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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  July 31, 2019 11:00am-11:16am CEST

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this is news coming to you live from berlin germany titan says laws on migration and asylum one aim is to make it easier to deport more failed asylum seekers now many fear that their time will soon be off and they'll be forced to leave why do so many people are patients. also coming up to us democratic candidates face off on television the party is seeking to the woman or men most likely to beat donald trump was 2020 election but as an ideological divide emerges it's still unclear
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whether the moderates or the progressive peaceful when the day. came to realize that i can't escape my judgment i accepted it i'm going to ask my father. it was too much to handle the copy i had killed my mother in law i was in so much pain. 25 years after the rwandan genocide some of the perpetrators are still struggling to come to terms with the past we looked at why the healing process is also being hampered by traditional ideas about masculinity. oh i'm terry martin good to have you with us germany has tightened its laws on migration and asylum but the changes are controversial one aim is to make it easier . or to deport failed asylum seekers last year germany deported nearly 25000
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failed asylum seekers but more than 31000 other planned deportations did not take place often because documents were missing or the silent seekers went into hiding under the new law asylum seekers will be penalized if they refuse to help clarify their identity and it will be easier to detain in hold failed asylum seekers before they're deported to the used market reports now on efforts to deport asylum seekers from munich and their efforts to resist. technics airport a dozen nigerian nationals are taken to a chartered plane for deportation. 5 people on the passenger list are missing they may have gone into hiding 12 migrants board the aircraft accompanied by 3 times as many police officers. officer christiane cook of my own has been on many such
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deportation flights he says repatriation amounts to a personal crisis for migrants many are desperate some even injure themselves at the last minute to try and avoid deportation as i mean every dimension that i have always on my worry about is i wonder how things are going to work out for them are these but then i figure if we're sitting in the plane with them than a proper legal process is being carried out to me even though my 40. some tooth from senegal could be deported next he has lived in and around munich for 5 years his asylum application was turned down he knows the rules for deportation are getting stricter and a lengthy detention is possible. is if you fall on a force that's not needed of the i don't see if we are to see. what through what we think on the even years we have been done. i think if someone don't know what is
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problem you don't fight so i think. that those people. some get support from an n.g.o.s munich a refugee council that helps him when he deals with officials and needs legal advice the refugee council is critical of the new deportation regular. the stared at him as a sneer compared to being completely deprived of their rights not only that those who slept here are being dehumanized because this is no longer a matter of an individual's fate but the families are split up or whether a person is sick this is a matter of carrying out a potations for the sake of raising the statistics to stick. authority to see things differently those in detention at this temporary facility at munich airport are legally required to be deported. every case has been reviewed by a judge. to hear appeals from people who have committed offenses
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have priority on a deportation blights or those who are in danger of public order and safety that delinquents and people consider the threat to adult with the incomes everyone else because within them by the get started so it's not only criminals who are detained in the worst cases people who have committed minor violations such as signing a document too late could also be deported. that sometimes makes officers like. think twice even if they trust the system couldn't meyer thanks abusive officials who accompany deportees such as speeding and fighting is on the rise and witnessing deportees inflicting injury on themselves is stressful. because it is it is murder so i try to avoid letting it get to me i think he doesn't mean me personally he probably sees police officers on the flight as representatives of the german state
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and he holds them in contempt because he has to leave the country that is how i distance myself from the situation or over the week is a visit from your fiancee were. the migrants from nigeria have long since landed back home for the time being they may not return to germany their train is over. smother stories making headlines around the world today at least 28 people have been killed and 10 wounded by a roadside bomb in the province of parole in western afghanistan the victims are mostly women and children it's the latest in a string of attacks as the presidential campaigning season in afghanistan gets underway. north korea has launched 2 short range ballistic missiles on yang's 2nd weapons test in less than a week south korea said the missiles were fired from the east coast and flew about 250 kilometers or japan's japanese prime minister shinzo ave says there's been no
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impact on his country's security. and authorities in costa rica and panama have arrested dozens of people allegedly linked to a ring of people smugglers officials searched homes and detained almost 50 suspects police say migrants are willing to pay smugglers up to 20000 dollars to take them towards the u.s. border. a 2nd case of ebola has been discovered in goma a city in the democratic republic of congo the city of over 2000000 people is a major transport hub and health officials are worried that a major epidemic there could spread at least 1700 people have died in along in a year long in the country. feel it's still more than a year away but in the u.s. the democrats are already gearing up for the 2020 presidential election 10 hopefuls hoping to win the party's nomination have clashed in a t.v.
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debate the candidates addressed issues such as migration and health care but the democrats' biggest challenge is of course stopping president winning a 2nd term. 1st. it was billed as a political blockbuster these democratic candidates met for a 2nd time to spawn live on t.v. . they sang out of the same hymn book during the rendition of the national anthem but old unity disappeared when a fierce debate ensued and progressive like bernie sanders clashed with more moderate candidates like john hickenlooper. but there was one thing all contenders agreed upon trump must go. we have got to take our troubles racism his sexism set up phobia and come together in it on president unprecedented grassroots move that not only defeat trouble but to transform our economy and how
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government will call his racism out for what it is and also talk about its consequences it doesn't just offend our sensibilities to hear him say send her back about a member of congress because she's a woman of color because she's a muslim american doesn't just offend our sensibilities when he calls mexican immigrants rapists and criminals senator elizabeth warren reminded of rivals that in spite of the differences democrats will soon have to unite to defeat their common enemy 5 shirts away from the hug donald trump disc graces the office of presidents every single day and anyone on this stage tonight or tomorrow night would be a far better president i promise no matter who our candidate is i will work my heart out to be donald trump and to elect a democratic congress. 10 more democrats will debate each other on wednesday it
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will be some time still before the party chooses the candidate to try and unseat trump in the 2020 alexion i. german prosecutors have brought criminal charges against the former head of bokes wagon subsidiary our d. over the diesel cheating scandal rupert stuff is among 4 people accused of fraud and criminal advertising prosecutors say stop le knew about emissions test cheating in 2015 but allowed to affected and folks wagons to stay on sale stopped love was suspended from his job as c.e.o. last year. to rwanda a country still deeply scarred by the genocide 25 years ago nearly all the killers in the 1994 mass slaughter were men many have served time in prison but now want
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to heal themselves and their community as our correspondent on the crew of the ball has been to the city of good zinni in western rwanda there she met some of those struggling to come to terms with the past. when the mall today these men sit side by side in community based social therapy to shed their experience during around. the 1994 genocide 25 years ago when up to a 1000000 tutsis in moderate hutus were wiped out interest 100 days but it would divide it among those who carried out the killings and those who survived it. memories of being on the run and how his pregnant wife had to give birth in hiding of it. we couldn't find a way that the baby would survive being with us but i still had friends who i was doing business with they helped me and they took my newborn at night to woman who run an orphanage at. the baby stage but
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a few days later the perpetrators went to look for him they took my baby and killed him. up don now lives a peaceful life with his wife. but he struggles with the guilt of not being able to protect the 12 members of his family who were killed during the genocide similarly former release perpetrators like every easter have served their sentence are still haunted by what they call the shame of their past he says he's guilty of killing 4 people including to the members of his own family. i came to realize that i can't escape my judgment i accepted it i went to ask my father in law for forgiveness it was too much to handle the fact that i had killed my mother in law i was in so much pain. many of the men returning from prison had struggled they found their families estranged their role as the head of the household challenged
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in the image of their very own masculinity destroyed. they say these feelings however cannot be talked about in public. and always has to be strong a man has to suffocate his pride and behave like a man. the way i see it a man should also show his emotions in rwanda in culture i can accept it in public . amounted to overcome his pain. and swallow their tears that's a local problem here in rwanda which reflect a dangerous society or men are expected to deal with their pain and grief alone in silence and internally although the country is hailed as a role model in reconciling with its violent past toxic image and lets continue to persist and continues to have the healing process of its me a population. away from social pressures. i'm glad they have found a safe space to reconcile and work on the psychological.
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therapy helped. because we used to fear each of. whenever i saw a person i had wronged. i could feel my heart racing. we have no problems with the perpetrators anymore because they're part of the families of social therapy. i say when we meet now we are the same we have the same heart. but. the man of peace a new social therapy group hope to contribute to the healing of their country so that future generations won't repeat their mistakes by facing their demons together they set an example so that rundown men learn how to show their emotions and their society learns to accept that. he w.'s melanie current
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a ball there reporting from rwanda coming up next we've got a documentary film for you alpine twilight europe without glaciers you're watching news from berlin don't forget you can get all the latest news on our web site at t w dot com i'm terry mark thinks people. are 1st climbing listen. to the grand moments arrives. to join the ranks on her journey back to freedom. you know working documentary. returns home on t w don't come.

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