tv DW News Deutsche Welle July 1, 2019 3:00pm-3:29pm CEST
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oh. this is deja vu news live from berlin hong kong protesters smashed their way into the legislative building they got in after spending hours ramming through a window earlier thousands of pro-democracy protesters clashed with police there rallying against an extradition bill look at the latest also coming up iran breaks the terms of the 2015 nuclear deal for the 1st time the foreign minister says the country has exceeded the limit on its stockpile of slowing british tube raney. they talked through the night but still no results european union leaders could not
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decide who should get the top jobs heated talks of the powerful post a commission president has opened up to deep divide. and renewed demonstrations in sudan demanding civilian wounded but at least 10 people are reported killed and scores more wounded in clashes with security forces. i'm sunni so much god it's great to have you with us protesters have stormed into hong kong's legislature on the anniversary of the city's return to chinese rule pro-democracy demonstrators tore down sections of the glass and metal wall before entering the building amid anger over plans legislation that would allow extraditions to china earlier police used the tongs and pepper spray to disperse crowds who occupied a road near the city's government complex. on this day 22 years ago britain handed
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the former colony over to mainland china under a deal that would ensure democratic rights for the city's people i think it's now fantasy those rights are being rolled back. and our correspondent peavy kong has been a covering the protests in hong kong for she joins us on the line phoebe we understand of the protesters have a managed some of them at least have managed to get into parliament what are they planning to do inside the building. down on now standing right next to their legislative council called life right now where tens of thousands of folks have to gathering around right. what is it you have some of the pope has to class so successfully and to the feelings. there quickly held back by police have a great do include as oh what are they would want
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to also kind of proud of it all still to like a bit of pressure the government on the adults the enemy is still very tense as it has been for hours it's afternoon and tens of thousands out of those has this now gathering here now also trying to make those roles here and including those who are killing to you so right it is tough to do and some of them there is no ceiling barricades by deal box and fencing with both from the legislative calicos and another area nearby and and they are delivering protective gear to the front line so although obviously they have to spreading hope something maybe more threats they thought they could do happen they like to our t.v. this demonstration is happening as we said on the run anniversary of hong kong's reintegration with china what are protesters been telling you on the streets today about about why they have come out.
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well the hottest topic in hong kong has a lot about the and status and they all of course did in a month 8 out of several rallies helping towns and many paying in several places have is helped out with a nice weekend demonstrators they are you asking but i think the amount as they call it to the companies to put it all faith traditions fail and to release all their grants says the feds all gaiety charges and also they ask tell them to step down and to take her political responsibility of all these are called the 3rd place these days and. so there is a mount to the same of people but none of them has been released on that by the government to them i see had mentioned nothing about our to restore the
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field. has ceased today so i think in all things a not enough florida court has said they're not satisfy with only suspend appeal but they won't come up with all. right and we have been looking at live pictures right here of hong kong as the demonstrations have been growing in size t.v. just a very briefly if you can do you think we'll see any changes from carrie lamb from the government with this pressure growing. on deck as the high government has just a few hours statement. one to 2 hours. to condemn the thousands ass off their hotel but they have mentioned nothing about all of it out there the mount which. i have mentioned to withhold it if this is how it should. so that the stance has taken out of how the government is tight it's quite tough they're not responding to . yes and we can be proud of what possibly to be
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a top of the show right here in the protest area all right our reporters he becoming there in hong kong with the protests t.v. thank you for bringing us up to date now to some other stories making headlines around the world a german military out helicopter has crashed in athens near the northern city of hanover several media are reporting that at least one person has been killed so far there is no word on the cause of the crash. the german foreign minister has called on italy to release the captain of a migrant rescue ship that detained saying rescuing people from the sea is not a crime telling authorities there arrested german national kind of all of that cater for allegedly hitting a police boat while docking at the port of the do that with 40 rescued migrants on board. iran says it has broken the limit on its enrich uranium
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stockpile set by the 2015 nuclear deal with global powers now reigning in foreign minister mohammad job at some risk confirmed what is the 1st major departure from the agreement after the u.s. withdrew the accord it means said that iran has defied warnings from european code signatories to stick to the deal despite u.s. sanctions but a former ministry spokesman said iran's steps to reduce its commitments to the nuclear deal work reversible. and use it to visit topper is following the story for she's reported from iran for us and a covers the region extensively how significant is this breach well it is of course a clear violation of the deal that iran signed back in 2015 i mean a deal that was designed to make sure run can never quiet a nuclear weapon and with this it's the 1st step in a process that could eventually allow iran to have enough enriched uranium to build
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a nuclear warhead so the time it would need to do that strings but we have to remember that iran says it doesn't even want to build a nuclear weapon of course foreign minister zarif just reiterated that it's even against the country's religion because this is a religious war against nuclear weapons but of course other countries don't really want to rely on that so what is the message that iran is sending with this then well we have to remember that it's been a year since the u.s. pulled out a very and so far iran has still complied with it even though it hasn't had any benefits at all and the sanctions that the u.s. imposed. in the past year on iran have really had like a dramatic effect on people's life and also the country's economy so with the other signatories of the deal europe china russia they have failed to provide some sort of relief for iran so it gets something in return for still sticking to the deal so that's why iran is now stepping across red lines of the nuclear deal one at a time to show that now we have to we have to start doing something we have to
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negotiate today the foreign ministry urged the europeans to step up their efforts to save the deal what is this where does this leave europe in terms you mention the coasting to tory's of the deal the e.u. has been very clear including germany that it wants to salvage this agreement where does this leave its efforts to do so well they suddenly have to step up their efforts that that's really hard to do without the u.s. because international trade heavily relies on the united states with the dollar also with the banking system it's really hard to get something to iran in return without the u.s. and especially with the u.s. still adding sanctions and sanctions every couple of months i mean that's why cheer on says it's not really willing to negotiate at the moment while the u.s. keeps adding sanctions ok but what about the u.s. because washington has said it it is open to perhaps re reopening negotiations with iran how likely is that to happen i mean the u.s. is sending mixed messages of course they're also threatening obliteration the next
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day they're offering fresh talks. the thing is that iran has ruled out fresh talks in some regards the supreme leader has that here doesn't want fresh talks the president hasn't said so clearly but this one thing that's for sure they are not willing to negotiate without preconditions like the u.s. president offers they want the u.s. to return to the old deal 1st and then start negotiations from there and that's something trump is obviously not considering at the moment over a reporter to his that's what but with the story for us thank you. now european union leaders have suspended talks after failing to agree on who will fill the block's top jobs in the run up to the summit france and germany agree to support a common candidate for the key post of commission president the dutch social democrat friends to moments but their choice has met some stiff opposition after all night discussions failed to talks will resume on tuesday. and he. is standing
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by in brussels for us max we're now that we're going to wait until tomorrow for some decisions but we thought that they were getting pretty close that we might even hear a decision today so how close are you leaders on deciding on these important posts . we listened to the german chancellor makeover who just gave a press conference and she said that they weren't as close as many people here might have thought she said that there wasn't really any consensus on anything no majority the required majority on any of the consolations and she said that a lot of names were mentioned during this negotiating marathon but she also said that it was important to find a broader majority than the one that is required required is a majority that has represent 65 percent of the people of the european union she says we don't want that we want to broader consensus a larger majority in order to have something that we can actually work within the
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next years and don't have too much spilled milk over that and that's why she said even if it doesn't make us look good right now to continue talking tomorrow and not having found a solution today history might prove that it's the better decision to take that one extra day sleep a little and maybe see things from a different angle on tuesday next what are the biggest lines of division that we've seen open up here over this question of who should be that have the commission and what do they tell us about where the e.u. is right now. you can see that the divisions between the east and the west something we've seen in the last years over multiple decisions is very strong we know that the so-called group represented among others by hungary was very much opposed to funds to moments the dutchman that seemed to be the front runner for the european commission presidency but there's also quite some opposition between france and germany here because i call the french president just out right rejected
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the german candidate for the commission presidency who is also the candidate of the biggest party in the european parliament monthly to the able for the conservatives and that's of course the party. so you also have a division there but among others smaller countries want to be represented eastern western countries. also need to make sure that you have gender equality of course so finding suitable men and women for the post this makes this in credible puzzle incredibly complicated puzzle this time around more complicated than ever because of the divisions you mention and also the consolation in the european parliament where it's no longer enough to have the 2 big parties the socialist and the conservatives work together you need the 3rd party the liberals and that's where i've got my call and all this 3 dimensional chess comes into play max just briefly if we can in the year that we're talking about britain leaving the e.u. when there's been a lot of contention over a migration in the block as well what do you take away what do you think of this
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wrangling over these posts what does that say about the european union right now. you know that's big. because we have these huge problems ahead of us and she specifically mentioned the u.k. exiting the european union they want to find a solution where there's a large majority she said we probably won't have unanimity but at least we want something that's put on a sound foundation all right our correspondent max foster been following the latest for us there in brussels thank you max. in sudan at least 10 people are reported to have been killed and almost 200 injured in clashes between police and protesters thousands took to the streets across the country to demand that the ruling military council hand power over to a civilian government the demonstrations are the biggest since a charity forces opened fire on a protest in the capital khartoum almost a month ago killing dozens. of. these demonstrators made their way to khartoum's defense ministry to appeal to military rule as it was one
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of several rallies in cities across sudan protesters were eager to make their voices heard. punish these oppressors. we want a civilian government a civilian one video that. some marches carried photos. family members who were among dozens killed when police broke up a peaceful sit in protest outside army headquarters in early june that violence coincided with the collapse of talks between military rulers and protest leaders about who should head a new governing body sunday's rallies marked the 1st return to the streets since then. as protesters in khartoum neared the presidential palace officials made it clear that they were unwilling to listen to the voice of the people on stirring the chants with tear gas. the military council justified his actions and a special t.v. address. when i came on that man with troops mission is to protect protesters but
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we don't trust the vandals. in front of the youth center in the medical headquarters there are snipers shooting at people they have hit 3 members of the rocket support forces and about 5 or 6 civilians that's why we were upset and trying to get things under control and that i don't look at. sunday's demonstrations also mark the 30th anniversary of the coup that 1st brought president omar al bashir to power in 1909. that coup talk of the last democratically elected government here the demonstrators have vowed to continue their protests until sudan has a civilian leadership again i for more on the story we can speak to d.w. reporter abraham she's with us here in our studio thank you for joining us you were in sudan in may during the mass demonstrations then and this is the 1st big protest since the government's bloody crackdown on protestors last month you've been in touch with your contacts on the ground there are they worried about getting back
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out onto the streets quite ironically what i sensed yesterday and today from people on the ground is not fear but relief i feel like i sense more fear from them between june 3rd and the events of yesterday because as we mentioned the report june june 3rd was this bloody brute. to crack down it wasn't just fire trucks there were also reports of men and women being raped tents burned just insane just unimaginable brutality a lot of the people that i spoke to have called this a massacre that this was a massacre on an epic scale it was an assault on a protest camp and since that crackdown the protesters have been forced to go underground there were militia men and police and military terrorizing people on the streets and in that period between june 3rd and yesterday i sensed a lot of fear not just for their lives but also for everything that they have accomplished up until june 3rd you know through overthrowing of bashir who had been in power for 30 years so there was there was fear on many levels but yesterday was
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this visit since you know for the 1st time since the crackdown this impressive show of power for a protest of that size to be organized without the internet with a near internet blackout with the headquarters of opposition groups being raided by the military 2 days before the protest and one day before the protest the military council is going out and saying outright any death on the streets is the responsibility of the opposition and for against that against all of these odds the people were still able to to to to galvanize themselves as they did yesterday now there's now there's more hope now i'm sensing a bit more relief in the words in the things that they're telling me actually what about on the diplomatic level what about the efforts to bring the military council together with protest organizers with civilian leaders has there been any progress on that front since the crackdown on june 3rd the opposition to for some freedom and the forces of freedom change which is this coalition of opposition groups that
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has been negotiating with the military council has not had any direct contact they have been communicating over a draft basically of an agreement through the fuel paean and the african union mediators be the demonstrations of yesterday and today perhaps in. going to ease the tensions between between the 2 parties however they now put the opposition back in in a place that they can negotiate from a position of strength because they have shown that they do commend the streets and that they can really gather the masses because basically this camp for our viewers just to give them some context this was a sit in that had been there since i'm going to bashir was overthrown they had occupied this essentially what's the traffic juncture in front of the ministry of defense barricaded and this was their physical leverage on the ground on june 3rd they lost that and yesterday they regained it somehow and so you know the demonstrations might not ease tensions but it certainly gives more bargaining chips
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for the opposition should negotiations move forward and they have to come to that at some point very important context there are reporters. thank you very much for joining us. now whalers in japan are back out on the waters today they're setting sail on the country's 1st commercial hunt since 1986 despite a huge international backlash conservationists say whaling is cruel and outdated but in japan it's a tradition. it was all hands on deck before setting sail on a hunt that's been 3 decades coming these are the men that will bring fresh local whales back to japan. are ready and sort of the crew. bigger and fatter whales means better meat i don't know if it tastes good so i'm wondering if i should buy them or not. enough that i don't really need to eat whale. it's another major whaling town this time and prime minister shinzo
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own constituency there were celebrations the crew set off in a bid to help revive japan's controversial love affair with whale meat. you're watching news still to come on our show an elected a spanish politician and a champion lightweight boxer taking on domestic abuse and meet a woman who's fights that take place both in the boxing ring and beyond. but 1st millions of people have taken part in annual gay pride celebrations and cities around the world over the weekend this year's celebrations are special because it marks the 50th anniversary of the stonewall uprising the revolt of gay people in new york that began the struggle for the rights. colorful and diverse hundreds of thousands of revelers gathered in new york to mark the 50th anniversary of the student riots the world pride march kicked off outside
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the landmark in a brutal police raid on the popular gay bar the struggle for gay rights that this was a day for celebration. this is really exciting and i came out of. her hands just being 6 here so we have most of their best time to these words it's really heartwarming to see how much of that as a nation that we are crafts and more accepting of others that are. accepting of individuality. but not everyone was a satisfied at the pace of change in the united states. today still in much of this country you can get married to a person of the same sex on monday and then go to work on tuesday and be fired because now they know you're gay and that's perfectly legal. and much remains to be done in the fight for equal rights in many other countries. in turkey's biggest city istanbul several 100 l.g.b. t.
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supporters gathered for a small rally despite about. i don't understand why a gathering like this is banned in a country where people are supposed to be secular and free the most not. despite hopes that the new man could convince of dorothy's to allow their rally to go ahead the march outlawed for the 5th consecutive year ended with tear gas and rubber bullets. sports now and a south african track star caster semenya ran her 1st 800 meter race since appealing to switzerland supreme court over a testosterone limits rule imposed by the sport's governing body to mannion dominated in the diamond league meeting in california winning the fastest time ever on american soil in the event and she's back to competing with the 4 and politics coming together in spain over the issue of domestic violence it's been put back on the agenda by the far right vox party a vox 124 seats in parliament on
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a platform that includes doing away with a gender violence law that it says discriminates against men one politician who was herself physically abused is fighting back and using boxing to champion women's rights. a picture of resilience miriam gutierrez is a fighter who has battled her way back from a horrific past when she was pregnant today aged 21 a partner at the time beat her so severely that she gave birth prematurely. when he beat me the 1st time i was 8 months pregnant and about to give birth he hit my face and such a way that he broke several bones and i fell to the ground. the 1st thing that came to my mind as a person carrying a child was does my daughter still have a heartbeat. luckily she did her daughter has grown up healthy and out of harm's way. only the net of
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my daughter is now 14 and she's super super happy she has a mother who has fought for her to lee end and i'll keep doing so but i also have a 6 year old my life is completely read boat that i'm in there it's up the spanish mother of 2 has had quite a year 1st becoming a european lightweight boxing champion in march and then getting elected as a city councilor in a madrid suburb in may a journey that has inspired many i. i'm just doing what i enjoy doing people who get up again and see me as a little raven spiration can say if she's done what i can to. get out of the outside the ring she spreads her message by holding workshops and delivering speeches at events tackling domestic violence it's a dream to one day when a world title. you're watching news that coming up next on news
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and the musingly. tovan 1st 2019 from september 6th to september 29th. i'm not laughing at the gym well i guess sometimes i am but i stand up in the winter that we haven't thinks deep into the german culture of looking at the stereotype question in here thinks he's a country that i not. yet need it seems ridiculous drama day oh you know it's all about a new i'm rachel join me from the german sunday. post. german with deafening and any time any place. video never. have the back of those. songs to sing along to download it is to come from super. to be able
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to. have very kind of into active exercises kind of thinking about it when you don't come to ash don't plan on facebook and am still. german so free with w. the for. this is the dublin user show coming up on the program and to beijing protests estimates again in hong kong angry demonstrators tried to break down the door of the city's fall a bunch of this as hong kong lost its return from british to chinese rule in all goal of the protesters pushed back against beatings growing influence plus. giving up fame full faith and indian actress says she's putting bollywood just reasons why. in the indian film.
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