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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  June 27, 2019 2:02am-2:31am CEST

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home earlier this month. there's an image that we'd like for you to take a look at it's so disturbing however we don't plan to show it again a father and his baby girl migrants from el salvador now it's believed that they were trying to swim across the rio grande river to reach the u.s. when they drill but we've seen this before almost 4 years ago it was this little boy a syrian refugee his body washed ashore in turkey after the boat carrying him and his family to greece say tonight images of our children and our humanity dying at the border yet again i'm off in berlin this is the day.
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i get personally concerned about the condition of these border security is rarely honorary membership and they're much better than they were under president obama by far the children are locked in their cell they said they can't bring themselves to play because they are trying to stay alive in their. town we have to avoid increasing the flow of migrants by restricting human rights. to israel's let me get a little children aren't doing hamas and care many are living. stations some are sleeping on the cold ground without long blankets or hot meal. this situation as child of the it's. also coming up tonight when we say it's hot here in germany we mean it today was the hottest day
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in june ever recorded in the. 3 a heat wave for the history books doctors are warning it may be one for the hospitals too will speak to one of those doctors later in the show. but to our viewers on p.b.s. in the united states and all around the world welcome we begin the day with the world suddenly alerted to and outraged by what is happening at the us mexico border for months there has been concern over the welfare of migrant children being held in u.s. detention centers reports this week of squalid conditions now has congress debating a humanitarian aid package for migrants worth billions of dollars but it was the image of a father and his daughter who drowned trying to cross the rio grande river to get to the u.s. is that powerful and disturbing image that now has the world watching and demanding an explanation just as it was during the migrant crisis here in europe in 2015 in
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the united states this summer of 2019 we are forced to ask again why are children dying at the border. according to reports oscar alberto martinez ramirez decided to swim across the rio grande day with his wife and child in a bid to seek asylum in the u.s. . his wife tanya. watched as her loved ones succumb to the currents seen here in the red she is led away but after. her chose that these people tried to cross the river to the united states jumped in the water of the draw and when he tried to rescue her. from the. back in their native el salvador their deaths have started anger and much anguish as their family mourns. this is her favorite doll this one
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she had it every time her mother got her ready. this. is the moment that. photo show a family with their lives ahead of them. was not yet 2 years old and her demons thank them and their last message my son sent me was on saturday he said mama i love you mom my day our moment he said take care of yourselves because we're fine here when i read that message i don't know it made me want to cry because i saw it as a source of goodbye you know something well not only is. the tragedy a marriage the democrats in washington passed a bill calling for extra cash to address the conditions in migrant detention centers beakers recognize for one minute thank you madam speaker this situation is child abuse is not tri-city that violates every value we have not only as americans
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but as moral beings donald trump says he will veto it but deaths like oscar and valerie years on america's borders may make such a hard line stance difficult to. hold. that was he was president on one trump there i want to bring in now laura macare jeanne director of the immigrants rights clinic and columbia law school she is one of the attorneys who visited the border patrol facility in clinton texas it was her observations of squalid conditions for children that triggered a national outcry or it's good to have you on the program i want to ask you did you think last week that just one week later we would be talking about children dying at the border children have been dying at the border for years for it's not me and over the past year there have been several and 7 deaths of children and federal immigration custody once they are actually in the united states you
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asked me what i thought a week ago a week ago i was wrapping up interviews plants and i was devastated and heartbroken by the appalling and aggregating degradation that i witnessed there and i i didn't know at that point what i would do. we know that in the past couple of days the customs and border protection officers have reportedly moved hundreds of children out of that facility do we know where those children are now i mean do we know if the where they're living if the conditions are better. right so the reports that i have heard are that on monday it was announced that several 100 children would be moved out of the current the cell any then yesterday we learned about $100.00 children were brought back into the facility and we are trying to track where the children are last week there were 2600 children in the
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custody of customs and border patrol agents in those facilities this week as of just this week there are only 1000 children left in those facilities we don't yet know where those children are and we certainly don't know the conditions in which those children are being held we are calling for an immediate investigation into every cv people still any where immigrant children are being detained. would you say that it's possible that we're talking about crimes being committed here i mean it's one thing to say that we're not providing people with basic sanitary needs such as toothbrushes and blankets and so but would you say that actual criminal behavior has been taking place against these children. what i can say is that the government is clearly violating the law
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a law that was passed in 2008 with bipartisan unanimous support in both houses and signed into law by president george w. bush says that children must not be in these facilities for anyone group and 72 hours and what we witnessed in fruit last week is children c.d.p. custody for days weeks and nearly a month and this is absolutely in violation of phone law on the floor a settlement agreement for 997 requires that children be provided with safe and sanitary conditions what we witnessed in clint's was neither safe nor sanitary it was filthy disgusting and emergent public health crisis with a flu epidemic and a license to station a war one a disaster before we run out of time the the image of the little girl and her father from el salvador who drowned in the rio grande river that image has been compared particularly here in europe with the image from 4 years ago of the little
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syrian boy who drowned and washed up on a beach in turkey do you see parallels between the migration crisis of 2015 and what we're seeing now is the mexican us border. yes so here in the united states we're seeing asylum seekers refugees fleeing for their own lives during the worst trauma as the worst violence imaginable and they're coming to the united states just as they were coming to europe in hopes of a better future at least of teacher in which they wouldn't be killed and a list so devastating to see that image i hope that image can be a call to action for all americans regardless of party affiliation that we must take care of children who are entering the united states and where we are in
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our reporters that i think most people around the world would agree with you with that for sure. director of the immigrant rights clinic at columbia law school. thank you thank you very much for having me. hope and expect this to be the only time that i will speak to you in this matter and the report is my testimony i would not provide information beyond that which is already public in any appearance before congress. famous last words that was the former u.s. special counsel robert mueller last month delivering the only public statement that he has ever given about the russian probe but that will soon change against his own wishes congress is asking him to talk again mother will testify before the house
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judiciary committee and the house intelligence committee on july 17th most importantly the hearings will be open sessions on live television viewership could be the biggest of any televised hearing since watergate while the mobile report itself remains a new york times bestseller people who haven't read the 400 page book and they don't need to they could have a front row seat to what is being billed as the mole or movie live from congress here's house judiciary committee chairman jerry never on the importance of letting mr moeller speak. i think just the fact just that he says what was in the report and says it to the american people so they hear it that would be very very important because they've been subjected to months of deception as to what was in the report by the attorney general and by the president well the u.s. president has insisted that the mobile report presented no evidence of collusion or
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obstruction of justice so what was the president's reaction to hearing that miller is going to testify before congress well mr trump was briefed but he was consistent we did he called it 2 words there presidential arrest let's take the story out of washington w.'s oliver salant joins me now from the u.s. capital good evening to you all the better we heard moeller say the report is his testimony is this about is getting new information which he says he doesn't have or is this about the optics. well it's about the way it's presented really i mean we're talking about a 400 pages reporting quite frankly no one is going to read the 400 pages here at least no one of the american voters that's the basic assumption so the problem here being is that the interpretation and the analysis of this report was essentially left to congress as well as to president trump who thankfully took that opportunity
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and as we know he's been tweeting time and time again and calling this report a witch on presidential harassment essentially in the hopes of the democrats are right now that by subpoenaing robert muller they would have someone impartial 3 someone at the author in fact of the report delivering 3 on the key findings here and he by the way was certainly not very happy being subpoenaed he said it has made 29 press conference that if you will subpoena everything he will deliver will be exactly along the lines of what's already inside that report but that's ok for the democrats all they want is to have him live on national television a centrally answering the question why president trump cannot be cannot be cannot be you know held. accountable really for the question of structure of justice that is going to be aired on his testimony here in the
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united states. much of the world will be watching and listening to oversell in washington and this was forced you know over thank you. well the leaders of the u.s. and iran today again traded insult stinginess between the 2 countries have been at the breaking point last week iran shut down the u.s. drone and that almost triggered a u.s. military strike and it is not only the pentagon that is on high alert nato is also concerned about a bad situation suddenly becoming worse nato defense ministers are holding talks in brussels this week their 1st meet and greet with the new acting u.s. defense secretary mark esper it's already clear that as for once more european pressure on iran to change course but as the w.'s teri schultz reports he may not get all that he wants. this strife in the strait of hormuz is creating
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a gulf between the u.s. and its european allies there's a debate to put it mildly there's a debate about this between europe and america u.s. acting defense secretary mark esper will spend his 1st days on the job at nato headquarters trying to convince his european counterparts their own interests are at stake in the street too u.s. ambassador to nato kay bailey hutchison has been laying the groundwork. and nato folks. are. attacking ships. say the they're going to go back into preparing for a nuclear weapons that's pretty strong to stand up to it but as for is still likely to have a tough time getting european support for military action one of the problematic parts of trump's agenda from the very beginning is this idea of. basically
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every nation fighting for itself in a kind of arena of actors that's the way some of the people around trump put it in the beginning of his term so i mean in my view that doesn't work then there's the u.s. president's casual linkage of article 5 all allies solemn responsibility to defend each other to how much they spend on their militaries now there is article 3 which states that all government should continually and affectively improve their capabilities and to be sure some don't but never before has the commitment to collective defense been quantified or questioned europeans are spending more on their militaries now and will spend even more in the future rather than easing tensions with the us a new front has been opened that's because the european union is earmarking almost $600000000.00 for its own defense projects that might exclude the u.s. washington is threatening to retaliate still senior nato. officials believe things
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will work out because the us and european defense industries are already intertwined so i think altogether the picture is not so much that of a fortress america of a fortress europe but that of a transatlantic market that is in place and from this perspective is likely to continue and in its quest to convince europeans to ratchet up pressure on iran the u.s. may take heart from recent history it took years but all allies now agree with the u.s. conclusion that russia is violating the intermediate range nuclear treaty the i.n.f. they also support the u.s. decision to declare the treaty dead on august 2nd unless moscow announces it will destroy its program before then a unanimous nato stance that once and impossible to achieve. europe is being hit by an unprecedented heat wave the choking temperatures set to
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intensify over the next few days maybe even breaking the highest levels ever recorded in certain countries let's take a look at some of the numbers in paris the average high for this time of year is $23.00 degrees celsius today it hit $39.00 in central france that's a 100 into fahrenheit and it's the same in spain it should be around 27 degrees in late june by the number of areas including the capital madrid today hit 38 degrees celsius and today right here in germany we recorded the highest ever temperature for the month of june the mercury in a town just outside the berlin at 38.6 degrees that is a whopping 101 degrees fahrenheit well don't worry we are sweaty here too at our studios in berlin the extreme weather is expected to continue until the weekend w.'s going to cattles braved the beating sun on the streets of the
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german capital here's what she found. i will keep checking balance temperature throughout the day to find out how my fellow berlin us i handling the heat and closely observe if the german capital can top the record. 38.5 degrees says yes that was the hottest june temperature ever recorded in germany until today if this doesn't sound hot to you it does to people here most of us don't have air conditioning at home i'm 0 way prepared i you know i'm taking my family to the pool and we'll be staying there the whole day. best not to work or strain too much stay in the shade. and it's getting hotter by the minute i am in the heart of balance government district. i don't know what america behind me in this building does to cool down but the tourists have
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certainly found ways to enjoy the heat. do you have any sort of ways to cope with the heat yet we we have 50 sunscreen all over extra 50 in the back and then we try to stay as much as possible in the shelter. so where do you come from where you come from ukraine are you surprised by this weather here in germany at the moment i didn't know that it will be 36 degrees like today 36 degrees you might call it hot but it's still not breaking the temperature records many seem to share my favorite way of cooling down though. so what about that record i am not calling it a day yet. i have found a place in berlin that has definitely top the heat read this. in there was it gets it was standing it actually feels more like 50 degrees but when it's when it's this
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hard to people who really come and buy kebabs yeah yeah many people buy kebabs kababs make things better i don't know how he does it just thinking about eating it makes me sweat and no wonder really considering this has been the hottest day of the. if she's going to need more than a hat if she wants to stay cool we're going to talk about the health implications of all of this he does do that i'm joined here at the big table by all of the doctor and researcher at the center for space medicine and extreme environments at the sharp university here in berlin it's good to have you on the show i mean. space and extreme conditions i mean that's what we're in right now isn't it devon b.s. as always that the change shelf off the climate conditions so it's when it's when it was kind of cold what what what it was last week that was like 20 degrees maybe 15 degrees and we go up to 3540 degrees and everybody's getting crazy getting crazy
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is it it is a danger to people's health right it is definitely i mean we say that every time there's a heat wave but i mean we really were serious about it i mean people get sick and people can die when the temperature is this guy who's most at risk most of the very young people to up to one or 2 years children. elderly people above 8080 years of age and people who have severe diseases like kidney diseases heart diseases. other severe diseases like cancer or something and what one of the precautions that people should be taking i mean i'm hoping that they're going to say they should have you know well working air conditioners definitely so yeah germans are afraid of air conditioning and they tell me. and the word is german eventually i mean what else in the world has that experience it's
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a draft if there's a draft in the room it's like wind when they can make you sick we get all the time i want to ask you scientists say that these heat waves are going to become the new no we're particularly in the summer. the climate is changing rather quickly i guess are humans able to a dead. this quickly young people and people at our age no problem so after a while you got adapted to it you sweat a lot but you know you adapt to drink a lot but if specially those people in danger we talked we were talking about they have an enormous risk to get sick and also to be give forgotten especially i think about the people who live alone in the cities there are enormous risks risk and we always thinking about we also thinking about this injury in. the doctor's. us we're scientists. who think about those
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climate changes that oh yeah this is a good point you make because it's just coming to work today the news there is many people outside because it is so hot and you don't see any overly people outside right now don't they all stay inside and they forget to drink and nobody looks off them and they can that's why they are in danger because nobody thinks about it and it's getting worse and. we run out of time but what about our mindset in dealing with heat you know we were talking about air conditioning for example do we have to change the way we view heat and the way we live with it if we want to have a comfortable life for me is there something that we have to change appears will. we shouldn't i think it's happening automatically but we have to make sure that until it happened and until that process has ended and not we don't
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have too many people who suffered are gay or have given their lives for it you know so we should be going to foster with changing conditions changing a way to thinking about how to build buildings. it is a how to what to do with any people how to do in public transport for example which is also very hot right now. from a university hospital we appreciate your insights and stay cool yeah thanks a lot need to thank you we're going to draw the day is almost done but as always the conversation continues online you'll find us on twitter either at u.w. news or you can follow me at bring golf t.v. don't forget to use hash tag today and remember whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is hopefully a cooler day we'll see you then applying. to
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. enter the conflict zone with to sebastian the tony east european state of moldova has a new coalition government our guest this week is that the mixture of what condi rice president of the outgoing democratic party and the former justice minister with mogo but now find wood for corruption is he assuring the peace talks he's raechel
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in. conflict so for next. time. we're many. from out. galaxy. researchers around the world are hunting for. trying to detect such a presence. messages from the edge of the. black holes and new trade offs in. 45 minutes on a double. digit . you know this you know 5
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minutes or minutes. pass an hour and a beauty. pageant all. the feats in the pantheon the great tennis circuit he's won for the ages. scott turner for the. stars july 10th on g.w. . do you think the rest of the world is really that stupid is he a crook yeah of course it's not and it's going to be rather uncomfortable for those that know it's not that old uncomfortable we will see who is less corrupted and who is better managing going down winning the contract the time east european states of moldova has a new coalition government united it seems only in its dislike of the previous
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administration my guest this week here in the capital q so now is a bloody mature but tardy vice president of the outgoing democratic party i'm.

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