held by the extremes the german public broadcaster is e.d.f. says on camera has restored the press credentials of its is stand bowl bureau chief your. turkey's initial refusal to do so prompted the german government to complain about restrictions on press freedom mr brosnan says he will return it is to have will to resort to a new work suit. us secretary of state my home pay zero has announced that washington is to withdraw all remaining diplomatic personnel from been its way out because of the country's deteriorating situation political turmoil in the country increased last week when venezuela's electricity grid largely collapsed president maduro has suggested u.s. sabotage is behind the blackout. on the european union's aviation safety agency has joined the growing list of jurisdictions suspending the operation of all boeing seven thirty seven max eight and max nine
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aircraft in european airspace this is a big deal the restrictions following sunday's fatal crash of an ethiopian airlines max eight national authorities say that they are concerned that they're receiving insufficient information from that investigation many airlines have also announced that they're grounding their macs a suspect in nearly half of the three hundred seventy four planes currently not peroration around the world you know who to believe. all right my calling out steven beardsley with our business desk is here now let's talk about what is happening here steve i mean it's a big deal for the european union to say you know these planes are not allowed here but is a lack of trust right they don't know if that if the f.a.a. in the united states is being honest with them well they they have to respond to their own publics right their own public see what everyone sees right now that there is a new model that is only two years old and it's crash twice now airplane crashes
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don't happen that often in the same model within four months of one another and that makes you ask questions especially the passengers so these are proactive measures that the f.a.a. said yesterday that the plane was airworthy but they also said that it needs a software update that they will mandate by the end of april so that's right well it's not the most reassuring signal right so everything's fine why is this update required to explain this very briefly the seven thirty seven max came with something different from the seven thirty seven and that is because the engines were moved up a little bit it tended to pick up the nose of the plane so they added a feature that automatically pushed the nose of the plane back down after the lion air crash there was suspicion that it went into a nose dive because it was getting the wrong information and putting the plane into a dive saying that it was too high and so this software update relates to the system so that just sends a signal to a lot of people that something is wrong and that the f.a.a. is saying that but also not really making the decision that they're making you can
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see that there airlines in the united states that own a considerable number of these seven thirty seven x. models is is this a story right now about protecting the economics instead of going out on the limb right now and being more worried about protecting passengers and that's what people are asking well isn't that the great balancing act in the aviation industry right is you have a very complicated industry that moves very slowly money comes in very slowly you have these big line items to protect and a crash can ruin everything so you have a. geishas on one hand especially the regulator the f.a.a. but also you have to protect the businesses including the airlines the airlines still say they have confident but we're seeing more pushback from passengers also from flight attendants and pilots who are saying we want to be able to opt out all right stephen beard that is always the human demonstrators have returned to the streets of algeria as capital the day after president abilities beautifully said that he would not seek another term in office he also announced that next month's
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presidential elections would be delayed saying that he's responding to weeks of protests but many voters are not convinced that the eighty two year old will fall them through on his promise not to run again. echoes of the arab spring after nearly a month of popular protests eighty two year old who to flicker has bowed to public pressure and announced he will not now run for a fifth term as president but he pushed bonet the election to be held next month indefinitely. a day after the announcement thousands of demonstrators are back in the streets of the capital algiers demanding immediate political change. and that we are against any extensions any decisions to delay the elections or extend presidential terms we want to transition to governmental rule not sustain this corrupt government and we have to try to save his fifth term by extending his
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fourth term and postponing elections this is unacceptable and as a citizen i do not approve of this shihab i'm not coming up on the issue. we do not accept the extension that was announced but they said new elections would be coordination. that is fine as long as they are the sheffield elections. we simply do not accept this. this or that. into fleet has suffered a severe stroke in two thousand and thirteen and has rarely appeared in public since but on monday algerian t.v. ad footage of the ailing president in a meeting that included nurit in bed to eat the current interior minister who is not considered part of beautifully because in a circle has been named the new prime minister that's being seen as a sign that the old guard might really be releasing its hold on power. in the decade or now to the cd business of digging for sand in kenya illegal sand mining
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is a growing environmental threat a building boom in the nation's cities is driving demand for sand but digging it out has depleted water supplies and has even led to violence melanie cure of the bowl visited a district where the promise of quick can. from sandy having devastating consequences. it's a walk across the scarred landscape which. called home this used to be a river carrying drinking water for the community and their livestock in much tacos county kenya. that until centile is just started illegally mining the river bed leaving barely any sand told the water john fight to stop them but his activism has come at a high price. goes where no if somebody. helps also as a human being that you may be. john says san cartels are behind the illegal mining
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which feeds the demands of the country's rapid and i say should people in his community believe they won't stop the destruction until there is no sand left with no regard for those whose lives depend on access to the water is. when the sun is too hot and you come to look for water you find the levels have gone very low and this water is salty it's not good for washing clothes for drinking this water is bad and we sometimes catch diseases like typhoid. all over the country illegal sand harvesting is taking place in broad daylight the driver of this truck doesn't want to be filmed but tells us up to two hundred truckloads of sand are collected each day the illicit sand business is a lucrative one just not for the people in the communities where the sand is mind on the small group of sandy this cashes in on the sales where the people of much of
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course are divided between those who depend on the little money and from harvesting and those desperate to save the last puddles of water in the area but no matter which side they're on both groups suffer the dangerous and by mental and human cost of the data use and industries underbelly. many lives have been ruined or lost due to kenya sandra this is a thirty six year old farmer who lost her husband a centavo who died at work. said it happened on the seventh of march twenty fourth teen before he was scooping sand to sell. as they were scooping sand and taking underground the soil above him fell down and buried him. as does self as opposed to the sand harvesting which has caused an almost permanent drought in the region but she knows that many of
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these men who make just a few dollars a day feel like they have no choice. and with a little. present more with the problem that we visited on sunday job and we have families we have needs. we human being does and we truly hope to get chills but we just don't want to do that. john says it's a tragedy that men like matthew are being used by the cut tells and have become complicit in destroying the livelihoods of their communities he is asking politicians and police to find the stand up to those stealing much like a sand so that hopefully one day its rivers can recover. or thirty years ago today a song just named tim berners lee put the idea for the world wide web on paper you showed it to his boss's boss liked it and the rest as they say cyber history. the
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ability of just about anyone to contact everyone anywhere in the world is downs of this man tim berners lee as a young english physicist berners lee came up with a program language that enabled computers connected to the internet to exchange data. back then he was more concerned about linking academic computers around the world the science community and something else tim berners lee didn't get his language page in did the world wide web was free of charge from the beginning on that might have had something to do with how the internet swept and changed the world in such a short time. what we're getting to this point in just a few months when for the first time more than half the world will built will be online with calling it a fifty fifty moment and that's a moment where i think we've got to do two things firstly we've got to say what about the next fifty percent and there's a lot of challenge in how we're going to get everybody connected or even the most
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the majority of the world connected but it's also of course a lot to do to make the web better and whether that's dealing with privacy concerns with content online with governments censoring or cutting access to the web in different parts of the world there's lots to do to make sure that we're getting the web we want not a web that actually puts humanity because that's the downside enormously powerful tech conglomerates like facebook and google who collect collate and monetize personal data governments that spy on their citizens they make berners lee livid so nowadays he's working to help internet users regain control and ownership of their personal data. so all you need film called the keeper tells the story of a former nazi paratrooper in prisoner of war who became a footballing hero in england after the second world war. was interned by the allies but his talent for goalkeeping where it won the attention of talent scouts
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and eventually led to him playing for manchester city's f.a. cup winning saw. as portrayed in the film beth troutman was in the parachute division of the german army where he had won medals for hero ism after being captured towards the end of the second world war and sent to a british p.o.w. camp he was still a die hard nazi. trautman is portrayed by german actor david cross who is a self-confessed soccer fan and player the real truculence talent was noticed at the p.o.w. camp and he was taken on by a local side not easy considering the mood in britain playful calm the eagle shield . this night so well we will i cannot least ready. to have a life which. is cheering when you know you know this. and soon got to know what democracy is and changed his outlook on things but that didn't mean that he still didn't have to fight prejudice and sometimes pure hatred
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simply because he had been on the other side. the director marcus miller had actually met the real bad troutman years ago when the idea for the film first came up. the. you told me how it happened but also how it was to be a youngster back then hitler youth especially is a great source of abused into the myth and about the brainwashing. and how he only came to his senses amid the horrors of the war vias he thought when it was really too late and the focus was simply on survival even after being accepted by the local teams truckman had to face even more prejudice from the coaches daughter when she blamed germans for taking her from the dance floor to air raid shelters. i'd rather have to answer with you then start on some battlefield. and in this case love really did conquer all the to eventually marry. then
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came troughton's biggest career coup being hired by first division site manchester city yet people first protested but eventually relented and gave a chance and that pay dividends the team went all the way to the f.a. cup final in one nine hundred fifty six and despite trott on literally breaking his neck in the game he stayed on the pitch and manchester city went on to win it three one also making a legend. and also ensured a terrible family tragedy but from that too he could move on. troutman earned many honors both in england and germany he passed away in two thousand and thirteen at age eighty nine but with this film his legacy could well live on. and here's a reminder of that top story we're following for you britain's parliament has dealt a major blow to prime minister theresa may rejecting her boards of withdrawal deal
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just seventeen days before the u.k. is scheduled to leave the european union lawmakers are voted by three hundred ninety one to two hundred forty two against the deal the second time that they have defeated. the. rather to leave the european union without a deal at all. after a short break i'll be back to take you through the day we're going to have them please coverage team coverage of all the what has become a fateful day for more exit and perhaps for the british prime minister herself.
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the temple of technology. the return of the markets. the momentum
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of the morning. made in germany. your business magazine. d. w. . bush says he ruined. morrow a. symbol of a long conflict in the philippines. between the muslim. and the christian population. with us fighters occupied the city center in two thousand and seventeen president intelligence response was crucial. i. will never again look over. the reconquest turned into a tragedy. that's not the reason at all this is not the kind of freedom that new.
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how did we become a keek way to islamist terror. and now we see so many more c.d.'s that are still. an exclusive report from a destroyed city. in the philippines in the sense of i.a.s. starts april eleventh on t w. britain will leave the european union but not the way prime minister to resign may want it tonight the u.k. parliament again rejected the withdrawal plan that she negotiated with e.u. leaders a brags that delay is all but guaranteed we cannot say the same tonight about the future of prime minister teresa mayes power. this is the day.

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