tv Verruckt nach Meer Deutsche Welle November 23, 2020 11:00am-12:01pm CET
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promises starts december 4th, this is the life from 3 leading hong kong activists plead guilty to protest charges class hong kong. and we will continue to fight for freedom and outflow that high bought out of beijing and the surrender joshua long on to other prominent pro-democracy organizers sent a message of defiance before being detained. the sentence also coming up
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ukraine's underfunded health care system stretched to breaking point by the pandemic. with that firsthand account from a doctor who's kind of covert 19 and is back at work fighting to give others the best possible government says protesters who set fire to the country's congress building are guilty of terrorist acts. the demonstrators are furious about cuts to education and health care in the latest batch. i mean the business leader, all eyes were on mine strike up his side, paid for the bush visit on trash day. i'm good. how the office, welcome to the program 3 prominent hong kong activists have been detained after pleading guilty to that involvement in last year's proto ocracy program. protests
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joshua warm ivan, lamb and agnes chao are all expecting jail terms for inciting and organizing an authorised assembly. the charges are related so a protest outside of police headquarters in june of last year on punts pro-democracy movement has faulted since beijing imposed a sweeping national security law on the territory that severely restricts his political speech. before entering a courts, joshua warm heart, a message of defiance for his supporters. neither person both, no election bows, nor any other arbitrary power with stop us from activists on. what we are doing now is to explain the well off freedom to the world through our compassion, the home we love so much that we are willing to sacrifice the freedom of our own. prepare for the pinchas of walking free. may god bless hong kong, and we will continue to fight for freedom. and now it's not a time for us kowtow to beijing and to surrender. thank you. so shalom speaking,
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then i'm now joined by regina. if she's the founder and the leader of the prob, aging new people spoke, mrs. of what sentence do you think would be appropriate for joshua woman, his co-defendants. they have pleaded guilty to a public order overhead says under the public order ordinance, these old fences carry, makes you mum jail sentence of not more than 5 years. i don't think they will get the maximum. it really depends on the judge. it's not for me to say what is appropriate, but under common law system which is inherently lenient, i think the judge, we're taking into account their age, their church, maybe population officers, records and all of that. but do you think they're good, be a jail term for organizing? a protest is a bit harsh. it's in our laws, you know,
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we have to apply the same laws to everybody under the common law system. no one is above the law. everyone is subject to the same set of laws and minister by the same system. i don't think they should. there should be any exception just because they call themselves freedom fighters or they call themselves freedom. fighters are just trying to establish democracy, democratic rules that you didn't support the crackdown on the pro-democracy movement last summer. why last summer, what happened was not a crackdown on pro-democracy movement. the protests against a controversial piece of legislation turn soon turned violent. it became very filings. there were attacks on police headquarters, siege of universities pouring, setting innocent bystander on fire, killing a cleanup with
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a piece of break. it was very violent, but who inside it is, violence was, it wasn't really the demonstrators who incited this violence up the, the person was set on fire by one of the, the activists or one of the supporters of the activism activist movement. you know, no one is above the law, you know, they are free to promote democracy, but they cannot put themselves above the law. they should do it within the limits of our legal regime. and what the pro-democracy movement is demanding of really fundamental rights i. freedom of speech, freedom of the press and the rule of law. what's wrong with us? one of these, once a well protected under basic law and rights, all apparently not. if you look at these faces facing charges and facing jail time now for just overnight as a protest in front of a police station. oh,
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the same law applies to everybody for whether whatever course, whether it's democracy, advocates see or any more welfare week. they cannot put themselves above the law just because they claim to be fighting for democracy or human rights. where do you put you to report the fight for human rights on the same level as animal welfare? i think that sort of that doesn't really work. does it well? oh, the postage them a stations for all sorts of courses and vironment over texan, any more welfare equal opportunity, you know, everyone can have a say. but to our laws of it here you have to give notice to the police. you can only hope to read any notice of no objection. this operation and that's no different from arrangements. government governing public demonstrations all over the world. you've always supported the one country 2 systems
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rule. do you think that is dead now? only a fantasy, foments it is a life and well, there are, in fact i've been talking to a lot of hong kong residents, including western us who are very pleased that after the and neck one of the national security law. also psyche have reaped to normal. people are now free to express their opinion without fear of being beaten up or set on fire. well, if you see them as it looks now, it looks like people are not free to express their opinion. if it's an opinion that goes against the dictatorship in beijing. do you think that this sort of appeasement, that you, that you do towards beijing, that it will keep home call in free? i think you need to be fan, look at affects system and then when of the national security laws so far,
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only 2 people have been charged, you know, and they will be dealt with under a common law system going through our ecosystem. it will be a long drawn out process. their rights will be fully protected. one, not that offender applied for hippias corpus, that was dealt with in accordance with the normal process. there is no some, no blanket suppression of rights and freedoms. you know, that's simply not the situation in hong kong. on the other hand, many of us are very pleased that our society has returned to a more peaceful and almost asian affairs so that we can get on with our business. thank you very much for, you know, if the founder and leader of the new people's party in hong kong for sharing your views here wanted obvious as now take a look at some of the other stories making news around the world in the u.s. . joe biden is pushing ahead with preparations for office by president on trump's
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continuing refusal to concede the election. media say biden will dominate. will nominate rather anthony blinken as secretary of state when he announces the 1st of his cabinet picks, lincoln's deputy secretary of state and deputy national security adviser during the obama administration, with the right 2 people have died, and many others are injured. after a stabbing at a church in the us state of california, police say the building in san jose was being used to shelter homeless people from the cold. the incident occurred sunday night no services were taking place at the time. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu has said there should be no return to the 2015 iran nuclear deal that was abandoned by u.s. president. donald trump. some observers seen as a yahoo comments as a direct message to joe biden, who has said he'll rejoin the deal if iran resumes strict compliance. human rights groups say below police have arrested more than 300 demonstrators in the
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capital, minsk, thousands protested for the 16th. straight sunday, calling on president oleksandr, look at shane code to step down. they accuse the president of rigging elections in august. astra zeneca and the university of oxford in the u.k. say their corona virus vaccine could be 90 percent effective. in preventing covert 19, researchers say the vaccine was the most effective when patients were 1st given a half those followed by a full doze one month later. crucially, the new job can be kept refrigerated temperatures does not require freezing. cold storage by other recently announced vaccines. astra zeneca says it will have 200000000 doses available by the end of this year. for more on this, i'm now joined by mohammed who is a viral edges on vaccine expert at lancaster university in the u.k. . so another vaccine that could be 90 percent effective against cope with 19,
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but developers say that right? that rate of effectiveness requires on usual dozing to achieve why is that? so yeah, well thank you very much for having me on the show. i think this is certainly a great he was on his own. one of the reason that astra zeneca vaccine is different from modern and that is that it's based on a vector, a vaccine. so basically the chimpanzee, i don't know, what is it, but common ground, that is a lot of a lot of this quite protein of the corn, a white is. and when it is injected into the body body, sense that and produce the antibodies as abilities, the response is both harm them or critical to protect the person from infection. so one thing that is really critical here is that those in the regime is a little different because our in most part of the board we have, i don't 7 to 10 percent people already having antibodies against it. i don't know what is so out of the sides. reason for different building for g.m. has not been yet revealed. but this is one of the likely cause or because of the fact that we would probably have a little different, i mean responses to this vaccine. then we don't know, and there is,
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there are several vaccines at the moment in the pipeline. one of fun just as this one have over the other has is also is i think of asking us a little and want to do is one of the major advantages. really the story got to transportation. i mean, it can't be just stored, entrusts, boarded at the refuge or temperature 2 to 8 celsius 36 to 48, far out, which is really very common computer that is meant in pharmacies and also with all the uncertainties and in the g.p. practices and other to want to do is that they just as anyone has pledged a non profit distribution of the vaccine between the cost will be significantly low . and at last, as i need to uniquely has 20 different partners in the war that are working on to the scale ability on to the manufacturing and trials and assessment, which is really a big advantage given the unprecedented need we are having. and the moment and last year i would like to highlight that also as an eco and oxford, a vaccine is also part of callbacks,
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which is an initiative by the savvy and the little actual to really make the vaccines available for low and middle income countries. so i think this is certainly a plus that we've always been seeing. unless not everybody is not safe, nobody is safe. how quickly can be rolled out is thing that either has ordered that the data that is meant was entered. now today morning it is really the interim, so we have to wait for the full data to become available and that would be presented to the regular people. easier is called how much are they? and once that is approved, i think the anticipation is by mid december, we will have the a pool and probably rolling out into the frontline workers and also get home, which is now the priority in the u.k., . when i'm going in from lancaster university in the u.k., thank you very much for this input layer. leaders of the world's wealthiest countries have wrapped up an online summit, promising to supply affordable, covert 1000 back scenes and tests across the globe. a virtual gathering of the g.
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20 group posted by saudi arabia and steve's war is that poor countries could be left behind. as the pandemic deepens, divisions between the rich and the poor. a 1st for an arab nation. hosting a summit of the leading industrial countries, even if it was a virtual gathering dominated, of course, by the pandemic. but with the environment also high on the agenda again must be for not being but in india and or used to be the g 20 should continue to take the lead in tackling climate change. we need to follow the guidance of the united nations and push for the full and effective implementation of the paris agreement on climate change. most of the leaders made the right noises about the need to protect the planet. but,
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in typical style, u.s., president donald trump defended his decision to pull out of the agreement. the paris accord was not designed to save the environment there was designed to kill the american economy. i refuse to surrender millions of american jobs and sentry years of american dollars to the world's worst polluters and environmental offenders. and that's what would have happened. german chancellor angela merkel stressed the need to help poorer countries to deal with the economic impact of the coronavirus. for the 1st time in a long time, we see an increase in global poverty. we need to act resolutely against this in alameda and today we therefore stressed the importance of private investments in particular, in africa. it was left to the host king solomon of saudi arabia, to close the summit with an upbeat message. we have held our commitment to work
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together to meet the challenge of the covert, 19 pandemic, to save lives, and livelihoods, and protect the most vulnerable. now the world must put its faith in the coronavirus vaccines in development. and in the g 20 leaders promise to distribute these fairly and affordably. some of the other developments in the pandemic global virus cases approaching 60000000 according to a tally by johns hopkins university. that will death toll stands at almost 1400000 . china is testing millions of people and imposing local lock downs after multiple new cases were discovered in 3 cities across the country. last week, the united states, germany and the united kingdom. also, they could begin vaccinations in their countries as soon as december. the 2nd wave of corona, virus infections, groups, europe, and some places. there is stretching healthcare systems to breaking point,
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ukraine's underfunded hospitals are struggling to keep up with patients. numbers frontline, medical workers are among those suffering most commonly visited a hospital overrun with cope with 900 patients and heard one doctor story resident, i knew that i get sick eventually when i got the news that i was infected, it was such a blow. i cried. i've done all i could to stay safe. this place is my baby. no one ever saw me here without a mask. rather cryptic, my name is only no craft. i'm a senior doctor here at the hospital in the u. bar. christmas family. most of the doctors and nurses here have gone through kobe, had we had a big outbreak here in the town, which is many as 58 new patients in just one day. many of them were very ill. and i'm a neuro pathologist by training, but i had to learn how to operate a ventilator. there was no choice,
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a patient was dying and i didn't know what to do. i did some reading and called my husband who's an anesthetist. he was telling me what to do over the phone on the loudspeaker. and it worked. it's hard to explain just how happy i was that everything in my, one of my father's friends is in our intensive care unit right now. you're always aware that your own parents could soon be patients here and then i got infected myself. it was scary, really scary. i had seen what covert can do. i was lucky, i didn't get pneumonia and was back at work 2 weeks later. our main problem is that people come in too late,
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many with gary serious pneumonia. some tell you they don't have money. others don't believe even exists. they say it's just the flu. this most definitely isn't the flu . the most precious thing right now is oxygen. you can see the patients hand stretching out for the masks. you can see how desperately they need it. you see how they come to life once they get it. even trying to turn the dial up on their own. as i go to bed, imagining what would happen if we run out of oxygen supplies for i'm sure it will happen eventually. and will we have to slam the door shut in patience or faces and tell them we've run out of the remark here. tomorrow as a government has condemned on the rest that led to the burning of the country's congress building on saturday, the protests were part of growing demonstration against conservative president gemma tate for approving
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a budget that has sparked outrage. most of the funds were earmarked for big infrastructure projects while spending on education and health care was cut in the morning after workers clean up the debris. what demolishes government says protestors who set fire to the country's congress building on saturday. are guilty of terrorist acts by the human rights groups and the police used excessive force against them. at least 12 were injured and dozens of others arrested. for the way it was was, i kept my hands raised in the air, but 358. policemen still came and beat me. they put their boots on my head. i think there are images of that. the truth is that is just not right. we must remember
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that we are no longer in a dictatorship and will die in what you write most. ilia it, we had a long yesterday i was arrested for documenting the demonstration in the square. i'm a documentarian and a photo journalist. i was doing my job when the police attacked me and illegally arrested me. mad, it only made it a little late when thousands of demonstrators had gathered in central guatemala city to protest cuts in education and health care spending. the new budget was negotiated in secret and approved by congress before dawn on wednesday. thank you. i'm all right that, that, that i had the people can't stand it anymore. is it over there? burnt the building because they're angry. and because the president doesn't help them and his own party, the people are in need, their suffering. they are hungry, and this is he that who is going to help them eat if the president has all the money. he had not gotten that packet come out yet,
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but yet that they're not going to meddle. vice president yet more testy. you responded to the protests with the drastic proposal put in the end by this for the good of the country. i have asked the president that we both present our resignation from office, him as president and myself as vice president. but we must do it together. but president, aleksander g m a 10 refuses to step down, clinging on to power despite the widespread outrage. some sports news now in the bundesliga on the sunday months picked up their 1st win of the season with a 31 victory over fellow strugglers fry book from strike zone. philip was the hero for the away side scoring all 3 of their goals. yeah, and maurits least as struggling mines arrived in freiburg looking for a change in fortunes. much would depend on the form of join fully pâté to the strikers 4 goals. in 7 games, the only bright spot in
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a terrible start to the campaign and metate to show his worth with less than 2 minutes on the clock. the frenchman charging clear before slotting home, kohli, one nil to the visitors, potato was on hand again to make it 2 nil in the 34th minutes. prior book keeper, florian miller, making it far too easy for the frenchman imitator completed a stunning 1st half hat trick. 5 minutes later, the titanfall causing no problems for the red hot 23 year old tribal got one back in the 2nd half through veteran strike and neil's pieces and the 4th and final goal scored at the busy end of the pitch $31.00 extended 3 goals from a tater and a valuable 3 points for minds. it is regarded as the toughest race in
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sailing the van de globe this year. some $33.00 souls set sail from france among them the 1st german to ever compete in the event while navigating nonstop around the world, he'll also be doing his bit to help fight global warming in a sailboat against the elements forest hammond is the 1st german ever to compete in the on day globe, the solo nonstop race around the world. his racing vessel. a state of the art sailboats with wings. it's way out. right now we're mostly flying. we're just touching the water with our foil and then little bit with the stern. it's aggressive and powerful, and in no way romantic. 2 weeks ago, 33 boats set out from france. 27 men 6 women selling 45000 kilometers,
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often stated using autopilot. but outside help is banned on a course, heading around the cape of good hope. after that, then talk to ocean white sand with the icy temperatures and waves as high as houses . it's a 70 to 80 day solo right around the globe. finally, the deadly cape horn. before racing back to france at speeds of up to 75 kilometers per hour. only around half of the competitors will make it to the finish line. it leaves only the one i only live in the moment anyway, and i try not to think about how far i've still got to go. when you look at my progress on a map and i look like i'm crawling along at an excruciating the slow, snail's pace around the world. but when i look at the surface of the water to my moving pretty quickly. so matrix the race is 1st storms cropped up early. unlike a few of the other competition favorites, herman was able to bypass them unscathed, surrounded by roaring noise, snatching sleep only a few minutes at
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a time. this is what he has spent years training for. he's able to move loads weighing several times with the help of pulleys to trim the huge sail spanning 2 tennis courts. his butt may be jam packed with high tech, but he is the one who has to navigate his way through the wind and rain. the paks leaders have completed around a 3rd of the route, hammon shown as the great boat in this animation has maneuver to see explore a vessel to 6 place, but also doing his bit for sun, a little troubled waters. this research boy is set to record data on global warming . thanks a lot of you know, i find that sailing is always a great metaphor for the power of nature and nature's energy, which i think we should be trying to harness such as an other areas like wind energy, for example. and why not have cargo ships with sails? you know, you're going across are on this sail as endeavor. great distances,
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dreams and goals lie ahead of him. though. is apollo on the wrong day globe. it's a journey he'll be on until at least the middle of january. and that's it from me at the newseum for now. don't go away. business headlines are next with kris kobach. stay tuned for that white lines at the top of the i the meantime, there's always a website with all the excuses, business culture, sport of golf from france watched
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reinforce each other global freedoms on 60 minutes on d.w. griffith, metaphor media organisations in the digital competition tension among session of the global media forum, digitization process is posing new challenges to media companies, and they offer new opportunities to distribute their content from community building to me walls. how can the media organizations optimize their revenue models in the digital age? join our discussion what's the secret behind this classic music,
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a sound. as soon as you hear beethoven, if you lose your, my, for the story behind the music was for needy germans bridges. she was, was a tobin's 9th symphony for the world. starts to simmer down on g.w. another potential vaccine astra zeneca at the university of oxford saying their jointly developed jab shows, average act to see of 70 percent. meanwhile, g. 20 nations promise that everybody should have equal access to a vaccine against coven times. also coming up all non-essential, shops and friends are shocked these days. and their christmas sales be saying
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through an initiative of big online retailers and protests over pork, thousands of people in taiwan demonstrate against the government's decision to allow the import of what they think could be contaminated meat. i'm chris colfer. welcome to the program. a covert 19 vaccine from astra zeneca and the university of oxford has 70 percent effective. on average, in a large scale clinical trial. the vaccine was most effective at a rate of up to 90 percent when patients were given a half dose, then a full dose a month later, esther seneca said it can begin to distribute by year end pending regulatory approval. the vaccine can be stored in a fridge instead of an ultra cold freezer, like the vaccine submitted for u.s. regulatory approval last week by pfizer, and germany's biotech. let's bring in w.
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financial correspondent. in frankfurt more, i should turn a 3rd problem soon. vaccine candidate by western company markets are liking it. i reckon. yeah, absolutely. yes, the markets have cheered this development across europe and asia. and here behind me, if you see dax is up, even it's the same story in london and paris. actually the ox or the vaccine is the big hole. as you mentioned, it's cheap, it's easy to distribute it. this is the vaccine, that's a maximum interest has been seeing the maximum interest from developing countries. it has seen the maximum number of advanced purchasing deals made including from god vaccine alliance that is looking to distribute vaccines to poorer countries and our shares of astra zeneca fairing and it is news interestingly they are not fairing with them in the open. in the red down, that's because i think investors have been spoiled lately because of those results
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from more than an pfizer beyond vaccines, 90 percent is actually quite unprecedented results. so 70 percent seems really low in comparison. but how did not being for their results? i'm sure the investors would have grabbed even 70 percent with both their hands should respond day in frankfurt. thank you. now with more vaccine candidates showing promising results the question of their dismay, this tribute is becoming more pressing. the leaders of the world's 20 wealthiest nations have pledged to quote, spare no effort in ensuring that all countries have access to covert 19 vaccines. the virtual summit hosted by saudi arabia was dominated, of course, by the pen demick image concerns poor countries will be left behind as wealthier nations reserve, nearly all of the expected supply of the most promising vaccine candidates. g. 20 leaders also reiterated a commitment to extend differ leaf for developing countries until at least mid 2021
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. for more, let's bring in gabriele 5 of my. he's the president of the kill institute for the world economy. he joins me via skype. good to see you. how much is the g. 20 pledge of fairness in distribution covert next, vaccines worth when at the same meeting, the german chancellor says he's worried that no major agreements have been struck with poor nations for not really much. i must say that has to do with the leadership in the united states. we hope that the vaccine comes online before that becomes president. and it also has to do with politics in many, many countries in the vaccine is there, there will be very hard choices to be made, giving you, are you big seems to other countries with politically, very, very costly in many european countries in the united states, in china, in japan,
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etc. the world is looking to manage this pandemic better with a vaccine. the question is, what will be the long term financial impact of this pandemic? oh, it's huge. we can say that already. and now about 921-0000 1000000000 u.s. dollars damage for the world economy. that's what i'm for causes say the keyless to do is we see similar magnets use germany alone. $400000000000.00 you rules of damage. this is a forgone foregone earnings, lost value added. and you know, this will not come back, we can stretch out over time, this problem by running up debt. but we come out of the crisis much poorer. and the distributional effects are also huge within countries and between countries
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in india, for example, to philip in brazil, so much harder than other emerging markets and particularly in east asia. so after the endemic the world will be poorer, much poorer, and it will be also much more unequal. and there is there the danger by spending all that money oftentimes borrowed money to support national economies. the countries actually planting the seed there for a new financial crisis. there is the danger, of course. we see that many countries don't have so much fiscal space. you know, that is really a privilege or if we see countries. if you go and look into emerging markets and look into the poor economies, you don't see this fiscal space to the extent that these countries run up. that there is a danger that the next financial crisis might be upon us. and if it comes, it will be very divided because countries do west big economies,
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let's say the t 20, they have to corporation over their central banks and they have national currencies that are on earth to pool that have substantial value globally. and so they can use their central banks as lend us a philosopher sorts of for poor countries. this is not possible. so if you talk when it's a crisis, i don't see financial crisis coming in developed countries. it's rather a problem of emerging. and of these developing countries, gabriel wild idea here would meet these mounting costs. a global debt relief be a feasible idea. it would certainly be desirable. the feasibility is in a very different thing. it starts with the fact that peak donor countries are not even in the paris club. china, for example, in the so in paris club members would agree to cutting that.
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china does not, that would, of course, create windfall gains for china. and so no one would like to do that. so i think this repeated absolutely yes. if usability, a lot of work needs to be done in the main thing to be done is to bring china into this process, full fledged, gave them our president of the institute for the world economy. as always, thank you for thinking of amazon says it will join other major online retailers in france and delaying as black friday sales event until smaller shops can reopen. following the current lockdown, it's a welcome move, but probably not enough to dear. the online giant to small traders who believe they are being pushed out of business. christmas is on its way with all the spending that comes with it. and small businesses like this toy shop in paris are reminding shoppers to support their local retailers. putting out amazon isn't the only place
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to shop online, marjorie column, bonnie can't open her physical shop. coronavirus restrictions don't allow it. but trying to compete with global retailers online is a near impossible task and laid off. you need new people end up thinking of us as the use because we're trying to sell products normal prices. but we bought them at a certain cost, and in addition, there are fees and taxes, or sometimes we find the same product online, cheaper than the price. the supply gave us something wrong with that. the unhappy times of france, a small shop owners are pushing some french shoppers to boycott. the big online sellers. tens of thousands of people are signed a petition calling for an amazon free christmas. others say using click can collect to support smaller businesses. things didn't deliberately avoid amazon, especially now it would be irresponsible in it. i'm rejecting amazon amazon has
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responded to the criticism, which is come from as high as the matter of paris by promising to delay its black friday specials. he says it wants to give small businesses time to reopen the full of the shopping bonanza begins and not just some of the other global business stories making news. china is planning new measures to manage its aging population according to state media that could include financial support, encouraging people to have more children. for 40 years, china had a one child policy meant to constrain population growth. now the country's health and social systems are facing pressure due to the growing elderly population. singapore's economy gray, stronger than expected, 9.2 percent of the 3rd quarter. a new government report said that while a slowdown of travel continues to weigh in the economy, the pharmaceutical and electronics industries are rebounding from recovery follows a record 13.2 percent contraction in the prior quarter. to today. 2 months
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coronaviruses, tens of thousands of people marched through the taiwanese capital taipei on sunday . among other issues for testers, voiced their anger over the government's decision to allow the import of u.s. pork containing feed at it is banned. elsewhere. the slogan on the side of the inflatable pig reads, i'm a rocktober mean pig rocktober mean is the feed. others have used by american farmers to promote leaner meat in livestock. but in taiwan and in most countries, around the world, including in the e.u., rocktober mean is banned. these demonstrators want to keep the ban in taiwan. i want to buy those. i have a child among the things of the rock hope. i mean it's not good for our bodies. i actually hope that the government can see that we citizens oppose this week. i don't see it at all. it is the fact that one day i'm
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a mom from ty chong, i'm here in taipei for the next generation. protesting against the import of poor containing rocktober mean because it's very poisonous. the u.s. is taiwan 2nd biggest trading partner. it says taiwan's restrictions on imports of beef and pork are a major barrier to greater trade ties between the 2 sides. taiwan hopes to deepen cooperation with the u.s. because china, taiwan's biggest trading partner, is stepping up military, diplomatic and economic pressure on the self ruled island. and that's a show i'm critical role in thanks for watching ever self success. why
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texas is one of the country's corona hot spots stretching hospitals and funeral homes there to their limits. at basle is on the border with mexico, but no one is talking about the wall anymore. the pen dam make is raging here. numbers are sorie. right now. we have about 241, in-patient, coburg, 1000 cases. now out of control, with about 45 days ago, we only had 30. but a lot of those people that you see going into these tents behind me. they will wind up inside are all, have authorities are already arranging to move patients to other cities. if the hospitals become overwhelmed, planning for months of strain, we have to make sure that we are ready for this winter. not only here in el paso, but also around the country, resources are finite. there is already a backlog in dealing with the dead. referee generated more outside, the hospitals serve as makeshift morgue to reese. funeral homes in the past so are
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so overwhelmed that families sometimes have to wait a week to bury a loft. one funeral directors themselves are struggling to cope this race is the level of stress is very high because it is not comparable to how it used to be . some months ago we had around 30 services per month. right now we're having around 18 research. this is where the economic effects of the pandemic can most clearly be seen. downtown el paso seems abandoned by some money of all works just around the corner. for him, the presidential race is not over yet. north of president biden is not going to be the president of the immigrants. going to be donald trump. he feared his business might be hit by the pen demick, but now he has orders until july next year. republicans, he says, are good for the construction sector. despite his support for trump, he has his own opinion on covert $1000.00,
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specially after he tested positive. everyone is going to get the virus and we're going to fill up the hospitals. testing is one of the crucial instruments to avoid to this problem may get cordy needs 10 testing centers in the past. so he works for a private company that is being paid by the state of texas. but his main concern in the penn dam make is not political. i don't have fully knowledge of what joe biden is planning to do in his administration. but until now we haven't had any kind of difficulties with the current administration. i don't think it's a matter of resources. the main concern is how to communicate to the people what to do or not really look at noida. trump supporters biden supporters to different sides that seem to come together. in a past 10 european countries have reacted to the drastic increase in corona infections with
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curfews and lockdowns. france's new regulations are strictest of all impressions from paris even under lockdown, the french are taking to the streets as opposed to during the 1st 19 wave schools here are staying open, but teachers don't feel safe. we have between $20.25 pupils per class. we are trying to impose social distancing, but in our classrooms, we can, it may still have a distance of 40 centimeters between each pupil that she's the most similar. we were hoping the government would green for senator kerry measures, but they haven't already least not sufficiently. so we don't understand that we fear the government is abandoning us chaos. you'll only lash if they are getting support from their pupils who have been blocking school entrances and posting videos online that show
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a lack of social distancing. also unlike during the 1st covert, $1000.00 ways, more shops open and large parts of france's industry are still up and running. and yet, this is still one of europe's strictest. lockdowns with people only allowed one hour a day and only within a radius of one kilometer of their homes. most french think the government was right to confine them, but many criticize the method. i don't understand why big supermarkets are no longer allowed to sell books, clothes or toys, just because small shops that sell the same things are closed. the government is just not good at explaining itself. this will cause lots of unemployment and bankruptcy speak. why are they leaving big supermarkets open by closing small the shops of the megastores often take in hundreds of clients and small shops, only one entry. they are much safer. and yet the government is staying the course.
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even though the spread of the epidemic has been slowing down in turkey, despite an increase in infections, there's been widespread indifference toward the corona, regulations. the government is trying to change that the city of $60000000.00 and which the corona virus is spreading. and one of the teams that are fighting to stop it was the last image on his a dentist. at least she was until the pandemic started it. she's been a contact traces since march 1 of around 35000 in turkey. and her book, seen from here, the size of the city can be scary. and i sometimes wonder where this pandemic is headed. but as a doctor, i have a responsibility. i try to think positively and knowing that i help people this
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would motivates me and keeps me going at the moment. the tracing team manages around 10 households a day. they work in shifts almost around the clock. the goal is always the same track down test and isolate those who have been exposed to someone with 19 and all of this as quickly as possible. google's 1st case today is the collects is all family. the mother recently tested positive. now the father has symptoms to, put u.k. it will clear up quicker if the test is positive. gergen will also trying to trace his cause contexts. the whole family has to stay at home for the next 14 days. after each visit, protective clothing has to be changed. job is time consuming and strenuous,
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but it's worth it. she says. as in many other countries, people's vigilance here has slackened in a recent survey. more than half of the respondents in turkey said the coronavirus does not effect a worry them and critics also blame the government for this lack of concern. because the health ministry no longer reports the number of new infections every day. but only the number of symptomatic patients john uncuffed, angelo, of the opposition c.h.p. says the government is hiding the real scope of the pandemic. so slow here in istanbul alone, the number of cases is 20 times higher than the tally from the ministry of health from i'm saying this with regret, but the figures and information we have given are not correct. we're going to,
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you know, google an image on his or her next house call. she does not want to take part in political discussions. she knows the debate about the numbers, but doesn't want to get involved. that more and more people disregard the coronavirus rules frustrates her being, which is surely good. it makes me sad. we are putting so much effort into this work . but what's the point? if so many act as if nothing can happen to them? and if this doesn't change, we won't see an end to this pandemic sticking because of google and hopes that she will soon be able to work as a dentist again. but she also knows that her new job will be needed for quite a while. germany is currently in the midst of a partial lockdown. schools. stores and businesses are open,
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but the government has restricted social contact among people. many oppose the measure from lin, the legs on the plots, in the popular areas, the shopping in strolling a safe distance is not guaranteed safe. politicians think that's why there are compulsory mosques even outside. that's finished its own for i find it terrible. why should i put on a mosque out here now? when nobody's working behind me, you have to be able to bring fresh air. i'm with mine at all. no one. i do not find it. ok. and mosque has to put on in certain places because i mean that it's really going outdoors. what is actually supposed to happen in public buildings. i'm just met, church train everywhere, but not here in a public square. and you can cut to politicians,
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need to explain more clearly what they're doing to combat a member of can think in my view, the whole thing doesn't only depend on the politicians. the whole thing is, a social g.t. like many others in a democracy, people have to sports in some form or another in the law. we will have to live with this far as somehow and we actually need a social debate. the public's going to look exactly it can be true of cooption good time with mobile storage because don't talk so much. something has to be pushed through. now. will it go on like this with the wave get higher and higher. and of course one has to austin question, what we still have to do with the money not to lose. do you for not mom doing even more hardly possible for the restaurants and cafes in the capital. they have to close for a month. again. this can be seen almost 5 kilometers away in the trendy
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district of friedrichs, on there are usually hundreds of people in this pub district, tourists, but also lend us a visit. and i think everyone who is not affected is fine with it. so i don't have any big problems to do without now for a while. but also because i don't walk in the hospitality industry and have nothing to do that i can understand that people are angry and secure and that after i went to fetch them to session, i don't like the theft. but will they show up the same time? most restaurants to have invested a lot of money in hygiene measures. some officer had to go to at least a mr. money. and
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reinforce much of the most recent 30 minutes on d. w. india turning misery in 2019. and devastating damage destroyed the famous liver villages. the survivors started creating dollars from damage clause giving up. this is never an option. a story of success. equal to the 90 minutes on w d 2, you know that 77 percent of laughing are younger than 6 of fox. that's me. and me and you and you know what?
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it's time all voices on the subject to 7 percent be talk about the issues. this is where you cut the 77 percent this weekend on d. w. the fight against the coronavirus pandemic. how has the rate of infection been developing? what measures are being taken? what does the latest research say? information into context. the coronavirus of data, the colon special monday to friday on w.
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