tv DW News Deutsche Welle March 14, 2019 5:00pm-5:30pm CET
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news live from britain's parliament passed for yet down oppressive votes this time on whether to delay butane withdrawals from the european beauty after suffering days of defeats the prime minister is now warning that might not happen also on the program the search for survivors in nigeria is that these building collapse and the search for answers intensifies but the number of people still buried beneath the rubble in lagos is not enough. and the boys and girls living under the shadow. of
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the tank should go out without someone kidnapping. to have no fighters. and. as the fighting in syria and as its ninth year leave here from the people the u.n. says are paying the heaviest price. i'm for welcome to the program britain's parliament will see more drama today after lawmakers last night rejected the idea of leaving the european union without a deal tonight's vote will decide whether to extend the departure date to be on the twenty ninth of march just fifteen days away if allah votes for an extension it will then be for the e.u. to decide whether to grant it this is been a punishing week for british prime minister theresa may. another vote another
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defeat us right three two one the most the left two hundred seventy eight yes. veterans of british politics say they can remember nothing like it threatens fever parliament wrestling back control from to resume a. thousand today provides a clear majority against leaving the city however i repeat what i have said before was to make matters wash the prime minister's voice like many and how party has disaster and on the night several of her own ministers to fight the government's voting or does. the house most comment so. for a long time to go to a subsequent eco the options before is the same as they always have to offer we could leave we could leave but the deal which this government is negotiation in the past two years we could leave with the deal we have to negotiate the subject to a second referendum but that risk no cracks it at all. opponents from all
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sides pounded the prime minister but signs that ultimatum may have rattled even the hardest line breaks a two years and how party though not without damaging her credibility security extending article if i think. you know if you. read the toeava you know i brought up the field in their breasts but i didn't think of it like i know this is terribly technically for the jews and they're probably all set 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 beefy just to listen to pop and makes promises of the dispatch box which appears to break this is a this is really really unacceptable. this morning's papers tell the story of a night of high drama threats and rebel. and want to be true reason me rolls the dice
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once more back my deal next week and with it a shortage tension to membership or to find you once more and risk losing brings it all together. a little bit more for a burger to master in london welcome burger let's start on that point from the prime minister where this idea of losing bricks it all together wears out come from . well the prime is keep saying it's my deal or maybe no breaks it because she can put pressure on her own party the great city is the people that really want to go out of europe come what may they might think that if a vote comes before parliament once again and it's expected that this could happen as early as next week that they have one more chance to vote for her so basically through gritted teeth they don't like the deal they think it's much too close to the european union but otherwise if they don't vote for it then the alternative
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could be a shorter or a longer delay and a longer delay means anything could happen maybe a second referendum the rex's vote could be overturned so basically we're in a situation where nobody knows what's going to happen so it might be that some of her own opponents within her own party might just come around and vote for a deal when it comes in front of parliament just one more time you see this was that this is this is of course i was going to want to this is the deal the m.p.'s have rejected in overwhelming numbers twice here the prime minister is talking about bringing it back for a third time and this on the basis that they might just hold their noses and go for it. exactly there was so much opposition i mean views here in the u.k. and in parliament are so entrenched and there are so many and a prime minister's own party who really want. a much clearer cut from the e.u.
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than what the prime minister office them and in particular they object to the situation on northern ireland so they have so far really resisted but some have to just since yesterday indicated that they might change their mind so this is what the prime minister could hope for that some of her own party possibly also those northern irish m.p.'s and the. propping up trees amaze government that they could come around and support a deal in the end so that's really the prime minister's last chance speaking of several of the prime ministers a cabinet defied government orders last night and abstained from voting so how damaged is theresa may by this whole process. she's hugely damaged even inkstand the afternoon paper here in london has the headline she's in office spot not in power say just to say that she is still the prime
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minister technically but really what's happening at the moment is an extraordinary moment in british politics parliament here and the m.p.'s are really trying to take charge of the whole bracks a process they're not happy with what the prime minister has agreed with brussels they have their own ideas what to do the question is will they ever come together will they be able to form a consensus within parliament we're really far away from that but what they clearly say is that what the prime minister and was what brussels have agreed on this is not what they want so parliament does not trust the prime minister with this issue is there any talk of resigning resignation. yes there is talk of a resignation but we don't see anything concrete happening just yet we know that there are several ministers ex ministers who are waiting in the ring but the question is will anybody be able to offer something else
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a lot of parliamentarians are really afraid that the u.k. could just crash out of the e.u. with just to be in just two weeks time when it's the default position that the u.k. will leave at the end of march if there is no prolongation if there is no if there is no deal so they woods would really would really have a problem to go behind a prime minister who is going for a clear cut breaks it but we'll have to see if nobody is concretely and really challenging challenging the prime minister at this point in time. mass in london thank you now to some of the other stories making news around the world a former british soldier will be prosecuted over the deaths of two civil rights protesters in northern ireland more than forty years ago thirteen people were killed when british troops shot out an arm demonstrators in what became known as bloody sunday sixteen other soldiers under investigation will not face prosecution
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. an oil slick more than ten kilometers long is heading towards the coast of france days after a cargo ship caught fire and sank in the atlantic french authorities are deploying vessels to battle the spill which they say has been caused by a leak from the ship's fuel tanks. brazilians have paid tribute to the black rights activist matter how franco was gunned down a year ago today in downtown b o to go to russia comes in a week that a senior arrest of two former police officers in connection with the council's murder it's also been revealed that the country's new far right president jiang have also the heart of knows one of the suspects. authorities in malaysia have closed all one hundred and eleven schools in a southern city hit by a chemical pollution incident at least one thousand nine hundred people including many schoolchildren fell ill in the city of passive good done after breathing fumes from in the lead dumped toxic waste in a nearby river a week ago one. european union has pledged more than two billion euros to help
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the victims of the conflict in syria the block's foreign policy chief federica more greedy enhancement of the donor's conference in brussels today a large portion of the money has already been earmarked for syrian refugees living in turkey the un is seeking six billion dollars to meet serious paid needs and to help support countries who post refugees. as the war in syria enters its ninth year unicef says twenty eighty has been the deadliest us so far for children the war has scattered many of them far from their homes to refugee camps and on to the streets of lebanon on turkey day doubly as follows the fate of some of them and their testimony during the course of the war are provide some of the most candid docu candid commentary on the country's situation. my but afraid neither side's going to bring a solution the government's not resigning it's shelling us and the opposition
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aren't backing down either they're firing back and we're in the middle getting hurt as in notching of god we live in permanent fear when we get home there's no water or electricity we're always afraid that planes will drop something on us when they fly over you were even afraid here at school 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 who's been shot dead with bullets that's what i'm afraid of. just after we got on the truck
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a plane fired on us yeah get us off that boat suddenly everything was burning the blood and everything was black around us. but when the two of 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 a. lot of us all around the route were burned out cars and there was an explosion. my brother suffered minor shrapnel wounds here. 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 and i'd like to go out without someone kidnapping me well so far and i don't have no
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fighters. and no bombing couldn't. have back my food but of. the mess that's 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. well if an organization came and took me to study i would go with them maybe they would give me a better life. for the house and have 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
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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 it's. the generation whose life is lost because dreams have been broken by war we are the generation that has grown too old too soon the voices of children scattered by the war in syria that the war child holland as an engineer helping syrian children living as refugees in neighboring countries hendrika harbors heads that syria responds program welcome to day w what do these children needed most. well in addition to the lifesaving eight what he needs is getting back to your sense of normality psychosocial supports to help him deal with the twenty experience they experience for out a conflict. closely related to that education's against out working on not military but also on quite a future for themselves and what a country and in what sort of circumstances are they living in the homes are they
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in camps what are they there. both depends a little bit on what country and different kind of situations but some are at home in their own homes on the range of homs some children are found in camps in informal settlements many cans in bigger larger camps it depends a little bit on the country going to need. to seem to cross those different situations and so are you trying to help them essentially be where they are or is a sort of temporary. measure until they go home. hopefully it will be a temporary measure but yes we have them where we are like we will come and find it wearing out and provide us through our programs ok so let's talk about what they the international community can do to help children like these a children who have missed eighty is a school had no access to basic health care what can the rest of us do is it just
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about giving money. that it actually helpful in addition to that protection is now debt and recognition psychosocial and education should be done in a statement humanitarian intervention and not at the end that it's not just simply enough to help them survive we also need to give them an opportunity to build a better future and to get back to normality and deal with the i mean it's been eight years now this this war in syria do you see any evidence that what you are doing is helping to normalize that these children's lives or is it is it just just a sort of sticking plaster over a really traumatic situation. it's much more than that we actually see and that positive impact and improvement on those challenges i mean in the program our programs and i'm nationalities have been passionate aided by a good enix we know that's a positive impact and we actually you know we also see that you know that your
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network and programs down shortly did need i'm not happy to go down but we can offer all the n.g.o.s combined can offer to them and unfortunately we're celebrating. not our. anniversary of the war hopefully just war and conflict all around children can go back to their own environments their own homes in their own schools go back to normal life so there's this big donor conference in brussels today what are you hoping to come from that. first the first news that came out was foster's one day and told it to bill and i didn't catch the flu or does it to himself than just one shade that is given is how did usually we ask for the recognition that this is what nature geisha is so essential and essential for all of those children that all still friends in europe. will not be just blanch but also be translated into action and to the excess. well we wish you
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well with your website you so much for joining. us from out warchild home the great crises of. emergency workers in nigeria have halted rescue efforts after yesterday's building collapse in lagos at least eight people were killed when the building the housing the shops and the school came down more than thirty people many of them children have been rescued but some of them may not survive d.w. correspondent funny for shah reports. not much is left from that was a three story building up until it collapsed yesterday morning things left behind by children are the visual remains of this tragedy the rescue operation has come to a halt because rescue teams are saying they do not expect to find more people below of this debris they're saying they have meticulously called through the entire area and they will not find more people they say what you can see here behind me is actually a cleanup operation that has also come to
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a stop right now because they are residents of this building what trying to gather their personal belongings from this house that was not just a school building but also residential building people are angry because they say this could have been prevented if maintenance had been carried out properly when id is thirty two now left with anything she says she lives in the jason building that is fact and by the collapse. because that does not in i got move and move from inside. there. and she's sporting two buildings that will collapse. that was this wood in the here is no save that was this. is the even sign if. cording to state authorities to building was cleared for demolition and the state governor says that a school inside the building was not permitted so what went wrong. is hard showing signs of stress previously but unfortunately. ignored because that. was
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something that was inevitable for people who believe that this is their means of livelihood the money that they will make out of it they would just feel like there's no point in trying to do something. also tells us that even if regulators see it they are notoriously understaffed he does not want to talk about corruption in front of the camera angry residents do. you plant. them because they are giving them bribes. we are fast that does riyadh agency in the gulf states that did not really cultural all these agency. the actual car truck did. wrong city properties at birth quickly or are rented for a quick source of income and they still unclear home many children died in a collapse just like so many before for people here is another result of
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callousness. investigators are examining the two black boxes from the boeing seven three seven eight which crashed in ethiopia on sunday the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder arrived in paris overnight the future boeing seven three seven max aircraft could well depend on the results of the investigation america's aviation regulator the f.a.a. has joined a number of other national regulates real sources in grounding the seven three seven max planes until further notice affected airlines are facing mounting costs. south korea's k. pop sex scandal has claimed another high profile star twenty nine year old a young would join he'll ask quit the band highlight and apologize for his involvement in sharing nonconsensual videos of women having sex he is the third member of the ring to be outed after another singer joan june young admitted secretly filming the women on sharing the footage with other k. pop star. k.
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pop careers ending where they began in front of the cameras seeing your children young from the band drug restaurant hand himself over to police for questioning after admitting to filming sex with women and sharing the videos with other k. pop celebrities. i am really sorry to the public for causing concern i will fully cooperate with the investigation but if i am sorry i am sorry . another k. pop star embroiled lisa in cuba. seen here earlier with white hair together with his band big bang known simply as song grae he has been accused of providing prostitutes to business partners he maintains that he's innocent while also putting on a display of contrition. pulling out of i deeply apologize again to our people and everyone around me who has been hurt and suffered damage to.
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the scandal coincides with growing outrage in south korea over men filming women in public with hidden cameras. and then. there are so many sexual harassment and sexual abuse cases today and as a woman i've become more worried. when young was a top korean star and a public figure what he's done is not just personal it has severe social consequences to. keep it's not a pop up this fall. as police continue their investigations into k. pop figures other stars may be yet to fall. to the status of one five formula one titles in a row meanwhile ferrari have become restless after more than ten years without a win bearing in mind that it took us form a superstar drive to make a five years before he collected five straight titles for ferrari that's sticking with sebastian vettel however considering he made
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a series of mistakes behind the wheel last season he's now under considerable pressure. i. survive that all is hungry for glory the ferrari driver feels it's high time his team won some silverware. it's going to be my fifth year together with a good area so i think racing for ferrari the expectation is always there to win and that's what we what we all want obviously we've i think come close some years bit for. but this season there have been changes of ferrari at the official presentation of the team's new car for twenty nine thousand pietro the son of founder enzo ferrari was there to show his support for ariz parent company cries there have increased the budget for the team this year and are hoping for success this being for brings first of all to mind the pride of a team that unites an entire country and represents the best of it
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a little. in twenty fifteen sebastien fattal was tasked with putting ferrari back at the top after an unsuccessful stretch the team wanted a return to the glory days when we had schumacher won five straight titles. that was a. default in a shell share market driving that red car was always my role model so this is like a childhood dream come true. prior to fattal's fifty year out ferrari there has been somewhat of a red revolution his teammate young star charles le clerc has become increasingly ambitious the restructuring has resulted in the appointment of marty happy not asking. to see the three little changes this year and hopefully we can use you know
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the woman to make sure that we do the final step in order to be competitive and it appears the changes may payoff fattal's pre-season lap times have even impressed lewis hamilton his fiercest right. the pace is very very good at the moment so the challenge is going to be harder than ever. to awaits between sebastian fattal and lewis hamilton and perhaps this could be the year that ferrari finally makes it to the top again. coming up next on d.w. news that the pakistani health go on a mission to visit a country of the crippling polio virus despite hundreds of her colleagues being killed for doing the same thing. it's amazing is that jews living in the world's biggest muslim majority country the jewish community in indonesia is just two hundred people and they're increasingly under pressure. i mean. the
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simply. to get. i actually. discovered the i'm. going to. subscribe to documentary on you tube. a city in ruins morocco a. symbol of a long conflict in the philippines. between the muslims and the christian population last. structures occupied the city center in two thousand and seventeen president to tear his response was. a different. thing football games of. the reconquest turned into tragedy this is
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not the kind of freedom that we want. how did move away to become a gateway to islamist terror. an exclusive report from a destroyed city. film in the sights of bias starts april eleventh on t.w. . basis. coming up on today's program the pakistani health walkout risking tucker own life to save himself from the crippling border virus also on patrol. in these tiny jewish communities feeling increasingly under pressure as conservative forms of islam grow in the wilds just post the results mission.
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