tv DW News Deutsche Welle March 14, 2019 11:00am-11:31am CET
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not everyone who walks books has to go insane. d.w. literature list hundred screens play. player. play. this is d.w. news live from berlin the british parliament rejects leaving the e.u. without a deal a day after saying the deal that is on the table is no good in a series of votes lawmakers deliver another blow to prime minister tree said made by rejecting her brakes at strategy and there's yet another vote today on the lake . to search for survivors is out for now begins the search for answers after
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a deadly building collapse in nigeria it is still uncertain how many people including children were inside. black boxes found from the ethiopian airlines crash go to paris for analysis and new evidence prompts the u.s. to join a long list of countries that are grounded the boeing seven thirty seven max model involved in the crash. also coming up the boys and girls living under the shadow of we're. going to go out without someone kidnapping me before i don't tell no fighters the cold and no bombing couldn't help laughing kids avoiding me in syria enters its ninth year we hear from those it has hurt the worst children. i've seen you so much going to thank you for joining us. more drama. specked in the
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british parliament today after lawmakers rejected a no deal with drawl from the e.u. voting last night paves the way for another vote today to delay britain's exit date beyond march twenty ninth then it is up to the e.u. to decide if it will grant an extension for the british prime minister this week has been a punishing one. another vote another defeat the right three two one the most the left two hundred seventy eight. veterans of british politics eighty can remember nothing like it britain's fee brio parliament wrestling back control from to reason may. thousands today devise a clear majority against leaving the house a deal however i repeat what i have said the five. to make matters wash the prime minister's voice like many in her party has disaster tarr several of her own ministers voted against her wishes the house was calm and so. for a long time to go through
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a subsequent various eco the options before us the same as they always have. we could leave we could leave with the deal which this government is negotiation because to yes we could leave with the deal we have to negotiate the subject to a second referendum but that there's risk no bracks it has all. opponents from all sides pounded the prime minister but signs that ultimatum may have rattled even the hardest line breaks it appears and how party will not without damaging her credibility secure extending out because if i think. you know you can fix the toeava bill i brought up the field of neighborhoods i didn't think of like i know this is terribly technically for the kids and they're probably all cut up to the back teeth of the whole thing you know but it's really important because not only do we have a government in complete crisis but we also have a prime minister city even if you just to listen to pop
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a makes promises of the dispatch balls which were in the piece to break you see say this is really really unacceptable. this morning's papers tell the story of a night of high drama threats and rebel. and i want to be true resume a rolls the dice once more back my deal next week and with it a short extension to membership or to find you once more and risk losing briggs it all together. let's bring in our correspondent bob levey so she's standing by for us in london with the latest about russia tourism a we heard there in that report saying the options before us are the same that they have always been is that true what is actually on the table right now. that's one of teresa mayes favorite sentences you remember sumi nothing has changed that's what she lives by so what she has part of the table today in the house of parliament here behind us is
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a motion to say we asked the e.u. for a short extension of up to three months and we will do it again next week on the brics strolled agreement and assuming that it's passed then we hope the e.u. is scroungers the extension for technical reasons to get all the legislation across so that is her point of view this is called here and these three meaningful votes three because we have to remember this egremont this deal has been resoundingly defeated already twice two days ago was the last time bought by putting the gun against the head of the hard line breaks here is treason may now hopes to sort of change her fortune and push it through the house of parliament and at the moment problem and sharon's on both sides of opposition and to the conservative party are still working up further amendments and there will be some asking for a longer extension to rethink breck's it to sort of go back to the basics and then
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maybe even some further variations we don't know yet i will come out during the day however this is a crucial day in westminster and chaos reigns in bricks of britain chaos indeed barbara with the resulting defeats that the prime minister. suffered in parliament can't reason they really still stay in power. good question there is some bricks that cheers who say that's a rumor from last night if she promises to step down more or less immediately we will vote for the deal for the withdrawal agreement that hasn't yet been confirmed but they talk a lot when the day is long but treason may under normal circumstances would have had to step down three times over these are not normal times and she is clinging on and pushing and pushing and nobody really at the moment is ready to shoot her down
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and replace or and barbara just briefly if you can what are we expecting then for the vote later today. there is no telling there's no telling what the mood of the house is there's no telling where the majorities might fall so we have to wait to the crossed party groups will put on the table and there might be and i was surprised like we had last night and the day before and the night before so joy fun and games in britain will go on in westminster here particularly and all of service nobody dares at the moment to somehow come out with this light to sort of look ahead all this light just type of prophecy all is up for grabs here in the british parliament all right barbara vale following the fun and games for us there in london thank you very much. well we can all speak to david mcallister from chancellor merkel's conservative c.d.u. party he is a member of the european parliament and he joins us from stress or mr mcallister
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thank you very much for joining us first off we should say that you are a german m.e.p. but you were also half scottish witnessing the chaos of the last few days in the british parliament i think it's safe to say it is an precedented what do you make of it. well this is all unprecedented perhaps it's even unbelievable grotesque or bizarre but anyhow we take note of all the decisions in the house of commons the one on tuesday evening the one yesterday evening and now we're waiting for the next decision today and then we will make up of wind one thing is clear if you are determined to leave the european union that are two options you either leave the european union on the basis of a withdrawal agreement or you leave the utopian union without an agreement these are the two options and this is what the house of commons will have to decide we negotiated the withdrawal agreement eighteen months with the u.k. government and that the prime minister will have
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a further attempt to get it through the house of commons she should go for it but in the meantime we will just wait and drink a cup of english tea mr mcallister you sound a little bit exasperated i think it's safe to say that there are some others there in strasbourg who share that feeling donald to president of the european council has said today that he will appeal for a long extension for the u.k. to rethink its brakes its strategy build some consensus maybe rethink breaks entirely what do you think that do you think agree with that initiative. if you u.k. asked to extend the article fifty talks we will then have a closer look at this request it certainly will have to be credible on the one hand and convincing on the other hand you have to differentiate between a short extension until the european elections from my point of view the latest date would be the twenty second of may if time is required to get the deal through
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the house of commons and in the end we get an orderly breaks and organized i think the e.u. twenty seven member states would be willing to accept this but if a longer extension is asked for way beyond the european elections ben we need a fundamentally different political attitude in london then we will really have to sit down and see how we can explain to not only the members of european parliament to all people involved why the u.k. should remain part of the european union much longer than european elections and of course there's also the alternative that the u.k. could revoke the article fifty procedure mr mcallister does the e.u. have to take any blame for the cast that we're seeing in london i mean was brussels a too tough on the u.k. in negotiating this deal essentially creating a deal that the british parliament could not support. no i don't believe so we didn't ask for this british withdrawal it was a u.k.
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decision we negotiated the withdrawal agreement for one and a half years both sides had to make compromises difficult compromises not only for the british side also for us and we have this withdrawal agreement ready since november and since we are waiting for the u.k. side to move we accepted all the british red lines but two points are really important for us the one is we need to maintain the stability and the peace in northern ireland and the other point is that we have to protect the integrity of our single market and beyond that we are ready to accept all compromises and the u.k. government was ready to sign the withdrawal agreement but it's obviously the house of commons which is not capable of finding a majority decision but if we don't find any kind of support for the withdrawal agreement then in the end we will be heading for the scenario nobody really wants
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a no deal break city and that would be the worst outcome of all possible alternatives for a given mcalister member of the european parliament joining us from strasburg thank you very much thank you to. now to some other stories making news around the world a large oil slick is heading towards the southwest coast of france days after a cargo ship caught fire and sank in the atlantic the italian ship was carrying what authorities described only as dangerous materials a french authorities say they will deploy several vessels to battle the spill. the trial of a viet mean vietnamese woman accused of assassinating the half brother of north korea's leader kim jong un is to continue after prosecutors rejected a bid to free her donte hwang's lawyer sharply criticize the decision for indonesian codefendant was released by authorities on monday. south korean police
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have questioned two k. pop stars over sex scandals singer soaring gree is suspected of supplying business investors with prostitutes he denies any wrongdoing another singer judging young is accused of sharing secretly filmed sex videos both men announce that they're leaving the entertainment industry. in nigeria emergency workers have halted their efforts to rescue people in lagos after at least ten were killed when a building collapsed the top floor of the multi-story building hold a private elementary school a more than thirty people many of them children have been rescued from the rubble but it is unclear how many of the rescued will survive now after one day and night of rescue efforts emergency workers say they are no longer looking for bodies. there carol so i'm considering going down to a large. local authorities say a building housing a private elementary school i'm the nursery on the top floor of
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a residential apartment block collapsed late on wednesday morning with around one hundred students and so i determined in class. never forgot it wasn't fired i was just surprised and i kind of doing now start with people leaving aside. such a common freshman just help me to the hospital on this one because the student an accountant the little guy is so tied to our side i got that kind of space to say i have somebody does a lot of the food that's the judge in this that's a sofa. while rescue operations were underway emergency services said that if it's to be in computers and by how densely populated area making it tough to keep from a city with a population of twenty million and growing law gross is one of the biggest cities on the african continent it was not immediately clear why the building collapsed
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but such incidents are not on call and in nigeria critics say that often calls by unscrupulous investors cutting corners on materials bribes being paid for illegal building permits. you're watching news still to come growing up in syria's war we hear about the damage done nine years that these kids can never get. but first the black boxes recovered from a boeing seven thirty seven max that crashed in ethiopia have been flown to paris for further analysis around forty countries around the world have grounded the aircraft model involved in the weekend disaster all one hundred fifty seven people on board the flight were chilled the u.s. is one of the latest to ban the plane under emergency orders from president trump it but where do the pressure had become too great after numerous countries banned the boeing seven thirty seven max from the skies u.s. president donald trump finally followed suit as if there's anything like you have
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planes that are in the air will be grounded. if they have the seven thirty seven max will be grounded upon landing at the destination for safety of the american people at all people is our paramount concern a crash in ethiopia on sunday. a similar disaster in indonesia last october satellite images suggest a pattern in the way both planes fell from the sky in a statement the federal aviation administration said that new evidence about the crash in ethiopia had led to the grounding of seven thirty seven maxes in the u.s. the ban came into effect at noon on wednesday causing jitters among those taking the plane's final flights. i prayed little bit more than usual i think like you said on my hands so i had to make it on the plane despite complaints by pilots that the aircraft had faulty software the authorities had been reluctant to act american airlines united and southwest were allowed to keep flying the max boeing's latest commercial jet. was the government trying to protect boeing the company is an
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important pillar of the u.s. economy only last month from boasted about the sale of around one hundred seven thirty seven maxes to vietnam yet days always had a conflict when they were established by an act of congress they were supposed to make it in for safety policy and then promote the visibility ation they can't do both a day earlier boeing c.e.o. dennis mullen had pleaded with trump to keep the seven thirty seven max airborne. but in congress growing support for a ban bridge the party divide. every one of these planes should be grounded right away. they are accidents waiting to happen the grounding of the plane has please many passenger safety advocates in the u.s. but it's another blow for boeing and one from which the aerospace giant may take a while to fully recover. u.s. backed forces say they have advanced further into the last bits of territory under the control of the so-called islamic state footage released by kurdish fighters
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purportedly shows fighting for the enclave by groups a group of militia have said the battle for the area is nearly over but for manning i-s. fighters are putting up stiff resistance and this comes as dozens of countries have gathered in brussels for a donor conference on syria chaired by the e.u. and un it's aimed to secure billions in funding for victims of the conflict now as the war in syria enters its ninth year unicef says two thousand and eighteen was the deadliest for children we hear now from syria's children speaking out from the ruins of the countries as well as from refugee camps in the streets of lebanon and turkey where many are trying to make a new life. my benefit neither side's going to bring a solution the government's not resigning it's shelling us and the opposition aren't backing down either they're firing back and we're in the middle getting hurt as it is not of god we live in permanent fear when we get home there's no water or
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electricity we're always afraid that planes will drop something on us when they fly over even afraid here it's cool we wake up in the middle of the night from the noise of the explosions. we kept getting bombed nobody helped us. it was raining bombs on the buildings a lot of the streets you couldn't move around here you had to stay at home there were some friends around and sometimes we'd be together but once a bomb fell close by and i got hit on the arm. i never i'm afraid of blood and i'm afraid to see a dead body. or somebody who's been beheaded or somebody has been shot dead with bullets that's what i'm afraid of. just after we got on the truck a plane fired on us yeah you can do that but suddenly everything was burning the blood and everything was black around us. but. two of
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my brothers died in the civil war one of the two days before we left a lot of planes came and bombed the mosque they came and went and they fired rockets and lots of people died. so there are. all around the route were burnt out cars and there was an explosion. my brother suffered minor shrapnel wounds. in aleppo we couldn't sleep at night because of the air raids. that's why we fled you know. why. i'd like to be alone and have nice things to help i'd like to go out without someone kidnapping me for far i don't have no fighters the one and no bombing couldn't. have back my fear but oh. the mess that's
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the only thing i want is to see my friends again and to go back to my old school. every morning when i see the turkish kids going to school happy and i think why aren't we allowed to do that. was a cameo if an organization came and took me to study i would go with them maybe they would give me a better life. style house and have them of course i'd rather go to school but it's just not possible we have to pay a lot of rent and food the water bill everything is expensive that's why i need to work and help my family. i have to get married because of our situation there are many things i need that i can't get i don't have any married friends and don't really know what marriage is. the generation whose life is lost
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because dreams have been broken by war we are the generation that has grown too old but too soon and for more on the story we can speak to hendrick harbors he heads of the syria response program at war child holland that's an ngo working to help children affect affected by war and conflict and it is helping syrian children who are living as refugees in neighboring countries hundred thank you for joining us from the work that your organization has done what do these children need most and how do you help them. so what we see in addition to the lifesaving neet is a lot of meat a lot of support me get for psycho social intervention and prejudice psychosocial is really better how we deal with what they've experience for other war troll moss so they dig in and strengthen their own resilience and be able to freeze like daily life in a normal way and that will allow them to be able to go back to normal education so
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that there are two very educational level that they need to go back to school but also to go back to having a hope for to future and the stock and rebuilding at lax. how much does that trauma affect them also the violence and in some cases loss. well all things dave experiences are catching them a lot we see a lot of children being aggressive something that we've drawn from her social engagement to her birthday p.s. so it has a very much that effect on them and a good news is that this doesn't have to be a permanent state this can be overcome and assume that it took psychosocial interventionists offer to them to better it is the better doctors else up to soon and they will be resilient again and be strengthened in what you need to do for the shooter and go back to normal education the war is entering its ninth year so these are kids who in part have missed that many years of school and also haven't had access to basic health care for example what does the international community need
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to do to address this. well how so many years of conflict is there's no simple answer there's a multiple of needs and what we plead for this war child is a recognition knows the importance of child social interventions and education that right at the beginning and not at a later stage so what needs to be done is helping children to overcome what they've experienced and making sure that this is possible to go back to school and we'll have some of the good the same get into the previous item as well carry out for years not only to go back to normal life but also to rebuild a life in that oprah church and if you mention that a big donor conference is taking place in brussels how said by the european union and by the united nations what are you hoping to see come out of this. we hope to see the recognition of importance of such solution to function education are we hoping to see the pledge by major donor countries and for rebuilding and
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reconstruction in syria as well as continuing to support the neighboring countries who have been hosting a lot of fresh veggies and we want to see that it will not just be a conference but that those words will also be turned into actions and jan occasions it's the guns. funding for research programs all right hedrick covers from war child the n.g.o.s thank you so much for joining us on. switching gears to football now and a byron munich have crashed out of the champions league after losing at home to liverpool three one it is the first time the german champions have not made the quarter final stage an eight years the game started out with both teams evenly matched until an error from the byron goalkeeper man and i are allowed ideal monday to score in the twenty six minutes now by or tied the game just before half time to enjoy my tip or own goal but it was all over poland second off first
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a header from virgil van dyke and another goal from may to seal the three one aggregate victory. byron's defeat means that for the first time in thirteen years a german club will not compete in the champions league quarterfinals tomorrow the remaining eight teams will find out who they are facing in the next round now england's premier league has the largest presence with four clubs in the quarterfinals one club each from italy spain the netherlands and portugal round off the quarter finalist so. the top stories that we're following for you here in d.w. britain's parliament is due to vote today on whether to request an extension from the e.u. for the brags that deadline just fifteen days away in voting last night lawmakers backed a motion to out a no deal drags it. and ethiopian airlines has said the black boxes recovered from a weekend plane crash have been flown to paris for further analysis the u.s.
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a stony despite calling for blacks to leave the country feel insists fuz not a racist for the c. then most good the move to support by pressing on the fields we don't want to be faced costanza with four conflicts so far. on the roof of. europe. what unites. what divides. the money a. driving force. what binds the continent together good answers and stories aplenty to. spotlight on people. going to sixty minutes long t.w. .
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the players the table. the stage petroleum comes in a hockey game of culture the money the competition is fierce football's most important natural resource. betting checking how long will they be able to play and who will wind up cutting the june political investigation starting bunch a takes on t.w. . populist politicians have made fresh gains in the european union this time in the stonier where a far right nationalist party more than doubled its vote in recent parliamentary elections my guest this week here in tallinn is martin helm a deputy leader of the conservative people's party of a stoner despite calling for blacks to leave the country he insists he's not a race.
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