tv World Stories Deutsche Welle October 12, 2020 8:15am-8:31am CEST
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in tennis or rafael nadal has beaten novak djokovic in a blockbuster showdown at the french open the spaniard winning in straight sets 6 love 6275 to claim his 13th and you open title and ball has now equaled fate of all time record of 20 grand slams he didn't lose a single cent throughout the tournament. this is the news live from berlin i'm brian thomas where the entire team factory. where i come from we have to fight for a free press and was born and raised in a military dictatorship with just one t.v. shadow and if your newspapers when official information as a journalist i have worked on the streets of many qantas and their problems are
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almost the same or do you source an inequality a lack of the freedom of the press. go up should we can afford to stay silent when it comes to the fans of the humans and see the right to fold who have decided to put their trust in us. my name is johnny carson and i work. from. this week on moral stories. its. lessons from the pandemic. turkish waiting for tourists but we begin in russia where at the beginning of october journalists reynosa if you know such yourself and fire engines who died
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from her injuries the russian federation is responsible for my death is the message she left on facebook. a death that sent shock waves through the city and through russia in need of good had hundreds of mourners came out to remember the journalist 18 us live in the who lit herself on fire. we were here last week. in us live in the equals freedom of speech this sign reads. and at her public memorial service anyone who wanted could say a few words in the journalists on are. sorry that we didn't save you didn't keep you safe. you know worked with the. she remembers her colleague as being fiercely independent despite working in a country where media censorship is commonplace. it's
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hard to approach the authorities and ask questions now but irina always asked she asked uncomfortable questions you couldn't please her she upset p.r. officers because she didn't try to safeguard anyone's reputation she always collected the facts to reveal a full picture of the very corruption and human rights violations. of. her supporters say slavin i was under near constant pressure by the authorities she had to pay several fines for her work at the independent media outlet she founded and just before her self-immolation security forces searched her home over a case against opposition activists. home was searched on the same day the opposition politician things the authorities wanted to silence it in us live in the. ability i think she definitely meant her death to be
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a political act a final political act it was a final attempt to get through to people she seems to have felt that the classical tools she had a media outlet her facebook page that wasn't enough for her they didn't get her the reaction she wanted. the governor of the region has expressed his condolences 1st live in those deaths and promised a full investigation into its circumstances. meanwhile the bench where she let herself on fire outside a police building has become an improvised memorial to the independent journalist. italy was good if the worst hit countries at the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. while infections there are increasing and the government and citizens have learned hard earned lessons from the dramatic situation earlier in the year.
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she lifts through the spanish flu the 2 world wars and now she survived colbert $95.00 the money greenie is 180 years old during the 1st wave of the coronavirus and it's only she watched many friends and her nursing home die well because they're worried i've been through so many things in my life and i'm still here it looks as if jesus christ doesn't want me. care homes were hard hits in the early stages of the pandemic when midland was at the epicenter of the outbreak more than half of the 33000 lives lost to cope with 19 in its elite who are here in the city and the surrounding lumber the region. vanda got to be a volunteer with the white cross provided emergency support during the most acute stage of the crisis she captured some impressions of the chaos on her phone relieved. vary from article like
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a tsunami something that in the moment arrives change it completely everything's so from that moment that we change our out of year we are our approach to the life people are legally obliged to wear masks in all crowded places from 6 pm to 6 am and many also keep theirs on during the day another reason infection rates are rising slowly is the long term effect of italy's harsh lockdown which kept people confined to their homes for months on end. professor maria retouches mando says there's no magic formula for other countries to follow italy is not perfect and it certainly can't go it alone i think is an important. thing is that to think out today european to have this same a protocol all therapy the same. exchange of experiences so they say require
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counting not just they look at localize it as the back to just motto you know european a strategy to face a divider says the professor also has high hopes for a rep its testing scheme the government plans to roll out in schools that's good news for material and his sister it's already they started class only 2 weeks ago and don't want to go back to homeschooling you. see that i hope we can soon take off the mosques and get a bit closer to each other without having to keep our distance all the time. since. this cemetery is a bitter reminder of my last collective trauma the 128 people laid to rest here were brought here from overcrowded hospitals and morgues public support for ongoing
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restriction remains high many now fear the approaching winter. in turkey like and other countries the crude a virus pandemic has greatly hindered freedom of movement and traveling the country's tourism industry is suffering as a result which includes istanbul. at 1st glance istanbul looks as lively as it did before the coronavirus crisis. is. but if you talk to shopkeepers in the touristy areas you'll only hear complaints there are still hardly any foreign visitors and the frustration is growing by the day. we hear from morning till evening but we sell very little sometimes just one souvenir a day for. all of us have debts we aren't selling anything we can't pay our rent so
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it's a lost season utterly lost because even luxury hotels like the parapet are in crisis mode because of the pandemic and. the building is one of the stumbles landmarks and manager john carroll proudly shows me how beautiful it is the hotel was billed 130 years ago for the passengers of the legendary orient express today guests are staying in rooms once graced by emperor as presidents and movie stars. or agatha christie who wrote crime novels here. at the moment so most of the $115.00 rooms of farley disinfected and abandoned. $21000.00 was a very successful year for. it was the changing of the person to a 95 per cent at the start of 2000 the.
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pandemic. first. person. 0 the situation has been particularly dramatic on the turkish riviera and tell us the long beach is deserted for months most hotels closed. since early august holiday makers have been returning mainly from russia because the government there is allowing flights to techie again. some. action has returned to anti us pools and to towel owners now hope they can extend the summer season far into autumn. at the para palace they also hope for better times the hotel survived 2 world wars it might also survive that endemic. but everyone here knows it will take time before tourists come back in large numbers and marvel at
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the sunset over the eastern wall from the terrace of the para palace. german relief occasion took place 30 years ago afterward many people left east to me to find work in the wealthier western heart of the country but their new gradually returning to more remote areas. a small town in an idyllic lakeside setting pen kuhn in the far north east is marking the 30th anniversary of the end of communist east germany or not term of the 3rd a public holiday either before and it's something to celebrate i'm glad i experienced it then and that i can live like i do today things are much better now ph. d. w. last reported from peng kuhn 13 years ago at that time young women were leading the
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d. population of the region leaving the older men behind the women always wanted to move west through a new bug or hamburg someone like that. definitely going yes i'm out of here still schuchardt is rubbish here. paying khun and the whole of the northeast seemed then to be in terminal decline. today it appears at 1st that most of the residents are still men but in fact there are young women with children living here as well the mass says there's no more talk of the town dying on its feet but is it and as always yeah more things have changed young families are moving here from berlin and the stettin area. some of polish families bringing a breath of fresh air to our town or. life in pen can began to improve in 2007 when the border opened between poland and germany playing
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kuhn is not far from the polish city of state teen a lot has changed since then the school was on the verge of closing but is now thriving thanks to its polish pupils. new homes are being built and more are planned people can also grow old here young people are moving to paying khun to work as carers in this retirement home not everything in pink or in is perfect ironically a building called unity house is an i saw it will soon be converted into a medical center other buildings are empty the last 2 shops in the market square have closed and you won't find anything to eat and drink but paying coon is not on its last legs there are just as many women as men again here and their numbers are growing.
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literature in the age of colonna. war and winning novels. experimented with an online book fair. and a female poet is awarded literatures highest honor. march 20. 4th w. . the number of corona infections is rising. large groups of people are least keeping the necessary distance from seems impossible. researchers say it can be done. by the flow strands.
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