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tv   Quarks  Deutsche Welle  September 22, 2020 10:30pm-11:16pm CEST

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their faith and self-determination. for the militant feminist movement i don't want anyone to tell me but the russia where it has come for not. going to. women are striving to reform their islam away from traditional prejudices . romney. starts september 24th on t w. the 4 horsemen of the apocalypse that is the imagery that the u.n. secretary general used today to describe the biggest threats to peace climate change unprecedented mistrust geo political tensions and the dark side of digital technology and he added a 5th horseman to these just hopi and dangers the coronavirus pandemic tonight a global health crisis that has made the global economy sick too if there are
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solutions where in the world in this world will we find the gulf in berlin this is the day. we have waged a fierce battle against the invisible enemy that china virus. facing the virus we should put people and life 1st. we must hold accountable the nation which unleashed this play clock to the world china. would see it in any attempt to belittle signs the issue postman ties they should and must be protected by all means. no lockdown travel domestically well allowing flights to leave china and infect the world easing things on the virus
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will be defeated humanity will with the special. also coming up with the viral times that bind what does briggs it britain still have in common with the rest of europe the coronavirus threat today prime minister boris johnson announced new restrictions that could last into 2000 and $21.00 if we fail to act together not we will not only place others at risk could jeopardize our futures with the move. drastic that we would inevitably be forced to take. it to our viewers on p.b.s. in the united states and all around the world welcome we begin the day in a world that seems unable or unwilling to save itself from itself today the annual u.n. general assembly convene this is the week when leaders from around the globe meet in new york city to talk diplomacy foreign policy discuss the present and the
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future this year thanks to the pandemic there are practically no get togethers face to face has been replaced with screen discrete the world together on zoom or today the head of the u.n. warned of a dystopian future mostly of our own making a broken down global order that we broke and only we can fix the speeches from world leaders that followed they did little to dispel the worst fears what we saw and heard online was the unexpected and unusual morphing into a new normal us president donald trump he used his speech to lash out at china blaming it and the world health organization for allowing the coronavirus to spread on the day when america 1st meant america 1st with $200000.00 deaths president trump refused to take responsibility instead he continued his campaign of chipping away at the multilateral global order that the un represents china's president then
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responded to trump with a message illustrating how the unexpected is becoming a worrisome norm china rejected any culpability in the pandemic accusing trump of sticking his head in the sand while americans died and china offered itself as the defender of multi-lateralism a champion of the global order that's what beijing would like you to believe take a listen now to both presidents. as we pursue this bright future we must hold accountable the nation which unleashed this plague onto the world china in the early is they have the virus china locked down travel domestically while allowing flights to leave china and infect the world china condemned my travel ban with their country even as they cancelled domestic flights and locked citizens in their
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homes. we should follow the guidance of science give full play to the leading role of the world health organization and launch a joint international response to beat this pandemic any attempt to politicize the issue or stigmatize sanction must be rejected. the virus will be defeated humanity will win this battle. well joining me tonight here at the big chief international editor richard walker richard it's good to see you we've heard so many times that the best diplomacy is done in person this year thanks to the pandemic we're not getting it we're going to diplomacy i guess. does that make a difference i think it really does i think it really is a real problem i mean of course it's normal for these speeches by the leader in the general debate to be used as grandstanding opportunities and we've certainly seen plenty of that today who are going to talk about that sure in a moment but still like the event every year in new york is unique in the
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diplomatic calendar is the only time when all of these leaders get an opportunity to come together and it's what happens outside that chamber and outside those speeches that they're really masses when there are opportunities for their lives and also their teams to talk to each other and have kind of serendipitous seek out which you know can be fruitful so it is a real concern particularly for believe us in diplomacy believe as in the power of will to last resort and we heard today beginning with president trump he opened the assembly on the day that america surpassed the 2000 mark the death toll from the pandemic 200200 i mean that's the highest level in the world and of most characteristically for donald trump when he's open for criticism he goes on the end tack and that's what he did very robustly within his 1st breath he was talking about the china virus now there are genuine concerns about china in the early
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stages of the outbreak in the center of the country at the end of last year beginning that how transparent they were with the world health organization also with with other countries about that but still this was pretty aggressive even by john. trump standards and also it's only adding to these fears that the u.s. and china are just headed for a kind of cold war scenario which the u.s. actually generally good terrace explicitly warned against in his speech who was donald trump speaking to today i want you to take a look at what the group america 1st policies posted immediately after donald trump's speech as we speak united states is also working to end the war in afghanistan and we are bringing our troops all america is fulfilling not just the news piece specker but it is peace through strength richard what we have their reelection campaign spot i mean it's not that much of
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a surprise but we were watching it live it was a very contends to kind of a hit list of donald trump's view of the world and what he sees as his achievements you know donald trump speeches usually long famously rambling this was wham bam bam so it's not much of a surprise but i mean bear in mind there is an election in just a few weeks i think any president who was heading into an election like this would use an event like this to some extent to try and make some political points but it moves this was in trump style let's talk a little bit global geopolitics and how it's reflected at this meeting this is what the russian president vladimir putin said today about the status quo if you will take a. particular russia has suggested convening a g. 5 summit it would reaffirming the key principles of behavior in international affairs elaborating ways to effectively address today's most burning issues it is encouraging that our partners have supported the initiative. u.g.
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5 summit for the 5 members of the security council what does that tell us about the present day balance of power yeah well it's interesting because he's standing up for a system that many sais is discredited that the u.n. security council is no longer functioning that it is in a state of almost permanent deadlock with vladimir putin and she's in pain from china on one side the united states on the other side and each of those having veto powers which means that they can each block each other's initiatives and this has concrete implications i mean look at the war in syria dragged on. this security council was unable to get over those veto hurdles to do anything meaningful to end that conflict and many smaller countries or particular grouping of smaller countries which germany is a member is saying that we need to reform the u.n. security council the get bega they need to get rid of these vetoes these get more
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diverse but the thing is and what we see from putin here of course the vested interests in the powers of those members of the u.n. security council are just so powerful and no one likes to give up their power and that you're exactly no one wants to change the status quo which means they would lose power and yet you've got don't trump champion an american retreat from multi-lateralism we're seeing that at the same time you've got the chinese president xi jinping showing the world that china is here to preserve the global order as we know it well that's his argument and of course it's needy argument to make when you have donald trump. saying well he said that every country should stand up for itself making the nationalist argument of course china's critics would say well you know it. at the same time is involved in a border confrontation with india it's cracking down on human rights in hong kong it threatens taiwan within vacation and it is trying to expand it.
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control within the south china sea these are not the acts of a benign multilaterally this hour. as we go to richard and if you look on the home page of the new york times or the washington post for that matter you will really have to struggle to find an article about these speeches in the u.n. general assembly today what does it tell us the year when does it still matter well i know this is the same thing and it is striking that german news sites featuring donald trump speech more prominently than many american ones. i think we do have to stress the kind of american neglect and disinterest in the united nations is nothing that you let me read you remember back in 1997 ted turner the founder of c.n.n. donated a $1000000000.00 to the united nations at a time when congress had stopped paying its dues george bush nominated as ambassador to the u.n. a man who had said the best thing you could do to the u.n.
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was to knock off a bunch of stories from the building so it's not so new i think what's more important really is the biggest challenge to the u.n. at the moment is this trip to the u.s. pinnacle led by leaders who question the very idea of international cooperation yeah that's right there's a lot of lots of enemies right now all of. these are in power around the world richard walker our chief international editor richard thank you. well as we mentioned the death toll from 1000 in the united states has now surpassed that grim milestone of 200000 that's the highest number for any country accounting for more than one in 51000 deaths globally this tragic marker is highlighting president trump's handling of the pandemic just as he campaigns for a 2nd term in office trump's democratic rival joe biden accuses trump of whining
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and incompetence both he says are why the united states has the world's highest pandemic mortality numbers. where the numbers of new infections continues to rise in the u.s. and here in europe today british prime minister boris johnson said the u.k. has reached a perilous turning point and he laid out new restrictions that could last into 2021 the u.k. situation is most extreme in europe but all across the continent people are curtailing their activities and the virus reminds us that it never left. he's waited 6 months for this pair for the 1st time since march pops in islander again pulling pints but the industry remains wary of a virus that hasn't gone away because we didn't believe until this morning we turn to hear the story that we're actually getting to open because because some people start to forget they only have to look at the capital dublin where bars have been
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told to stay shot amid a spike in cases there it's a stark contrast to the u.k. . the it is really really the way to go where the government relaxed restrictions much earlier and is now warning of a 2nd wave prime minister boris johnson who himself almost died from covert 19 back in march morning that the country has reached a perilous turning point says if we fail to act together. we will not only place our those roots would jeopardize our own futures with the more drastic action that we would inevitably be forced to take. new restrictions on pump opening time social gatherings and to mask wearing will now come into force painful for any government trying to open up its economy meanwhile hospitals in spain are battling western europe's highest kovac 19
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caseload health officials are considering whether to expand a lockdown light to include the whole of madrid. some of the families confined to their homes are confused by the mixed messages. as a rule and so i can't quite explain i can go to drink in munich germany the annual beer field october fest was cancelled but the drinking holes are still packed the good cheer belies the wiring surging coronavirus cases in the city officials have now set mosques a mandatory in some school as physical here at this hour how to control it and those he told abide by the rules must be punished not 10 euros but 100 or 1000 munich like much of europe is now wrestling with corona virus all over again and hoping to defeat it without shutting down public life entirely.
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our correspondent in london big must bear gets the u.k.'s place in this pandemic and certainly not one to envy you mean it's the hardest hit country in europe the pandemic recession is the worst in the world you get the sense that the government is struggling to balance the health of the public with the health of the economy today's new restrictions do they maintain that balance. well this is obviously what a lot of countries across the world are grappling with it's trying it's a balancing act basically in the u.k. we know that the scientific advisors of boys jones and they had also something much more strict they had really warned that the country is at a crossroads and that something quite drastic needed to happen in order to just cut it and go for example into its read complete lockdown this is the ideas that were
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bandied around but then we also know that on the other hand there are economic advisors there is that and also the backbenches in the. own party who were really cautioning and they were worried that if quite drastically than what happened where for example hospitality industry restaurants would be shot and pubs would be shut that these businesses just wouldn't recover and that you just call it sort of open up and then shop open not that this is not sustainable so in the end prime minister boris johnson is trying to strike this balance like so many other leaders of so many other countries and and i guess the jury is out whether this is sufficient or maybe whether it's not enough in order to just make a clear cut and stop this exponential rise of the virus that we're witnessing at the moment you know it wasn't that long ago that boris johnson was talking about a return to normal life in the u.k. by christmas but if you look at these new restrictions or you have to admit these
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will not be fitting under any christmas tree. no and that was one of the most striking messages from brust johnson today that he said perhaps we're looking at restrictions for about 6 months so really pos christmas and this is not the usual optimistic doris jones. that people how of the u.k. have voted for you somebody who usually or quite often these ridiculing what he calls do this and good names and he always tries to put a sunny post back to on things but in this instance his message was very very stern about the country has to brace itself for further restrictions and for quite a long time. spigot mosque with the latest tonight in london you can thank you.
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1972 it's been almost 50 years since the last astronauts left the moon and now finally we know when humans will return nasa has unveiled a multi-billion dollar plan called artemus it will send 2 astronauts to the moon in 2024 and one of them will be a woman will travel in a capsule white spacecraft called a ryan propelled by nasa as new rocket the space launch system a number of companies are competing to build the lunar landing module the next eagle if you will but the timeline of the project that is dependent on congress approving billions in an initial funding by christmas nasa plans to have the astronauts conduct scientific experiments collecting rock and soil samples and searching for water and other resources well here's nasa is head jim prime stuff and talking about the significance of this mission. 50 years after
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apollo we have a new program named after apollo twin sister and in this new program a sustainable return to the moon for the 1st time in human history we're going to have the opportunity it's not just men to the moon but also women to the moon so the moon is the proving ground it's not just about how to get there but once you're there how do you live and work using the resources of another world and then of course taking all of that technology and all that capability to mars that's the goal our that was now said mr jim stynes speaking very joining me now from washington is keith cowing a nasa veteran and now editor of the american space program blog nasa watch skeeters good to see you again you know for a decade we have waited for a date for a return to the moon now we finally have it 2024 why is it so important for so many people that we have this time this date commitment. well for me
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i grew up during the apollo era and we were told by the end of the decade and we get it and 72 i was a junior in high school so it's been a half a century for me and for a lot of other people like any other large project heavy get a duty date by which you do something is important not only to guide your program but to keep the excitement up and 2024 is the landing date that's kind of soon so their mission to make this happen and people are sort of getting excited about it the apollo mission had its genesis in the cold war it was about national pride competition why are astronauts going to the moon this time. well you don't sit here we have a saying that was then this is now there still is an issue of national pride in competition except back in the you know space race as they called it the era it was us versus the soviet union the cold war now it's many nations and companies it's
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not just you know countries they go to the moon it's private companies so the competition comes from many directions and has many players so it's a little more difficult so you have a political score to say who's ahead but i guess the simple answer is more people more companies more nations can go to the moon and they're going to go do you think that nasa is or has its eye on what the chinese are doing because they really are pushing to have a presence beyond earth oh absolutely they're paying attention and a lot of them are you know folks at nasa are happy to see this because it brings attention to us some people here think we have to compete with everybody but other people realize that you know the more people as i said before the war or people who want to go the more reasons there are to go and the more reasons there are to go the chances are that more people will go sort of a circular argument but it seems to be working just fine right now and we learned
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vet the this moon lander you know the next generation of the eagle if you will it will be touching down at the south pole of the moon can you tell us why. well. kind of the reason for going down there is that the apollo missions lead in the equitorial regions whereas the south pole offers a totally different environment than we've ever sent you the humans are robots too and there's a chance that there could be some water ice or some sort of. rocks and water ice that can be mined for useful or rocket fuel and for other purposes so it's the ideas that go places where we've not gone before and we know that nasa is doing something which we didn't have with the apollo mission and that is it's relying on private companies like jeff bezos is blue origin or elon musk's space x. to come up with essential hardware for the mission do you see this as being a big gamble or a big risk i mean what's your assessment i think it's probably less risky to have
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more players in to not just rely on government programs to be quite honest with the if you look at the progress that the large s.l.'s rocket has made and it's many years behind many billions over yet if you look at what space x. is doing they're launching rockets for a fraction of the cost and they can afford to blow them up just to test a new system so i think quite frankly the smart thing to do is what nasa has done and that is to bring the private sector and nasa says that it would like to see in our midst be a sustainable mission unlike apollo 15 years ago sustainable as in a permanent presence on the moon is that what we're talking about. well it's funny you should ask that because that's the question i asked the administrator yesterday sustainable beans different things to different people i guess your estimation yet if the idea is you go there you just don't go there wait a flag and leave it you go there he set up
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a base so that each successive mission can have something to work with an innovator ants but other people see sustainable is whether you know congress says you know we think we can stick sustain the budget so it's sort of an old phrase here where he says it depends on where you sit so sustainable space semantics if you will a bit about 20 seconds he's let me ask you do you see a date coming anytime soon for when we can have a mission to mars. throughout you know the middle of the next decade the 20 thirty's is what everybody's been meaning for but they've been meaning that for 10 or 20 years when i was a kid we were told we were going to enter the moon from 1901 so now you know it gets darts and throw them at the dart board. and say where it lands all right kate kelly get a pair of nasa watch dot com keith always good talking with you thank you a pusher. well the day is almost done with the conversation it continues online to find us on twitter either you w. news or you can follow me at when i go off t.v.
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and remember whatever happens between now and then on earth or on the moon tomorrow is another day we'll see that everybody.
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should. be asleep after the harvest. fresh fruits often end up in the garbage instead of the supermarket. that should change with the peel and the liquid that increases the. so fly food. is this the way to avoid food waste
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global 3000. and 90 minutes on t w. in the. climate change. clothes assumes. much and soon people. want to use today householders future. dot com african american citizens for the multimedia. click it or. go to use crime fighter are back again africa's most successful radio drama series continues this season the stories focus on hate speech cholera prevention and sustainable charcoal production all of a sow's are available online and of course you can share and discuss on africa's facebook page and other social media platforms. crime fighters tune in now.
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get. it on what it. is you know i mean in your minute as he. goes over the next cynical media. us all up with out about a. vision of getting. it on wood. this you know i mean you may not even seem quite. up like a son among one out. what i'm focused on in this unit but i'm with what it took and i said i'm not going to sit there and. this you know i mean in your mind not a single when you get in when you cry i don't want to. me nobody and unanimous. the show could go because i see it right yes it said. i shouldn't. have only said that i caught it going on with the game fun to. see it because as if
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to say i said. this is g.w. there's like the from berlin a coronavirus clash between the presidents of the u.s. and china the fall of the guidance of something if we say to the indians rolled out the old tulsa okla i say should i launch a joint international response to just done that we must hold accountable the nation which unleashed displayed on to the world china double trump made
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a lot of claims at the u.n. general assembly today will do a fact check on the also coming up another tragic milestone the pandemic has claimed more than 200000 lives in the u.s. the highest death toll in the world what does this mean for the presidential election just when we pass away. i'm burnt off it's good to have you with us the united nations general assembly began holding its annual debate today as the un marks 75 years since its founding it was the 1st assembly where world leaders did not all gather in new york city but instead addressed the forum via video that's because of the coronavirus pandemic but far from delivering a unifying message us president will trump repeatedly lashed out at china in his
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speech this prompted un secretary general antonio gutierrez to warn against a new cold war. let's have a listen now to part of trump's attacks on john we must hold accountable the nation which unleashed this play on to the world china in the earliest days of the virus china lock down travel domestically while allowing flights to leave china and infect the world all right we want to go now the fact checker. they were joins is just a tell me is it true what trump says here about the china i mean can we put all the blame on china for the pandemic. well we all know that president trump keeps calling the coronavirus the china virus which is part of his tragedy to blame this country for the outbreak in his prerecorded speech for the united nations he demands consequences as we have heard and he gives us this example of why china acted in his opinion intentionally whether international flights while the domestic
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travel was locked down in china clearly no we checked this together with our china department and it's true that from generally 23rd on there were practically no flights with passengers from will hand but domestic travel in china continued we saw both types of flights international and national being reduced for example china canceled on february to around 24 percent of the international flights and 50 percent of their domestic flights other china airlines acted also in that way so no you can't say that there were just international and no domestic flights in china at that time all right so that's the one is you don't want trump he's also attacking china for other reasons for example for polluting the environment take a listen to what he said today china's carbon emissions are nearly twice what the u.s. as and is rising fast so is this claim based in reality.
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this claim is correct china's share of the global carbon emission is around 28 percent while the us are accountable for nearly 15 percent china is far and away the world's top carbon amator close to $10000000000.00 metric tons of c o 2 from burning fossil fuel were emitted by china in 2017 more than 5000000000 metric tons by the us later trump said in his speech that the us reduce its carbon emissions by more than any country in the world and again this claim is true following numbers of the international energy agency the united states or the largest to climate energy related c o 2 diminish emissions in 2019 on a country basis so this point is correct we have to say are a very good the us president praised his administration's response to the pandemic in that speech today let's take a listen to what he said about the u.s.
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in his handling of the crisis in the united states we launched the most aggressive mobilization since the 2nd world war we rapidly produced a record supply of ventilators creating a surplus that allowed us to share them with friends and partners all around the globe i don't see in the biggest mobilization by the u.s. since the 2nd world war is that true. well we know this claim already as trump tends to praise his management of this crisis but again this is not true we all remember the 1st week for example of the outbreak in the u.s. to the country wasn't prepared for this virus and for example in new york governor andrew cuomo was asking for help and for more ventilators 30000 to be precise but to receive just 400 of them the governor even raised the question of theology so the question who should be denied this important medical treatment to survive and on the other hand germany offered ventilators to the u.s.
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as an act of help but this offer was denied at this point so trump's claim is false here and we shouldn't over see that this disease has killed already 200000 americans so they were as are and their role model like trump is trying to tell us in this situation all right in us we know that the u.s. president he spoke for only 7 minutes in the video of speech today and he spoke during this of the biggest partly about the u.s. economy let's take a listen to what he said about there we also know that american prosperity is the bedrock of freedom and security all over the world in 3 short years we've built the greatest economy in history and we are quickly doing it again are i was going through the numbers is that exactly correct what the president said. you know the us are in the middle of an election campaign so it was expected that trump would address the voters within the united states and i think this claim can be seen in
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this context as the economy growth was for a long time let's say the key argument for his government but even if we can't say what exactly is the influence of pressure president on the economy situation in the country the sets the statistics prove trump very wrong a closer look on the economy growth and of the 13 presidents of the us after world war 2 shows that president trump isn't the number one he is actually position 9 the average annual economic growth of his 1st 3 years as a president was 2.5 percent lyndon b. johnson for example produced a solid 5.3 percent of growth and the source of this information is the u.s. department of commerce so he obviously light here in this situation again and it won't be easy for for him to rebuild the economy after the coronavirus was so
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costly for so many americans yeah that's a very good point and it's always good to let the truth come to light especially when we're talking about the economy w.'s fact checker notion of able to thank you for here's a look now at some of the other stories that are making headlines around the world european council president charles michel has gone into quarantine after one of his security guards tested positive for coke at 19 the surprise announcement means that a summit of the e.u. leaders that was due to begin in 2 days' time has now been postponed until october 1st a court in pakistan has sentenced 2 former political activists to death over their wall in a deadly garment factory fire the 2012 blaze killed more than 260 workers the court said the men started the fire as part of a political extortion scheme. u.s. senator mitt romney has said that he supports holding a vote to fill the vacant seat on the supreme court before the presidential election the announcement all but ensures that president trunk can have
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a vote on his nominee despite democrats' objections trump says he will name his choice on saturday. all right now to the latest pandemic news the u.s. death toll from code of 19 has passed the grim milestone of more than 200000 that's according to johns hopkins university now that is the highest number for any country so far it accounts for more than one in 5 coded deaths globally it's putting the president on drums handling of the pandemic in the spotlight as he campaigns for a 2nd term in office trump's democratic rival joe biden says that trump's unwise and incompetence are the main reason that the united states has seen so many deaths from this vine as. well on this sad day for the u.s. we want to speak now to our correspondent stefan simons in washington d.c. good afternoon to huge deafened we are what 6 weeks away from the presidential
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election in the u.s. and how are these 200000 deaths reflected in the campaigns. there is flecked as you would expect them to be the president just the other day of a big rally in ohio and flat out denied that corona virus is that deadly for young people he said and of course that neglecting by that the danger which is posed by young people for older people if they pass on the virus the president largely trying to excuse himself in taking responsibility he doesn't take responsibility number 2 he is of course largely ignoring willfully ignore ignoring 2 100000 deaths in the united states almost 7000000 infections in this country so there's a lot of avoidance going on for a very very good reason because this is not his strong suit of course he's getting
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hammered with criticism about his handling about the covert 19 crises cme the pandemic the other side biden reminding this just the other day as americans to not to not become complacent about the fact that 200000 people died 200000 people died in the richest nation of the world from a pandemic which the democrats say could have been handled better even prevented to a loss to greece in terms of this death toll we've been speaking to americans in denver colorado danged if one has given what they think about this tragic milestone take a listen. i know that other from other requests from court in the oral. sense of public health. we have a real leader here. remember the much smaller we think up to then a good job. i think that there is a story on the other side that wants to say how he's handled it but nobody knew
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where nobody knew where it was coming from in the beginning or what it was all about. we just heard otherwise but has this tragic milestone nonetheless has it increased or has it was and the potential of this pandemic to divide us society. kind of think that 3 november 30th when we elect a new president it has actually increased division and polarization in this country however in general terms i think it's fair to say that polarization is a staple here in the political discourse input in politics see in the united states and division in the country between the people. to war it's do i wear a mask such a simple thing do i wear a mask do or practice social distancing do i believe that covert 19 this pandemic is actually there and that we have to battle it this division of people who believe
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this and do the do the do the wrong thing or do the right thing and wearing a mask and and listen to experts that is that is here to stay and this is not going away and we've got about 30 seconds left on we've got the politicization of the pandemic grim numbers how are things looking as we move into the fall and winter in the u.s. . not good there are predictions out there that there's about one around 180000 additional deaths in the united states by january 1st if if if we don't do anything or we don't do enough to actually really fight the virus and that is where mask keep social distancing and don't mingle with a lot of people that's what you need to do if that's not happening hundreds thousands more will die well is hope the forecasts are wrong in this case we will see stefan's i'm on the story boards in washington stefan thank you. best of all legend michael jordan has linked up with champion stock car racing driver dinny
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hamlin to form a new nascar cup series team take a look at the deal will have bubba wallace as their driver while a successfully campaigned you may remember to give the confederate flag band from nascar races the 3 men aim to create more opportunities for black people in race. in brazil a practice session of the women's national football team was gate crashed by someone apparently keen to join the squad but they brought in some thoughts there you see the would be footballer landed on the head of defender brenda benito's the bird was reluctant to leave until an assistant coach finally managed to push it away sadly the plucky parrot failed the old dition and hasn't been seen sands what you call a bad perched fasting. this is news from berlin up next business news with change stick around she'll be right.
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every day. for us and for our planet. my dues is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do we make cities screener how can we protect animals and their habitats what to do.

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