tv DW News Deutsche Welle March 13, 2019 2:00pm-2:31pm CET
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this is deja vu news live from berlin children trapped in a collapsed building in nigeria the three story block cell town in the commercial capital lagos some children have been pulled from the rubble but scores more thought to have been buried. also coming up a debate is underway in britain's parliament ahead of a vote over no deal brags that lawmakers must decide today whether to crash out of the e.u. without a deal it's a scenario prime minister theresa may has tried for two years to avoid. she was trusted to guide and protect children instead one of the catholic church's most
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senior clergymen will go to prison for sexually abusing choir boys in australia. i'm sumi so much going to thank you for joining us we start with some breaking news from nigeria's commercial capital lagos a three story building has collapsed in the into fogey area of lego's local media and rescue officials say many people including children are trapped in the rubble now this is video of one of seven children who have been pulled out so far at the top floor of this building reportedly house or private elementary school with around one hundred students. let's go right to our correspondent following the story for us funny for char is in lagos she joins us on the line hi funny what is the latest that you can tell. about this building collapse. and my theory on this
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one and i'm not i don't know if we are all priests you know and besides this is knowledge of the people trying to grab you. it's just a more systemic checklist after this building and also the noise of machinery and also. parents who are anxiously trying to find out that it's just an i phone to be rescued that they're actually scrapped that they are among the people that he. will not respond to our company number seven computer number all those who are inside it's only between fifty to one hundred people. inside the building but just three stories still collapse sure enough to tell me i'm in mourning so as you can start an ad from the commotion in the background and what i can see right now a lot of commotion but also some chaos to see just because then going away the right to get out of the college coming to the next government more thing about this
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situation that just happened a couple of hours ago is completely healthy for a home and it's just been common people departed and how many people killed been taken out of this damaged building alive. when we are having some difficulty hearing you but we're looking at live pictures and we can understand very well it appears to be an incredibly dramatic situation a lot of people gathered there as you're just telling us and tell us more about where this took place in lagos where you're standing is a really heavily populated area. it is a heavily populated area however this is not made by god but if you make an island which is a rather more like a middle class although a very tall and who was apparently in this building on the top so it's a tiger or a private school now because it was a private school normally school classroom in such buildings a difference. or unlike the hoffman who will guard the building is it more people
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back there or don't kill philby i on the phone there was a whole lot of very. there was of course always reproduces the money come you know . what the for everything what a couple of months ago in a nearby thing. or something of course we both could be but not. really nobody here and they've all had a very. alright well those rescue operations as we said are continuing looking at live pictures here are some correspondent funny for char on the scene for us funny thank you very much will be coming back to you a little bit later. now britain's parliament is debating whether to leave the e.u. without a deal for a future relationship ahead of a vote later today prime minister theresa may is said she wants an orderly withdrawal and attempts to vote against a no deal gregg said but both deals that she's hammered out with the e.u.
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have been rejected by wide margins if lawmakers vote down a no deal gregg said today it is possible they will want to delay withdrawal but the e.u. says there will be no extension without some clarity about the u.k.'s intentions. more on the story now with our correspondents birchard masters in london and teri schultz is in brussels good to see you both what is it looking like today we have this vote looming over a no deal braggs and what are you hearing there. well i've been speaking to a lot of m.p.'s parliamentarians over the course of the morning and they're from different sides of the party divides but they really seem to agree on one thing and that is outside kaohsiung london i mean you're seeing you're hearing protests behind me it's really a very tense moment after the vote last night m.p.'s most of them don't want the u.k. to crash out of the european union in just two weeks time so we're expecting that
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in another vote later on today that m.p.'s are saying they don't want a so-called no deal bragg's it the future is extremely young clear and it puts really the ukase economic prosperity and also in the way security at its apparel so we are expecting that weight to go through later on today and then the question is will the parliamentarians in another vote then instruct the prime minister to go to brussels and ask for an extension of do is draw a period so for the u.k. to stay longer within the european union then the and of march and this seems to be the likely scenario parts what's really going to happen here in london nobody knows all right terry let's come to you in brussels it sounds like it very well could happen that theresa may could come back to the e.u. and ask for more time for an extension will brussels give her that time. leaders have said many times in the past that they would be willing to give the
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u.k. more time but negotiations were at a different a different position than now that there's been yet another rejection of the deal that was agreed among all twenty eight people are exasperated here in brussels and you had leaders this morning at the european parliament in strasburg saying look what's the use of giving them more time if they don't come back to us and finally tell us exactly what they want from this deal that we've already negotiated from their breaths their process why would we give them more time just to continue this very uncomfortable inconvenient expensive and chaotic process so i think that you know they really need to think and in the u.k. that time may very well be up michel barnier the chief negotiator said that this morning he's not in favor of automatically giving more time give or hushed up the peace negotiator said the same thing and this would have to pass all twenty seven e.u. governments remaining e.u.
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governments so there would be no way you could guarantee at this point that they would all be in favor of continuing the brics of process without more clear guidelines clear objectives from the u.k. to the e.u. once more clarity and get in london right now there is very little clarity of bigot interest in may we heard her say a little bit earlier today that the government has made funding available in the case of a no deal gregg's it how ready is the u.k. for that possibility. well the u.k. obviously has to prepare because in the worst case it's really only two weeks when the u.k. will leave the european union and it's getting ready in many fields not just funding generally made available but also it's looking at how to manage the borders it's puts its troops on standby over three thousand soldiers are at the ready this is also been announced they have also just today talked about import tariffs
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because that's an area of big concern to business they said that most of the import tariffs will be slashed in the event of no deal we've had a business reacting to that they say this is really not a way to run the country that there was too little consultation and also that for example for the car industry that wouldn't really resolve all the problems so really for business in particular the threat and everything that the government has done so far in order to to counteract that threat of a no deal has not been good enough terry what about for the you european union you know how concerned are you leaders that this confusion we're seeing in london will really affect the rest of the continent a factor for example commerce and trade and travel. well as they're get mentioned this announcement this morning that there would be a temporary twelve month new tariff program in place suddenly clearly shows that there's a lot of panic in the u.k. but if you look on the e.u.
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side much less changes for them of course nobody wants higher tariffs on european goods going into the u.k. most of all the british citizens themselves so i think that at this point there is a lot of confusion there is a lot of chaos but it's mostly on the u.k. side here on the in the e.u. they say they're still in the same position they have been for so many months waiting to hear from london what it wants and hopefully we'll hear more later today with this vote and possibly even into tomorrow but at this point things are much more calm and brussels and in strasbourg they are side of the water all right our correspondents teri schultz in brussels and very good mosques in london thank you very much. now to some other stories making news around the world 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 police pollution a social disaster
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a designation that gives the government access to more funds to use for emergency measures. 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 me an mar on such a mission the remains are now set for identification. the u.s. justice department has charged fifty mostly wealthy parents with fraud after they cheated to get their children into a league american universities including yale stanford and georgetown those charged include the c.e.o.'s of major companies and the hollywood actresses full of c. huffman and lori loughlin they allegedly conspired to falsify records and bribed college officials to influence the admissions process. an australian 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 a cathedral powell is the most senior among leading clergymen to be convicted of
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child sex abuse. 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 vatican treasurer registered as a sex offender for the rest of his life. case is just one of many that have rocked the church in recent months. last week cardinal philip 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 default former u.s. cardinal theodore mccarrick he had helped draft u.s. 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 hahn borrows at his entire church leadership resigned police are investigating hundreds
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of abuse claims in chile along with a major cover up the case of pope francis harvey 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 belonged to the pope's inner circle . the pontiff 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. you're watching news still to come we'll take a look at a new film tracing the rise of a former nazi paratrooper to football stardom in britain. 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 and indian controlled kashmir the two countries
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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 nine hundred eighty nine india accuses pakistan of supporting militant groups there islam about denies that charge in a d.w.i. exclusive our correspondent sonia found the car visited the family of the suicide bomber. earlier. this. remembers his son before he disappeared last year last month a car packed with explosives rammed a convoy of indian battle military troops killing more than forty. the blast just a few miles from here. then received news that the suicide bomber had been his own son. we were shocked we didn't think he could ever do something like this again one of three everyone started crying. who can take pride in this so many
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people have died in. the dark families this are the joint mass protests in two thousand and sixteen. he was injured and bedridden for months he lost a year of college. my son went to help a protest or who was hit by a bullet but he was also shot in the leg with security forces. he couldn't get over the incident. he didn't talk to us about it but he was seeding with anger every time he saw the military. it's a situation. too common in the region the family lost contact with our the last year. we knew he had become a militant. trying to find him but we couldn't but. no one really knew what when we can't reason points here. the military police make arrests and torture people it forces people to resist that's why young people want to join the militants
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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 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 other 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 beach. 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 stalked fears in the
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predominantly muslim body was done for independence b.c. as a place of people. at the district court in srinagar the capital of indian administered kashmir i'll give a credit to the legal system in the judiciary lawyer or feet defense teenagers arrested for protesting or providing logistical support for alleged militants. their basic rights she says entre protected fuelling resentment and anger runs a person is arrested he used to be explained why he was arrested he has to be here in access to his family members 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 producing them before a magistrate when they see these things why this why why i am not being treated as a normal person. today the city of srinagar has shut down after strike all by
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separatist groups. it's an all too common sight the. young people here it's almost impossible to have a normal life. we missed lessons when schools closed down because of the strikes are mothers worry we might get hit by a bullet if we go out to. everyone i can assure you i believe one has this anger that they're not their moments. they cannot go. with india and pakistan on high alert the recent tensions people in indian controlled kashmir are bracing for more protests strikes and by. the conflict that has already been smoldering the dickies. aircraft maker boeing and the us federal aviation administration are increasingly isolated and refusing to ground the boeing seven thirty seven max after sunday's fatal crash in
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ethiopia investigators there are sifting through the wreckage of the brand new seven thirty seven that crashed just minutes after taking off its european airline says the flight recorders will be sent abroad for analysis it was the second disaster involving a new seven thirty seven max after a crash in indonesia just five months ago many airlines and countries have now ground at the plane but the u.s. and boeing insist it is safe boeing has delivered around three hundred fifty of the planes and as orders for almost five thousand more. we have our correspondent that's 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
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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 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 a 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 and this is what i find is a little bit over the top since my four homes there's been two crashes and one hundred fifty people have died that's true but if you think about what happens on the march away you have to avoid that. was a decision to 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 of this it's still the safest way to travel with the plane i'm not concerned it's always like with your car you can have it fitted with
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a. new car too so i'm not concerned about that well certainly i am concerned but 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 a from the from the internet so i think today i take it. and praise not seven three seven. maybe next time i would take care four 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 new model it's 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 not trying to get too technical here but there is an automated system basically that will make sure the
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airplane doesn't get too steep of a level because it would lose lift under its wings so automatically it would 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 pokus and have all the questions surrounding this plane affected the travel industry overall. a 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 the lion is the widest cell sold aircraft
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entirely every two seconds somewhere on the on the on the planet one takes off or 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 it's 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. now to a new film that tells the story of a former german paratrooper and prisoner of war who became a football hero in england after world war two batch tough buns 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 and was in the parachute division of the german
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army where he had won medals for hero is a. 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. troutman is portrayed by german actor davi 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 gulf shores . this night mr waller and cannot we speak. words. in audio. troutman 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 simply because he had been on the other side. the director marcus miller had actually met the real bad troutman years ago when the
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idea for the film first came up. but also how it was to be a youngster back then a good lawyer youth especially is a great source of abused into the midmost they offend about the brainwashing what libya was and how he only came to his senses amid the horrors of the war vias he thought it was really too late in the focus was simply on survival even after being accepted by the local teams troutman had to face even more prejudice from the coach's daughter when she blamed germans for taking her from the dance floor to air raid shelters. and rather have to start on some better shoes. 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
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a chance and that paid dividends the team went all the way to the f.a. cup final in one nine hundred fifty six and despite troutman 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. 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 mine are not our top story here are frantic rescue efforts are underway in lagos nigeria after a three story building collapsed and scores of children are thought to be inside the top floor of the building reportedly housed a private elementary school with around one hundred still. coming up on
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t.v. news asia k. pop controversy the sex scandal that has sent south korea's news it industry into a stand. and traditional medicine is under threat in taiwan we'll tell you why. the fear of spanish we have so stories coming up on t.v. news they should just say. please. please please. please please. cutler.
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money little. by their culture. only a promise to. leave the jungle and return to the concrete and glass jungle but. the result reverse culture shock. was. the prize winning documentary from the forest starts first on t.w. . a city in ruins maro a. symbol of a long conflict in the philippines between the muslims and the christian population . lives treasures occupied the city center in two thousand and seventeen president to churches response was told. by general is going to have it again look i'm going up to. the reconquest turned into tragedy this is not the
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kind of freedom that we want. how did malawi become a gateway to islamist terror. an exclusive report from a destroyed city. film in the science of i.a.s. starts april eleventh on d. w. . illiam. this is due to a show coming up on the program the sex scandal rocking the world of the k. pop stars accused of keeping prostitutes and secretly filming sex videos find out what sent south korea's president history into a spin also coming up the health emergency for traditional chinese medicine in taiwan they have diagnosed the problem but can they find a remedy to save the industry. and the playbook for citizens rights to see how india is trying to make the call.
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