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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  July 31, 2019 3:00pm-3:30pm CEST

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this is news live from for lent germany tightens its laws on migration and asylum one aims to make it easier to deport more failed asylum seekers now many fear that their time will soon be up and they will be forced to leave but want to do so many deportations. also coming up tensions rise again in hong kong as more than 40 n.t. government protesters appear in court charged with the rioting after demonstrations over the weekend add to the mood i came to realize that i can't escape my judgment
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i accepted it i went to ask my father in law for forgiveness it was too much to handle the shop i had killed my mother a little i was in so much pain. i was on a book of years after their wanderers genocide some of the perpetrators are still struggling to come to terms with the past we will look at why the killing process has also been hampered by traditional ideas about masculinity plus they can track your location and even listen to your phone calls all without your knowledge smartphone apps are making it easier than ever to spy on your partner we investigate the growing problem of stalker where. i'm sorry kelly welcome to the program germany has tightened its laws on migration and asylum the changes. our controversial one aim is to make it easier to deport
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failed asylum seekers now last year germany deported nearly 25000 failed asylum seekers but more than 31000 other planned deportations did not take place often because documents were missing or asylum seekers went into hiding under the new law asylum seekers will be penalized if they've refused to cooperate and it will be easier to detain and to hold failed asylum seekers before they are deported did abuse mark iraq's reports on efforts to deport asylum seekers from munich and their efforts to resist. a new next 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 kugel mio 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 remember them and mention that they are always on my worry about it i wonder how things are going to work out for them are these girls but then i figure if we're sitting in the plane with them that a proper legal process is being carried out to be sure that you know my voice. samba boost 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 a feel for all of us let's not leave it where we are not see if we had a suit. to what we didn't run didn't use we have been done i mean i do. if someone don't know what is probably you don't fight so i think is good
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also to point you to those people. some get support from an engine you know in 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 actions. the stashed at him as compared to being completely deprived of their rights not only that but here are dehumanised because this is no longer a matter of an individual's fate but the families are split up with a person as sick this is a matter of carrying out to potations for the sake of raising the statistics to stick to that. 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. related to you but she was for the people who have committed offenses who
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have priority on deportation plights or those who are in danger of public order and safety that delinquents and people consider the threat a dealt with 1st comes everyone else because when the right to get started it's 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 google meyer think twice even if they trust the system could a minor things abusive officials who accompany deportees such as speeding and biting is on the rise and witnessing deportees inflicting injury on themselves is stressful. because it is it is. your answer 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 and she holds them in
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contempt because he has to leave the country that is how i distance myself from the situation or. from. the migrants from nigeria have long since landed back home for the time being they may not return to germany their dream is over. let's get more now we're joined by d.w. political correspondent maximally on akashic with us here in studio to tell us a little bit more about these changes to germany's deportation law why were they considered to be necessary well a general reform of the german migration policy has been a long time in the making it's took germany quite a long time to realize and to come to terms with the fact that it is in fact a migration country but what we've seen since 2015 the big migration crisis that germany has been in the needs of kind of regulating its migrate. policies more effectively and what we're seeing especially in the report now is that in the last
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year we had 31000 deportations that have gone through one fact is that the difficulties go into hiding other issues are for example still not like figured out identities of the deports he's or documents being missing sometimes it's also preventions from pilots or activists but there was a need in germany to make the make the regulations more effective and with the new laws have been passed by the german parliament but haven't come into force yet these deputations are said to become more efficient and how about the migrants who are allowed to stay what changes do they have in store well these laws it's a bunch of laws have been passed by the german parliament and are said to be coming into force in the coming year those laws or end of any a deportation but also that integration so one part of the law is also trying to make for those people who are seeking a job in germany who are high have not even very good but who have chance of
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staying to get easier access to integration courses to language courses but also those people who are not coming from the european union who are not under the kind of privilege of free movement that those people who are qualified and can seek a job in germany that those are easier having access to work permissions because this is coming back to the term germany knows it's needing more qualified workers it is becoming more my migration country and with these new laws have been passed by the german parliament and are coming into force that these those could help the next 1000000 acushla thank you. more than 40 people have appeared in court in hong kong charged with rioting at a protest on sunday the pro-democracy demonstration turned violent when thousands of activists clashed with police the protests have been going on for nearly 2 months but this is the 1st time that authorities have used the rioting charge defendants could face up to 10 years in jail if found guilty. they entered the courthouse carrying umbrellas the unofficial symbol of hong kong's protest movement
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the citizens have been charged with rioting for taking part in protests that have pitted the people against the government and to beijing their supporters thronged outside the courthouse crying foul. but there is some systems just people should be on the phone all good people but now the government is using a lot the right way this focus i say follow and focus and then i was taught that right. some took to the streets as soon as they heard about the charges . and the so far the vote was right. that that's the way i thought. i would protest it i was the 1st i think that the tensions between police and protesters had escalated to only
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a few hours earlier riot police confronted protesters in front of the quite shocking police station. the officers charged into the crowd. i. was met with stiff resistance by demonstrators who pushed the police back and eventually forced them to retreat back to base i the following day fierce winds lashed hong kong as typhoon wi-fi hit the city. as the storm clouds on loaded the political storm also shows no signs of blowing over. let's get a quick check of some other stories making news around the world north korea has launched 2 short range ballistic missiles it's pyongyang the 2nd weapons test in mice in a week south korea says that the missiles were fired from the east coast and flew about 250 kilometers toward japan japanese prime minister shinzo abbé says there's been no impact on his country's security. one of india's best known entrepreneurs
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as g siddharta has been found dead authorities were covered the coffee tycoon's body from a river in the south he disappeared on monday sparking rumors that he was under financial pressure he founded the cow. a coffee date chain which has more than 1700 branches. and authorities in coasta rica and panama have arrested dozens of people allegedly linked to a ring of people smugglers official search the whole reason detain them 50 suspects police say migrants are willing to pay smugglers up to 20 $1000.00 to take them toward the u.s. border. the former c.e.o. of both wagon subsidiary audi rupert stadler has been charged over the diesel emissions scandal german prosecutors say that he became aware of cheating on a mission test in september 25th team at the latest but allowed the affected cars to continue to be sold. now to rwanda
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a country still deeply scarred by the genocide 25 years ago about 800000 people were slaughtered in 100 days by ethnic hutu extremists they were targeting members of the minority tutsi community as well as political opponents the genocide has had lasted and devastating effects on rwanda and surrounding nations every year rwanda mourns those killed and it remains illegal to discuss ethnicity many of the killers mostly men have served time in prison but now want to heal themselves in their communities our correspondent melanie corrida ball head to western rwanda where she met some of those struggling to come to terms with the past i was appalled when the mall today these men sit side by side in community based social sarah p. to share their experiences during run discoveries the 994 genocide 25 years ago i went up to a 1000000 tutsis a moderate hutus were wiped out in just $100.00 days but it were divided among
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those who carried out the killings and those who survived it. dumbs memories of being on the run and how his pregnant wife had to give in hiding to give it. we couldn't find a way that 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 a few days later the perpetrators went to look for him and 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 released perpetrators like it or least or have served their sentence are still haunted by what they call the shame of their past he says he's guilty of
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killing 4 people including to 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 have struggled they found their families estranged their role as the head of the household challenged 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 pain 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 its pain. and swallowed it tears that's a local problem here in rwanda which reflect the dangerous side to all men are
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expected to deal with their pain and grief alone in silence and internally although the country is hailed as a role model and reconciling with its violent past toxic image and lets continue to persist and continues to help the healing process of its me a population. away from social pressures and the least and i'm glad to have found a safe space to reconcile and work on the psychological. therapy helped. because we used to fear each of the. whenever i saw a person i had wronged. i could feel my heart racing. we have no problems with the perpetrators anymore because they are also part of the families of social therapy. when we meet now we are the same we have the
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same heart. but. the men have the same 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. melanie card of all the reporting from rwanda you're watching the news still to come on the program smartphone apps that can track your every move without you knowing like digital eavesdropping is getting easier than ever. and they won the world cup but the debate over pay in women's football rumbles on now u.s. soccer bosses see their women's team has actually been paid more than the men. now
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at least 30 people have been killed and 10 wounded by a roadside bomb in western afghanistan no one has claimed responsibility for the bombing but security has been deteriorating across the country with both the taliban and islamic state fighters mounting attacks almost every day. the victims were all civilians the majority of the dead women and children they've been traveling in a bus on a highway linking the 2 key cities of kandahar and herat in western afghanistan the bus then hit an improvised roadside bomb. as i mean we were heading to kabul from herit with a vehicle was hit by a lot of mine i saw many people martyred and injured. there was no immediate claim of responsibility afghan government officials blamed taliban insurgents who operate in the area and are accused of planting explosives but a taliban spokesman denied the group's involvement. the latest attack came a day after the u.n.
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mission in afghanistan released a report saying that most civilian deaths in the 1st half of the year were caused by afghan forces and their international allies the report was apparently referring to civilians killed during afghan and u.s. military operations against insurgents. the bloodshed is expected to intensify now that official campaigning for afghanistan's presidential election is underway on sunday just hours after incumbent. traffic danny kicked off his campaign at least 20 people were killed and more than 50 wounded when a suicide attacker and gunman targeted the capitol office of his running mate. once again civilians bore the brunt of the violence. so to him us and the election will cost the lives of all poor people the poor of the main victims are myself i'm affected by this attack there is no one to check on my situation. i
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can't go anywhere i have no shelter job or is your beef with the taliban and other insurgent groups determined to undermine afghanistan's fragile democracy many afghans worry about further violent attacks in coming weeks. they can track your location listen to your phone calls and even access your photos or your text messages the so-called stalker where smartphone apps which are becoming more common it's now easier than ever to digitally eavesdrop on somebody without them knowing and is on this very important story for us so carl you've been looking into this what are the apps and how does it work in is kind of a terrifying story really is that these are stalker where that refers to apps or programs that you can use to track someone else's phone and once they're installed you have access to basically nearly anything you want a lot of these apps they do have legitimate purposes or maybe parents trying to keep tabs on their kids for example but increasingly these are being used and
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abused by jealous partners by the use of lovers without the victims knowledge we wanted to dig a bit deeper on this so we started actually by trying out one of these apps or ourself take a look. this is my colleague and this on my phone is her exact location in fact right now i can see every move she makes she reads work walks to the train station and heads downtown. i'm using a standard i phone app called find my friends it's meant for meeting people around the city but it's one of many smartphone apps that can easily be abused and turned into spyware in fact according to one study there are potentially thousands of apps for android and hundreds in apple's app store that could be used to track someone's phone and then there are so-called stocker where programs available outside the official app stores this app provides remote access to nearly everything including turning on
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a phone's camera. stock or where it is an excellent tool for domestic abusers it is in fact after trial is to one of the stock where companies featured a photo of a man holding a woman's risk the woman is looking down she has blood on her face and a black eye and it's very clear not only does this man abusing this woman because. she is she did it but that the company that is selling this product is on the side of the abuser installing stock where on someone else's smartphone is surprisingly easy to do all you need is physical access to their phone and their passwords to things most partners or ex lovers already have. and experts say digital stalking is a growing problem a recent survey in australia found that nearly 20 percent of domestic abuse victims were tracked using g.p.s. and recent data leaks from stocker where companies revealed hundreds of thousands
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of clients the thing that is most disturbing about it is no understanding limits your abusers power so usually when you're being abused when your name spied on you don't know exactly what is being spied on and you don't know what has been compromised and when you don't know then it feels like the abuser is all powerful like they must know everything of course my colleague knows she's being tracked but most victims don't because once installed these apps can be very hard to detect. wow is that legal well spying on someone is not legal i mean that's what we're wondering as well how can this stuff exist that's the question right well for one many of these apps have a disclaimer hidden the fine print that says something like do not use this app without the other person's permission kind of covering their bases and of course as we saw that's the exact opposite of how many of these apps are marketed right the
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other reason is that many of the these programs have legitimate purposes so find my friends the one that we used as a different purpose but you can turn on the occasion tracking without the other person knowing you can even do that in google maps which is something that many of us use right so that's why it's it's difficult to to stop this problem so what can be done to stop the problem there are a few things that we spoke with a couple of experts on this and here's what they want to see happen for one apple and google need to take this problem seriously they need to police their app stores get rid of the stuff that's that's that's just meant for spying on people anything that breaks the rules they should be much better at that they're operating systems could do a better job of giving an alert that says your camera has been turned on for example anti-virus companies could do a better job of detecting when this is on your phone and law enforcement needs to step up their efforts as well ok so i'm truly terrified thank you all for bringing us this story if you actually have to check your phone and make sure you change your passwords is a good tip to ok thank you. it's in american soccer the dispute over equal pay has
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taken a new twist that's after u.s. soccer the national federation so that it found that players from the women's national team had been paid more than their male counterparts in recent years in march the women's team started legal action against the federation they described the findings as quote a ruse. the u.s. national team has dominated the women's game for decades a 4th well title proof of that but their success in france came to me to pay dispute with their own federation headed by this man carlos caldera even during homecoming celebrations earlier this month the coals for equal pay were never far away i to play is assuming the federation i think gender and pay discrimination the federation having focused on supporting the team during the tournament has now responded in an open letter code terry said it's over an 8 ship period the women were paid $34100000.00 compared to
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$26400000.00 for the men the reason unlike the men the women get a base salary of $100000.00 per year the men have to rely on bonuses alone the core dero admits these can be larger. the women's team has constantly been more successful than the men who failed to even qualify for the last world cup they say their requests to have performance based pay the same as the man was refused in a statement their spokesperson said it was quote a sad attempt by the federation to quell the tide of supports the u.s. women's national team has received. this team has proved their winners on the pitch with the 2 sides in the dispute now heading for mediation a bigger battle off it is looming large for. now international diplomacy is a careful balancing act but sometimes it can also be child's play
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a role of fluorescent pink seesaw spanning the border between the u.s. and mexico went up over the weekend in the american state of new mexico the seesaws are the work of an architecture professor at the university of california he says the project aims to show that actions that happen on one side have a direct impact on the other. a quick reminder of the top stories that we're following for you germany is tightening laws on asylum and vibration the hope is that the changes will enable the authorities to deport more failed asylum seekers early 25000 were deported last year but more than $31000.00 planned deportations failed to take place. and with that you're up to date now on it is coming up next and you don't use asia india makes instant divorce a criminal offense but critics say the law is designed to target the country's muslim minority and a dirty trade cambodians are angry that their country has become
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a dumping ground for other people's trash. the chan has all that more in just a few minutes time don't forget you can always get the latest news on our web site that's at the w dot com and you can follow us on social media my name is sarah kelly thanks for watching have a great day. sometimes
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books are more exciting than real life. raring to read. what if there's no escape. church or a list of german streets. below into an official estimates more than 1200000 venezuelans live in colombia needy and illegally. so. why return to.
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to visit friends i don't think i'd ever go back there to live you know what i live there again i don't know so i'm not sure. bearing witness global news that matters . made for mines of robots because they're still in the development phase 6 but what's going to happen when they grow. will schumann's and the mission in spirit will to pass for me co-exist or are we on the verge of the lips if we just bumble into this totally unprepared with our heads in the sand she seemed to think about what could go wrong then let's face it it's probably going to be the biggest mistake in human history. artificial intelligence spreading through our society is this the beginning of a good game to join. the in the loop be subjected to continuous state surveillance
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. of. experts be able to agree on technical guidelines or will this technology create deadly new autonomous weapon systems are going. to use the robot to let's start off just for teachers on t w. this is. coming up instead divorce becomes a crime in india it's a victory for women vulnerable to the controversial customs practiced by some muslims but is their political agenda behind the law plus. bangladesh struggles with its worst dang day outbreak ever thousands are sick what's driving the spike in cases.

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