tv DW News Deutsche Welle June 10, 2019 5:00pm-5:30pm CEST
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d.w. and online. this is day dubliners live from berlin or germany on the iran move to salvage a 2015 nuclear deal iran's foreign minister tells his german counterpart we will cooperate with the european union to save the agreement but can it be rescued in the face of u.s. opposition also on the program 12000 year old turkish town that's about to be lost forever beneath the waters of a hydroelectric dam. process to say they'll hold more demonstrations against proposals to allow extraditions to mainland china but the territory's leader says
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she will press on with the legislation. on to the controversial building floors just drive by sebastian sacking of the canadian called great. jumping for joy. time filled hell welcome to the program germany's foreign minister has been holding talks in iran aimed at salvaging that country's nuclear deal with international powers heiko modest revealed the difficulties all sides were facing when he told a news conference in teheran germany was working to prevent the deals complete failure is running counterpart mohammad javad zarif described discussions as frank and serious and while the united states against war doing what he called economic war against iraq the nuclear deal struck in 2015 between iran on one side and france germany britain russia china and the united states but donald trump withdrew
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the u.s. from the deal last year re imposed economic sanctions and threatened sanctions against western companies who deal with iran. the iran nuclear deal requires to limit its atomic enrichment in verifiable ways so that it cannot make weapons and requires it to submit to international inspections in return tehran is supposed to get relief from sanctions and gain access to frozen assets but the us has pulled out unilaterally and really imposed sanctions president obama made a deal the iran nuclear deal which was a terrible deal because it was a short term deal didn't do the trick and i was very much against it i was very much against the deal i terminated the deal on iran is a much different country today the u.s. has also sent additional warships to the middle east as part of a pressure campaign that some fear risks escalating into open conflict the other signatories to the nuclear deal insist they can still make it work. french
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president emanuel mccraw has tried to project unity from the european side while accommodating washington relief and this is producers in the fifty's we want to do 1st you want to be sure they don't get you know you can with them meanwhile the reimposed economic sanctions have hit the iranian economy hard largest theory that the employment situation is a catastrophe those who have a store has to close it and look for another job those who have studied need to look for jobs but where where are they going to work. on the broader danger should iran break completely from the agreement is that the new nuclear arms race will take place the u.s. recently announced it wants to renegotiate with iran but tehran says the u.s. has not shown good faith. how does. whenever they stop cruelty against their own nation put aside the cruel sanctions fulfill their commitments and return to the negotiating table which they themselves left the road is not closed for them.
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the road is open how much. does president trump has made clear over the past year the u.s. is unlikely to agree to any of that and trust among the parties is in short supply . let's get more on this from an independent iran analyst adnan to batter by and i asked you just in bonn welcome to day w i went hypo mass asks tehran to stick with this deal does he have anything to offer beyond hope and good wishes. that's a good question i think the. mention foreign minister was mentioned as the term miracle it seems as if europe has to pull off some miracles to do some wonders in order to have european businesses do trade with iran and that's the difficult parts i think the only thing that would really convince iranians would be clear concrete specific examples of how trade with iran can be up again can be normalized and that
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is the only thing that will make the iranians stick to the agreement europe has not been able to provide those those clear indications so why is teheran still listening to them i guess to iran really at the beginning and at the at the initial steps of the nuclear agreement was hoping to normalize its trade relations with europe and this is still something that many in the iranian political leadership are hoping that can somewhat be materialized in the chief but obviously the prospects for that are good are getting more and more grim by the day. the iranian foreign minister mohammad javad zarif warned today that those waging economic war against terror could not expect to remain safe how do you interpret those words for i think for the iranian foreign minister isn't it is important to signal that iran can respond to these course of measures to what the iranians call economic
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warfare and that can have implications for u.s. interests in the region and the neighboring region of iran and i guess this is what the president or excuse me what foreign minister as i leave is this pointing to respond how. well by threatening the security of u.s. troops in the in the in the middle east for example by exerting pressure on us allies in the region and what iran has always been saying of the point that iran has tried to make is that if if you ron is living in an secure environment will make sure that the others are insecure as well so that the solutions are somewhat found to make sure that the security is generated for everyone and not for everyone but iran. that was speculating but was was speculating on the on the basis of these was that were issued today and when you talk about iran threatening troops in the area are you talking about starting the shooting again starting that excuse me
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they said are you talking about you talk about an armed conflict are you talking about a guy i think. i think in fact what we really have to be clear about that is that there is an increased risk of these things happening we have the designation of the revolutionary guards that are present with troops in the region as a terrorist organization by the us and the iranians have reciprocated that with calling centcom troops in the region as terrorist entities and the danger that some in someplace this kind of us collation happens is really high but let me also stress that we have seen in issued tips from from different countries who try to make sure that this kind of escalation does not happen could talk to you thanks for joining us i've known about about. we'll take a look now at some of the other stories making news around the world 9 people have been injured in a blast caused by a branch of gas pipe in
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a town near rome the explosion occurred during roadworks in a rock at the proper smoke from the blast was visible from the italian capital more than 30 kilometers away. because in india has sentenced to 3 hindu men to life in prison for their roles in the break up and murder of an 8 year old muslim girl last year 3 police officers received 15 year sentences for destroying evidence the girl's death sparked outrage and inflamed religious tension in india acoustic controlled kashmir. international observers say sunday's presidential election because it's town was tarnished by human rights violations electoral commission says the winner of the vote is that. it was handpicked by former president a no sultan not a bad election was overshadowed by the rest of hundreds of opposition protesters. the right to become britain's next prime minister has officially begun to form a foreign minister barak's johnson is the favorite to succeed theresa may as leader of the conservative party and therefore pm candidates need the backing of 8 other
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conservative lawmakers to enter the contest foreign minister jeremy hunt is another of the 11 tones vying for the top job. now at least 95 people have been killed in an ethnic attack in central mali it's the latest massacre amid an ongoing conflict between rival communities in the west african country the attack happened in the village office a body coup which is inhabited by members of the doggoned community officials say an identified gunmen attacked overnight virtually wiping out the entire village fighting between doggone hunters and rival philosophy herders has already left hundreds dead over the last year and a half. a scant more from a journalist i'm brown posthumous in modest counseling because he joins us on the line welcome to the w one do we know about the provocation behind this attack. very little apart from what you already mentioned in your introduction. part of an
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ongoing pattern of communal violence in an up. earlier this year when another village called the saddle was attacked with more than a 150 people dead this seems to be a revenge for that village who was majority inhabited by. this village as you mentioned 72 which is majority seems to be a communal element in the assailants came in in the dead of night. some reports even mention that there were inhabitants still around for there were burnt alive used guns and probably knives and left $200.00 people dead so if if this is part of this ongoing calm and all violence what happens now does this get investigated as a crime or does it get does it get investigated as that's been a part of a war. that's a good question. because the terminology matters
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a great deal here the states the government has already come out using the word terrorist. which. supposed they look at it from a law and order perspective whereas the local mayor has been claiming that the people who were behind this attack were fulani herdsman which would suppose that there is a more of a communal element to this and it's probably both the massacre in over struggle that i mentioned earlier was investigated not by the your 4 of you but by the u.n. peacekeeping or organization the national singled out the traitors it's up to the mali and justice system of these the to bring these people to book from the authorities the so what you see most of the time is stay sickly handwringing. talk as you thank you for joining us journalist abrahm possumus in the bamako.
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let's get a closer look then at the background to this conflict with the doctors again in pharma who spent lots of time in this region while can gather and so these conflicts seems to go back decades what's that about so it's not only decades sent centrist to be honest because it's mainly because these 2 ethnic groups on the ground only mention the full on the on the one hand who are all of us and moments and on the other hand we have the sedentary families with the cold the dog and that region so it's basically a conflict over resources so the herders they need to have land for that kept us to graze and the agricultural sedentary from us need land to produce snow and now this conflict is getting worse and worse because of the climate crisis so the land with the hardest can use for their cattle is to strengthen because of this it to vacation coming up so there's less land and they go into more and more into regions where they haven't gone before so they have always been killings like 2 or 3 people
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but recently this have this this killings have a race to it to really get in a much bigger dimension just because if this sounds a bit like much more violent than skirmishes over laundry we heard about to perhaps a whole village being wiped out so this is. this is this clearly more so they stand just we need we need ball resources you know this is i thought like the origin of the conflict i know there's several things adding up you know there's a strong islamic set terrorist groups are strong present and the reason the f.b.i. in the north and and also you have to see like these almost the poor people there for nothing they're really living on the on the edge so if anyone comes to them they give me 10 euros 10 say 10000 fasi if i would just a little control and see if you could shout out to this person for one night they would do this that will not say that they're linked to a terrorist group but they then poor. just there just take money and the other
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thing is that we spoke people predominately muslim and the dog and people are predominantly animists so there is also religious sort of conflict in between so there would perhaps more easily give shelter to someone who is from the muslim side but. not really saying that they're terrorists but they're they're they're getting linked by the us to this and then we have another factor that of the week president of the state so the money state authority is very strong and bamako the capital and the region but they're not neglecting the rural areas and so the doggone a so the separate pharmacy a bit like auto defense groups because this is somebody at the sec you can't allow the state test the power has to be at the army you can't allow like any people have all to have local militias being given this is and also the last government there was a reform of the governed because they couldn't decide these local militias because they have really no no power no say in those regions and these people say if the
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state does nothing for me if i want to be 1st myself so you sing and so is the mali central government is that luck of all sources in this area because they say they actually don't have the resources to police these areas or is it just they don't care i think there is i can't say yes i think that authority in this way just perhaps is a resource problem but that's also not like the strongest will to go there because mali government have been very much engaged in the 2 of 12 conflict in the north of the country where the 2 are ike another ethnic group wanted to have independence and so much much attention goes there and now the other region but the other thing you have to say it's not only a mali and problem because it's a regional problem you have these same ethnic groups like. and said and they're in also in the neighboring country fossil niger and like all of these have been drawn by the colonial powers operatory so it's not only in mali province a regional problem you have the same a textbook enough so every day even from my fellow john was that there was
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a tech today book enough fossil that's really something where the central powers they they don't arrive to to get these communities to give work for there and so there could be like gangs form live in for. them it's work if someone comes go here and kills people it's work for them because they have nothing and also for the sedentary from us the. period where they can do agricultural strength due to climate crisis on the month and 9 month the sitting around doing nothing and or anyone comes and offer them something they would just go for it but the hood is interesting how all those there's various factors into play a verb bring that to our attention a gallon of foam thank you. we'll turn our attention to sudan now where a nationwide strike against the country's military rulers has entered its 2nd day most shops in ca to remain closed for the 4th and i say life is returning a back to the capital opposition leaders urged people to stay home to protest
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against the deadly crackdown last week when security forces violently broke up opposition citizens army chiefs stepped up their troops presence in the streets to counteract protesters demonstrators are pressuring the army to handle the power to civilians. turkey started flooding a down on the river tigris today despite criticism from local communities the town of hoss and keefe in south east turkey is one of the 1st places on the tigris where human being settled filling the elusive will completely submerged the ancient town and started grooms thousands of people have been uprooted and moved to a newly built town to make way. feel that out of who used to tend to the garden of his small guest house every day people who stayed here could enjoy his home grown fruits and vegetables he always felt he would lose more than his guesthouse with the construction of the dam. they don't think about how they will be changing our
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lives and our cultural heritage but that's what concerns us most losing our culture that's why we have freedom of the world into the. guest houses in the ancient town office and keep it over 12000 years ago it was one of the 1st human settlements on the banks of the tigris river. the elusive dam is about 60 kilometers southeast of here planned as early as 1950 s. the dams purpose is to produce hydro electric power but from the beginning there was opposition to the project local residents like more had to take in tried to have it stopped. them and always say yes it would generate electricity. only of what could be gained by flipping a place like this. dam will produce just one percent of the energy that turkey needs think there. will be. about 50000 people will lose their
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homes to the dam most have been resettled in a new town along with some of the historical monuments. to secure his livelihood phaedrus are gone bought a parcel of land for a new hotel in the new town. i'm going to take up everything here and take the soil with me or that's the only way anything will grow here it's like container gardening for her here because i can. shop owners in the old town center also have to start from scratch hasn't keefe was a popular day trip destination for tourists. merchants like moore that can now worry about how they'll in a living. will their readers paid is far too little compensation they tell us we can buy new shops in the new town and pay them off in installments but how there's no work for is the one i live in. an old arabic poem from the region
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sais these traces show that we have existed if they are lost the memory of the creators will also disappear as an keeps residents fear that this age old saying could prove true. now opposition leaders in hong kong say more than a 1000000 people turned out of the weekend to protest against plans to allow the extradition of suspects to the chinese mainland despite the protests arden's chief executive says she will not scrap the legislation critics say the changes would give beijing free rein to pursue political opponents on the island they have promised to hold more protests on wednesday. they're fighting for justice and these protesters know that if they don't make a noise and i then they were standing over there in japan to judicial system to beijing organizers say more than a 1000000 people joined that march but that's not change the minds of the people in charge. while we will continue to do the communication and explanation
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there's very little merit to be gained the tool of delaying the bill it will just cause more insight and divisiveness in society the protests have had broad support attracting not just activists and students but also businesspeople and lawyers who are normally supportive of the establishment. if they invested in the rebel visit invest the money you know lose confidence in hong kong and because of this see you know you go bill then you know when the whole go will economical it would also be the straw that mainland china use all sorts of way. to exercise so-called to pay to ship them in hong kong. to kidnap the people they treat as anime. many fear china's legal system with its high conviction rate and liberal use of the death penalty. hong kong's government says it's included safeguards in the bell and
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amended it only applies to crying is carrying a sentence of 7 years or more critics say this is a not to quit the protests are expected to continue to keep up the pressure on lawmakers as they prepare to debate the battle on wednesday. is in hong kong he sent us this assessment. there was a sense of astonishment of achievement yesterday that it was really possible to get this many people to the streets and if the government ignores this now and is determined to push through this bill this will only further enrage people the government has little need to to mysie with the pro-democracy camp with those hong kong those who hope to preserve their freedoms and it will only lose them further beijing stepping in and denouncing the protests as a western interference in hong kong's affairs will certainly not help this either.
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now in follow on lewis hamilton has consolidated his lead of the top of a driver's world championship after a controversial win at the canadian grand prix in english one was 2nd to the checkered flag but got a boost from grace marshall's after a near miss with german sebastian vettel the 50th canadian grand prix match 2 of the modern masters side by side at the front of the grid england's 5 time world champion lewis hamilton and germany's 4 time world champs the best in veteran starting from paul in a much improved ferrari. the rivals would hold that formation through the early parts of a hotly contested race before the decisive moment unfolded on lap 48 when the englishman was finally applying sustained pressure to the race leader vettel 100 breaking. the german overshot a chicane and took a detour through the grass on reviewing the incident bryce marshall's deemed that
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the former world champ should have allowed the englishman to pass vettel was hit with a 5 2nd time penalty that meant that hamilton said his driver was the race winner despite getting to the chicken flag 2nd the decision sealed a 5th race win of the season for the reigning champion. naturally it is not the way absolutely not the way i wanted to when i was pushing to the end to trying it must. force him into an era the german stage his own unofficial people and protest hold no grudge was said or not you should ask the people what they think you know i think we had a great show. it was such a good respect so yeah us the people hamilton will take a 63 point lead over the fatal to the next rice south of france. football england have kicked off their women's world cup campaign with a $21.00 win over old viable scotland on bowl gave england chose the school from
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the penalty spot heat of paris conversant to make it one. england doubled their lead before half time when alan white's pounced on. the box scotland got to go back through clare and was late in the sunday night minutes and held out for the way. i mean while australia and italy kicked off their women's world cup campaigns with a thrilling groups a clash that gangs all square at. the last minute of injury time to sleep striking back into a straight hot barbara. bonsa us quarter 2nd go to seal the game to one the final score. in tennis or rafael nadal is french open champion again in a repeat of last year's final he faced off against a dominic t.m. for the title and just like last year a spot had continued his phenomenal spell of dominance to rack up
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a record breaking victory. it was a quick turnaround for dominant team he only finished his mammoth 5 cent semifinal against novak djokovic on saturday then on sunday he faced the king of clay on his favorite court so it came as no surprise when rafael nadal took the opening set 63 holiday team fought back to win the next set but nadal was back to his ruthless best after that securing a double break of serve to claim the 3rd 61. the 4th was just as brutal when team center returned long on match point and hours 12th french open victory was secured was the same time no other player has won as many titles as a single grand slam tournament and while team's time may yet come the now the king reign supremes. that's it your abs there it's more of the top of the hour leave you
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the be. body. plan now is the coffee bomb from the imus women this means have led to its name to bristles was a populist subject now it's grown on and large scale it was lumps of chemicals. into action islam is the man of the traditional way of sustainably i'm for you mr science but they are struggling to survive in the face of mass production the beatles are next on d w.
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born. more dream go international talk show it's been a tumultuous week in german politics and europe resolve bitter divisions over migration the government it is said step into the abyss could friendly fire for president trump to defeat one of the strongest military alliances in history find out what my guests have to say on quadriga. margarita on d w. what does not for t.v. . let's ask her let's experience a modern museum center with her. cultural heritage foundation for. researchers are looking for answers in more than $5000000.00 objects suit each
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object to claim it's part of the history of mankind. only those who know about secret things have a house like this submission cultural heritage foundation or limbs treasure trove overtook documentary june 21st going to dublin. clock. hello and welcome to global 3000. in israel a social entrepreneur is helping people with mental health issues find their place in society.
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