tv Arts and Culture Deutsche Welle April 15, 2019 11:45pm-12:01am CEST
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please believe me we will do everything necessary to reverse the damage and we will do everything necessary to win back your trust step by step group for giving print a call on how to step down despite claiming he knew nothing about the scandal but prosecutors say he already knew about it in maine twenty fourteen and did nothing to stop it also failing to report it to the authorities and customers when to cons of thora he was feared by staff who were under pressure to make the car maker the global leader managers and technicians were afraid to challenge him and all the while folks were going to continue to claim that it's diesel technology was especially clean and environmentally friendly. kristoff. business so what's going to happen to mr cool he could end up behind bars for a long time that if the court and branch. run for it should go ahead with a case against him and the other four executives that are being charged the outcome
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of such a case could be severe prosecutors cite a particularly serious case of fraud here and that could lead up to a maximum penalty of ten years in prison it could lead up to the fact that bonuses that have been handed out to these exact executives are going to be taken away from them that would be eleven million euros for mr winterkorn plus should he get convicted fox one could sue for damages he's going to need some good attorneys because this isn't the only legal trouble that he is facing that's right he's already under indictment in the united states on charges of fraud and conspiracy to violate the clean air act he could face up to twenty years in prison there however it's unlikely that he'll get convicted because germany doesn't extradite its citizens but these this legal pressure from the united states is important today and that it's possibly one of the reasons why german prosecutors are not acting tougher on mr winterkorn for example putting him into custody because they say the
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pressure from outside the country is already so big he's not going to get about twenty seconds spokeswoman saying anything about today's so they say this is an individual's matter they're not commenting on this any further they say we paid one billion euros to leave this case germany to rest that's all right because before was always thank you. the middle east. conditions of. refugees following a policy change in the white house the u.s. cut off funding to the united nations relief agency that provides services for about two million palestinian refugees those refugees. in jordan. as. the budget cuts.
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to the refugee. twenty seven year old in the refugee camp or he was born and raised it was once his job to clean the streets here but now the garbage is left uncollected he was one of around forty seven employed by the united nations relief and works agency for palestine refugees for short. in twenty eighteen the trump administration announced it would seize all funding to the agency so it has had to let employees go including sanitation. the u.n. agency was able to raise new funds from some forty other countries but still needed to reduce its hold budget by ninety two million u.s. dollars last year. my financial situation is difficult when my elderly father not something i can't give it to anymore your dream or my dream is to go back to working for a new or i was self-sufficient. in the campus extremely dirty and in the coming
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summer months it'll only get worse. i have asked us not to reveal his identity his refugee status doesn't allow him to work outside the camp this job was his only source of income to support his family of six. there are now only ten workers left to clean a camp with a population of thirty thousand as a result the camp is experiencing a garbage crisis. of jordan's ten refugee camps for palestinians this one josh is absolute poorest an estimated fifty two percent of the residents here live under the national poverty line with the recent cuts to an era residents say conditions have reached an all time new low no claim the camp is lacking in everything. the santa teresa to ations very bad every day i have to clean this street myself. removed to a different camp because it is the largest refugee camp or palestinians in jordan
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with a population of over one hundred thousand many families have been in the camp for generations here sanitation is not the only problem residents of houses with makeshift roofs like this one are especially vulnerable in the winter months. a father of two says he hoped would help with building expenses but they always cited a lack of funding he was forced to go into debt to pay for this metal cover. will agree about how i'm a grown up but i can handle this. but i was worried for my children and all night i would carry them from one room to the other so that the rain would not fall on their heads i had to put buckets all over the house i had no other solution. to the solution he found is by no means sustainable water still gets through the house poses many health hazards and the children are at risk of electrocution from
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uncovered wires. says that when the summer months hit the roof will make temperatures inside the house unbearable he says he feels abandoned with no other option but to hope for a better future. for more on this i'm joined now by uber he filed that report from jordan good to see you so you spoke with say that he should workers who felt the impact of funding cuts the you with relief camps there in jordan i mean what were the conditions of the camps you visited so we visited two camps set us camp and because. as you mention in the report the poorest camp of all of all ten palestinian refugee camps in jordan this is the one that's absolutely poorest with more than half of the of the refugees they're living under the national poverty line of jordan and also. houses a particularly vulnerable group of palestinian refugees namely ones that come from
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the gaza strip and these unlike other palestinian refugees in jordan don't have a an ideal and id number provided by the jordanian government and us are subject to much harsher conditions so losing this job for as we saw with the for example we saw in the report it's not just about losing an income it's also takes away their sense of empowerment their sense of agency that they're giving something to to to to their community so these are the conditions that you see the they don't have the numbers that are usually given by jordan is this jordan specific problem. with regards to iran i mean under what is a large organization when they were launched back in one nine hundred forty nine they were set up as an emergency agency to accommodate the feeing arab populations from as a result of the arab israeli war and back then there were about seven hundred fifty thousand refugees roughly that they have to. look after fast for twenty one thousand there are about five million and these are divided across the middle east
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jordan lebanon the west bank. syria and the gaza strip and the cuts have been felt across the camps in jordan as we saw but i'm told that the conditions in the gaza strip which. there's been under a blockade are much much worse where. the people that are employed but don't know where they're really have no other option or resort they had to cut one thousand contracts in place in the gaza strip and this included this had to include the termination of mental health mental health programs for example for people that live under a blockade which they desperately need so what are people doing there are they trying to leave work and they go i mean like i saw with his just sitting at a cafe doing nothing and leaving is i think something that a lot of refugees there would maybe like but. it's the prospects are very dim when it comes to leaving and also when they come to countries like germany
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for example the the chances of a palestinian refugee having their asylum application accepted are are lower because they're not immediately from from from from a conflict zone so a lot of despair there unfortunately you know last week we talked a lot about the election is israel and yahoo. be reelected but just the issue of the palestinians even as a people or the occupied territories the settlements it just seemed like none of that was an issue in the campaigns what does his reelection and the results of this election what do they mean for these people anything that's hard that's actually so binyamin netanyahu actually hailed this move when the united states decided to cut to cut funding funding because he sees it as an essentially failed institution that failed to reintegrate. palestinian refugee populations and having them sort of
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continue existing in the camps as they were over generations and. that is partially true it is fact that these camps are populated by generations and generations and generations of refugees that is that is a fact but that's also because the people there they have a different perspective they believe that one day they can they can they can return home this is their opinion and this is what they believe but going back to a question about people people leaving i think something that people perhaps miss in this cause in this question is the sustainability of wonder what actually is a. pull factor for if you do not to migrate and not to come to europe where they might have less perspective because they provide them with jobs they provide them with their. stability exactly they provide them with education care and jobs projects so there is also an argument that they are giving them hope where in the camps where they are at the moment. well you were he was always very appreciate your reporting thank you. well that he is almost on the conversation
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we'll breck's it means britons have to do without their fish and chips. the traditional english dish could fall victim to britain's except from the e.u. yet british fishermen don't see it that way they tend to favor brax it even though the consequences could be just astra's. good fish and chips. to some thirty million on t.w. . what's the connection between bread flour and the european union he knows gill bought a correspondent at the baker can stretch this can live with the rules set by the team. staffing
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