tv DW News Deutsche Welle March 13, 2019 10:00am-10:16am CET
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d.w. . this is deja vu news live from berlin britain faces a no deal breck's a vote today after teresa mayes second crushing defeat in part lawmakers will decide on whether to leave the e.u. without an agreement after two years of negotiations last night the prime minister's final deal to leave the e.u. was rejected by a massive margin also on the show. he was cross to guide and protect children instead one of the catholic church's most senior clergyman going to prison for
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sexually abusing boys. and after much of the world grounds the boeing seven thirty seven max would you still fly and want to put that question to passengers here in germany. i'm brian thomas thanks so much for joining us it is time for britain to get its act together that stern council coming from the use chief negotiator michel barnier ahead of a vote today in the british parliament lawmakers will be deciding whether to leave the e.u. without a deal on a future relationship now this follows last night's overwhelming rejection of prime minister may's final agreement with brussels. it was one of the biggest parliamentary defeats ever for a sitting prime minister many of the. dissenting votes came from within prime
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minister to resign may's own party as the results were announced it was clear may had lost her authority and her voice on a point of order with the speaker i profoundly agree the decision that this house has taken tonight i continue to belief that by far the best outcome is you know she's kingdom leaves the european union and orderly fashion with the. lawmakers were frustrated that we may have earlier failed to secure a watertight agreement in stroudsburg to limit the so-called backstop that would keep northern ireland in a customs union with the e.u. for you opposition leader jeremy called and said the defeat signaled that may's time was up the prime minister's run down the clock on their caucus rain run out on her maybe it's time instead we had a general election and the people get this thing through their government should be now you can lawmakers face a vote on whether to leave the e.u. with no deal at all some european leaders see that it's highly possible and better
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than giving in to the hard line brick city is a. likelihood of ability perhaps it is more than fifty percent i'm sure that this is what i feel but again the damage that this would cause would. fail in comparison with the damage that would be coles by conceding basically the destruction of the single market the british public is just as divided as their politicians with just sixteen days to go to the break the deadline no deal could be just around the corner. well well that let's go now to london and you have used baggage last joining us from strasburg a state of years max hoffman good morning to both of you let's start with london baggett what's it looking like after the massive defeat last night will we see a no deal bracks said today in parliament. well it's expected that paul newman is voting against just that scenario brian so we're expecting that
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m.p.'s really think that's crashing out of the european union at the end of march so in just two weeks time is for many of them something that they want to avoid at all cost and there is a vote later on and it's expected that it's going to voted against the question of cause what comes next and the government and really parliament here in the u.k. is an absolute disarray we don't know what's going to happen if you fell mentioned jeremy corbett in your piece of the door of the opposition asking for president actually and that's something that even us some loyalists into reserve mais own party all asking for so the future as of today extremely unclear ok if as expected as we just heard there from barry go on parliament kicks this very battered can down the road once again will the e.u. give london more time and a chance for more talks. there already been voices today brian politicians
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in the european union for example a minister in germany calling for a good explanation to actually accept an extension of this article fifty period effectively delaying gregg's it because they say if it were exactly the same position after this extension as now it's where's the benefit of that so they're asking the british government to come up with a plan what is this for do you want a second referendum or snap elections those are reasons possible reasons that have been given in the past for instance by the french president him in a room i call so asking the brits at the moment to come up with a plan like that doesn't seem very likely so the e.u. will be in a dilemma if the british government really asked for an extension it most likely will be without a very precise perspective for this extension what do they do then because there is a lot of sympathy for granting this extension but also like i said there's the
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argument where's the benefit of it if we're exactly in the same position afterwards ok a dilemma for the european union what about reason a baggett could she be forced to step down could there be snap elections after her humiliation in parliament last night. anything going to happen any day has bryan is really where living in exciting times here in the u.k. so for loyalists even saying that it's time for a for a fresh start and you know fresh energy but that against reason may has shown extraordinary resilience over the past months she has lost votes off of aids on dyspraxia process and she has also endured a lot of backstabbing from within her own party and nevertheless she really has soldiered on there are several people that are in the conservative party that are supposedly preparing for leadership elect you know for leadership contacts within the party but it's all speculation we don't know as as of today as of now we don't
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have any indication that may. is intending to to throw in the towel anytime soon and we have much more from big mosques in london next often as frostburg throughout the throughout the day for now thanks very much. let's check in with some of the other news at this hour in syria u.s. backed forces have shelled the final little strip of territory held by so-called islamic state that town bug reports scrivens joe hart is being cornered in a seven hundred square meter cluster of bombed out buildings some three thousand jobs have surrendered since monday to the mainly kurdish forces. south korea's parliament has passed legislation to combat air pollution after the country suffered especially high pollution levels earlier this month to last player pollution to be a social disaster designation that gives the government access to funding for emergency measures. the us justice department has charged fifty mostly wealthy
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parents with flawed after they cheated to get their children into a lead american universities including yale stanford and georgetown those charge include major c.e.o.'s of top companies and hollywood actresses felicity huffman and lori loughlin they allegedly conspired to falsify records and bribed college officials to influence the admissions process. it's to australia now where a court has sentenced cardinal george pell a former close advisor to pope francis to six years in prison he was found guilty of molesting two choir boys in the cathedral how's the most senior among leading clergymen to be convicted of child sex abuse. he used to be one of the most powerful men in the austrian catholic church but now george pell has fallen from grace sentenced to six years in prison the form of that he can trust be registered as a sex offender for the rest of his life. pelz case is just one of many that have rocked
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the church in recent months. last week french cardinal philip was convicted of covering up for a priest who serially abused boys he was given a six month suspended sentence and in february another blow for the church the pope defrocked former us cut an oath you don't mccarrick he had helped draft us church policy against abuse in the early two thousand but mccarrick was himself later found guilty of molestation. in two thousand and eighteen chilean bishop holland bottles and his entire church leadership resigned. police are investigating hundreds of the beast claims in chile along with a major cover up. the case of pope francis hawes because he had initially defended . but the jailing of george pell is perhaps one of the most damaging scandals for the catholic church the seventy seven year old belongs to the pope's in
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a circle. the pontiff disintegrate pressure to address to abuse issues last month he promised that abuses would be brought to justice but the scandals have already cost many to lose faith in the church and you can find more of that story at her website dot com now the news at our craft maker boeing in the u.s. federal aviation administration are increasingly finding themselves isolated in their refusal to ground the boeing seven thirty seven max following sunday's fatal crash. investigators there are sifting through the wreckage of the brand new seven thirty seven that crashed minutes after takeoff if european airlines says a flight recorders will be sent abroad or analysis this was the second disaster involving a new seven thirty seven accept for crash in indonesia under similar conditions five months ago. airlines and countries around the world have grounded the plane but the u.s. and boeing insist that it remains safe to operate these banners affecting flights
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across europe. for more on the story let's bring in paul bret's he's standing by for us at frankfurt international good morning to you paul what are people saying where you are is the boeing seven thirty so seven max a top issue for the flying public in frankfurt. well europe has banned this plane from taking off or landing here so since nobody is going to take one of these plans today the main worry is can i get to my flight on time but of course it's something that people talk about i spoke with a pilot earlier who said he had complete trust in the airplane but he's rather isolated speaking to some of the short short term ticket sellers here they mentioned they would certainly alert customers if they were about to buy a ticket that involved flying and airplane and i did ask some passengers around here let's have a look at what they said. i don't care about it but she will so i need to
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care about it to either i'm not worried because it's safe. i'm confident and i have all my confidence and i will see and know it so it's oh boy yeah right i hope that everything is going to be fine but meanwhile i'm just so human talk to rezone was an issue i think it's still like the statistical thing is like. don't. drive b.m.v. or whatever because they are more involved in precious i generally do feel safe flying it's one of the safest methods of travelling. it's always a question of luck you think. a lot of confidence from those passengers but boeing stocks are plummeting right now what's the company's crisis management plan and can boeing contain the damage to its brand and to its reputation. well so far boeing has responded very quickly but it hasn't responded in
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a way that really put much puts trust back in passengers they're still calling operators and asking if they're on one of these flights where they can change and yeah there's a lot of trust in general and some people don't care but there's also concern even the crews in the u.s. flight attendants are asking the head of american airlines to stop this plane from taking off and boeing has not yet responded in the way that really puts back trust in in in the plane model. even though there is a software update for the plane that's been in the workings since that crash in october from a liner in the nisha but that won't be available until april ok this is one of the three of the seven of these three hundred seventy of these in service hundreds more in the pipeline said for for delivery how could the boeing max questions affect the overall travel industry. well in europe you mentioned almost
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five thousand planes this is a very very important plane the seven three seven line in general every two seconds one of these is taking off or landing in one part of the world now the seven three seven max in particular won't be affecting europe as much as there aren't as many planes here but it very much will affect the. asia pacific region where a lot of these planes are china has grounded almost one hundred of them and also the u.s. where a lot of these planes are flying and it's not just the airlines it's also two operators that will be affected if they cannot use this plane to to operate. christian birds for us today at frankfurt international also very much for the. let's get your mind of our top story at this hour the british parliament is due to vote today on whether to leave the e.u. without a deal on any future relationship lawmakers last night firmly rejected the latest draft agreement secured by prime minister theresa may in brussels.
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this is deja vu news live from berlin stay tuned for our dock film secrets of the stone age that's coming up next don't forget it always find out more about these and other stories or a website interview dot com i'm dr thomas for the entire news team thanks to. the floods have taken everything they own now despair is lift up the climate refugees. they seek shelter in the capital to come but even here the waters are rising and. the floods the church. d.w. .
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