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tv   Fit gesund  Deutsche Welle  November 9, 2020 2:30pm-3:01pm CET

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i'm sure. your day is a week you're going to leave just to get. the trace of the oil. companies dream work going to. boil over 6 starts december 4th. you're watching g.w. news asia coming up today joe biden promises a new day to america but what point of biden presidency mean for egypt we'll take a closer look and see how stability and prosperity in the region might be impacted . plus the story of another election people in myanmar voted this weekend and it looks like another win for on some sushi and chips party.
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i'm melissa chan welcome to news asia thank you for joining us most major countries in the region have congratulated joe biden as the next u.s. president of china has not saying it will wait it's not clear until when but for the rest of asia governments face a new reality for the past 4 years donald trump has shaken the foundation of what u.s. relations mean for the region with his tough talk and courting of traditional rivals so what's the outlook now for america's allies and competitors in the end of pacific. joe biden has promised a new day for america but what does biden have in mind for asia the u.s. has a powerful reach there over security trade and climate change but also a rival for economic and military dominance. a confident china which has managed
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so far to beat back its coronavirus epidemic and now looks to outmaneuver the u.s. as a global superpower. meanwhile protest movements in thailand and hong kong look to the u.s. as a champion of democracy for the region. in nuclear arms north korea the u.s. faces the next the central threat president trump tried cozying up to kim jong un but his personal touch did nothing to rid the dictatorship of its long range nuclear missiles the trumpet ministration had more success with the quad relationship and alliance of democracies japan india the us and australia as a counterweight to china's expansionist ambitions like in the south china sea ties that biden may seek to bolster but as a politician who prides himself on collaboration and consensus in his own style.
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joining us is matthew broker he's managing editor of bloomberg opinion asia matthew let's start with where you're at in hong kong people have strong feelings there about trump versus biden and who would support the pro democrats more what's your assessment now we know it's going to be by. i think you're quite right there is very strong support for trump. in the. in the pro-democracy camp and certainly among the. really see you know i think it's a case of my enemy's enemy is my friends are they might not be so cheering didn't suit the white. soldiers home turf play just see somebody who's been very strong in opposing the chinese communist party and what they've been doing in the city here.
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i see that you're working from home and the kids are in the background is something that a lot of people have to deal with these days and not a problem at all but moving on to. now moving on to china how will binds engagement with china be different i think you know the very clear difference that you're going to see here is that you're just going to have much more predictable character in the white house trump of this new sort of very confrontational and very futuristic as it used to china and approach that was you know clearly you know. by some people in this region i think the downside of that has been that it's very sad to show scattershot approach and it's so. many of the u.s. is around the world i think with biden in place where you're going to see is that islam is a return so much more multilateral approach that seeks to bring in our allies and
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build are kind of united fronts now let's talk about india and nobody and trump had a very good relationship do you think that will be the case with biden or will we be seeing americans play a little bit more pressure on india when it comes to human rights violations for example. yes it's an india is an interesting one obviously you have this very quite bizarre love in the swinging. to the how do you modi events and then the rich the nothing not just i trump return in india. so in that respect as. well i think you know modi certainly might be not sickly happy to see trump if he says on the other hand of course biden's vice president has. indian heritage and i think there's a lot of excitement in los pride in india about that and that you know maybe sets
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the stage for there to be a warmer relationship in some what he's clearly biden has being more 'd. vociferous on human rights issues and that is is an area of potential tension in the in the u.s. in your relationship now on to japan how will that close relationship change our well it. i don't think you can see very fundamental change in much power relationship i mean obviously japan is the u.s. is closest ally in asia probably the closest ally i think might be prepared to work with whoever is in the white house. you know you know i hear on the on the conservative side of the spectrum in japan they might not be so happy to see trump go because from their perspective the obama is were a bit too soft on china. they didn't really see china as being the looming threat.
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i think it's deceived to be you know across the political spectrum. in the u.s. now. but only you know really the same applies for india and china. but it's going to be much more predictable and you know i don't think whoever is in the white house the. you know china very looms over everything whichever bilateral relationship you're talking about and i i think that's going to be one thing that's a key concern to japan and i don't think that's really going to change very much on the biden matter better thank you so much for your time in myanmar uncensored cheese party embraces victory the national league for democracy says it has won enough seats in parliament for a majority and to retain power is the 2nd time that the country has held relatively
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free elections since military will end it in 2011 millions of people lined up for hours to cast their ballots but not without controversy and criticism. celebrations for all sun sushi security had already begun long before the release of election results. earlier on sunday millions voted in myanmar despite calls to delay the poll because of the pandemic. it was myanmar 2nd election since the end of the military rule in 2011 for many the choice was clear on sunset she and her and the party a symbol for defiance and change. and. i want to know the party to win because they work for the people especially for the farmers it has a good reputation in the international community. flitch was once
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truth despite her popularity the nobel prize winner has fallen from grace internationally due to her response to the will hinge or crisis. and 2017 hundreds of thousands of muslims had to flee and army crackdown which the un described as an ethnic cleansing. we condemn. on the local. and if it is a reflection of. the bullets in the. wall and what. the international community said those words weren't enough it criticized the leaders in action. until today all rohingya muslims for maining in the country are stripped of citizenship and rights including their chance to vote. but at home there is little sympathy for their plight analysts say suchi remains popular and
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respected. shows. that even many people in cents each. that sounds almost irrespective of how big government of ministration but also the opposition the national position is that this right there is no major party you know really putting an outsider to have a credible senate it's all work for the leaders supporters mothers soon is no doubt the one who can lead the country in the next 5 years although peace and reconciliation she once pledged still seem far from fulfilled. so many places where we can be social have closed because of the pandemic including amusement parks around the world many have sat empty when usually they get hundreds thousands tens of thousands of visitors every day in japan one park has come up
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with a new business model that offers a combination of work and pleasure. things have been going downhill for quite a while at your land the number of visitors has hit a record low since the pandemic struck but the theme park hopes to turn things around with a pivot to office space. gun you know you got a little change to my mood i think anyone who works at the same place every day will run out of ideas that mentally. instead of working from home this i t consultant can now work poolside. for 15 years the day he gets electricity why 5 and loads of sunshine. to do this it's strange but i can actually concentrate here better than i thought through the cubic yards from us and . the only jury then used to be one of japan's most popular theme parks but it
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had been losing to strong competitors such as tokyo disneyland change was essential for survival in the pandemic struck prompting the 50 year old park to get creative . secada decides to work on a ferris wheel today he can sit in roller coasters instead but that's just too impractical. it wheel is perfect for video conferences it's quiet and has an unbeatable view. to consider. whether you're working near the pool or in a ferris wheel the noise level is surprisingly low and other people's conversations aren't distracting the mechanical noises don't bother me either i didn't expect that it's really nice. really just. for theme parks like yomiuri then the pandemic poses
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a big challenge but thanks to adventures office workers things may be looking up again. that's it for now. be sure to check out our other stories on dot com ports slash asia or on facebook and twitter we have you with pictures of protests in thailand over the weekend they're still marching and they have marched and summer thanks for watching we'll see you next time and defy. the fight against the coronavirus pandemic. has the rate of infection been developing what does the latest research say. information and contacts the coronavirus update. on t w. b
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r fighters want to start families to become farmers or engineers every one of them has a plan would be an issue for your children. so nothing is kiss on the children who have already been the boy and those that will follow are part of a new process. they could be the future of. granting opportunities global news that matters d. w. made mines. the race for a vaccine continues. and the speed of that race is worrying some. survey shows 83 percent of americans would have safety concerns if a coronavirus vaccine were approved too quickly. of course the research needs to be done but others are totally against vaccines. experts blame that on rampant
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misinformation and the fact that many people don't understand the science behind preventive medicine. it's exactly why scientists are taking to social media to explain the complex but lifesaving roles they play. because at home lives are on the line. well instead of petting samples and analyzing data researchers are trying to demystify trades by using to talk. kind of like a says it's a new frontier for them but they came to get across their message that vaccines are extremely valuable even though they're not the sole solution to this crisis i'll talk to an er in a moment 1st incredible progress scientists are making on the back same front in this pandemic u.s. farm of pfizer and germany's beyond the 1st to show successful data from
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a large scale clinical trial of a coronavirus vaccine they say it's more than 90 percent effective pharmacologist say the vaccine needs to be stored at mine is 80 degrees celsius could create major listicle challenges for mass treatment outside major urban areas and in low war middle income countries but they say the breakthrough is a relief hugely positive and very encouraging doctors say we need to wait for the final results but that this could be a watershed moment it's hard but it's. millions of doses could be ready by the end of the year still the experimental vaccine is not the only one being developed there are about $200.00 of them around 40 are in clinical trials and there are different methods being used to make them. various kinds of vaccine for corona virus are in development one kind is an inactivated virus vaccine that uses proteins from the virus to create the vaccine viruses 1st stop to be broken down
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into parts and their infectivity has to be destroyed so it's no longer dangerous. but it still has to provoke an immune response in the recipient so that the immune system develops antibodies to it. so what are the advantages and disadvantages. of this approach is well established. companies that develop and manufacture vaccines are familiar with it. and the production processes have been perfected. but certainly an advantage. or disadvantage is that it takes time to grow the underlying virus in large amounts . of viral vector a vaccine uses a harmless live virus of a different kind as
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a carrier to transport genes from the dangerous virus into cells in the recipient's body. a protein gene from the virus is 1st added to the benign one in the case of the novel coronavirus it's a spike protein gene. modified virus that resembles sars kovi 2 in one key respect immune system detects the offending protein and creates antibodies in response. to the safety requirements for growing the virus not as strict as with inactivated whole virus vaccines of. disadvantages are that it takes a lot of time and you have to choose vectors that are not affected by any preexisting immune response capability. and. then there are vaccines that use messenger. or an egg for the novel coronavirus is m.r. and a with instructions for making it spike proteins. such vaccines prompt cells in the recipient to make such proteins themselves which in turn provoke an immune response
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although these proteins are not dangerous they are still identified as enemies by the immune system which then creates antibodies and thus immunity. for. one advantage is that the safety requirements are much less stringent. another is that you can modify the r.n.a. quite quickly money a factor of say that within a short period of time perhaps 6 weeks are in a vaccines can be produced in very large volumes millions of units you can't match that with vector whole virus or other kinds of vaccine stuff least. so each of these approaches has upsides and downsides nonetheless they're all considered worth pursuing it is likely that we need more than one vaccine. bioengineering joins us from london what's the problem here and our if if we
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totally rely on one or more vaccines coming along to solve this crisis. yes so really you know we have a lot of different tools that we can use to fight this pandemic so you know if you were being approached by a swarm a mosquito coast and you had the choice to use nat weiss water and bug spray or something you wouldn't choose to use just one of them so in addition to vaccines and the many different vaccines that we might have available you want to also be using masks and public health measures like social distancing as well it even if we do get a vaccine or more vaccines at some stage soon i hope it's not going to be an immediate fixes it. no no definitely not so it will take some time to roll it out to the population but even when you receive a back scene depending on the type of vaccine it can take anywhere from 2 just 6 weeks to induce immunity so there's still a little bit of a lag time. and though there are a lot of people out there who are going to want to take that vaccine all those
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vaccines how has misinformation on back scenes made your job difficult. yes so we often view it as people that are pro-vaccine are anti vaccine and i really think it's kind of a great area in between so i'm part of a new team called halo which is an initiative to connect scientists working on coding 1000 vaccines directly to the public and we do this through tick tock so we're able to make videos about how we make vaccines how we test them and be there to answer any questions that people have so it's a really great way to connect with people who are skeptical or critical and you know i don't really think that's a bad thing as scientists we're taught to be critical until we see the data and often the public isn't you know proxy to that day about data or doesn't know how to interpret it and so it's great to be able to get connected and have actual conversations with people and you're making all of this process transparent which
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is important i'd like to know where all the misinformation on vaccines actually comes from. i think just in general you know there might not be a lot of people that are educated on vaccines or how they were going so when stuff starts to kind of just stew in the internet there are a lot of rumors fly around and you know sometimes people just don't know what to trust anymore so we're there to kind of improve that trust and just be a direct source where you can ask questions and get an honest answer from a scientist and honestly can you answer this one to try to answer this question once we get consensus once we do have vaccines and people taking them when could things start returning to normal. yeah that's a really hard question to answer so i think based off of some of the trials that are really in kind of the final phases in phase 3 of their kind of trials right now those are looking promising so i think we might actually have x.
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eans possibly by the end of this year or early next year. it's really hard to say worldwide how we'll be able to distribute those and kind of return to a normal society so yeah i'm hoping for early next year but i'm also just cautiously optimistic has crossed bioengineer at a blakeney thank you very much thank you. your questions now of the coronavirus sending them into our you tube channel and g.w. science correspondent eric williams will take care of the rest. can you tell us more about the b.c.g. vaccine clinical trial that's currently underway. well there are a few studies looking at this but i think the one that you're talking about which has received the most media coverage is called the brace trial it's being conducted in several countries across the globe it involves around $10000.00 volunteers and many of the health care workers but before we go any further i need to provide
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a little more background the b.c.g. vaccine which has been around for close to a century is usually associated with tuberculosis prevention though it also appears to help prevent or at least reduce the deadliness of a range of other infections the theory is that the b.c.g. vaccine is sort of a generalist vaccine that helps strengthen the immune response to many respiratory diseases by in hansing your innate immunity however it's no longer widely given in countries where tb has grown rare but in countries where it's still endemic and the b.c.g. vaccine is still common there are lots of studies showing that impacts things like child mortality rates and and many of those same countries also appear to have lower mortality rates in the code 1000 pandemic the problem is is that it's hard to
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show that the b.c.g. vaccine is maybe one reason why because a lot of other factors could also be playing a role it's kind of hard to filter out all of the noise and that's what the brace trial is trying to do in a systematic way and if we don't have a more specific targeted at 19 vaccines soon and the study shows that the b.c.g. vaccine does indeed help lower a coded 19 transmission or severity it could one day be seen as a kind of a stopgap tool in the pandemic but but that's still a big if. and finally in the philippines a plant is taking root the stress of lockdown and financial pressure caused by the pandemic have prompted and the filipinos to seek comfort in their gardens themselves the nicknames toss and plant uncles and aunties demand for greenery has
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blossomed amid the coronavirus restrictions and business of plant markets is booming social media platforms are full of photos of flowers before carefully tended in backyards and on balcony says house bound filipinos turn to nature to relieve stress and boredom. i've been fizzling for any other developments on the bars go to our website at the. covert 90 s. he will get here very soon but left.
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it's quite as simple as it sinks. to understand the world better we need to take a closer look at. the experience knowledge
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tomorrow to. keep an eye on t.w. . good girl whose all. of the morning. i cannot sleep because your order to zoom are. in those smaller smaller. rooms lol hers was. slow fuse no love for the wicked. doesn't. work using the her. parents knew.
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her good story. her current form. and the company pushed. us right now in the world right now climate change different office stores the faces of my friends the way for just one week. how much work. we still have time to. i'm going. to subscribe to like the. bishop harry truman just a diplomat who always gets straight to the point. the good to institutes outgoing director. we look at his final year in office and his impressive career. name the last cultural diplomat.
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starts nov 16th on d w. this is. a step closer to a breakthrough in the coronavirus pandemic pharmaceuticals giant pfizer and german . vaccine is more than 90 percent effective in advance trials. also on the program and in the u.s. german relations german chancellor angela merkel congratulates joe biden.

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