tv Lehmann Deutsche Welle November 16, 2020 3:15pm-4:01pm CET
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replace the must go back to company ego dordogne, former soviet republic, moldova gave independence in 1901, and his closest, cultural and linguistic ties to neighboring. romy, a man accused of trying to carry out a terror attack to avoid a high speed train has gone on trial in paris. was tackled by passengers after he merged heavily armed from the toilets of the absolute down to paris train in or was 2050. he joined the islamic state group earlier that year. the 2 armenia where the government and the new pressure over a peace deal that requires it to hundreds of territory to azerbaijan. the agreement ended 6 weeks of fighting over the nagorno-karabakh region. i mean, his foreign minister has announced his resignation. residents of the calvert john district began a mass exodus ahead of sunday's initial deadline. as a by john said it was perspiring for humanitarian regions of the reasons and denounce the burning of homes. by all means leaving the area,
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the extension follows an appeal from armenia and mediation from russian president vladimir putin. it brokered the deal and has put russian troops on the ground to enforce it. it's a russian flag, no flying of the enchanter minion, dobby found ministry in a disputed cow. the hard district russian peacekeeping forces are setting up here ask part of a cease fire agreement brokered by moscow. guarding a christian ministry is one of their duties, along with supervising the exodus of armenian troops and civilians from the area. the armenian priests who live in a monastery, how allowed to remain christian armenians feel they have no other choice but to leave the terms of the peace deal, a low azerbaijan, to take control of kandahar formally controlled by armenians. both ethnicities have
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lived here at different times, according to moscow, more than 4 pounds and people have died in the 6 weeks of fighting in and around. the armenians are still burrowing the dead. yes. all the dead guys and now our sons, it doesn't matter who died, relatives or non-relative. we're grieving for everyone. but both the sort of disagreement with azerbaijan is not new. it's about capitulation that. so people go through the russian peacekeeping mission will last for 5 use was an option for renewal. i think i would have liked to key turkey to be directly involved too. and ankara
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pushed for darts. but moscow got its way. the armed conflict may be ended for now, but overcoming resentment in both semenya and i was led by a jam wanted peace, so easy with another protest against this deal is taking place in the armenian capital. yet about today, there are more calls for the resignation of the prime minister. nicole they didn't correspond only show when is that welcome back, emily. what's going on over here in the center of yerevan where several 100 protesters have gathered to call for the call pushing on the prime minister here to resign. they have been chanting leave. they have been chanting, that is a traitor. after all, people here in armenia, many people see the peace deal that dashing young, signed last week with azerbaijan and representatives of russia as well as a capitulation. and they say that himself is personally responsible for the huge
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loss of life that armenia saw in the past. few weeks of fighting in and around the corner car boss over 2300 soldiers were killed on the armenian side alone. and to day we've seen some consequences from these ongoing protests that have been happening in your, of, on the foreign minister of armenia resigned. but pushing yon today into how the press conference and spoke in the parliament and he doesn't seem to be resigning anytime soon. and one of the peace deal itself is actually holding has, has the fighting stopped. this ceasefire has been holding so far. there were previous cease fires that broke almost immediately and fighting continued. but now russian peacekeepers are on the ground in the territory
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and are rising. have been arriving in the past few days. and armenia in the coming days and weeks will be handing over territories that have so far been under armenian control, even they were, even though they are azerbaijan, according to international law. and we've seen and heard reports as well, of people kind of burning their houses in those territories because they don't want their ease arriving as areas to have anything at all. so the resentment continues, even if the fighting has ended and put this into a broader conflict into a broader context. for certainly how willing to developments influence the, the region. well, i think it's worth mentioning that both turkey and russia have kind of got their fingers in yet another regional pai here. another conflict. on the one hand, you have the russian peacekeepers now on the ground. russia, of course, has
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a security treaty with armenia and azerbaijan, in the past few weeks of fighting has been supporting turkey rather, has been supporting azerbaijan. now, russia has emphasized, in the kremlin, has emphasized that they, there will only be russian peacekeepers. and that seems to be kind of a red line for the russian side that they don't want turkish boots on the ground as it were. but there may be some kind of an observation center, a joint observation center for this ongoing peace which could involve the turkish side as well. so we'll have to watch that space and really show what i mean. you talk to you more than $100.00 migrants have died at sea in the central mediterranean, in 4 separate incidents and less. that's just over the last week. the international organization for migration says nearly $700.00 refugees have died this year,
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attempting to cross from libya to your more harrowing scenes that see ground breaking in the strategic, released by the italian coast guard, shows a dramatic rescue of over 30 people on saturday night. their bench capsized some. 5 kilometers off the island of lampedusa. these migrants didn't make it not far. they will think came within an inch of their lives, but that the lucky ones, at least $74.00 of their fellow travellers drowned after their boat sank off the libyan coast on thursday. not too long after a further 20 people perished in similar circumstances. you know what i think many migrants are so desperate that braving the open seas even with babes in arms is prefer to ensuring the misery at home. i am
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and maybe the woman 6 month old child was later found to have drowned along with 5 fellow travelers. luckily the majority of the over 100 people on that boat were rescued by spanish angio open arms. most were transferred to a quarantine vessel off sicily. rescue charity say there is no end in sight to the numbers of desperate people willing to risk their lives to make it to europe. the current deceptively calm ocean conditions are increasing the pool. as a result, charities are stepping up their efforts. german n.g.o.s see eye is adding
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a further vessel to its fleet. the c.i. for will boost the number of charity rescue ships on standby in the central mediterranean to 7. then with the ships frequently impounded by italian and european or thirty's, that's hardly likely to be enough to peru which has been plunged into a political crisis. following the resignation of its interim president, manuel a marina agreed to step down after only 5 days in the job. he faced and ultimatum from congress following a deadly police crackdown against protesters is resignations, being welcomed by many peruvians after days of anti-government demonstrations. elation on the streets of the capital. as people power retards to a medic, a otic political crisis. yes, it was possible, the chanted after the ensuing president resigned. euphoric protesters swarm de w.'s
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reporter on the ground but still plenty of anger here following deadly clashes on saturday. and not enter feline play really did not resign the people to come out. marino was never president, he never represented me more time in returning to meet. he waited for people to be killed before he quit. manuel, merino, resigned, less than a week into the job here will assemble. and i want to announce to all the country that i tend to my irrevocable resignation of the post of the presidency of the republic. i call for the peace and unity of all peruvians. my commitment is to peru let me through. it's really been his departure came after the own going on. race turned deadly on saturday. riot police and demonstrators treated tear gas fire
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works rubber, bullets, and rocks. 2 people died after being shot. politicians join calls for the interim president to go. mr. marino and his government have to resign. meanwhile, the impeached former president who was ousted by congress last week, hit out at his forms. it can't be congress which has put us in this political crisis that has power lies peru for 5 days with death. he will give us a solution which is selecting another person that they want. legislators gathered late on sunday, but where are able to agree on a new president. outside protesters kept watch as their country boxer by covert, 19, and facing economic collapse. went to bed without some leader. that's
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this is coming up 1st, the joy then the misery back quality wasn't a demi a day off for the festival of the body and it isn't for the 1st time why is devalued pollution? becoming an annual feature in the indian capital and southeast asia is battered by the powerful storms. the 7th in just over a month is severe weather, the new reality for the region.
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i'm british manager. welcome to join us. over the weekend, the over the indian capital delhi look like this. residents bursting firecrackers to celebrate the hindu festival of the bali ensured the city recorded its wost equality in 4 years. conditions though, won't have been so severe, had residents of the had to a government ban on 5 bikes. but for many, that is the very essence of the rally. celebrations in delhi firecrackers traditionally mount the start of the hindu new year. but this time, the fun was also an act of defiance. she is over soaring air pollution prompted a citywide ban on fireworks. but across delhi revelers refused to little spoil the party. but
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a day off to diwali came the hangover. the festival of lights left a thick blanket of smoke hanging over northern india. residents of the bustling capital used to severe air pollution. but the weekend's frenzy has only added to the crisis. but little by little, the pollution was already there, but the firecrackers have made it worse. now we're having difficulty breathing and the children of coughing, trying to bend the kids into and sometimes it is very difficult to manage. i don't smoke, but it feels like i'm smoking 100 cigarettes every day. the scientists say every lung full of the toxic, it can cause long term damage to people's health. the small contains dangerous fine particles known to increase mortality rates. the world health organization has put
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safe levels at just $25.00 micrograms per cubic meter. after recording well over 900 more than 36 times the w.h.o. limit. for some a health hazard that should have been avoided. i know stubble burning is causing pollution, but we need to be more aware of the problem and doing more from our end people and children sitting on fire crackers is harmful to us. yes. delis ban on fireworks is in place until the end of november. but as saturday night city, while the celebration showed without public support, it's a ban that's difficult to enforce. and it's not the 1st time that such a ban has been instituted in delhi, but almost every time they come to naught. i asked the reader from the center for science and bottom into delhi. why that is you know,
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because this decision is set to get just few days before the rally and there's never a long term strategy on how do we want to deal with firecrackers, especially on these occasions as they shouldn't during lean. when we have received your pollution and there is not people as you go through more pollution to get at it. so therefore, i mean be serious about and also to understand that this is of christian belief. you a consideration. so therefore you cannot address this issue when you read the mountain control, you require public support for this kind of not at one level we have seen by vehicle ram. this is going to some extent been done a lot of people who are similar to crack, honest, and yet there is also not section of people west elna to be willing to accept this idea. and then when you are bringing this guy, don't come under control. it is enforced seeable because this is don't know how to
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because beverly, what it means is that you need to bring up poor lucy on productions she licensing the firecrackers months before the body. if you have an out of 5 crackers should be made to be sorted. and is widely available then this will have to burns something. and that's whether that's how we tap and work or less than a speeding considering how important firecrackers are dog deval. they will any government of risk making a policy that bans the production of firecrackers cry, crackers and the sale or firecrackers during the money. i guess it's isn't very difficult question, and i don't think there is any pierre also to that. and government just right. not only bans to have come a bit other district of policies they're trying to find out when you can bust crackers. wager going bust crackles. beige. you cannot get tried or looked at,
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but it just so on. and so we have to figure it out to what extent bad news is really possible, but it's on some allegations we do have to understand that we don't know going, i think nationwide that both vendetta and the last of the country where you have the pollution levels are not that c.b.s. and you have more favorable be too large. she may be districted fire crackers is possible, might be, but did not mean just specially to get in and see out and what you have would just not a few days. this is getting the huckabee out in this is window and want to do that in bush and her setting. there is no range to blow the pollution a rate and really don't want j.t. in that secret has got to get, you know, we have to dig not what exists of action to control. this kind of shocked a man insistent bullying of practice celebrations that make an already existing problem fall was that was on a thought i'd throw that away from the center for science and environment and any
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days off the causing devastation and killing at least 67 people in the philippines typhoon vanco has made landfall in vietnam from god already weakened when it hit, but still caused serious damage and injured several people picking up the pieces quite literally in the northern vietnamese city of who way. the storm destroyed many buildings there, blowing off roofs and operating trees. it lost friend since moving on from the philippines. 2 but still caused significant damage. the authorities prepared people for the onslaught as the storm approached, evacuating nearly $650000.00 people in coastal areas to higher ground is the latest in a series of storms to cause destruction and misery in be it. now, at least 159 people have been killed in floods and landslides,
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in the last 6 weeks. in the philippines, storm vanco has exacted a heavy toll with a high number of casualties. expression in the north of the country. authorities are now assessing the scale of the damage. some communities are describing it as the worst flooding in 4 decades. many villages were swamped, crops, destroyed, and hundreds of thousands left without power. as in vietnam, the philippines has also been battered relentlessly by storms over the last 2 months. is the 8th to hit the country in the last 8 weeks and the 21st this year. but for all the drama of the last week, the hope in the philippines is that the worst is over, at least for now, until the next storm hits. and joining me now is dr or merrill,
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from the university of oxford, part of dr. paul gans research includes climb richer and its impact on communities dr. called on welcome. what is causing these increasingly devastating storms in the region? yeah, thank you very much for having me here today. so a, i think there is a connection with climate change. why there direct again the link has not been get a quantifying. i think that we've got to have it clear. it's a lot of that as well. a temperature increase, so too are some temperatures. so yet, and then warmer oceans are expected to aggravate the thanks jenny, but so tropical storms as we are seeing now. well, i would also like to make it clear that unfortunately the connection between climate change and frequency of a storms east. not very strong yet. so when you say that the ocean or want tons of warming, what should ascension,
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you say news that stallman's in the future are going to get more powerful? yeah, i did that. that's it. and that's what climate science he's telling us at present. so we have a yeah, we're expected to see that in the coming years. storms and more intense, but it's also important to, to see to it. we will also expect to see changes in the global water cycle due to climate change or basically their way that it rains. so climate models and climate science for their returning generally agree that the region we expect that the sea markets for morning things precipitation events not just from, from, from tropical just storms. so well, i think because being there yet, it ends, i mean these 9 months where we can't see where we have seen a very tense or unusually strong monsoon season. and so yeah, i would also like to express that even though we're
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expected to see more flooding, people shouldn't be surprised if in the next years anything the next year. we just see among some see somebody relatively weak or rainfall comes late. in general, i would say to climate change, he needs a more viable and a more or more and expect climate buttons. right down of these unexpected climate patterns and storms getting more powerful. what does this mean for people? is there any preparation that governments and communities can do or to avoid the devastation from these storms? yeah, definitely. so in general a there should be all there all. 'd to what the strategies that look should look at in a secret and the receiving end of not just the infrastructure. you can start your system study some of the green infrastructure, see in among grows forests, etc. but also,
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this is the look that they received as a community people. so that means that people should get a sort of the moral beast and expect again, what are climate bottoms and then at them at the greater risk. and i would say that a, at the government level, you're all cut and that's my levels should be more prepared to face the cycle of challenges where even though at the time being dr. maddow piled on for you know, mr. fox, i thank you and that's it. for today there's more on our website added up the dot com and you can follow us on twitter. as we said earlier, the volley, the 1st of all of flights over the weekend really even now with images of celebrations from across the country. more of the same time to see you then
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the fear that matter to your country, what ever it takes the for the cocoa mines, the worst possible choice for doctors when they have to decide which critical patients to admit to an intensive care unit. and which to turn away to most probably die. it happened in the 1st wave in italy. other countries may be faced with the same situation in this 2nd wave intensive care units and nearing capacity and some health care workers are at their limits. when too many people get sick, all of once getting the right care, maybe out of reach hospitals better prepared this time. well this next belgian
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hospital, the c h u has reached its limit. it's transferred at least 40 patients to other hospitals within the country and abroad. the hope is that other european nations remain in a position to help out, and that health care systems aren't suddenly overwhelmed for the start of a journey that could help safe life's this. babson covert 900 patient is about to be transferred to a hospital in germany. 1st patient for today is quite easy for us because he's not going to be to say that if so he's grieving. but we have to monitor everything particles. so card to prevent the blood pressure in the countries and some of the patients and everything off. so that's a little bit challenging us such as the theory, the 59 year old, freddy needs intensive care support with the wards filling up here. and yes,
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he volunteered for transfer to minister in northwest germany because he can speak german and he gets how are you? i'm fine. thank you. god. during transferred friday. where's the breathing mask? this plastic covering his mentor, protect him and everyone around him. belgium has become the epicenter of europe's 2nd, coronavirus space. yashin, the french speaking part of the country, has been hit especially hard there too many sick people. not enough bat's doctors here. fear that soon have to decide who will get treated and who won't go on the air european countries. and we normally have all they need to say should patients, we don't want to do worse than we usually do at the moment we're still managing, but our biggest fear is that in a couple of weeks, we'll no longer be able to cope to help prevent such a situation belgium has asked germany to take over 1000 patients like freddy at the
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moment. infection rates are much lower in germany, finn here in belgium, but the situation is unpredictable and could change at any time. we have very good, happy that we can help at this moment in time is to have to pass if he in belgium competitive is an earring possibility. so good that we're going to have known as an ascent perhaps in the future. germans have to come to belgium for the question of europeans for the veritie. it's good neighborhoods and it's really close cooperation. in just over an hour, freddy and the crew will have arrived on the other side of the bullet or providing some relief for the hospital here, yash, which is now able to take in another call with 900 patients. the death toll is still rising in belgium, but there are fewer beds all complied by code patients than during the peak. over a week ago, you infections are rising in the u.k. . they stay constant in italy and spain and even fallen slightly in germany. and by
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a lot in france, let's bring in get moxon anesthesiologist and head of the pop out of intensive care medicine and intermediate carrot and university hospital. based on those trends, would you say europe's 2nd lockdown is starting to work? yes, i think this is fair to say because we had still rises in the at the end of the week, but it's not an exponential rise anymore. so we have sort of a plateau and we have to see the next days. but obviously these are the 1st on the grounds of the successful lockdown. and what about the hospital situation is, is europe doing a better job? it handling hospitalisations in this 2nd wife? it is more difficult this time because we have more programs that are stopped. you know, almost sickness and current seeing, but yes,
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i would say so because we are trying to be open and ready for taking any patient but also due to the other operations which are necessary as well. so it's sort of the other way around, is that not? not as bad as far as the patient situation goes, but as far as stuffing goes more of a challenge, is that what you're saying? i mean, they were the patients, i mean, the mortality of our ventilator, he said gently was 50 percent in the 1st wave. i mean, we have done a lot of research and we have now a lot of experience how to handle these patients, how to protect our stuff. so i do hope. 'd that the, the outcome of the 2nd wave, it's got to also we have some medication now deck some, it has though, and then daisy via really do more anticoagulation and if hopefully less and some both this but still very sick patients and it's very difficult to treat them
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and they always need very long time to treat, so they do a snuff treatment as it's really weeks in i.c.u. . so this is very unusual when they come to triology again in europe like in baghdad. well i am happy to aa does that for at least for germany, i do not expect that we will have the situation off tree os because we have still a couple of thousands empty beds available. we have 12000 emergency capacity evade ago, which is then obviously needs stuff from other parts of the hospitals. but having no this flattened current and lined. i mean i do expect that we have a lot and we have today 3400 i.c.u. patients. every school with 9000 treated in germany. i do expect more, but we will not be in the situation of 3 hours because our politicians,
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our government has done the knocked on measurements early enough. so germany is in a good position. would you say to help out other countries when it comes to taking patients? and that's where this way, i mean it's not that we have even the largest get, the city has an end. but obviously in europe we need to support it. and for example, yeah, and also hysteria. there is that the new us yasuda and moon study, that's no coordination center for dutch and belgian patients. so whenever these 2 countries need support, they go to directly to this, to all colleagues and staff, and they're looking without haitian, that capacity is available and these patients to these hospitals, which makes sense along those border areas, of course,
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here in europe and in germany, tell us what the doctors and nurses learn the 1st time around whether 1st time around was quiet and use a situation because it was a new virus, a new disease. it was basically everybody was afraid of getting devices ourself. keeping in mind that in italy, for an example, in the 1st mate around 50 percent of the end of the stuff in the hospital is infected. and so we had to learn how to protect ourselves and what are the specifics of these patients. now we are basically in a more robust and experience situation and i really our teams are doing and super job because they basically they just finished their 1st month then. and now then the middle of the 2nd one and they, so it's really tough, but they're doing a super job and treating these patients day and night 24 seventh's. and it's really
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great. it's good to hear and also good to know that hospitals themselves, a safer places. what, what do we need to do to be ready for the next pandemic? i know it's very early to ask, but what do we need to do? we've learned a lot of lessons already from this pandemic. yes, you're right. we learned a lot and react to make sure that when the pendennis, although we still remember that we, we had to learn our lesson and bring this over and reality. so one example is that we need more stock basically fall their protection for important medication trucks. we probably need in europe, at least production sites for these very important crucial stuff. and not only a production side to end the world,
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maybe in china already. and also what we need more and more network. so i think this pandemic really point out that we need to make more out of the potential of the digitization. so we need it for an exam and intensive care. we need national and european networks supporting each other likely to if you know it's telemedicine, for example, to make it really happen that the same quality of care is basically delivered elsewhere in europe and university hospital. thank you very much for your time today. my pleasure. take care. the u.s. from says its experimental vaccine is 94 and a half percent effective in preventing the new coronavirus. a late stage trial involves 30000 adults including many high risk or elderly people. in alice is based
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on 95 infections among participants who received either the vaccine or of those only 5 infections occurred in those who received the vaccine, which is administered in 2 shots about a month. the pot. and i now hand you over to our science correspondent eric williams. he's been looking into the questions you've been sending us on our you tube channel. what about long term complications? are we seek over 1000 disabilities in the future? doctors or especially worried about the impact of heart damage in patients, tissue, death and scarring. there is permanence and poses lifelong health issues will obviously only know the long term effects of covert 19, all survivors when much more time has passed. but there are already indicators that those effects will be significant. the doctor who treated british prime minister boris johnson last spring called the disease, this generation's polio. it's
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competition wife, marketing numbers on a scared fight. and childish fights. money, fans, problems, find stamps, and facts on you tube and you your, me? no, yes. yes, we need you and how the last 2 years germantown so that when you bring your uncle out, man call, and you've never had to have surprise yourself with what is supposed to this magical, really what moves and who talks to people who follows her along the way i admire and critics alike now as the world's most powerful woman shaping public. it's just the metals last stop.
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this is the news live from another breakthrough in the hunt for a covered 19 vaccine. us drugs make up the dirt on us says it's experimental vaccine has a success rate of nearly 95 percent. it's hard on the heels of similar results from fires and its judgment in the biotech markets jump on the news as the hopes of an end to the pandemic grow. also, on the program, germany gets ready for even tighter coronavirus restrictions at current partial lockdown. the scene infection rates begin to level off but not.
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