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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  March 13, 2019 12:00pm-12:31pm CET

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this is news live from berlin britain say says a no deal brecht's its vote today after theresa may second a crushing defeat in parliament lawmakers will decide on whether to leave the e.u. without an agreement after two years ago she. also coming up she was trusted to guide and protect children instead one of the catholic church's most senior clergymen will go to prison for sexually abusing choir boys in australia. after
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much of the world rounds the boeing seven thirty seven max judge would you still fly in one would put that question to air travelers here in germany. plus did you talk to the family of a suicide bomber who brought india and pakistan to the brink of war the military and police might arrest and torture people it forces people to resist that's why people want to join the militants everybody wants to pick up a gun. our correspondent goes to kashmir for a look at what's fueling conflict in the disputed preacher. i'm sunni so misconducts going to have you with us they use chief breaks a to go she says britain would need to justify any request to delay its departure from the block now if. british lawmakers reject a no deal bragg's it in
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a vote later today the next step is to decide whether to ask the e.u. to push back a march twenty ninth that line with just over two weeks ago parliament has clearly rejected both deals prime minister theresa may has reached with the e.u. . it was one of the biggest parliamentary defeats ever for a sitting prime minister many of the dissenting votes came from within prime 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 this is because i profoundly agree to the decision that this house has taken tonight i continue to believe that by far the best outcome is the united kingdom leaves the european union and an 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. . position leader jeremy called and said the defeat signalled that may's time was
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up the prime minister's run down the clock on the caucus rain run out on or maybe it's time instead we had a general election and the people could think who their government should be now you can lawmakers face a vote on whether to leave the e.u. with no deal at all and some european leaders see that it's highly possible and better than giving in to the hard line brick city is. a likelihood of ability to break cities more than fifty percent i'm sure that this is what i feel but again the damage that this would cause would. bail in comparison with the damage that would be caused 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. to get used to. mine is in strasburg tracking reactions to london's deadlock over bragg
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said he spoke to manfred vapor leader of the european peoples party in the e.u. parliament missive evil isn't the time to tell the brits we need a clean cut hard it's better than the circus of the worst case scenario. is closer than ever before so we are running in this scenario for the moment having this is really the worst case scenario isn't the worst to have something that drags on for months leading uncertainties always in that scenario sparking speaking about millions of people who have no certainty about the living conditions that's why it is or it is a worst case scenario and and again we're running in this direction mo than ever before and and the key question is now we have the decision on the prolongation obviously on the table and i will not support any kind of prolongation if we get not a clarification from the british side what they want to achieve because i said it's a basic problem they have no much surety in favor of anything they only have only my treaties against any sense but if they don't give you
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a clarification and ask for an extension you say that then no. yes isn't that the same problem as you just mentioned because then you have the uncertainty and you're forcing the worst case scenario if the british side is not capable to give as an ounce of what they want to do is suppress that outcome of the referendum which they cannot conclude if the political class fails so totally in great britain then because europeans cannot solve separatist on mystic internal problems that's a situation we are ready even gave additional confirmations and different additional messages to our friends and for it to be clear that backstop is only temporary solution so it's really up to them he cannot verify their problems that's up to them if they are not capable to do so then problematic situation will become do you feel like they are capable at the moment you know they are not capable that it would be easy you know that we have the heartbreak cities we have those who are . who are against any kind of president we have are more interested in regime
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change in a governmental change in great britain more focusing on domestic issues and these three camps are blocking any constructive pro prosecution maturity in the house of commons and again that's only what i can analyze but i cannot change it as an european politician but i have to guarantees that see tragedy and. is not infecting now the european decision making process the europeans have to vote on the twenty sixth of may for the future of this continent and we have to do this on our own will of what we want to do in the future and that's why we have to clarify things. thank you very much. all right let's a check announce mother stories making news around the world in syria u.s. backed forces have shelled the final strip of territory held by the so-called islamic state in the town of boggles one report described the jihad as a cornered in a seven hundred square meter cluster of bombed out buildings some three thousand
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jihadists have surrendered to the mainly kurdish forces since monday. south korea's parliament has passed legislation to combat air pollution after the country suffered especially high pollution levels earlier this month the new laws declare pollution us social disaster a designation that gives the government access to more funds to use for emergency measures. i mean maher has handed over to the us a box of remains believed to be of american airmen lost in world war two it is the first time an american military aircraft has been to be in mar on such a mission the remains are now set for identification. and that the u.s. justice department is charged fifty mostly wealthy parents with fraud after they cheated to get their children into elite american universities including yale stanford and georgetown those charges include c.e.o.'s of major companies and the hollywood actresses felicity huffman and lori loughlin they allegedly conspired to
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falsify records and bribe college officials to influence the admissions process. an australian court has sentenced cardinal george powell a former close advisor to pope francis to six years in prison for child sex abuse the vatican's former finance minister was found guilty of molesting two choir boys twenty eight years ago he is the most senior catholic cleric to be sentenced for child sex abuse. let's bring in our religious affairs correspondent martin got the story hi martin as you said most senior member of the clergy to be charged with historical child sex abuse how significant is this is very significant but the story has been very significant from the very moment that the vatican the pope in particular allowed him to return to australia to freeze charges those were the terms in which it was put back then i mean you said he's the most in your view you're in the vatican in the road to going higher t. and it's also an extremely extremely visible figures sort of in greece and church
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politics so that goes to say that this actually a very significant case what's important to note that we actually weren't allowed to talk about this case until just a few weeks ago when the court lifted a gag order let's take a closer look now at cardinal pell's case and also some of the other cases that are currently rocking the catholic church. he used to be one of the most powerful men in the australian catholic church but now george pell has fallen from grace sentenced to six years in prison the form of that he can trash be registered as a sex offender for the rest of his life. case it's just one of many that have rocked 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 u.s. carbonneau theodore mccarrick he had helped draft u.s.
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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 han barrios and his entire church leadership resigned police are investigating hundreds of abuse claims in chile along with a major cover up. the case of pope francis hard 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 inner circle. the pontiff is under great pressure to address the clergy abuse issue last month he promised that abuses would be brought to justice but the scandals have already cost many to lose faith in the church. martin let's take a look at the case of cardinal pell he was a close advisor of pope francis so how close is he really to the pope i mean there
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was a bit of a political alliance that had to do with the fact that both king would have very strong reform agenda particularly bell was very concerned with vatican finances and have been very vocal over the about the existence of the vatican bank. in when the pope i mean when friends is going to see he appointed belled to essentially oversee that operation at the very same time i mean these were not close friends so to say i mean they come from very very different political political corners well bo was somebody that within the context of essentially. got the lead church was seen as somewhat of a liberal he still belong to something that was clear to the right of this pope so in a sense it came as a bit of a surprise when the pope actually allowed him to first testify in front of poster no authority from rome he was like this into the gritty knowledge to the er and on a t.v. line which would sit me or would would melbourne i believe that at the very same time it was remarkable actually to essentially the lever into the hands of us
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really know authorities where there was really no precedent for such a thing taking place it comes at a time when the pressure really is rising on the catholic church to deliver clear outcomes on how it will address sexual abuse in its ranks is anything changing with that pressure my sense is that there have been major changes and i mean in the last couple of weeks we have essentially three very big stories we have macquarie coup was defrocked perhaps belatedly i mean he's leaving you know a retired life in guns but it's still a very very senior figure in the american church no the bell case but also the pope's reaction to the summit of the sexual abuse in which he turned on his church and accused him quite directly of covering up rape and off you saying i mean you're allowing essential child pornography within the church and seven or so these are very big. big gestures some of them but at the very same time the fact that we are beginning to see justice investigating charge operations is
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a major the element in the story and i think that if you blinked you would not see it but paying attention to greeley shows a change in the tide ok our religious affairs correspondent martin thank you very much welcome. here watching news still to come boeing seven thirty seven max is banned for much of the world sky after the ethiopian airlines crash but the u.s. still backs the popular track we asked travelers to if they could fly a plane. and football turns a nazi paratrooper into a british hero we have a look at a new film based on his from mark approaches for starters. but first just a few weeks ago india and pakistan came close to a full blown armed conflict after a suicide attack on indian troops in indian controlled kashmir the two countries have been locked in a dispute over this region for decades an armed insurgency has been under way in the indian administered part since one thousand nine hundred nine india pakistan of
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supporting militant groups there is denies that charge and a day to be explosive our correspondent sonia found the car visited the family of the suicide bomber. this is how dark remembers the sun before he disappeared last year last month a car packed with explosives rammed a convoy of indian pattern military troops killing more than forty just. the blast just a few miles from here shook the family's home. then received news that the suicide bomber had been this own son. we were shocked we didn't think he could ever do something like this again one hundred three everyone started crying. who can take pride in this so many people have died in. the dark families says are they'll join the mass protests in two thousand and sixteen. he was injured and bedridden for months he lost a year of college was. just my son went to help
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a protester who was hit by a bullet but he was also shot in the leg the security forces. he couldn't get over the incident. i suppose is one idea of that other he didn't talk to us about it but he was seething with anger every time he saw the military on the water so. it's a situation says is all too common in the region the family lost contact with our the last year. we knew he had become a militant. trying to find them but we couldn't. no one really knew where when we can't raise our voice here. the military and police make arrests and torture people it forces people to resist that's why young people want to join the militants everybody wants pick up a gun it wasn't only my child even well educated young people are joining the movement have got to do it we're not terrorists our children are not terrorists
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military personnel are not terrorists it's politicians who are the terrorists. and armed insurgency against indian who first began here in one thousand nine hundred. the fos mall and now authorities say it's increasingly drawing local recruits like are the dark they come from villages like this one in the southern part of the kashmir valley considered a hotbed of militancy. official figures show last year alone security forces killed more than two hundred fifty militants in the region. since the recent escalation in tensions between india and pakistan the indian army has intensified its crackdown here. in recent years the rise of the hindu nationalist b.g.p. party and the tough approach to the region has also still fears in the predominantly muslim body was done for independence from what they see as oppressive. at the district court in srinagar the capital of indian administered
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kashmir i'll give a credit to the legal system in the judiciary lawyers defense teenagers arrested for protesting or providing logistical support for alleged militants. their basic rights she says on to protect fuelling resentment and anger runs a person is arrested he used to be explained why he was arrested he used to be an access to his family member he used to be given access to the legal aid all these things are denied to him he's kept in police station for days together for months together without any remodelled without good. producing them before a magistrate with. these things why this why why i'm not being treated as a normal person. today the city of treatment has shut down. separatist groups. it's an all too common sight in the battle. for young people here it's almost impossible to have
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a normal life. we missed lessons when schools closed down because of the strike mothers worry we might get hit by a bullet if we go out. every day i can assure you i believe one has this anger that they're not their movements. they cannot go. with india and pakistan on high alert the recent tensions. in indian controlled kashmir are bracing for more protests strikes and by the us. a conflict that has already been smoldering to take its. aircraft maker boeing and the us federal aviation administration are increasingly isolated and refusing to ground the boeing seven thirty seven max following sunday's fatal crash in ethiopia investigators there are sifting through the wreckage of the brand new seven thirty seven that crashed minutes after taking off its european airlines say
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the flight data recorders will be sent abroad for analysis it was a second disaster involving a new seven thirty seven max after a crash in indonesia just five months ago many airlines and countries are have now grounded the plane but the u.s. and boeing insist that it is safe boeing has delivered about three hundred fifty of the planes it has orders for almost five thousand more. but we have our correspondent. standing by for us at frankfurt international airport he's covering the story for us and so what are people there saying where you are is the boeing seven thirty seven max really an issue for people flying there. well here in europe the plane is banned it cannot take off it cannot land and it cannot even enter the airspace so people here in frankfurt at the international airport they will not be boarding a seven three seven max and they can go back to worrying about getting on to their flight on time for that but they're still talking about it i ran into
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a young pilot this morning who said he had complete confidence in in the aircraft although that seems to be a little bit of an isolated incident i talked to ticket sellers here who said they would certainly raise the issue if they were to book a ticket for a passenger that would be operated with the seven three seven max and i also talked to passengers this morning and let's see what they have to say. i see from this invisible i find it a little bit over the top since my fulcrum is it's been two crashes and one hundred fifty people have died that's true but if you think about what happens on the motorway you have to avoid that. as a safety has to be a priority and we need to find out what caused it but i think the response is a bit over the top because it's still the safest way to travel the plane i'm not concerned it's always like with your car you can have it fitted with a. new car too so i'm not concerned about that well certainly i am
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concerned i don't believe the plane was flying today is one of those so i think i'm pretty good shape i saw the news of from the west from the internet so i think today i take. praise not save us three salmon. maybe next time i would take care for days maybe to a white say residents say when they say. so we had some mixed voices there and you said you did speak to a pilot this morning who seemed confident in this aircraft but even some pilots have warned about this model why is that. that's true it is a a new model has only been on the market since two thousand and seventeen so it's not an issue of age but there is a certain feature in it that has bugs some pilots and i am not trying to get too technical here but there is an automated system basically that will make sure the airplane doesn't get in too steep of a level because it would lose lift under its wings so automatically it would
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correct bring the nose down and that's fine if it's working all right but pilots have complained that it isn't working all right and that the nose goes down in situations where it shouldn't now that is an issue and it's an issue that came up in october of last year when the lion air plane crashed and since then boeing has been working on a software update but that is not supposed to come until april pocus and have all the questions surrounding this plane affected the travel industry overall. the travel industry is mostly affected in the asia pacific region where there are a lot of planes china has only china has grounded almost one hundred of these planes the boeing seven three seven a lion is the widest cell sold aircraft entirely every two seconds somewhere on the on the on the planet one takes off or
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lands it will also or it would also have ramifications for the u.s. where there is a very large fleet although the. authorities there have yet to ban the plane from taking off and of course this is also affecting operators travel operators who will depend on these flights to go to the destinations our correspondent that's at frankfurt international airport good to talk to you. too a new film now that tells the story of a former german paratrooper and prisoner of war who became a football hero in england after world war two that's tough man's talent for goalkeeping during prison break time eventually led him to manchester city's f.a. cup winning team in one thousand nine hundred fifty six take a look. as portrayed in the film back troutman was in the parachute division of the german army worried he had won medals for hero is a. after being captured towards the end of the second world war and sent to
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a british p.o.w. camp he was still a die hard nazi. troutman 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 play football the gulf shores . this night so well we will not cannot we study. or have a life which. is. in iowa this i've. 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 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. vs. if you told me how it happened but also how it was to be
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youngster back then hitler youth especially is a great in the mid malls they offend 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 if the focus was simply on survival even after being accepted by the local teams truckman had to face even more prejudice from the coach's daughter and she blamed germans for taking her from the dance floor to air raid shelters. and drop that dance with you then start on some fantasy. and in this case love really did conquer all the to eventually marry. then came trout ones biggest career coup being hired by first division side 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 on literally breaking his neck
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in the game he stayed on the pitch and manchester city went on to win it three one also making a legend. 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. or minor now of our top story on g.w. the british parliament is due to vote today on whether to leave the e.u. without a deal on a future trade relationship lawmakers last night firmly rejected the latest draft agreement secured by prime minister theresa may in brussels. and don't forget you can always get your news on the go download or out from google play or from the app store that will give you access to all the latest news from around the world as
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well as push notifications for any breaking news you can also use the data to send us your photos and your videos. coming up our show main we'll be looking at the pressure of being any professional sports and the pressure of south korea's rigorous education system that's coming up in just a few minutes on.
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moved. up. just how to get to terry and his journey. is well compensated family. and who decides how much
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it's worth. but the focus on. productive easy. pace. and the pressure from living in an increasingly on school society and. made in germany next on d w. might not look on that appetizing. but they're very popular with your mate. c.q. cumbers. curious sea creatures are found in southern madagascar and come courting too strict ecological regulations above they know the rules safeguarding natural. law sixty minutes on to the. pole or.
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the players the table. the stage petroleum comes in a good deal of money the competition is fierce for its most important natural resource. betting checking how long will they be able to play in the whip good but you look at the investigation starting march eighteenth fall d.w. . it seems the only thing that counts these days is performance there's constant pressure on the job and sports even in the family do your job and do it well but
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every really determined by that our performance achievement results really what counts and how do we measure achievement and how important is it.

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