tv Focus on Europe Deutsche Welle May 2, 2019 5:30pm-6:00pm CEST
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he and his friends countries like. this movie in kenya was dubbed refugee camp. his life story may have grown to a. twenty seven years ago but there's no holding back his dreams. thank you for watching. cinema scotsmen twenty seven done. such. a low in a very warm welcome indeed to focus on europe with the peter craig and we begin in northern ireland where tensions have been stoked by the ongoing uncertainty over brags the looming british exit from the european union and people have been
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mourning the death of young journalist lira mckee shots while reporting on the clashes in the city of derry the killing was the first by a paramilitary group in the twenty one years since the signing of the good friday peace agreements that brought an end to decades of deadly violence known as the trouble it's. now day nine hundred ninety eight agreement led to the opening of the border between northern ireland of the republic of ireland both part of the e.u. and those who live along the frontier wanted to stay open believing that a hard border would trigger not just more violence but also more smuggling and shamus murphy is among those who are supportive mildly very angry that people are even talking about the possibility that that worst fears could become a reality. the free exchange. march. from his home in the republic of ireland seamus murphy shows his friend peter where the irish border runs it is
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a constant topic of conversation and concern for them some cynical humor helps. it would be illegal. to take his dog from. pine trees because pine trees in the republic of ireland a but his dog would not be allowed to it would need to be shots i'm not too sure. i have. here in the border region people aren't big sticklers about regulations seamus murphy says smuggling was part of everyday life when he was a boy so most of the time the goods involved were fairly innocuous detergent. or a couple of sheep in a carrier say almost anybody over fifty years of age have themselves some smuggling skills and we admired smugglers when we were children there were legends there were robin hood figures in this area so there was no social condemnation of
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a smuggler smuggling was perfectly respectable business to be a. mick who prefers to keep his last name to himself says he to smuggle goods back to them the truck driver brought his cargo across the irish border on country roads avoiding the customs officers altogether. he believes that will bring with it duties and price differences and that will encourage smuggling again. wherever. i go to barbados facio and instead of. it that really you know like a lot. of our youth back hopes it's two or three on the cross. over the years the couldn't do. it when they're here. so this thing of. the sea it was in the old days these warehouses right by the border were used to
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smuggle in cattle grain heating oil and other products until the e.u. customs union and open borders made it unprofitable but gangsters continue to operate in the region and could profit from. the danger is very substantial there are people with access to hundreds of thousands opposed to invest in the goods that they want to smuggle and those are the people with existing links to cry. work together just as criminal gangs have cooperated with particularly in illegal cigarettes and legal cigarettes from eastern europe from. after that it could be more lucrative for these gangs to be from the u.k. and to neighboring ireland and then sell it for higher prices in the e.u. . the only way to stop them would be to implement tougher border controls but politicians warn that that could also reignite the northern ireland conflict.
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has the potential to bring us back if there's any infrastructure. at the border to border control tends to bring us by those dark days and that's what people that's why it's so imperative that there is no return to the borders of the past. this former british customs shed is a relic of that past. conor patterson from the new reeked of commerce and trade recalls that it would sometimes take an entire day for a truck to clear customs. although back then there was less trade between northern ireland and the republic of ireland. this facility was both here and in our area that was secure we have we have cameras
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we have we had the british military very close by the previous for so they were was was destroyed and an ira which killed nine people i'm not swore they are actual arjun's of the political conflict came from that's why three hundred thousand british soldiers and northern ireland during the course of the thirty year conflict . some bricks that supporters say the answer to the problem is a smart border with infrared cameras and motion sensors but among locals there's also huge opposition to the idea. the problem right. so any take knology installed at this border will not last twenty four hours. why because it will be either blown up by paramilitaries or ripped down by respectable people like me. as
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well and these two men want things to stay just the way they are at the irish border they do breck's it is a threat to peace and stability in the region. that no one wants the troubles to return that. ok let's go now to the spanish region of galicia where twenty years ago the town of pantera very drove burned cars from entering the town center and gave the streets back to the people the man at the center of that decision was made go fernandez laurus who was then and is still the mayor of ponce of that trip he made the case that yes cars stand for mobility and freedom but they're also noisy dirty and dangerous and most people in the town are glad that they've gone down a different route from other places the. point of a dress has long been a stopover for pilgrims taking the way of st james but now it's become a destination for curious urban planners to. pont of adra
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is setting an example as a pedestrian ised city with only a few cars. the town hall welcomes group after group of interested visitors mayor mcgill morris is the man behind the project. emissions here have been reduced by around seventy percent and these portuguese visitors are impressed. the mayor receives guests from all over the world including the u.s. and the rest of europe. today the mayor of paris has joined the portuguese visitors they're intrigued by the project always good to see the streets here bring people together. through the records of their squares where children played. it with the view there's a sense of ease and community. punch of entries mayor shows us the center he says he's a great fan of walking. laura's started changing things twenty years ago
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back then part of a drought was choking in traffic it had nearly eighty thousand residents and almost as many vehicles most people did their shopping by car in those days today the majority of shoppers are pedestrians of course as they were with cars are bad for the city they took up too much space we still have up to fourteen thousand cars here every day of the storage city center was complete mayhem and growth. all around the city there are signs that look like subway maps but instead they provide walking distances in meters and minutes. the fifteen thousand parking spaces on the edge of the inner city play a major role in the project most of them are free of charge vehicles such as delivery trucks are still allowed to enter the city but they may only park for
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brief periods it's the same in all residential areas the maximum parking time is limited to ten or fifteen minutes no room for cars is the motto here. police cameras monitor how long a vehicle parks and how fast it travels the overall speed limit is thirty kilometers an hour and put s. rians always have right of way there are hardly any traffic lights or signs the project is proving a success. and i think that if they think that there has not been a single fatal accident in the last eight years. before that there were two or three in each year that appeared the. traditionally conservative punt of a drove voted in left wing representative morez at the end of the one nine hundred ninety s. since then he has transformed the city the city center was protest realized within a month whether it will reward him or when you buy a car you do not also buy the right to
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a parking space this is our approach of course people who are afraid of making changes but then most people saw how things improved and how the retail sector benefited little get out the bad but only got to court i mean. at first three thousand retailers protested against the mayor's plans some even went to court businessmen miguel lago was also against the proposal initially but that has now changed. sales increased not only in his store. and customers now come on foot or by bike. local shops have profited from the traffic free concept because you will have to know how to fill a hole people were afraid but then we saw how the rundown city center improved a little now more and more people want to invest here. or feeling. pontiff vedran is showing how cities can reclaim public space and residents are
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supportive. whether that thank you and you can walk without the fear of getting run over it's just wonderful baby you think that a lot of us men those cons i mean i feel if there's less pollution the city is more fun because you can stroll around without the cars. being. twenty ventra has become a much more attractive place to live people used to move away from here now the number of residents is on the increase a success for the city's mayor. was the theme of the with us or we of the people are proud of ponte vedra. they believe in the city's future. that's probably the best things that can happen to america. but surprisingly mayor lois likes driving he drives in from the countryside every day he says he doesn't hate cars but he feels they belong on country roads or freeways and not in
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cities this philosophy has turned pumped of adra into a great place for pedestrians. now on a very different note to russia is a key player in the long dirty and devastating war in syria and to make the case for its involvement in the conflict moscow has sent a train around the country carrying exhibits highlighting the heroism of russian soldiers and the threats they face in syria but there's another side to the story and our reporter met with a woman called. who told him about her own loss and the council sees in a war in a distant land. at ten am the syria train as it's known arrives that concerned station to a welcome with military honors its twenty cars are packed with military equipment
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patriotism and pride sporting trophies brought back from syria by russia's armed forces. including tanks armored vehicles and even many labs for making chemical weapons they allegedly belong to i asked terrorists because iran is one of a total of sixty stops on the tour. luminosity adds another view to the russian people have to see this train some more so the want to stop the misery that sadly at home in other corners of the world because i can't understand russia's role in the battle against international terrorism the war on the steel but it's missing a lot of them that it is not. all gone marcie love understands all too well what that battle can mean she lives in each new camps one hundred seventy kilometers from concern alone with her daughter her husband dmitri was killed in syria in twenty seventeen she sees the train from the perspective of her personal tragedy.
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i need to work with i see nothing in this train but death. because of the military involvement i've lost my husband or through what i'm worth only have this government. the russian defense ministry gives an official told of one hundred sixteen russian troops killed in syria officially august husband dmitri is not among them alongside the regular troops for several private combat units from russia agas husband belong to one of them. but it wasn't just ten or twenty soldiers from russia there were thousands and very many died. when august caesar videos of the trophy train she expresses just one wish. what they can be as now we are if i had known i might have gone to cousin and
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would have hounded down those generals it's. officially russia prohibits combat missions by private companies human rights activists speak of cynical double standards we meet up with one of the activists on the outskirts of moscow surrogate prevent go ahead about august case he provides support for the relatives of the private russian fighters who were killed in syria now where the dead fathers are husbands listed as soldiers. in the syrian war has two faces the first one shows us russia's official war on terrorism. a second hidden one is not meant to be seen russia must expose the second face and explain the nebulous structures in syria and meet in a new new year. the death of august husband is one chapter in the story of russia's involvement in syria but the trophy train and its initiators prefer to keep on the wraps. instead the guides talk about russia's
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successes. moscow has been assisting the syrian military in its fight against isis since twenty fifteen and helping to keep president bashar al assad in power many visitors support this. are helping the degraded syrian people. so how. successfully they say what does russia have to do with syria. well it's a substantial help for the country so we can return to the well what's it called peace. we have to show children weapons of war so they know war is bad. the families of some of the victims from private armies are fighting for some form of compensation among them all go michael over and her daughter they get nothing from the russian state even though dimitri was fighting alongside regular
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russian troops against the same enemy in syria. that i fear would of course russians fighting international terrorism but why isn't there anything for the survivors. our government sends humanitarian aid to syria why aren't we getting any humanitarian aid we've lost our breadwinner. for two months the syria train traveled across russia from west to east. the russian military pretreated as a symbol of success in its war on terrorism but this battle has left many questions unanswered. now it lies it deliberately waged between switzerland and austria with beautiful landscapes we're talking about the principality of lish tench dine which is this
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year celebrating its free hundredth anniversary but has had to work hard in recent years to begin to shake off its reputation as a tax haven and in what is a hereditary monarchy the ruling family under the acting head of state or low as far on. time have also worked hard to justify an exalted status that sometimes feels like something from another age. for hundreds of years european kings and princes were absolute rulers in their castles overlooking the cities and towns from on high then came democracy and the rule of the people. but at least things are a bit different even to this day as prince alex of liechtenstein explains. the border first here is the prince lives in a castle one hundred meters above the valley he's got
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a very close natural and informal relationship with the people and used. ot the hereditary prince as an expert on law and economics and a member of europe's wealthiest noble family but he describes himself as simply the first servant of his country. the people can pass a vote of no confidence in the monarch in a referendum. the people can even abolish the monarchy in a referendum one of he option off more than one and so just like an elected politician the monarch always has to consider the interests of the people so we are not in the long run he'll run into problems. with the company and because. that may be true but lichtenstein sprint's also holds a unique right to veto any law passed in parliament if he wishes he can also dismiss the government and appoint judges. these powers are a bone of contention for the monarchy few critics at home.
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and some in the. when it comes to the citizens judicial rights lichtenstein ors like to say they'd rather leave it up to the people up at the castle take care of it. that's also a form of pragmatism and division of task but i think it undermines democracy because father to democracy. but least in stein's economy is booming unemployment is virtually nonexistent the principle of these financial dealings have made it rich and it is home to numerous banks financial advisors and trustees. in two thousand and eight one of the princes bank employees sold for in tax inspectors confidential documents the involved thousands of accounts held by tax dodgers and contained billions of euros an undeclared funds. blew the liechtenstein system skyhigh with the data he took from the royal trust and that's an achievement. i think he changed this country more than any
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artist or intellectual prince ever did before. he had a few city itself to. the people at least in stein and the prince were called robber barons but they came through the scandal united following international pressure the financial sector was reformed to adhere to european transparency rules . i think we can start looking back it's very clear that this was the right and important decision to make at the time. we were estimating that for the end of twenty eight thousand we'll be managing over three hundred billion swiss francs in assets and forgotten for me for titan here. which is also a source of income for the latest on us so they took the tax haven affair as a minor forepaw on the princes part. this is to hurt so they're part of us they're us and we are they. would lead this direction stein didn't have its principles still be a farming village today this is very likable family we're looking forward to their
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big jubilee house it's a school so you believe the people down in the valley are full of praise and up at the castle hereditary prince otherways is well aware of his high approval ratings surrounded incidentally by one of europe's biggest private art collections. this is by rubens one of his few landscapes the meaning launch off now to have made of. and has had to be bullish on the us i tended to concentrate more on biblical as well as antique motifs always with powerful figures if you can figure one thousand pounds and peer. into seems to like powerful figures and in twenty nineteen and this age of democracy the small state and its powerful princely family celebrates their three hundredth anniversary. well one of my favorite places in europe is brussels the belgian capital is though often underrated despite its many attractions including the tiny fellow universally
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seen as the symbol of the city who spends his whole day well dare i say passing water lovely you might be thinking but it doesn't stop there because it's been discovered that the little lady who just can't restrain himself has been wasting a very valuable public bridge so. the city of brussels has so much to offer. mary treats performance art architecture. and then there's this a sixty one centimeter tall bronze statue of a boy passing water mannequin pierce is regularly decked out in new outfits. but now the authorities have realized the city landmark has been wasting more than two thousand liters of fresh drinking water every day no one even knew. we didn't have a water meter and a different department simply footed the bill somehow. and investigation
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has revealed that the water from the statue was going down the drain but that has since been fixed and you look at the look of all the water is not collected here. we then pump it back up to the mannequin pissed at you and love will restrict your pretty. fresh drinking water is no longer being wasted and the four hundred year old statue is one hundred percent eco friendly when it could be manic and piss makes it clear to everyone in brussels belgium and europe it's a message from europe's capital that clean drinking water is precious and should not be wasted. because of it. the recycled water doesn't detract from the popularity of what is probably the most famous tourist attraction in the belgian capital a small boy spending a penny. and that's all from
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documentary. coming into returns home on t w dot com coming up tanks. you know that seventy seven percent of flopping are younger than six o'clock. that's me and. you know what time of course is i watch hard almost seventy seven percent to talk about the issue. from one part of the flash from our. you poor little tom there is no way. welcome to the seventy seven percent. this weekend d. w. . i don't what it. is you know i mean you're monotonous and god knows what and when most. of them and
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i don't seem to call me. us all without it but i. don't want it. this you know i mean when you're my noticing quite young white ink i have pockets when i'm on women out is. what i'm focused on him is you know what i'm with white and black and i said i'm not but as a term of. this you know i mean you're my noticing growing you are getting what do you cry i don't want to. me number one and unanimous. the show could go it's as if i yes it said. i should run. but i would have only said what i thought of going on what they're doing fronted. by mackenzie it is as if to say i said.
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this is d w news live from bali and bad as well it's been a good president nicolas maduro urges the army to fight two clauses after this week's violence the ministry responds with a show of support meanwhile the mount leading the push to oust the two opposition leader while i'm quite out was called a series of strikes on the program. a special report on the devastation inflicted on the mozambique.
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