Skip to main content

tv   Quarks  Deutsche Welle  October 20, 2020 10:30pm-11:16pm CEST

10:30 pm
5 adventures. one goal. the preservation of our planet. it's not just an issue of martin trees and saving pandas and more. exhausts it's danger surat. struggle to realize that there's a radically different way of living it's rather. unfortunate starts november 6th on t.w. . in exactly 2 weeks the united states will hold an election the likes of which it has never seen a combination of early voting along with mail in an absentee ballots means 2 things there is more time to cast a ballot and it will take more time to count them all if early voting is an indicator joe biden will become the 46 president with a comfortable margin of victory how likely is a donald trump comeback is
10:31 pm
a 2nd trump electoral college win is that possible tonight we crunch the numbers i'm bring coffee for lynn this is the day. i mean you know trump is their greatest president ever what we're seeing at the cinema for trump in our area larger than it was 4 years ago terry lane for president father cheney who is the braves and you know if we win wisconsin we win the whole ballgame and i think i'm trying to make the best man with the bag of what's in front of. there on the ground 0 in the state of illinois in the face of a book that is not going away. also coming up
10:32 pm
a search engine so ubiquitous is its name is a verb every day almost everyone googles something tonight try searching these terms google us department of justice and land mark also. according to the rest regional 90 percent of all internet searches go through google that is power. and it comes with responsibility today google is more than a search engine we have global company that's come into it to building products for everyone. and to our viewers watching on p.b.s. in the united states and to all of you around the world welcome we begin the day with the politics of patience lots of patience that is what politicians and voters alike will need beginning the member 3rd election day in the united states we are all used to those marathon presidential campaigns but this year the election itself has morphed into an election season early voting is already taking place and once
10:33 pm
election day is over the tallying of mail and balance in absentee ballots will last days perhaps weeks i have covered u.s. elections since 1902 and this is the 1st time that the media is bracing for an election night with no clear winner patients and maybe a virtue but it is not one many of us have in abundance hence the search for clues in the information we already have early voters they may not be electoral oracles but in 2020 they do provide us with some important clarity in just a moment we will pour over the data and ask what do these numbers portend for donald trump and joe biden but 1st the messaging from both campaigns on this tuesday 2 weeks before election day. we are rounding that and we have the vaccines coming in all but even without we're rounding the turn. people are pandemic
10:34 pm
out you know that they're pandemic down that's why it's so great with your governor is done he's opened up your state you're doing great we pioneered lives and by the way you get it you know like i say here i am i'm here i'm here and no music i can jump into this audience and kiss everything. donald trump was informed in january january 28th of the nature of this pandemic he was informed that it was lethal in proportion it would kill 5 times as many people as the flu he was informed it could hurt children he was informed that it was contagious and air balland and what did he do he stood at rallies and he stood before the american people and he didn't tell you what he knew. all right with 2 weeks to go let's bring in tom bowman your he's a democratic political strategist also the c.e.o.
10:35 pm
of the political data company target smart tom welcome to the day before we dive into the early voting numbers let's pull out far and wide for a moment what is your data telling you about the importance of the code 19 pandemic in this election. it's by far the most important issue it's it's impacting how people vote both in terms of the motive go in but also there go choice we're seeing it have a huge impact and is really recycled deck in this election we've seen early voting on an unprecedented scale already but some 30000000 votes have been cast and yet predicting the outcome has never been so difficult that's what we've been hearing this entire season why is that. well there's just so much more uncertainty than we've ever had before as you say over 30000000 votes cast early and while that's a massive number that's approaching the total number of early votes we saw in all
10:36 pm
of 2016 and we still have 2 weeks to go. it's going to potentially trip by election day and we're looking at a turnout record so there's uncertainty in how these people are voting to the extent that some of these votes will not be counted there are numerous legal challenges that are still in play and will be in play through and perhaps beyond election day and a lot of uncertainty about turnout will the president's supporters turnout on election day as he insists they will well you know despite these uncertainties what picture can we paint so far made who are these voters these early voters what's what's driving them to cast their ballots early. well so we've got a really interesting picture at this point again with over $30000000.00 cast it's a pretty good sample to get a sense of where the enthusiasm lies at least at this point and what we're seeing is that they're only the people of it so far certainly seem democratic based on our
10:37 pm
models it looks like the democrats have about a 13 point advantage at this point again that's not success suggesting exactly how they will vote but just looking at their general partisanship the people are voting it's really across the spectrum we've seen a huge increase in younger voters a traditional democratic constituency but on the other end of the range we've also seen huge increase in seniors voting which certainly makes census people were perhaps the most threatened and that risk they're taking advantage of these opportunities to cast a safe ballot what we have seen is that the senior voters certainly are favoring joe biden much more than they did hillary clinton in 2016 so they have the opportunity to really swing this election especially in key states like florida and arizona where they make up a huge share of the and have huge share of their early. it's fascinating this senior surge that you're talking about it with so many of these early voters being
10:38 pm
democrats voting for joe biden should that boost confidence within the joe biden campaign. you know i think anyone who lived through the 2016 election is not going to have a lot of confidence at this point in terms of the models probably stick scores that say what percent chance he has of winning because we saw that in 2016 and we saw them fail even in the polling there's uncertainty about whether or not those polls are accurately predicting turnout republicans say they're going to come out in record numbers on election day and really there's no way to tell if that's true until it happens so based on our uncertainty you're seeing no one take anything for granted at this point on either side. let's consider the battleground states for a moment these are the states that will decide this election in for our viewers we've put together a list here the states considered a toss of our florida iowa ohio georgia maine
10:39 pm
north carolina that a ground states that are leaning democratic are michigan minnesota nebraska 2nd district new hampshire pennsylvania wisconsin nevada and arizona and the one battleground state leaning republican tonight is texas now with only that one state leaning republican tom does that does that spell doom for donald trump. it's bill's a very difficult path to reelection. he obviously won by the narrowest of margins in 26 team about 80000 votes across 3 states 3 of the closest states michigan wisconsin and pennsylvania as you said those states. look. a good bit worse for him at this point certainly still very much in play but the landscape is is more dire for him at this point in those states and also he's playing defense as you noted not to states he didn't have to defend last time like arizona like texas. like
10:40 pm
georgia like north carolina and seen that many states in play he's really going to have to be able to run the perfect campaign from here on out a very disciplined campaign and unfortunately that hasn't been his friend. is there a state or a group of states that trump must carry if he wants to reach that magical number of 270 electoral college votes well he certainly can't afford to lose the states that he won last time because he didn't win by the most narrow margin so looking at states like florida arizona texas georgia north carolina you know he could lose one of those at least the smaller ones among those who can't lose 2 of them and then he would also have to repeat this performance through the midwest in michigan wisconsin and pennsylvania and again looking at the early vote out of there that democrats are coming out in record breaking numbers at this point so he's going to find himself in a pretty people come election day back in 2016 hillary clinton she won the popular
10:41 pm
vote but 3000000 more than trump is a repeat this year possible i mean could drop win the electoral college and the election and lose the popular vote to biden by more than 3000000. the to me the popular vote isn't in question i don't think there's anyone that you would find on that term campaign who could argue with a straight face that he has an opportunity to win the popular vote so then it becomes a question of as you say can he win the electoral college and certainly just based on the bias we've seen in the electoral college towards the smaller states there is a path where he could lose by more than he lost in 2016 i mean we're looking at turnout that could exceed 155 or 160000000 vote which is massive so he could lose by a larger margin than he didn't 2016 in the popular vote and if he does everything right in wins those close key states still win the electoral college and it would be
10:42 pm
another shock for the world watching and observing this election that is for sure tom bowman your democratic political strategist with target smart has a great web site we use it all the time to look at the numbers i can highly recommend if tommy appreciate your time in your insides tonight thank you. thank you very much. well the timing and the target are both remarkable today just 2 weeks before the u.s. presidential election the trump administration filed a landmark antitrust lawsuit against the search engine giant google it alleges the company is abusing its dominance of online searches to fend off rivals google controls about 90 percent of global web searches the company has long denied claims of unfair competition the lawsuit also alleges that google uses billions of dollars
10:43 pm
to pay phone manufacturers to ensure that it is the default search engine on those phones for hours this is the u.s. government's most significant antitrust case since it sued microsoft more than 20 years ago. well for more on this i'm happy to welcome to the day jennifer hudson she's the director of technology and innovation policy at the conservative think tank the american action forum jennifer it's good to have you on the day is an antitrust case against google is it the right way to go forward here i mean is it google's business model vindicated by the fact that it is the search engine of choice for most people. this interest case is the latest in a series of different events that have been happening that have been kind of part of a broader tech class against these big tech companies from both the left and the right we've seen calls to use anti trust from democrats in the house and now we've seen
10:44 pm
a republican attorney general as well and several state republican attorneys general filing a case against google what is important to remember though when we examine these cases is that any trust law has several different elements it depends on the market we're talking about where they will have to show market power they also have to show that they these companies are abusing that market power and the need to show that it's harming consumer welfare and so far what we've seen is there were it's not clear evidence that google has engaged in such behavior and can the show can the court show a certain market i mean it has to prove that google is abusing its power in the u.s. market but is going to have to prove that on law and is it been done before. when we're looking at defining the market that's going to be a key point of contention in this in this case so the department of justice is
10:45 pm
probably going to trying to find the market as narrowly as possible to try and make it look like google has a larger markets here over things like advertising but when we look at how most of us consider the market for something like advertising is an incredibly diverse market that we'll see companies to using to train online advertising and more traditional options as well and even with an online advertising that companies have several different types of choices so this is the type of debate that we're likely to see play out around this case as well as questions about what certain other markets may be involved in here the competitors are down market definition is certainly going to be a key element of dispute in the antitrust debates going forward the general want to ask you about the timing of this announcement we're 2 weeks away from a presidential election and also about the politics of this you mentioned that republican attorneys general are also plaintiffs in this case but there's not
10:46 pm
a single democratic attorney general what does that tell us. it tells us that we see a lot of calls to quote unquote breakout big tax from both the left and the right but for very different reasons we also have to think about the fact that we've seen a lot of conservative voices complaining about big tech companies recently over other issues particularly online content moderation and on the left losing a lot of concerns about whether or not anti trust needs to be basically very heavily revised that kind of standard of the idea that big is bad or that these companies are are somehow exploiting smaller businesses and looking more at a focus on competitors rather than consumers what we're seeing there are 2 very divergent criticisms and as a result the house judiciary committee report that was a result is there and he trying to investigation and only had democrats sign on to it and this current case only has republicans signed on to. basically
10:47 pm
evaporate after the election if we see. become the next president what happens next with antitrust is going to be very interesting following the 20 twentieth's lection since we've had calls from both the left and the right over into trance we will likely see some form of action regarding investigations or continuing calls for these revisions that don't necessarily actually reflect the way that antitrust was intended to be used instead they reflect more political motives are also tools that antitrust is not the appropriate mechanism to resolve. if you can take. people see this as a positive move but maybe they should be thinking about the long term and how long as my producer says how long it's going to take these chickens to have. this is not
10:48 pm
something that's going to happen overnight is it. no so if people who are looking for you know a quick solution into trust certainly isn't your tool when you look back to those other tech cases you mention the microsoft case earlier but also i.b.m. there's cases often take decades and even if a solution is found for example in the 18 tiebreak out that's usually pointed to as kind of the time that antitrust work it can be decades of enforcement and oversight after that so indeed this is just the start of an antitrust case and we'll likely see much more conversation but the fact that a case was filed is still significant and could still have a significant impact on the teacher innovation as well as on decisions that are being made at big tech companies it's interesting you mention the word innovation because move moving forward isn't it possible that the litigation will take so long and in that time technology will change so quickly that once we get to i
10:49 pm
guess we get to the courtroom this entire case could be a moot point is that possible innovation can be one of the best competition policies well we've seen in the past is that sometimes when we're looking at the market we're looking at it far too small and the next and they just thing is just around the corner so when we're looking at net mainframe markets personal computing was around the corner while we were looking at web browsers and those concerns mobile is what really revolutionized the way we connect and the app economy completely changed those connections as well so we want to make sure that we're not just focusing on the current big players that we're understanding the way that the market is incredibly dynamic in this field and how that also it seems. jennifer director of technology innovation policy at the conservative think tank the american action forum jennifer we appreciate your time tonight in your insides thank you thank you for having me.
10:50 pm
new clashes have erupted between armenia and azerbaijan despite a humanitarian ceasefire that was agreed to late on saturday indeed disputed region of nagorno-karabakh both sides accuse each other of violating the agreement just hours after it came into effect the breakaway region is mainly inhabited by ethnic armenians but internationally recognized as part of i'm sure by john. well authorities in both eyes are by john and the media have denied targeting civilians residential areas have been repeatedly shelled since the conflict flared up 3 weeks ago our correspondent julie han reports tonight from inside azerbaijan. i. was. on the ruins of what used to be her life. her neighborhood was destroyed in the missile attack over the weekend. for home i
10:51 pm
mean is. this is from where the rocket came there were houses everywhere here but they were hit and everything got destroyed. the small sports school to. look their clothes and mattresses lying around my belongings also somewhere here. next to the bone daoud homes a makeshift memorial. many gunja residents come here to commemorate those killed in the attack certain people according to the authorities. they bring flowers and signs saying who they blame the armenian army. to rest in peace gunja people may god bless you. the city of ganja allies dozens of kilometers away from nagorno-karabakh people who live here never thought
10:52 pm
they would become part of the fighting but they were wrong several houses in this residential area have been reduced to rubble over the weekend and it's become clear once again that this conflict can escalate any time and in any direction. since late september amenia and as a by john have been at war for to go nuclear about again. and it is difficult. to get an independent picture of the situation in the region both sides report military successes both countries accuse each other a fuelling the fighting. 2 attempts at a ceasefire have already failed propaganda and war rhetoric determine everyday life. also here in the city center of gun jeff most people we speak to support for
10:53 pm
a azerbaijan listening with the power and strength of our army will soon be taken in the flag of azerbaijan will be a race that although much of our registered as a woman to you to join our army i'm ready. this clock you know there's been we're not afraid i mean my family and fellow citizens all of us so willing to sacrifice our life for our nation we will never back down this whole truckload is imo close to the old us after the fatal attack on gunja as a by john has the right to defend itself many here say. he now has to look for a new beginning in the ruins of her own life. and to. countries across europe are scrambling to contain a new spike in covert 19 cases authorities in the german state above very have put more than a 100000 people under a strict law hundreds of people on vacation there are also packing their bags to
10:54 pm
leave restrictions in these southern districts they went into effect on tuesday. bash has gotten the land in the feria a manton as it will on the austrian border now the number one coronavirus hot spot in germany the number of new cases that in the last week is 5 times above the threshold for a high risk area as of choose day locals are back in lockdown and only allowed to leave their homes with a valid reason. the number of new daily cases in germany is rising nationwide with the south and the west worst hit more than 129 areas and deemed high risk as the 2nd wave hits berlin authorities are urging people to wear masks in all crowded places where social distancing isn't possible masks a compulsory at markets well queuing and on some shopping streets for the public is largely remaining calm but. of course we are afraid but not in the sense that i
10:55 pm
think about it all the time it's good that we're protecting ourselves just like before us as you know when i still live with my parents so i won't go to panic buying but i already found it bad the 1st time around and this time to. think it meant. i think we're better prepared this time around compared to the 1st time. i see how people are behaving and it's much better. but what it means for us i'm in berlin for the 1st time in 10 months and of course i'm a bishop afraid. it had to listen in a totally you know in political sphere as pressure is growing for more involvement of the parliament in coronavirus decision making in this talk president wrote to m.p.'s on monday saying that parliament's role has no make and must be more distinct in the handling of the pandemic a polite reminder that in germany's democracy parliament makes the laws not the government. where the day is almost done the conversation it continues online
10:56 pm
you'll find us on twitter. or you can follow me at. every member whatever happens between now and tomorrow is another day we'll see you then everybody.
10:57 pm
is growing in the city. in the form of housing. the super foods that are also good for the cause they're primordial plants but a futuristic resource and they can do even more. women from 2 continents
10:58 pm
present their green vision. global 3000 and. 90 minutes on d w. in the army of climate change. cause massive. cuts and soon people. one day years to the head of their future. g.w. dot com african american cities the mechanisms could turn. imagine how many push all floods us thrown out and more right now the climate treatment different awful story. this is much less the way from just one week. how much worse can really get. we still have time to act i'm going.
10:59 pm
to sort of set. that subscribe for the morning news like this. good. morning. because you know for using. them though slowly slowly over. billy's love goodness knows. there's no use no love. for the goal which. was a. world kids from the. local canceling. school. are killing
11:00 pm
us. this is g w news live from berlin tonight a landmark lawsuit against a search engine giant the u.s. government is taking google to court the department of justice today announcing that it is suing google alleging the company abuses its dominance of the online search and advertising markets also coming up.
11:01 pm
on. the recount in the night sky over longo's nigeria as police and soldiers opened fire to break up a protest earlier a curfew was imposed on law goes after weeks of demonstrations against police brutality and corruption plus touch and go into outer space in a matter of hours a nasa spacecraft bulleted to snatch samples of rock from an asteroid we'll get the details of this daring mission a cosmic catch me if you can. golf it's good to have you with us tonight the u.s. and google are headed to court the trumpet ministration today filed a landmark antitrust lawsuit against google it alleges that the tech giant has been abusing its dominance as online search engine to fend off its rivals google
11:02 pm
controls about 90 percent of global web searches the company has long denied claims of unfair competition the wall street. also alleges that google uses billions of dollars to pay phone manufacturers to ensure that it is the default search engine on those phones browsers it's the u.s. government's most significant act to protect competition since that groundbreaking case against microsoft more than 20 years ago all right for more now we're joined by our correspondent in washington d.c. oliver salat and he to you. for it what exactly is google being accused of here well the allegation brant is that google is on fall unlawfully maintaining a monopoly and that it's cutting off its rivals essentially in the areas mentioned here are general search services search advertising and general text advertising so we're talking about the areas that google is known for of course and as you
11:03 pm
mentioned it's a very significant law case the biggest off its type in 20 years since the groundbreaking case against microsoft but we're also looking at one of the u.s. government's most significant acts a to protect competition here really google has already responded that they believe that this law case is deeply flawed and that people use it voluntarily because they choose to use google they stress there are other options other search ends and engines out on the market and that they're going to fight this you know the we understand that the attorneys general who have signed on to this lawsuit are all republicans not a single democrat has signed on why is there. well that's right 1st of all 11 republican state attorneys general joined the department of justice as plaintiffs and if you look at the states then perhaps it's quite self-explanatory those states are are console florida georgia indiana kentucky
11:04 pm
louisiana and so on and so forth all republican led states so it does look like a partisan move in an effort to support the department the department of justice here in what about the timing of the verb why are we seeing this lawsuit announced now 2 weeks ahead of the presidential election the timing brant is particularly interesting because 1st of all we are 2 weeks as you said head of the election and donald trump promised this voters time and time again to punish big tech for allegedly having an anti republican bias and of course as you know behind in polls he's trying to keep his promises right now trying to gauge gain some voters support it could also be an opening salvo this case against other antitrust against other big tech companies and other antitrust actions like facebook and twitter for instance they've been under scrutiny for quite some time by the u.s. government because they are now moving against fake news misleading information
11:05 pm
against conspiracy theories like q and on and as we know donald trump benefits from that he is posting these kind of misleading information himself in a critics make the case that this might also be an act of retaliation right to put who responded oliver salad on the story for us tonight in washington oliver thank you. gunfire has erupted in one theory as commercial capital law goes this evening where protests against police brutality have turned violent witnesses say police have fired on protesters and they do w. news team on the ground there has confirmed hearing gunshots the violence erupted after thousands of protesters defied a 24 hour curfew imposed earlier today after attacks on police stations are used funny the charset us the footage that you are about to see. the. shots rang out against the night sky as on a detail the news team scrambles to safety i think all through the life evolved
11:06 pm
through the as some remaining french as this continue to defy the hope town more shots of fall edged the. the. man hundreds of young nigerians had counted for peaceful protest in a cross pledging to remain on the streets despite around the clock curfew. precious have been spiralling dramatically of the pos 2 weeks. they were initially trickett by anger at police brutality. especially at abuses carried out by a neutral reus and she robbery squad pulled saas. writes beautifully he is accused the police unit of extortion harassment and to check. i think there was a silence has been the one that made me limp like this that was when i was in my
11:07 pm
house sleeping around 2 am in the middle of the night when when they came scattered everywhere in my area and started shooting everywhere everywhere it. was the outpouring of anger forced the government to scrap the police unit a week ago but people here on such a side. and the protests have become about much more than that by gerry is use a calling for sweeping changes and an end to systematic corruption and widespread on and show him and. africa's biggest oil producer is currently facing a recession as the fall in crude prices spot by the qur'an a crisis has bought such government finances. that. up to 300 got in a managerial got independence in 1960 right of tabitha's 960 since then we haven't achieved anything you know we haven't benefited from anything little but everything is we have so many graduates this is my colleagues he's
11:08 pm
a graduate no job nothing we don't want resident watching anymore now down the road mortgage out ok this is how far do you. think about the government's new measures to make it harder for the voices of nigeria's used to be heard. on top of an indefinite lockdown in the economic capital and jarius police chief also announced that riot police will be deployed across the country to quell the protests. aren't here some of the other stories now that are making headlines around the world the european union is pledging almost 44000000 euro's in emergency funding to several countries in africa sawhill region it's part of almost one and a half 1000000000 euros the u.n. says that it has for the region to save it from the breaking point the sawhill is plagued by increasing conflicts weak governance and a lack of developed protesters in thailand spread out across the capital bangkok to
11:09 pm
sing the national anthem at 6 in the evening while showing the 3 finger salute that has become the movement symbol it was the latest action in defiance of bans on public hearings or gatherings whether protesters want the government to resign they want a new constitution and they want reforms to the monarchy but libya's president elect luis are says says there will be no role in his government for former president evo morales braless governed for almost 14 years before resigning under pressure last year and then fleeing the country rallies remains leader of arses socialist party. french authorities have ordered the closure of a mosque in paris saying it helped provoke last week's murder of a teacher the mosque had shared a video railing against the teachers use of cartoons of the muslim prophet mohammad into last the mosques director insists that sharing the clip was not a call to violence. in an historic mission
11:10 pm
a nasa spacecraft is ready to reach out and make contact with an asteroid more than 320000000 kilometers from earth the oh cyrus rex spacecraft is designed to collect samples of the asteroid which is named ben you and then bring them back to earth in the year 2023 data and images are already being collected science's hope that the mission will help them learn more about how planets formed and about how wife began . all right for more on this let's go to washington d.c. i'm joined by keith cowing he's editor of the space news web site nasa watch dot com good to see you again keith the the spacecraft we understand will land soon it was launched 4 years ago but now we can finally get to work what could still go wrong now. well the spacecraft is not actually going to land it's
11:11 pm
actually going to tap touch and go and it's going to come close to the surface for a moment blow some gas out have a little collector that grabs the find rena tiriel name will back off and so this is been done once or twice before by the japanese and it's sort of an intricate and worried you don't want to bump into anything on the on the asteroid itself and the asteroid they thought it would be kind of like this woman nice and smooth and they called it the cd beach well it ends up as a little rocks in that sandy beach so they're going to be very careful as they can so what we're talking about is a space craft as you say that reaching into this asteroid trying to take a piece of the asteroid out without damaging itself exactly and that's been done once before you say well actually twice the japanese attempts at it through once and they do it again with another spacecraft but this is sort of like doing surgery from
11:12 pm
a couple 100000000 kilometers away it's you know you never get quite good at it and you always have to practice more and what insights do scientists hope to gain once these rock samples are brought back to earth. well this is a smaller asteroid it's actually well here's my little model here this is a wall not this is a giant skyscraper the spacecraft is about the size of a truck parked at the bottom of this this building and this is mostly a rubble pile it isn't solid and this is an asteroid that could conceivably come very close to maybe threaten the earth so the idea is well what's it made up and when they went there they discovered that it's a pile of rocks and stuff from all over the place and this materials on the surface of this little body that imply that there may have been water on it which well it's a small rock you wouldn't there so it's maybe pieces from a larger planet that was destroyed early in the solar system and on top of that there's chemicals on there that are related to where you get the origin of life so
11:13 pm
just little pile of rocks is providing a lot of interesting information lot of things that we did not expect to find fascinating of this asteroid benu in the name of it you said it could become dangerous for the earth why is that. well it just the way that it orbits the sun comes close to the earth's boulder near earth asteroids and you kind of want to understand how it's put together because if it does hit the earth if it's a solid object you can you know land and cause a problem and if it's likely to be fragile it could just burn in so little pieces there's a comes close in the year so you'd like to actually get close to a no knock on it and see how it's put together which is exactly what the solutions don't let's you know for 50 have a successful mission and let's hope that this asteroid misses the earth keep going editor of the best news web site nasa watch dot com. sports news now football and the champions league has resumed tonight
11:14 pm
a bit media speculation about its possible demise in future seasons but last terms see my finalist or be like sick got on with the job in hand and be to stand by shocked to hear 2 nil angeleno grabbed both goals in their group h. opener in the german city only $999.00 fans were allowed inside due to coronavirus restrictions the turks were making their debut in the elite competition they are heavily backed by turkish president rich a player or one. in other champions league matches tonight it was a bad start for bruce you dortmund they lost 31 at italy's last c.e.o. last season's runners up p.s.g. were beaten 2 network 21 rather by manchester united and barcelona won 51 at home to hungary's. go see were making their group stage comeback after 25 years away holders by in munich host atlético madrid on wednesday with serge did
11:15 pm
not break out with you guessed it. his reminder the top story we're following for you the u.s. has filed a landmark lawsuit against the search engine giant google it alleges google have used installments as the world's leading online search engine to maintain its position ahead of rivals. you're watching news from berlin that's it for me if you don't mean business news is up next stick around the business team will be right back. what secrets lie behind the swamps. discover new adventures in 360 degree. and explore fascinating world heritage sites. d.w. world heritage 360 getting apps now. one
11:16 pm
continent 700000000 people. with their own personal stories.

19 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on