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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  June 8, 2020 10:30pm-11:01pm CEST

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right time all voices. on this 77 percent talk about the. front part 2 classes from housing groups how big is where. 77 percent. this weekend. final public memorial service for george floyd takes place today in his hometown of houston texas 2 weeks ago floyd an african-american died under the need of a white police officer america and much of the world have been protesting against racism and police brutality ever since now polls suggested this could cost. the november election it's already changing our notion of law enforcement and what
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about race will this moment forever change health skin color colors how we see each other i'm burnt off in berlin this is the day. time please accept my people we've never looked to the police for our safety. i'm here today i call for the funding of all of their time and across the country that we have had this interview by cameron and the black folks are still here watching black people came murdered here can't get our streets police are not the right response for a myriad of issues mental health crises domestic violence calls. also coming up tonight accused of. they didn't commit to put on trials the world will
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never see a special investigation into china is a sham justice for its weaker minority interest how many feet and your money says 21st that they can interrogate at any time even at night when you're asleep the women i was with ended up there because they had want to head stuff crazy how much trouble had brought there wasn't a single criminal among them. but to our viewers on p.b.s. in the united states and all around the world welcome we begin the day with the world is saying goodbye to george floyd the world george florian's death has already changed mourners are gathering in houston texas for the final public memorial service for the black man who died in police custody 2 weeks ago the end of floyd's wife sparked protests against racism and police brutality from minneapolis to sydney to london here in berlin last saturday the crowds gathered
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despite social distancing rules totaling some 15000 and the public those protesting and those not they have been listening and apparently some changing their minds a new poll released monday in the us shows joe biden with a double digit lead over president trump in his bid to win the white house in november trump's threat to the ploy the u.s. military to quell unrest in u.s. cities is cited as the key reason why the president's approval ratings have plummeted and lawmakers they appear to be listening france has announced that police there will no longer use chokeholds when taking a person into custody in the u.s. congressional democrats have introduced the justice in policing act which aims to stop the use of excessive force in law enforcement in minneapolis the city where george ford was killed the. city council yesterday voted to dismantle the police
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force entirely here is the minneapolis city council president our candidate is to do what's necessary to keep everything go member of our community feet to tell the truth that the minneapolis police are not doing math. and that is to end our city of relationship to the video clip to police departments to answer police thing as we know it really. does stand up public to do that actually. my 1st guest tonight is gerald horne professor of history and african-american studies at the university of texas he is the author of numerous books including white supremacy confronted and he joins us from houston texas tonight professor learned welcome to the day it's good to have you here there has been nonstop protesting in the u.s. since george floyd was killed 2 weeks ago and this force it appears to be
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international you know as i said we had 15000 people here in berlin on saturday demonstrating against racism let me ask you as a historian to look into the future do you sense a turning point here i mean is there a window of opportunity for lasting change. there is a window of opportunity for lasting change but it's premature to say that there is a turning point i would like to see what is the approval rating of mr trump in november for example steadily despite all of his many transgressions and flubs his approval ratings have hover pair fully in the forty's and even today they're still in the forty's he has a heart core of support and that along with voter suppression could still turn the tide for him in november i would however like to underscore what you said with regard to international protests i think that that is
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a critical and key factor because if you look at the history of white supremacy in the united states one of the reasons why it has been able to be repelled has been international support international support helped to turn the tide against slavery of the 19th century particularly british abolitionism and support from haitian revolutionaries and the fact that in the 1950 s. united states that to appeal to rising nations in africa in the caribbean that had african majorities helped to convince the united states that the better part of wisdom was to retreat from us apart 8 otherwise these nations might turn towards the socialist camp and must go so therefore we must take careful and close attention to mr trump's approval ratings and also the level in nature of international solidarity well professor do you think there are 2 narratives here at work the legacy of u.s. slavery and the legacy of european colonialism i want you to keep that question
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in mind and i want you to take a listen to what a kenyan rapper said today about the role of white people in his country and across the western world take a listen. actually we have american friends who live here we wanted to be who won them to be accountable especially a white americans and that they need to be accountable they need to be incented to do what is happening in the world they can't keep because if you're white and you can your privilege already you don't find poor white people in kenya you know as well because of that they need to be their voice and they need to champion and to change from here is a chain reaction to the west so professor what does he talking about is he speaking about a collective white guilt or is it speaking about a collective white responsibility or both. it's more the latter and i think more so is the legacy is your sort of question suggested the legacy of slavery and colonialism i think we're there to states for these
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a double whammy on the one hand you still see black people being treated like slaves because after all one of the reasons there are 40000000 of us in north america is because of the legacy of slavery in the slave trade but the other issue is rarely discussed or interrogated that is to say that there is a legacy of national chauvinism in the united states of america because there is this widespread feeling that the overthrow of british rule in $776.00 was this great leap forward for humanity the problem is that the african population in north america by several orders of magnitude did not support the overthrow of british rule and the in throne of slave owners like george washington and thomas jefferson and james madison and therefore since that time we've been treated like counter-revolutionaries yet we've been treated like we're not a part of this society on top of that we're still being treated as a result of the legacy of slavery as if we're criminals and wait when until we
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confront those double issues i'm afraid to say that it will be difficult to suggest that the tipping point against a nother replication of duplications of a george floyd murder has not been reached professor should u.s. history should it be at in world history should it be talked differently in the u.s. you know we've got like you said the story of the american revolution the founding of the us should that be told with the story of european occupation mass killings of native americans and the construction of a nation in part by slaves and then freed slaves who were treated like and didn't turn servants. clearly your question needs to be incorporated that is to say u.s. history needs to be totally revamped and reconfigure but that's going to be a very difficult uphill climb just a few weeks ago if one reporter for the new york times got behind his prize and u.s. journal journalism for suggesting what i did a moment ago that united states was born in part as a revolt against british out listen ism as she was subjected despite this prize to
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many bats of attack yeah scurrilous reproaches and all the rest and that leads me to think that it's going to be very difficult to revamp u.s. history which means i'm afraid to say that there may be a long hot summer and one hot summers ahead when professor gerald horne professor of history and african-american studies at the university of texas professor we appreciate your insights tonight let's hope that that long hot summer will be a short one thank you thank you. investigation what china does not want the world to know about how it's treating its weak muslim minority in china is change on province it's estimated that 1000000 have been detained in so-called re-education camps the remote region in china's far north west is off limits to international journalist muslim leaders who make up
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most of the region's population they have long faced repression by chinese authorities including lengthy prison sentences well how are we able to leave or to escape and how do they do it by betraying themselves. team has found that many imprisoned weekers have been forced to admit to a crime that they did not commit and are then sentenced in sham trials without access to due process w. reporters spoke with people who was scape from china's network of repression in. injured how many freedoms you money says 247 they can interrogate you as any time even at night when you're asleep so the women i was with ended up that because they had want to head stuff crazy how much trouble had brought there wasn't a single criminal among that. that's the voice of a woman who spent almost a year inside
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a reeducation camp in china but keeping her identity a secret in order to protect have family in. a remote region in northwest china. she is home to the week is a predominantly muslim ethnic group. decades of state sponsored discrimination against them has stepped into discontent in times of violence including riots in terror attacks. in response china has cracked down and we built up a close knit surveillance system. of imprisoned. more than a 1000000 people in internment camps across to. the chinese government claims the camps were set up to fight extremism and provide readers with cation or skills but detainees and documents contradict that narrative rather detainees are targeted based on little more than their culture and religion and are forced to undergo a draconian and often brutal brainwashing program. and now we've on earth even more
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chilling evidence of china's repression of leaders we talked to former detainees who managed to escape china's last network of re-education camps. one day they were handed a list of alleged crimes. it was one page of paper we had to choose one item and started reading it and it said wearing a headscarf playing owning a qur'an or phoning all contact him people abroad they threatened you will stay here with a crime so i signed the paper and put my finger print. a few days after the woman was forced to sign the list official start of calling up people one by one for what amounts to a sham trial oh yes you were you. there were no lawyers.
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there were to read out the judgment and the detainee would have to say i confessed my crimes i promise i won't repeat my wrongdoings i'll. just the cost. of others so that. we analyze satellite imagery in publicly available material such as construction bids and tender notices and managed to locate 3 camps where these trials happened in 2018 in 3 different locations across 2. after the trials detainees started disappearing some were picked up at night others led away from their classrooms never to return. but it seems that any of those who had confessed to religious acts in the child's were picked up this is yet another indication that china is targeting weak a culture and religion. the woman in the other detainees we took to manage to
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escape to neighboring kazakhstan as players with cars that president seal family members will eventually allow to leave china. my husband says i've changed sometimes i get very angry still no reason it's just screenings are in the nights i'm so exhausted all of the times asked us. well i'm joined now by ryan thumb he's a historian of islam in china specializing in weaker culture and history at the university of nottingham he joins us tonight from new orleans in the u.s. it's good to have you on the day based on what we have seen in that region of china would you say that china is trying to eradicate islam on its territory. no i wouldn't say that because islam is allowed in some sort of limited ways even for some weaker is and also for other ethnic groups it's allowed especially
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the way of the group it's allowed on a greater scale it severely restricted i would say though that that china is trying to reengineer dilute and maybe even entirely destroy culture why would do you think that china is conducting these sham trials and forcing detainees to pick a crime that they didn't commit i mean i guess china doesn't have to do any of this the world would never know right. well the world has knows a lot about what's going on. largely because the chinese government put so much of its documentation online and of course we get people who get out of the camps one way or another as in this case we talk about what happened but there's also a drive from within china to formalize what was somewhat improvised policy for a long time so we you can see legal documents catching up with decisions that the
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party in the government already made and started implementing often with about a 6 month or one year lag time and we've seen that over the last 2 years after these massive internment camps camps opened up and it's this looks like one further step in creating an illusion or a fig leaf of. that systematic miss where where really things there are treasury you know almost like an air of legitimacy if you will the fact that you and i are talking about this proves that it's not a secret the chinese government claimed earlier this year that people were graduating from these reeducation camps and having you know lives happily ever after if you put all that together and then see what the international community is doing would you say that china is getting a free ride when it comes to repressing its weak years. it's getting about as close to
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a free ride as. as you could imagine i mean there have been there has been some movement finally in terms of other governments trying to push back in practical terms the us awhile ago. blacklisted some companies that were involved in this and has now passed a law which is waiting for the president's approval that would that would call for sanctions on some chinese leaders but for most of the world has responded with very little to nothing of a practical response is ryan some of the university of nottingham joining us tonight from new orleans ryan we appreciate your insights in your time tonight thank you. you're welcome thank you. this computer there are no indications which bases would be affected on which branch whether it's the army after the marines or whoever. but i also think that we do not have the luxury of wasting time only to wait for an official statement for
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example with regard to the reduction of troops in germany that. the investments were made in the training area which is not only the largest in europe but also the most modern world wide concert much of the americans giving that up we have to bring the europeans together and find a common position we a scapegoat are we a means for a big plan a masterplan off. i don't know. lots of questions in guessing here in germany are the americans about to pull thousands of troops out of the country and if so why last week u.s. president drunk reportedly instructed the pentagon to bring home almost 10000 of the 34000 troops stationed here in germany the pentagon has not confirmed that report and the german government says it has not received notification ever since he became u.s. president donald trump has criticized germany for not increasing its defense
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spending today germany's defense minister made it clear the presence of u.s. troops serves u.s. interests and does not constitute the americans doing the germans a favor. this is or that the fact is that the presence of u.s. soldiers in germany serves the overall security of the nato alliance and thus also american security. that is the basis on which we work together incidentally it is also the basis on which many american soldiers have also become a real component of german society are well integrated on the ground and play an important role there and in this respect for today i believe there is no need to add anything to that. all right for more now let's take this story to brussels home to nato headquarters to teri schultz joins me now from our brussels bureau terry has spent many years covering nato good evening to you jerry
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germany says that washington has not announced anything has nato received word of any troop reduction plans in germany it's hard to tell brant i asked secretary general stolzenberg about the u.s. plans for withdrawing german troops today at an at an on line event he had he held and this is what he said we are constantly consulting with united states with old nato allies on the military post your presence in in europe european allies and united states we are doing more together now in europe than and on for many many years and i think that's a fix to the fact that real action to strengthen the military cooperation within the code will suffice. secretary general stoltenberg would not directly address whether he had been informed about u.s.
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plans and in fact he held a press phone call with president trump after this event and even after this i asked nato officials again did they discuss the reported plans to pull troops out of germany and i didn't get a straight answer again simply was told that they discussed the u.s. troop presence in europe as they always do so we really don't know brant frustrating for you and for all of us trying to get answers a trumpet ministration official told us that there is no need for a large u.s. presence in germany because nato has increased its defense spending is that true and is native just as strong with a few were u.s. troops here in germany. we don't really know brant it is true that nato has increased its defense spending or more accurately that the nato allies have increased their spending on their own militaries which is in fact usually referred to as as nato defense spending but they really there really hasn't been
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a test of whether of nato as need for u.s. troops here on the continent but i think what's what's really missed in this conversation is that it's in the u.s. interest to have the troops stationed in germany those troops are not there simply to protect germany as president trump likes to portray it or even to protect europe in fact it is used as a staging grounds for troops to go on to other parts of the world i mean not even not even europe not even the russian border the u.s. has many uses for its installations in germany and that in fact would be a huge loss and you saw many commentators coming out after this announcement saying that's a ridiculous decision that's a strategic mistake those are most of the comments i heard from military commentators a mistake for the united states not a threat to europe yeah a colossal mistake we heard in the last 48 hours there are warriors here in berlin that donald trump would reduce u.s.
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troop numbers to punish germany for not spending more on defense are those words are they justified based on what you know about u.s. nato times at the moment. well i think it's more about u.s. german ties in fact outside the nato context and i have also read those reports that this is sort of another fit of pique by president trump about germany's low defense spending also rumors that he was angry because chancellor merkel refused to come to a g. 7 summit at this point to do to corona virus worries and that's had to be delayed so we don't really know and in fact you know many in the administration were not informed of the thinking behind president trump's reported decision to do this and it was just asked at the white house a short time ago today in their briefing and they didn't have anything to say about it either so he has apparently kept this decision if it is made in fact quite quite
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close and nobody is really sure how it came about but i wouldn't put it past him to to be coming up with this idea to punish chancellor merkel one of his frequent target still big he is always quick to talk of u.s. commitments to nato are we to believe that after 3 years of the drone presidency america's role in nato is stronger it is true as secretary general stolzenberg likes to point out massaging this message that despite all the trump threats to nato the threats that range from pulling out to simply cutting off funding it is true that the u.s. troop commitment the u.s. troop presence in europe is greater now than it has been that it even was under president obama but that remains to be seen whether whether that will continue with these threats from president trump and whether it's true that there are more boots on the ground or not what his dentist shake up unity to make the case constantly
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wonder what he has up his sleeve next i don't know that that makes up for having more u.s. soldiers on the ground here yeah that's an important point and we should not forget the results on the story for you brussels tonight syria as always thank you. the day is almost done the conversation continues online join us on twitter user d w news you can follow me a print off t.v. and remember whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day we'll see you then everybody.
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everybody stay safe stay safe stay safe please stay safe. the gut. this is. in the u.s. the last chance for the public to bid farewell to george florida throngs of people are filing by the casket of the african american whose death in police custody sparked protests around the world we'll get the latest from houston texas also coming up tonight a tricky job begins in removing damaged scaffolding from. make
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a mistake and the whole thing might come tumbling down.

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