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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  September 24, 2019 6:00pm-6:30pm CEST

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this is it are we news live from berlin u.s. president donald trump tells the united nations general assembly iran is one of the greatest security threats facing peace loving nation. only is iran the world's number one state sponsor of terrorism. but iran's leaders are fueling the tragic wars in both syria and yemen trungpa blames iran directly for the recent attack on a saudi oil facility and accuse the iranian leadership of having quote blood lust alfonse from global terrorism. also coming up a supreme court bombshell in a blow to british prime minister boris johnson all 11 judges agreed that his move to suspend parliament was unlawful johnson val's
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a ruling or not get in the way you present. there are a lot of people going to the prostrate pretty girl a lot of people facing people to stop this country coming onto the beach. so what options are left for forced johnson we'll hear from other exit expert. great to have you along everyone. u.s. president donald trump addressed the u.n. general assembly amid rising tensions with iran he blamed the country directly for the recent attack on a saudi oil plant accusing the iranian leadership of having quote blood lust we denounced what he called 4 decades of failure and tehran since the islamic revolution in military. here's more of president trump's address not only is iran
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the world's number one state sponsor of terrorism. but iran's leaders are fueling the tragic wars in both syria and yemen. at the same time the regime is squandering the nation's wealth and future in a fanatical quest for nuclear weapons and the means to deliver them. we must never allow this to happen. president trumper sticking at the u.n. just a short while ago indeed obvious correspondent ugh zondervan naaman is at the united nations alexander and not surprisingly of course iran featured quite prominently in mr trump's speech we understand that germany's chancellor angela merkel has met with president trump reportedly there are also plans for her to meet with iran's rouhani. do you think that she can play a mediating role. well it appears live there for now that the
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german chancellor as well as the french president among the crow are trying to take the role of media tourists here to try to be the media truce between iran and the united states marco also met with rouhani yesterday and he is due to met with president to meet with president today and i think that what is what it is telling us is that the europeans are seeing a chance for diplomacy here president was very critical of iran and he's united nations addressed however he has so far shown restraint in the conflict in the crisis and he refrained from any military retaliation measures against iran and i think that the europeans understand that that is there a chance to try it to give to try to give diplomacy
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a chance but of course we have to wait and see what happens next well as other lists over turn our focus again to his address i mean how did it compare to last year's speech. i think it's fair to say that he's message at this year was more toned down message compared to watch we sold last year or the year before he was still very focused on his america 1st hosea addressing certainly his domestic audience praising his administration for the country's economic growth but also as stressing that even though the you asked or he as president invested a lot trillion of dollars in the u.s. military the ass is not seeking can you conflict it is rather looking for new partners but not adversaries and i would sense that that there was something that
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many leaders in the you and general assembly liked to hear and they were relieved to hear oh let's turn to the subject of china president sean per singled out of that country let's take a listen to what he said exactly and then we'll continue our conversation after that not only has john a declined to adopt promised reforms and has embraced an economic model he penned a door in massive market barriers heavy state subsidies currency manipulation product dumping forced technology transfers and the theft of intellectual property and also trade secrets on a grand scale so grievances there are a list of grievances. alexandra that many countries have raised when it comes to china and trade with china so was this a more subdued note from the u.s.
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president. i think that it was a very important for him to raise this issue in he's addressed because many times in the past he said how important it is and how remarkable it is that he is the 1st president to try to confront china for its a trade practices so this is a very important issue for him for him and he had a sort of stern message to china also mentioning hong kong saying that the question or the way. is going to handle the crisis there will decide over the role the country will play in the world in the future however we have to say that trump very much is interested in having a deal before the election in 2020 because this way he could present himself to his voters as the best deal maker in the world and
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this would certainly improve his chances to get reelected. on a nominee reporting from new york the general assembly thank you so very much greatly appreciate it. ed we want to continue our conversation though now with or if elected he is a member of the german parliament the opposition party for democrats and he's also a part of the foreign affairs committee in the bundestag and an expert on un policy great to have you here with us sir we understand that chance uncle americal has met with u.s. president donald trump we haven't had confirmation yet but we know that there are plans for her to meet with the iranian leader mr rouhani in new york today do you see a role for her that she can play a mediating role that she can play in the rising tensions between iran and
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washington but 1st it's quite a pleasure to be with you know to not. be an american is doing that for 2 german policy is about it's about diplomacy and she's talking to the people on to the guys who are in the hat of being a part of not getting a non-conflict down the hands of middle east again now of course at the heart of this is the iran nuclear deal can the iran nuclear deal live in the nuclear deal or what's left of it still be salvaged well that was a bomb destruction that unit a lot of those. did mr trump and today was the one angel being there. in metal affect he just wants a partnership. and it's a pure way and we have to try to to put the pieces together again because europe is not in need of another conflict in the middle east got to put the pieces back
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together again what we've seen is that germany has joined forces with france and the u.k. in condemning or blaming iran a for this month's attack on an oil facility in saudi i wonder does this mean that germany and the other european countries are siding with president. well in a way we have to acknowledge that there is based state of that iran is part of the conflict and that the attack on the saudis we all know about that deputy was. given. saudi arabia and iran. backing. off the conflict and so everybody knows that iran should be behind the attack on the. plan to dumb down saudi arabia so does that still make it possible for a country like germany to reach a deal and get iran back to potentially the negotiating table and negotiate
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a new nuclear deal well we are no need in war of war as a settlement and we have to to get them to talk to each other we have to do everything against what we have migration to you know of out of africa and afghanistan of some of the other conflict zones the world and what the people go if there will be walked on the ground now germany has healthy rotating u.n. security council presidency a lot of issues were raised during that period sexual violence against women in conflict zones and disarmament of arms control what has germany concretely achieved in that a limited period that it was president well we had 2 months of president ship the french and we had that in march and april we have the. presidency and for all the accomplished that security council thing about sexual violence
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and women. and we had to put out boston for example auto solution text because of and u.s. veto. announced in front of. negotiations down then new york i attended the. meeting together with our minister mr moss was not a quite a nice day in the partnership between the u.s. and germany so everything is new on the table of the world you see is a seattle states this has something new on it. so a company had to write and adapt. or it really reflects the m.p.i. opposition party free democrats member of the foreign affairs committee in the bundestag an expert on your policy thank you for joining us thank you very much. we want to turn our attention now to the british supreme court which in a historic judgment has ruled that prime minister boies jones has moved to suspend
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parliament was unlawful all 11 supreme court judges agreed the so-called corrugation kept parliament from doing its job. judges biled into the courtroom to deliver their highly anticipated ruling their verdict unanimous a stunning rebuke to the prime minister the court is to conclude. that the decision to advise a magistrate to parent parliament was unlawful. because it had the effect of frustrating preventing the ability of parliament to carry out its constitutional functions without reasonable justification the effect on the fundamentals of our democracy was extreme no justification for taking action with such an extreme effect has been put before the court the court said the government suspension order was no one void and said parliament should resume business immediately. and common
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speaker john bercow confirmed m.p.'s would sit again starting wednesday. news of the ruling reached prime minister boris johnson in new york where he's been attending the u.n. climate summit obesity this is a good it did we would expect to respect the judicial process i have to say i strongly disagree with what we justices and i don't think. it's right but we will go ahead. come back. while the ruling doesn't affect brags that directly it does mean parliament won't have to wait until mid october to have its say in the process the decision like drugs that has divided the public but these protesters welcome to the judge's decision. that great day for democracy a great victory for british democracy it's good to see the courts reaffirming the rights of the electorate to streets and eyes through its elected representatives
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what the government staving off rights of opposition labor lawmakers whose own divisions over brags that have been on display at their annual party conference have been stepping up calls for johnson to resign. the prime minister's next move may be anyone's guess but to return to london to face growing pressure over his brags that strategy and his leadership. hi john why in the u.k.'s highest court today did abuse regs that analysts alex forrest widing is here to tease out the ramifications of this momentous ruling and what it will all me for braggs it good to have you alex how unprecedented is this extremely on precedented and not just because in the u.k. they have an unwritten constitution so it's not like it would be in the us in germany where you know if there was a problem you might go to the court doesn't know when they happen however and this was all about the role of parliament and the supreme court decided that boris johnson and his government had acted unlawfully by perogue in parliament that means
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suspending parliament as such a long time because effectively they couldn't do that job. which is to scrutinize and hold the government to account in fact one former. he's called sumption is a former supreme court justice who when he resigned a few months ago has called what boris johnson is doing constitutional vandalism and he said look we didn't want this to come to the courts but actually the supreme court has had no choice because they had to intervene to say again that in the u.k. it is parliament that is sovereign now this is arguably one of the biggest setbacks that promise or boris johnson has suffered he tried to put a brave face on it we just saw his reaction a little earlier on but he accepts the ruling albeit reluctantly yes and actually he can't do anything else really because he said that the government must abide by this which they must how can the government break its own rules so that's number one and number 2 he can't appeal it that there's nowhere for him to go unless he
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was to go to europe so we would if we went about badly he's very ironic it would be ironic but what he and he has talked about and in in that interview he talked about the possibility of still introducing a queen's speech in the queen's speech would mean he would have to suspend parliament again so we may well see that happen but just for a few days this is not comfortable for him and it's very difficult for somebody who runs the conservative party to be seen as misleading the queen she's really a figurehead in the u.k. politics but very important he had to get her agreement has signed off on this which she has to give and now what he's done asking her to do that has been proved to be illegal the wrong move to have done in in the courts eyes what does this all mean for braggs it a good question on the face of it nothing because this was not about bricks it this was about the role of parliament but it now gives m.p.'s more time to come back to
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parliament to try to work out a way through this terrible mess of bricks it remember the u.k.'s juta leave on the 31st. oct boris johnson again making it clear that will happen but they've already tied his hands by saying that if he can't get a deal than the u.k. mustn't leave and they want the e.u. to give a 3 month month extension to the to the u.k. for that so actually it's difficult for him he's got to try to get to deal with the e.u. he's got to try to hope that they can give him some compromises so that he can prove to his you know the brics it is the right of his party and others that he's got bricks if that is done if he doesn't i think they will have to be an extension taken back from this or are his these number why you would think he can't he wouldn't dare to come back from this for for the reason as i said earlier he's he's misled the queen i mean this is significant and a big no no for any prime minister however the u.k. is in a very strange time at the moment he is still popular with it with the public and
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the opposition party led by jeremy corbyn jimmy corp and he's not particularly popular and boris johnson knows that his friends know that at the moment the tory party are sticking by him if that begins to melt away it will become more difficult but at the moment all is not lost for boris johnson all is not lost alex alex forrest whiting did have used briggs and alice thank you. well as i now read some of the other stories making news around the world. german prosecutors have charged the 3 current and former volkswagen bosses with market manipulation relating to the car giant's a diesel gate scandal the 3 are accused of deliberately informing investors too late about the scandals risks. that is top court has ruled that google is not required to apply the e.u. right to be forgotten rule to search results outside of europe well google had
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argued that author italian governments could otherwise try to cover up human rights abuses if the in new regulation was applied worldwide. 5 year pin union countries have struck a policeman ery deal on resettling migrants rescued from the mediterranean the agreement reached in malta aims to ease the burden on the e.u. southern members who bear the brunt of migrant arrivals and delays in decision making. on land at last in malta migrants rescued off the coast of libya a finally able to disembark on european soil in many cases asylum seekers have been stranded at sea for weeks while e.u. countries argue about who will take them. europe has wrangled for years over what should happen to migrants rescued at sea the e.u. is dublin agreement states that migrants must seek asylum in the 1st e.u.
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country they reach and that has been a major bone of contention for european countries that border the mediterranean now a deal struck by germany france italy malta and finland could finally see an end to the rout over the redistribution of migrants rescued in the mediterranean. it's a plan that would take the burden of italy and malta and for seize the swift relocation of migrants to other e.u. members part of the plan could see germany taking in a quarter of those migrants to help process that asylum applications. the people that are brought onto land have to be redistributed to kind of their security status can be determined through a process of interviews but it's impossible to determine their legal status in such a short 4 week period so their right to asylum is for example what will be decided in germany. these are just the bones of the plan that will be put to the e.u.'s
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other interior ministers at a wide a summit in october. for now at least there's hope that could soon be an end to the days when rescue ships packed with desperate people turned away from here oops ports. now want your past to stay a thing of the past at least online well this landmark ruling just made that a whole lot harder that's because it is top court has sided with google in a case that sought to extend the european union so-called right to be forgotten laws to the rest of the world and joel adultery has been following this case and he joins me now right i mean 1st of all what does this mean well this means that you have the right to be forgotten but only in europe so you've got the right to kind of be forgotten does that mean to be forgotten well let's go back to the start we started in 2014 a spanish man brought a case against google asking for a link to be removed referring to an article about his bankruptcy he won that and
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since then google has had a system where you can apply to have a link removed and use that information is found to be out of days or relevant google may remove that link so 5 800000 people have done this and around 45 percent of them have been successful but it only applies to people searching for your name within europe now this wasn't good enough for france it was worried that google was still showing these results to the rest of the world so it tried to prosecute google google appealed out up to the court of justice which today started with google basically it found that the europe doesn't have the right to tell google what it can share other people the rest of the world in the rest of the world a terrorist kind of makes sense but what does it mean in practice well i guess we should to explain how this actually works for europeans and it works by a system called geo blocking basically google looks up your ip address and decides what information you can and cannot see now i tried this by searching my own name actually so basically google if you go on to google you'll get your search results
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you scroll to the bottom of the page and down the bottom there what you'll see. he is that google has looked at my ip address which is the number that tells where my web host is located it thinks i'm in bonn germany well i'm not in bonn i'm in berlin but i guess deutsche of l. is web hosting service is located in bonn and this tells you that this is not a perfect system in fact you can use a so-called v.p.n. virtual private network which lets you pretend to be somewhere else and then you'll be able to see all that information that google has blocked within your country so internet experts basically say this right to be forgotten system is more like a speed bump that prevents your friends your relatives your employer from accidentally finding out those links that you've asked to be removed but what does this ruling change now it doesn't change that much for europeans you can still apply to have your links removed they'll still be removed within europe but if you want them removed from the rest of the world you going to have to go to other countries and try and use their legal systems and even then you won't be successful and deleting that information because the internet never forgets never forgets does
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and eventually still be there but what this basically this ruling basically prevents europe from influencing what the rest of the world sees about europeans it wasn't so much about the right to be forgotten it was about europe's right to police the internet globally and the limits there are for all the dollar thank you so very much for explaining to us what that really means for all of us it's. now some football free soccer's biggest names have red carpets at milan opera house last night for the best player and coach of the year awards u.s. soccer star megan rypien oh was named best female player after helping her team so world cup win in july. meghan rypien 0 start at the women's world cup in june and july being named best player and ending up as joint top scorer as the u.s. clinched their 4th title it was no surprise when she was voted to speak as best
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female player. she had a powerful message. for the football world we have a unique opportunity in football different to any other sport in the world to use this beautiful game to actually change the world for better so that's my charge to everyone i hope you take that to heart and just do something do anything we have incredible power in this room thank you there was more success for the u.s. with former national boss ellis taking the coach prize the fee for awards of voted for by fans journalists national coaches and captains most pundits assumed liverpool the netherlands defender virgil van dyke would scoop the men's player award after helping liverpool to champions league glory but for the 6th time alone as leader no messi triumphed after stabbing his club side to another spanish league title. well said i don't know what my secret is the only thing i know is that hard
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work doing the most to keep improving to keep bettering yourself to keep winning that i've always said is most important everything else is secondary where. you know sort of stick with it despite vandyke missing out there was recognition for liverpool that german manager you're going club took home the best male coach award football paid homage to its heroes and rupp ino stole the show. our martin are the top story that we're tracking for you this hour. u.s. president donald trump has virtually targeted iran while speaking to world leaders gathered at the united nations general assembly he blamed iran directly for the recent attack on a saudi oil facility and announce what he calls 4 decades of failure and tehran's sense of islamic revolution. you're watching the news coming up next after a short break don't you news asia with the most such outcome by law bottom line on
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behalf of the entire news team thank you for spending this part of your ticket i'll be back at the top of the law. into.
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the small feats in the mind. where i come from. roggio remains an important town to solve crimes meeting new ones and for miche and when i was young my country was in brawl huge money conference the war throbbing people most people would cause of our own drudgery deceivers. it was my job to touring one of the not just say it's so thought everyone in the town. missed some tours that gives us. nothing cause in france admired known codea in
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jonathan morris on along even if it's not by us i was a twit and for me it was. my choice to discard because given their way toward transmittance patrols. and in the question how much and i will. do it up until. the fall of the berlin wall become before november $989.00. physically heroes of eastern europe we talk to those who began the struggle for freedom in the last few showed personal courage for all that no good book was going to go no telephone call for almost call it down to going to the school room way up would go off the wall didn't surprise me i saw it coming 10 years before the flood through a kind of a homebody. what does it take to change the course of history. raising the
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curtain starts september 30th on d w. kim. you're watching a jet coming up militants spread fear among 4 hinge or refugees in bangladesh we take you into a camp that's in during the violence plus. blood red skies in indonesia as fires burn out of control we need a man who's battling the blaze in his region. and did evolution get it wrong researchers in japan say some people could benefit from a tail.

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