tv DW News Deutsche Welle April 2, 2019 10:00am-10:30am CEST
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this is deja vu news live from berlin britain moves one step closer to leaving the european union without a deal parliament has again rejected all the old turn of the of the government's fracs a deal the e.u. says britain must break the deadlock this week or face the abbess also coming up. the islamic state brides who are western citizens or read as the president of the
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role they played in that terrorist organization is often unclear now many want to return to the places they call to speak to one woman desperate to return with her child in germany two year old son and. the poor boy has a right to a safe life. last swipe camera action how smartphones are revolutionizing the art of filmmaking in ivory coast. i'm dr thomas thanks so much for joining us the british cabinet is preparing to hold an emergency meeting in just a few hours to discuss its next moves comes after parliament again rejected a number of alternatives to prime minister teresa mayes unpopular withdrawal deal parliament is set to vote again tomorrow but the e.u.
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says it's now looking quote almost inevitable the britain will leave the union within ten days if parliament fails to act. so the no use having us so the news have it you. have it it. was. sharing how one horrible for proposals all turned down but some of the so called indicative were quite close to one authored by conservative m.p. kenneth clarke called for a withdrawal agreement to include a permanent customs union with the e.u. it failed by just three votes against mine i think now it's a proposal from the labor m.p. peter kyl called for a confirmatory public vote a second referendum to approve may's perts a deal before it was ratified by parliament but it failed by twelve feet high given everything ten conservative m.p. nick foles proposed a soft break the deal that would keep britain in the e.u.
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single market it failed by twenty one votes after which a dejected polls threw in the towel. i had sex i have cited. i have failed chiefly because my coffee refuses to come from the i.c.u. was five hundred saffold sure enough that i can no longer sit for this for a big chunk of it was both gentleman with god i thank god parliament is now expected to hold another series of indicative votes that could be followed by yet another vote on teresa mayes breaks a deal which parliament has rejected three times already but time is running out in brussels the head of the european parliament's pricks a committee that tweeted that monday's votes left
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a hardbacks at nearly inevitable and warned that the u.k. has a last chance to break the deadlock or face the abyss. and the chief bracks a negotiator michel barnier spoke a short while ago in brussels this is what he had to say about monday's developments in the british parliament and let me just make a point very clear. you won't read peter three. you know i'll give you my nerve and agreement. and we'll be the only one let's get the very latest now from matheson brussels and charlotta potts in london good morning to both of you georg if we can start with brussels we've just heard a few moments ago a new warning from brussels that the deal on the table is the only one is the tone though from michel barnier today different. i don't think necessarily of course
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it is more serious a situation now than let's say two years ago when he said the same thing so so the meaning but the meaning of his words haven't changed she was always serious he was always clear and he reiterated that today in his speech again that this was never the objective of the e.u. to have no deal rather contrary to avoid no deal is the objective and he said there is still a good chance and i thought that was interesting for another meaningful successful vote and he then made clear that the political declaration is able to accommodate all sorts of scenarios a common market an internal market plus a common market and norway model so he really signal to the u.k. give us an answer and we will work with it ok there is a possible meaningful vote tomorrow what are the british prime minister's options right now as everything hinges on that vote tomorrow. well i mean parliament decided that they don't know it's a way forward which can be counted as kind of
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a success for theresa may so the question is will she put forward vote for a fourth time the talks about tomorrow maybe the day after and she might not just put forward her vote but she might have a runoff with the most popular option in parliament from last night and that was the customs union that just fell short of three votes to get a majority so what could happen is that parliament will hold another vote is it going to be to resign may steal the withdrawal agreement on the political declaration or is it going to be the customs union moving forward but whichever way they decide they need to agree on a withdrawal agreement on a divorce agreement so to say until april twelfth to move forward and there is a political impasse and a lot of the big things a big sense of frustration and exasperate this morning in palm and and on the streets here in london i'm looking at the two main options as a lot of just mentioned there a teresa mayes deal or the customs union which would the e.u.
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like to say which would prefer. well you have heard me michel the news saying this deal is the only way for an orderly breck's it so clearly they've worked a lot on this on this deal michel he said again you know we've spent recent real time and effort to get to get it so i think that is clearly prefer bull having said that of course it depends what else other than the customs union. that the u.k. would want it really depends on what other elements would be attached because to resolve the northern irish border problem you would not only have to be in the customs union but also in parts of the internal market so it's a really complicated thing and that's deal would provide a lot of answers to these complicated questions there's a lot to this it's crunch time once again for bricks and teresa mayes meeting in a few hours with her cabinet to be sitting down for five hours a very long meeting what's being called a showdown what do you think we can expect to come out of that. well the cabinet is
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meeting without civil servants for a few hours at first and that is might be an indication that they are going to talk about the possibility of a general election that is something that took the tory party doesn't not want to see the labor party would indeed like to see that because they are polling very high at the moment and they could be successful in if there was new elections to be held so that is one option that they are certainly going to be discussing to change the parliamentary arithmetic and to find a way forward another thing that they are going to be discussing is should the u.k. to leave with a deal the majority of may's cabinet actually things that that would be a good idea and that the consequences wouldn't be s. chaotic as we all think and expect so that will be something to watch out for a will to resign may turn to what's the hot line us and her party in her cabinet indeed and say ok maybe we have to leave with with the deal on april twelfth or will she indeed go for a soft a version of that and find
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a way forward in that regard. in brussels thanks very much to both of us for. let's check in now some of the other stories making the news today algeria's president adela's ease but if leka says he'll be stepping down before his term ends on april twenty eighth in ousmane on state t.v. said steps are being taken to ensure state institutions keep working smoothly during the transition. two year old has faced weeks of mass protests demanding an end to his twenty year rule. chinese authorities say they've recovered the bodies of thirty firefighters killed battling a blaze in sichuan province it's being called one of the worst disasters for emergency services in years a sudden change in wind direction chopper trap the firefighters were to say the blaze has now been contained. the united states is
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halting all deliveries of its f. thirty five stealth fighter to turkey u.s. officials saying all cooperation on that jet is on ice until ankara ends its plans to buy an advanced russian anti aircraft system the s four hundred this is the latest in a series of disputes between the two nato allies. thailand's prime minister has flown to the country's smog affected north to discuss that region's acute pollution problem wildfires caused by exceptionally dry conditions and land clearing have sparked a public health crisis with the air containing up to six times the allowed levels of c o two. all it has been about a week since international forces declared the defeat of so-called islamic states last stronghold in syria and in the aftermath a number of western countries including germany are debating what to do with their
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nationals who were captured while fighting for or supporting us among those captured are women. who joined islamic state many claimed they were forced to do so and say they carried out housekeeping duties in syria or in iraq rather than acts of terror now according to the german government about fifty women with german citizenship are either imprisoned right now or are living in refugee camps in syria or iraq local authorities want to get rid of them as quickly as possible but the german government's reluctant to take them back berlin says it's difficult to determine if the women are in fact citizens or if they pose a national security threat we met one german woman in a syrian refugee camp who is desperate to come back to germany. stranded in the middle of nowhere seventy four thousand people live in the al whole camp in northern syria it was made to hold only ten thousand the conditions on
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acceptable especially for children most people want to leave as soon as possible they want to return to their former homes which they left years ago so they could live under the rule of the jihadist group islamic state out of conviction carelessness or compulsion. they now gergen studied psychology in berlin and married a turkish man during a trip to turkey he took her to syria where he joined us at least that is how the twenty three year old describes it. took the she calls on is often terrible things happen they're kind their women and children should not have any value systems women are terribly abused and beaten by us mine in my little man and my former husband died about two years ago. he locked us up and abused us in horrible ways. i couldn't recognize myself one day in day out.
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talk i didn't talk also. her son was born during the chaos of war the two of them suffered years of hardship and now she hopes she has survived the worst and things will get better. i inspire i have a two year old son but the poor boy has a right to a safe life and even see it when thankfully we could flee from those i as terrorists funding was we were just trashed their. women and children are worth nothing to them. as it's horrible what i asked does in the name of islam. i'm happy that i can return to my beloved homeland times germany. and. the kurdish authorities would like to get rid of foreigners like zainab as quickly as possible but hardly any
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country wants them back the local authorities are overburdened with investigating securing evidence clarifying guilt an international court is now supposed to solve the issue but the west is treating this initiative with great caution. presence of thousands of fighters and their families is a major problem for the autonomy's authorities in northeastern syria. we do not have the possibility of bringing them to justice here if they have committed crimes against syrians or iraqis now they spend their days waiting to go back home but their fate remains uncertain as long as they are not welcome in the film home. with me to discuss this very difficult question. you know reporter following the story for us good morning. the woman in this report on a bargain says she's a victim of. a willing supporter she seems fairly convincing but how can
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a storage determine if that's true that's really difficult and i think one things that very important that also came up in the story is that. we need to collect evidence we need to secure forensics and for that to happen so it has to be called peroration between. in germany and fighters and that's something that the german sorts of very reluctant to do germany's german authorities of basically dragging their feet when it comes to its members and the families they say. hide behind closed europe arguments basically they say. look we don't have diplomatic relations with a syrian state must. so we can't work with them but we also don't recognize the. so we don't have any way to assist the kurds in determining
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evidence. not just the adults in question but there's also the issue of the children that zeinab two year old boy for example are the children in effect condemned to pay for the alleged crimes of their pounds. looked like set it's really sad. germany seemed very reluctant also to take back the children of the country is. following it different from for instance just repatriated a couple of children from a whole camp among them by the way also a child fostered by a german jihad is i think it's the german authorities really should. go into that matter and deal with this humanitarian issue but the problem of course is not the truth and it's apparent. that her much for.
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the state of the news live from berlin still to come on the show they borrow their way under the skin especially into people's feet and cause stream pain analysis kenya is fighting back against this parasite the tiny sandfly known as the jaeger. but first the outcome of thailand's recent election will not be confirmed for another five weeks but for luminary results are already dividing that nation opposition parties accuse the military would seize power in a coup in two thousand and fourteen stacking the odds in its favor boston hearted reports this is causing many young people to become disillusioned with politics. twice a month when you won't see what i walked in not that long in the take to you tube with their popular political parody show shallow news in depth topic this week of course was the elections on. there's another type of ghost the type they don't even
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want in hell the scold the popular vote ghost. the program is as popular as ever says when you want to put a lot especially with young viewers and black. kids right now. starting to notice what is going on and so i'm just doing my best i'm trying to do my best to. show them that if been going on for soul many years so many decades. so if you want change you guys need to step up. there was hope that with this election things might change in thailand but that hope now seems to be turning into frustration. we basically we the younger generations the new generation we have the fourth quarter i basically sick sad and wasted wednesday into nothingness. i'm
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answering questions. as well as the uncertainty of the thai politics. some say patience among thailand's younger people is wearing thin a situation that can jurors up sinister memories this is the site of one of the darkest chapters in modern thai history some forty three years ago around one hundred students were shot and beaten to death on this very field at bangkok's thomas at university they were among the thousands who had taken to the streets to protest because they were unhappy with the direction in which the country was headed a sentiment that's not at all unlike the one spreading among young people in thailand today. at this bar across town the patrons are trying to take things with a pinch of salt. when on election night the election commission said they couldn't continue to count the votes because they didn't have a calculator cohen or a gun leo has two one offered free drinks to anyone who stopped by to donate one
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his form of protest. we are educated people so we know what is right what is wrong but i think this is wrong wrong this cannot happen we make up for it if you sad about my generation and i don't want to have a fit because the one in which you're growing up in this. kind of thing. it is the young men who will eventually be responsible for thailand's future but it seems that more and more of them are giving up on their country. it's to kenya now where hundreds of thousands of people suffer from a condition known as jigger infestation the jaeger is a sandfly that burrows beneath the skin especially into people's feet causing painful health problems a report of visitors school and consumer who are children are learning to help each other combat the parasite. to read up past the loves going to school
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the best part is being able to concentrate on her lessons but that wasn't always the case the twelve year old's feed used to be full of jagers tiny sand fleas that borrow into people's bath flash causing burning painful lesions. terrible i couldn't play i couldn't jump i scratch myself mostly at night for a long time you know all the tools. of the children at this primary school in consumer county still suffer from the minute parasite constant itching and severe pain makes it difficult for the infected students to walk and impossible for them to concentrate in class untreated figures can lead to deform glimps gang green and fatal tetanus infections jagers are a widespread but neglected health problem in africa official figures are hard to come
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by in the schools here in consumer almost a third of pupils unfactored with jake is going to have them. so much pain every time i was scratching myself. it was too painful. i still feel pain. it's not just the pain of the actual infection that's the problem but also the teasing and social exclusion by the other children the students here dipankar primary school have decided to do it differently instead they're helping each other. here in the local ngo has been training these children who've made it their mission to technology guess what's more being treated by their friends and peers has helped fight the fear of the treatment and the stigma associated with the disease. across kisumu students i know how scouts they are challenging the believe that having to give is a poor people's disease and to helping their schoolmates heal and instead of the
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traditional method of pulling out the fleas which is excruciating they're using a pain free technique where. we start with the ones who are severely infected and we wash their feet we put them in a second basin with fresh water and they stay there with their feet inside for five minutes. then the scouts wipe the whole legs with medicine and we ask them to sit in the sun while the other three does brothers edward and he will last you will soon be ticket free then just like derrida will be able to enjoy school again. when you introduce a to treatment b. if notice a definite change in the student's performance the school generally improved and he scored high in the national exams and seeing them heal and starting to play with each other that has made me happy as a health teacher. the jigga treatment has changed these students' lives. and i love going to the river to fetch water i love to study and
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to play i feel better because i'm healed and that can play i can walk properly i can jump us well. three to hopes that obvious growth across the region well adopt this way of dealing with the bigger fleet she runs on the pupils to be able to love school as much as she does. to abidjan now the ivory coast economic center were thought first of all the difference took place over the weekend the bushman film festival is the first of us in the fresh this french speaking area of west africa thousands of entries from around the world and they were all films shot with smartphones and tablets here's a look at some. you know these filmmakers a young they're creative and they understand that a smart phone can help them push past the problem of expensive professional film equipment. business we want to show people that we can make films but unfortunately
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we don't happen to have the means does that mean we have to stop just because we don't have the means doesn't mean we don't have a dream so we find a way to express our dreamers this is only the second year this festival for films shot purely on smartphones or tablets is taking place it sets no age restrictions for filmmakers and it attracted more than five thousand entries from around the world. but compared to t.v. it's a different thing because there's a lot more noise the picture is not clear but it's still good. this film festival is held at the bushman cafe in abidjan a place for actors and directors filmmakers and film lovers to meet a network and ultimately get more and better films made. in what we said we spot talent and show them that it's not only about getting the films are now simply giving them exposure. it's because of some
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awards and sponsors we've won that we've been able to support these talents to produce better films get the films launched and get other people cost on larger platforms so the. mobile phones are now a legitimate ineffective tool for low to no budget filmmakers and it's the bushman film festivals and aimed to bring new talent from west africa in particular to audiences worldwide. let's give you a reminder now of our top story this hour britain's cabinet is repairing the old emergency meeting after parliament again rejected or alternatives to the government's practice of deal the use says britain must break the deadlock this week or face the abbess. up next we have video of your business and markets here with the very latest from the hanover trade for of course of brian the world's greatest the biggest most important industrial technology there and i think it's safe to say that the ongoing breaks of travel is also taking its toll on industry
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leaders there we've collected some hearty quotes for you which will share with you and then just a moment of course all agree that europe kind of the four to loose sight of new technologies digitalisation artificial intelligence so there's a lot of catching up to do and a lot of that is on display in hanover and we share that with you that's right more on that story as well as our website interview dot com for me though the entire news team for all that we've done this far thanks for being with us marcus is of the.
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the prize winning documentary song from the forest for the first minutes. with him had a big gun because up close with lions i know if i had known that the boat would be that small i never would have gone on a trip i would not have put myself and my parents so much danger to the bottom of the game with a little bit a beautifully it would. come up once until the puppet on the global to give them i had serious problems on a personal level and i was unable to live there but it might seem going to. want to know their story in for my great scarified and reliable information for margaret's. closely. carefully. soon. to be
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a good. discover . subscribe to documentary. brick states or to fishel intelligence what dominates the high. there well the answer is both a disorderly breaks it threatens to disrupt supply chains across europe german companies try to focus on the task ahead and that's keeping pace with new technology. also on the show.
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