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tv   Gut gebruht  Deutsche Welle  November 14, 2020 4:03pm-4:30pm CET

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as having been deliberately carried out by a party to the current fighting, these killings of civilians would of course amount to war crimes. it's still unclear who is responsible for the mass killings follow days of clashes between federal troops and to ground forces. the region has become the latest flashpoint, stemming from ethiopia's complex. if nick politics to grinds, controlled ethiopia's central government for 30 years, but their power has waned under prime minister ahmed, who came to power in 28 increasing resentment intentions, became open defiance in september. went to grow, rejected the central government's authority and held its own elections. now the feud has descended into conflict with the government very, to crush what it calls a rebellion. it looks to me. it is. and fugitive brought
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to justice. as civilians flee fears amounting that ethiopia could be at the beginning of a protracted and bloody civil war. a lot of talk about here. let's get to it with a semi all get you is a journalist based in ads out of us standing by for us. samuel, thank you so much for joining us. it's been difficult for outsiders to get accurate information on this conflict communication and the t. cry region shut down, journalists aren't allowed to move freely there. what's the latest you can tell us? the league has, even if you're going there, lance has suspended any flights close to growing, including going to go under barter. the 2 cities that were attacked last night in 2 people have so far today because of the incident and nearly well at the
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historic city of lalibela. so, you know, the information we're getting is very limited because we can't travel to too great for instance. but we're getting the information from on this international people are sending us information. what each of the sudanese but we are certain the people are dying. more people will be heading to sudan because that's the only option they have this conflict has been building up for quite some time now. what led to it ultimately, escalating in the way we're seeing now? well, you know, the state of the great held regional election in september, but isn't accepted by the government or the parliament of hours of iteration. so since then, and even before that for the last year, they've been having different, you know, social media or staying, you know, confluence,
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a general that was of pointed by the federal government to head to mcnally was the gentleman you are sent by from a colleague to the silva, so the prime minister and the president who has just immediately go, has a wanted man, according to the federal government. they've been having this kind of conflicts and you have to know the both of them run for their to be prime minister of 2 years ago . and the action in support of them, our leadership. so they've been having this back in for a while. it was building up to this conference that's barely become a deli and making many people miserable and sending them to sudan for safety. today i started receiving reports of the fighting spilling over into neighboring region. how could this conflict affect the stability of ethiopia as a whole? it's not just people should be worried about. well, to answer your question. it's
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a faith in the region that has been in conflicts with the great leadership for alone time. but it's also the fears that might even spill to sudan, which was a part of your one point. and even this migrants with so little resources, since you done might be force to go to european nations. so this is a concern of international perspective and that's why in the uk and even even washington d.c. is trying to bring them to some kind of ceasefire because people are just miserable just in need. and the resources just sit on to compete in the un has been calling for a cease fire or even to be allowed to goods. it's a great so they can actually save lives. and this is a difficult situation there. samuel got to show in this ad about thank you so much for your analysis. let's now
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take a look at some other stories making headlines around the world. u.s. president donald trump, has made his 1st public statement since t.v. networks called the election for a democratic rival, joe biden. though he didn't concede trump said, quote, time will tell when talking about which administration will be leading future efforts to contain the pandemic. dozens have died in the philippines after typhoon vanco unleashed floods and landslides. it's the deadliest storm. the country has seen this year. more than $400000.00 people had to flee their homes. vietnam's central coast is bracing for the typhoon to make landfall early on sunday. thousands of anti-government protesters in thailand have gathered at bangkok's democracy monument. the festive demonstration is the latest and months of rallies that are also calling for reforms of the country's powerful monarchy. protests began in july, initially seeking the removal of the prime minister, a former leader earlier this week, a peace agreement put an end to a month and
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a half of bitter conflict between other by john and armenia, and calls for armenians to leave large parts of the long disputed nagorno-karabakh region. that's provoked outrage in armenia, where people see themselves betrayed by their government and by russia, which oversaw the deal. those forced from their homes say they want to leave nothing for their enemies. one last look before leaving it all behind. while their home might still be somewhat intact, after 6 weeks of conflict, their right to live, there is not. now many armenian residents of the cabbage or region are intentionally burning their homes before they're forced to hand them over to their enemies. after decades raising their families here and fighting to keep the territory, the new peace deal says it's time to leave in
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the end, we will blow up or put a fire to all of this. we will not leave anything to them. here i didn't want us gone now the children in armenia are crying, they want to return home. it's hard, this depth of sorrow. for decades, the nagorno-karabakh region has been the source of bloody conflict between the 2 countries. under the ceasefire agreement signed by the leaders of azerbaijan and armenia, and russia on tuesday, as a by john will regain control of the calabash, our region, and several other areas. as armenians their fleet. many say they want to know why russia has abandoned them. but it's good to see it that
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it was soviet russia that originally declared nagorno-karabakh part of azerbaijan, 100 years ago. but the majority of people who lived there remained armenians. now, under the new russian brokered peace deal, that is set to change defending the new deal. putin is calling for a humanitarian response to the chaos. the conflict has unleashed a group turn our attention to the serious humanitarian problems in the nagorno-karabakh region. over 4000 civilians were victims to the fighting over 8000 were injured estimates show the number of refugees is in the 10s of thousands. armenians are furious with russia and their own government for signing the deal. since it was announced on tuesday, thousands have taken to the streets of year of on daily to demand prime minister nicola pasha, neon, resigned. as this latest turn in,
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history plays out. people on both sides are mourning the thousands who have died in just the past 6 weeks of battle for control of nagorno-karabakh. it's meanwhile, europe is in the middle of a 2nd wave of the kind of rona virus and demick where the number of infections continuing to rise in many countries. governments are turning to even tighter measures to control the spread of the virus craze, for example, is set to close all its schools. while australia, which currently has the highest infection rate of any major country, is planning a tough 3 week lockdown in other parts of the continent. grim scenes from innocent of those 1st seen in italy and spring, are now starting to play out another life lost to the pandemic. primitive organs in the czech republic of having to keep pace with the country's kovac 19 death toll, which is now the worst per capita in europe. the number of
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deaths is rising in many places. and there are problems now with cremations, goods to me. in the french city of bordeaux students queue for food handouts at the university campus, many of lost a part time jobs in bars and restaurants, due to pandemic, lockdowns people. so i have to pay 545 year olds for rent. that leaves me with $100.00 euros a month to live off. life in france is dominated by the battle to stop the spread of the virus. the number of patients being treated in hospital is also hitting record highs. all new patients are being hospitalized at a rate for about one every 30 seconds with about one every 3 minutes being admitted to the i.c.u. health system is also reaching breaking point. again, these footage from an overcrowded clinic in naples my father had oxygen
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saturation levels of 60 percent, but the hospital turned him away. we begged them to take him, but they refused until he got even worse. yesterday he died. he plea now fears a repeat of spring when the country became the global, the center of the virus. switching gears. now canadian lance stroll will start sunday's turkish ground 3 on pole position and they say the season long monopoly. the racing point driver stunned the competition for his maiden career pole joining him up front as red bulls a stop on championship leader lewis hamilton will start 6th on the grid up to date on t w. news this hour. but remember, you can get more end up stories and reports our website. just go to d.w. dot com. we'll leave you now with pictures of hindus around the world, celebrating diwali, the festival of lights on and off early for me, and the entire news team here in berlin. thanks for watching.
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outgoing director. close to tellem on the last cultural diplomatic. starts november 16th, d.w. .
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and it will feel it's the market for longs for a nature film to have commercial success. it has to be an upscale form of entertainment, a small, i mean, our freak out in the tsunami. often when you're filming in a national park in africa, if you would swing the camera a half meter to the left or right, you'd see $25.00 game drive vehicles full of tourists taking pictures, just need something to the east p. tag. and in all, should we depict an excerpt of a world that submitted lead being edited, to show people the last bits of unspoiled nature, hasty and in fact, notwithstanding soit is the cause of a few days of the big day. i've been looking forward to for a long time,
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and we're hoping to find ledge we, antelope, i hope we find of it as a physio from the other island with the island. i got out of the bear and they're like a rabbit. ok. but the look at the back, they're good. they're now going to have a nice thing and they're going to get them back. yeah. ok.
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informational and for brant, the helicopter 6 in 3 hours, the helicopter burns 600 liters of kerosene. you could always get hell to reconcile these on an environmental level. is something that's hard for me to answer that last scene, the traces that we inevitably leave behind are unavoidable folk. i mean, the alternative is simply to do nothing. it's in the end when making a film to raise awareness about the importance of nature as time field was shot and sort of
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the next one might be on our own a few 100 miles north. but that lets me know that if the police showed up i've got some really m m m m m, m, m, m up never to keep the money coming. i'm
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not a teen years afterward looking for pushing the beer from mine.
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hi, this is 4. 26. am an hour before sunrise movies number on the way to a glorious more on the alpine foretells. bush and his mission. i imagine every wildlife filmmaker cares deeply about preserving nature. the $1012.00 of them left me in the hundreds. i'm interested in amazing animals. but even more so in their habitat is one of the things the thing. this isn't
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a more look over there. the more there is the 1st fight, a more likely isn't she defeat? there are many stories about our local natural environment that have yet to be told . if you, i'm sure, just as fascinating as the distant exotic waters. good look, it's all water down there. that's crazy. i don't believe in going down in the more with a crazy work as a winter's bone or false holes in the force are just fantastic. capitalists were unusual animals and plans to have many more storehouses for massive amounts of greenhouse gases. these people are protecting them or is also a way to tackle climate change. was
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crazy. but is one of the best balloon flights ever? to move to let's go down. yes, good. all right, go down here. do you come down down there? good. good. now what camera don't reach out. damn now walk. get out. little everyone out. get up. come if i can. what
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so if employed all of the film project like this usually takes us 3 years and she then yeah, that's the weather doesn't always cooperate. so you have to try a 2nd or 3rd time, so i will go to sean's with all the traveling we do. it's great that i can at least through the video editing at home between existence and its so i was a mom kind of star
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is a star struck personality. some are crankier than others, sour, warm, or some have blind spots. some sharks you can come right up to them. some sharks. you can't come anywhere near them and they're all individuals. there's
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a shark there and i'm in the bahamas. that was a real sweetheart of a shark. but i don't let lovingly into his eyes. i mean, so i get darker and still a shark. you know. i'm sure for when you get in a project and so much bigger than you, you have to grow so much in the process. poland sea shepherd launching a campaign against poaching. yes, me to join the campaign to stop the illegal fishing of sharpe's. ok.
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well, i got a relief. it doesn't take much if you legal fish around here, all the stuff around a person that's one of them as fast as we get up to the plant to chase them with water cannons and hopes of flooding, or stalling the engine. the rest of them ready to verge, arrow finally agreed to follow us into port. we could deliver them to the authorities
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. so the plane yesterday morning found her like 9 kilometers off shore. with our way out for a while, you'd be hard to believe that you'd be able to for a drummer and not hear you would say it. so you'll capture having never been good for them. 3 or 4 feet through line. you go on that little kiddie pool and out to
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a big ocean. if you're hungry enough to find it. condition wise from just a distance assessment for 1st, decently 3 inches, not really low in the water. it doesn't appear to be extremely low energy. but you know, that's why we're trying to take care of the little worker finding $5610.00 pounds a day. that's going to be hard when you know what you're doing. you know, the boy, you don't have a lot of time to state what i told her. it does no good behavior is a little thing like i don't want to stay on the right thing. take care
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manage around and here i am. i've never seen it like it's become, i think, energy, water samples that they take out of the power of or its leaders who are consistently the most toxic in all of california. it's what i can pick up its chemical toxic from all of the x. stuff. don't drink the water your child has to go on and change anything.

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