tv Colonia Dignidad Deutsche Welle January 21, 2021 4:15am-5:00am CET
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here is a british defense of the bracks a trade deal don't forget you can always get the latest news and information around the clock on our website g w dot com or you can follow us on social media twitter and instagram at chip in it is ok richard send in berlin for me an entire team thanks for watching. the fight against the corona virus 10 damage. has the rate of infection been developing what does the latest research say. information and contacts the coronavirus update. on d w. d t you know that 77 percent. are younger than 65. that's me and me and you. and you know what it's time all voices want part.
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of the 77 percent speech obama issues. this is where it comes from. the 77 percent this weekend on d w. i. now the vaccines are rolling off the assembly lines where are they off to. developed economies are at the front of the line some countries are starting to vaccinate the super rich will celebrities like here in indonesia where the government inoculated instagram influences. the world health organization is calling foul. its goal to try its younger healthier. reach countryside but she made to before. there is and all the people in poor countries
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it's a problem many still coming so why is it too late for equality in the largest bank seen drive in world history. well check this out the news organization vices discovered the wealthy a paying big bucks for especially organized vaccine holidays at a time of travel bans they take a luxury trip she will go all the emirates going off to get it to jab it in some sightseeing critics say using their money to jump the queue ahead of the more vulnerable is unacceptable. campaign and nick dearden says research shows many more people will die if the rich get the vaccine 1st instead of doing it fairly well told him in a moment 1st health care workers in kenya fear for their lives the vaccine hasn't arrived yet and covert is taking out their colleagues one by one.
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clinic an officer a big part of that though was to work closely with covert 19 patients then one day she got sick herself i saw one. problem i didn't and a good source i was supposed to go on oxygen my sons were infected it was very traumatising she survived 9 of her colleagues did not and then another shock she had to pay the expense of hospital bills from her own pocket for over a month now she's been on strike with her nurses and medical offices more than 30000 according to the unions their demands include protective health insurance and compensation for families in case of death. yeah finally it's going to investigation. and as if that is not enough then they tell you if you do not go back to that and say working
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environment we are going to said. indeed health care workers across kenya have lost their jobs for participating in strikes the government says illegal nobody is denying that he should be getting your money you should say it's a legitimate right but we're also saying that when there is this situation in the country let's also face it together you know and don't make it look like you're blackmailing the government at his weakest point. as dorcas doesn't feel protected by her employer she's awaiting the covert 19 vaccine kenya expects to receive the vaccine through the kovacs facility among other sources but experts say a 60 percent vaccination target is needed to achieve herd immunity on the african continent meanwhile wealthy nations have reserves more than half of the vaccines even though the home to only 14 percent of the world's population so they've kind
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of some selfishness to say live a fuss resign it now for people i think the issue here is that global responsibility issue comes up as many as you want for your country but what is your responsibility to ensuring the wild is safe to be safe that's also doctors wish for herself and her colleagues how do you feel about that and the pentagon african countries governments mason later yeah we are less human we feel like we are not going see that letter anywhere that's a little never at least we're hopefully we're going to give them a little. kenya 1st tranche of 24000000 vaccine doses is expected to arrive next my doctor has now hopes the vaccine will finally ensure her safety. well hopes are higher elsewhere leading some to accuse countries of hoarding we'll get to that in a moment firstly though let's look at some of the numbers because funnily enough the welcoming and tolerant canadians
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a 1st in line having secured the most vaccines per capita the us as we mentioned it's organized of a 7 doses to head the e.u. with these for india $101.00 half indonesia just one person and the codex scheme as you can see there to share out shots is sadly struggling it did in these director of global justice now and joins us from london nic you've been campaigning for global economic justice for of a 28 years way is the justice in this case was a really good question because you know with so impressed with the scientific ingenuity that brought us these vaccines but unfortunately most of the world a lot of access to the immunize ation that we also desperately need hold it by rich countries and the monopolies on these vaccines are held by some absolutely enormous businesses for the next 20 years which just makes it so much more difficult to
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produce the numbers that we need it makes it so much more difficult for those of us who don't want to get the corona virus because you know if you're going to immunize all vaccinate only half the world it's not going to solve this problem is it. well that's exactly right i mean we're already seeing at the moment mutant strains of course one of them's come from my own country but there's one from now we believe from south africa one from brazil the longer us allow this virus to run on checked in other parts of the world the more mutant varieties all of it will come back and around us so i mean on the one hand it's just simply unfair of course i mean nobody in europe would consider vaccinating the richest part of that population and keeping the rest of us in lockdown yet which perfectly happy to do that on a global basis or at least all governments are and i believe that's you know not ethical not right but i mean even if you just look at it purely selfishly and unless we reduce the back of the viruses spread everywhere it's going to come back
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and rebound illness potentially in varieties which are immune to the vaccine and we knew there was going to be this in justice that's why this kovacs system was set up of what happened to that. that's right and the kodak system has bought vaccines for lower income countries greece it will begin distributing those vaccines soon but it hasn't got enough money to buy a look at scenes it needs and frankly even if it did have the money the vaccines just simply don't exist at the moment so kovacs was invented for a great reason it was understood that if we gave this vaccine out in proportion to those who need it the most so family around the world at the same time that's the way you're going to cite most lives you're going to immunized those who are most at risk and it could save millions of lives compared to only allowing the rich to immunize their own populations 1st so it's a great idea the problem is that many rich countries like my own decided that they
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were going to jump the queue and simply by millions and millions of vaccines themselves so that there wouldn't be enough flexed on the market why why didn't they minority why can't the brits line up orderly like the germans did. it's a good question we've seen a lot over the last few years but. i mean they that they just decided they wanted you know if they wanted to vaccinate the whole british population funds then i think seemed pretty immune to the questions of global injustice it's not that they haven't given any money to kovacs they have they've given quite a lot to kovacs actually i think one of the problems with the british government particularly is it always stands behind the pharmaceutical industry some of the companies of which are based and regularly puts the returns that those companies make before the needs. of the population globally so the most recent has happened if i think i mean we only have a few seconds how do we solve this then is it
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a case of governments having to take over those patients from private pharma. precisely and let's bear in mind many of these vaccines these have been produced with public money some of being produced entirely with public money so the idea that you that private eyes that knowledge and allow those companies to make profits off it in coming years is just completely wrong this is a pandemic it's about people's health not about return to shareholders so the government should keep the patents share the technology and help countries around the world produce the manufacturing capability so that they can produce the amount necessary so every to end this virus it didn't global justice now thank you very much for pleasure. as part of the show where our science correspondent derek williams takes the reins and answers your questions on the coronavirus. what makes the new u.k. variant of the corona virus more contagious virus is evolved over time collecting
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genetic changes called mutations most of these changes don't make them more effective in some way and therefore pairs but every once in a while through sheer chance a variant like the one discovered in britain will acquire changes that give it advantages in this case they appear to have made it more transmissible so it's able to infect more people and to find out exactly what's going on at the molecular level scientists 1st had to look at exactly where changes occurred in the variance genome that made it different from earlier versions of source code to then they had to try to figure out how those genetic changes translated into changes in variant protein structures that could explain why people who get it are more contagious to enter cells sars 2 uses
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a structure called the spike protein those are those bits that stick out all over the surface of a coronavirus vats what it uses to latch on to specific receptive ears on a cell surface as it seeks to break in to make more of itself in the new variant investigators discovered 17 quite recent mutations and 8 of them affect the spike they change its molecular shape in different ways and it's likely that at least some of those changes make the variant better that latching on to receptive ears and if the spike fits the receptor more snugly the hypothesis goes it's probably better at infecting the. cell possibly a lot better for reasons that are less clear some of the mutations might also drive up viral loads in the throats and noses of people who are infected so so when they speak or cough they spread more of the virus to others those 2 aspects the experts
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say likely explain at least to some extent why the new variant is more transmissible. turk williams that if you've got a question just leave it on our new channel i'm ben physical and thanks for watching stay safe and i'll see you again sort of like. the. conflict zone with terms of the past year the e.u. and britain clinched a free trade deal for the post correctly deal now at least in the u.k. there are some hard realities to deal with why just this week for navigation in scotland is andrew bowing conservative m.p. and vice chairman of the conservative party line as far as job suso economical with the truth of money frick so many conflicts of. interest on t.w. . she hopes the only way she can. taddeo clegg
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supports belorussian activists who want to flee the country. their destination is neighboring lithuania. where they hope for a safe future far away from the police my lands and state oppression. from goods under. 60 minutes from d w. y subscribe to g.w. books you meet your favorite writer some. stewie claims he. did because of a school degree brooks. how does a virus spread. why do we have it and when we'll all miss out. just 3 of the topics covered and i'm weekly radio show it's called spectrum if you would
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like any information on the wrong direction or any other science topic you should really check out our podcast you can get it wherever you can get your podcast you can also find us at. science. might do it with very little approach and i understand that. it's not what we expected crystallizing be on your partners all year because all of the european union concerns all getting everything up and running is a little bit unfair it was in doubt right up to the last minute but on christmas eve the e.u. and britain clinched a free trade deal with the post directly below now at least in the u.k. there are some hard realities to deal with and plenty of shots of the trial my guest this week from aberdeen in scotland is andrew barley conservative m.p.
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i'm vice chairman of but conservative party was boris johnson so economical with the truth and why did he break so many called the. underbelly of welcome to conflict zone thank you very much for pleasure to be here i guess you can argue about whether britain's 11th hour free trade deal with the e.u. is good or bad but whatever it is why did the prime minister have to lie about it i'm thinking about he's flat out denial that that one long tara barrios associated with the deal. well i don't think that using phrases like allies and anybody helpful i mean what the prime minister is trying to explain is that this is a good deal for britain a good deal for the e.u. in the territories that was. far less of an obstruction to be the case
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we have gotten and all that the scaremongering and the stories about the cuban over the queues of kali and hold up a comma is not and we are proceeding at an early age and you're mature you know we want to see l'arche the great business and present peoples of both of our above our unions and i think especially with you you could even go so great a basis for last week or if i may say you pull a process over the fact of what he said which was on christmas eve there will be no palisade of paris and no known terrorist barriers no non-tariff barriers tom took mrs ned thought that simply wasn't true you know i would agree with that all there that there are of course that are about as the prime minister to say what he really said that's not what he said there were only said i don't need a you know i didn't know or he was once going to choose which is it i mean either he didn't know he wasn't telling the truth which was at the trial the prime minister's been absolutely clear all the way along was the time to get a deal that worked for the united kingdom as you're you know we got that the old
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deal it's good for business advice very good as a starting point for a referral for the relationship between european and and really independent so when i came to florida and the tower fires how to stop all are in place are not insurmountable that is what the prime minister was trying to say when he said there is no power stayed. higher to me they are surmountable we're working with business over qantas all part of the teething problems that some of them might be having at the minute and so that we can move on this new year a french cooperation between the e.u. in the u.k. well i hate to nit pick but he said there will be no palisade of terrorist and no known carriage barriers and we now have what retailers a calling the biggest imposition of red tape in 50 years on the. u.k. tax authorities have estimated that the cost of that for british companies will be around $7000000000.00 pounds annually so to say that there will be no non-tariff barriers i'm sorry to keep going on about this but i think the truth matters in politics what it what does it say about the government believes the false statement
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on its website especially when it's known to everyone that it is false it shows a degree of contempt for the british public doesn't think as i said nonsense i mean the prime minister was raised on the station nothing full of contemporary poetry to a really great deal of respect and and we trust the understand that the deal that we got was a deal that's good for business people great and and yes there are going to be eating problems and yes there is red tape and then and we're working very closely with and by the way with. organizations on the other side of the china within the european union to make sure that these obstructions such as they are are not in place for very long and the teething problems are more wrinkles are ironed out and we're able to continue really so astutely facing the european ip where before we left well let's talk about some of the teething problems as you call them a bit later but the fact is that the government has been less than candid over much of the bracks process hasn't it let's take the northern ireland protocol in the
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october 29th seen which mandated checks on goods going from great britain's in northern ireland because northern ireland is remaining inside the e.u. single market for goods 2 months later mr johnson insisted that the no checks why was that again ignorance or dishonesty that was needed to try and we were we were determined to make sure that when the united kingdom of britain northern ireland left the european even so as one and that's what we've done was to land in northern ireland the best of both worlds avoiding a hard border on the island of ireland i think it was great i was the last thing that anybody wanted and so the i hope you might want such a northern ireland remains in the us and your course going to vote so on elements of checks on trade in. northern ireland yes that was not what he said he denied it was what mr johnson actually said was there is no question of there being checks on goods between northern ireland and great britain or great britain in northern ireland and that was simply untrue wasn't it you know i wouldn't say it was untrue
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i think the person saying i have of course it's untrue it doesn't accord with the facts it's not i'm sure that it doesn't really this is self-esteem is the power i mean i think what we what we've achieved is get was with something which most people thought was unachievable nobody believes i'm not arguing about mathematically about you to leave the transition period i will go with northern ireland remaining part of the u.k. single market and the e.u. customs union without a hard border on the island about and with free flow and just about as freely as it or or we left the european you know i think that's a great success or 'd the british from having the european union compromise as well and we came to an agreement well i reached the u.k. one elaine and to respect your station or the republic of ireland over goods on the island i understand that you don't want to talk about the issue of truth and you'd much rather talk about other aspects of this deal but look what happens look at the
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us look at what happens when leaders no longer bother to distinguish between fact and fiction it can lead to massive social dislocation aren't you worried about that here in britain and i think comparing the situation in the nice change with the satiation the states might be getting a bit beyond ourselves i mean i think that there's really because of the lying isn't it this because of the lying the gone on in terms refusal to accept the truth and that i think that the largest party as well is a huge difference between trying to explain the complexities of the trade agreement between the united kingdom in the european union and accepting the results of a free fair and open democratic election which is what we've seen in the united states american i think i speak respect and. everybody in the conservative party and the government when i say we are looking forward to this well then seeing joe biden in the presidency of united states that this era. of lies deceit of the democratic process mean i say. france is mr barry there's a lot of people who trusted mr johnson have been badly let down haven't i the
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democratic unionist party in northern ireland said they were promised they'd be treated just like anywhere else in the u.k. and they want a year where we know i mean america the just finish the question can i just finish the question or year ago mr johnson told alfie unionists that no british conservative prime minister could or should sign up to any bracks deal that damaged the fabric of the union with regulatory checks and even customs controls between great britain and northern ireland and yet that's exactly what the northern ireland protocol did isn't it fact as part of the single market northern ireland has to follow strict e.u. regulations on food standards plant and animal health that's fact and that's the time electrically opposed to what mr johnson promised them report yes exactly yeah parametrically opposed no what the prime minister did achieve here g.p.
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i came to him leaving the european union as one united kingdom with the best of both worlds for northern ireland and the alternative was to leave northern ireland in a position with our border on the island of ireland or. we were almost in a situation preserve all about having to control almost every aspect of creation on the island of violence and no you telling me your be telling me yes you're telling me what he actually signed up to but that wasn't what he said he was going to sign up to that's my point so when mr johnson declared on december 24th we've taken back control of every jot and tittle whatever that means very jot and tittle of our regulations in a way that's complete and unfettered that once again wasn't true is that northern ireland is very much fatted by its obligation to abide by the rules of the e.u. single market at least for the next 4 years again that's fact. what we have managed to do we have managed to reach the european union as one you know i came to northern ireland alongside the rest of united kingdom of great britain and of
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course i know now and what we have achieved is something that most people thought was apology we've managed to do it with very little obstruction on trade we've managed to do it as one with a hard order on on the island of ireland and i was moving forward with that with a deal that allows us to to create a new relationship a friendship and cooperation something we can build on as we move forward this time a year ago this time 2 years ago people were questioning whether bracks it would even happen that we got the cross-wind fact that we're now left with no less a transition here with as good a deal as we have written and yes businesses in northern ireland who actually i think we have the best of both worlds is something i think we should be cheered and also that i think we should be critical about do you think that the hans is the reputation of the government and the prime minister when you just break a promise which you made to which do you pay in northern ireland and just brush over it you think other countries don't notice that i think what and hans's the
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position of the british government is as a demonstration that able to achieve what we have achieved in peacefully i'm with with the good intention leaving the european union with this trade deal something which as i keep saying if only a year ago were saying which is most of us right on the stand so walk away from the northern ireland deal and breach international law in the process not only produced outrage in britain and europe but also in the u.s. where you talk about the need for a u.s. trade deal and getting together with the new biden ministration doesn't exactly enhance mr johnson's reputation with that incoming administration has it wrong well we're. trapped she was the result of our getting another winter coat agree and the eventual deal with the european union. so you suppose that's right to you you don't have one of those around you because that's part of the art of all the characters as myth or whatever sounding that you will find on the thread longest article deals
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along been done i support the government all the way through in its position to go see a thing and that and it's catholics and trying to get a deal that works for ourselves and the european union and what we were talking about was something which other countries in the world have done on numerous occasions of course stop and control it with mediocrity and breaking international law but we pay much of it when it comes time and how do we manage to come to an agreement come to a deal which i think if you frankly yes and so shoddy was it that the government's chief law officer had to resign in protest or he was because he was going to be i think he had been a prisoner in. the service life as a law abiding country does and then living it you can know who's a friend an agreement with britain after this really valuable european this yeah yeah but after that because they wanted out of the deal. the government was really was playing hardball as many countries do when they're negotiating complex
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international agreements and indeed germany has done point kagan in the past the chief law officer resigned on principle of course i respect that the idea of the prison would break international law however it has not come to us and which is a very good thing in my eyes the deal was done and now i think we're in a very good position to move forward as i said in the build on our relationship a longstanding relationship allies france as we move forward and a shared object as we ourselves in europe moving toward much in the rule of law combating. campaigning free trade all the things that we share with your opinion the derailleurs conceit. let's talk about those teething problems which you mentioned those include empty shelves in some of the supermarkets in northern ireland which the government describes as teething problems that hasn't done anything to pacify the. cravat unionist party says geoffrey dollars isn't the leader of westminster said to know that on principle had ruined trade in northern ireland it was an insult to our intelligence to talk of achieving problem his
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colleague and pays a set the province had been screwed over by mr johnson this is another part of the deal that wasn't properly thought out was it about a restart teething problems the government is working very closely with the whole years and businesses that are seeking to transport are going to cross carriage the internet islands make sure that the scenes we saw in early january are answered just the markets are not repeated there is no reason for them to be any shortage of food stocks in northern ireland so might go as that. using gaping holes they were certain to ensure that the situation not arise again you know what we saw was there being as you say there's no reason why there should be empty shells but there were plenty of warnings not least from the national audit office back in november when it slammed the government for a shortage of customs progress i'm prepared border sites failure to build enough capacity in new custom software you report you so don't you well or there are
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obviously teething problems we are 'd going to want to you know they're going to say the inaudible or to 50 years are and it's a failure to pass properly is not teething problem the failure to plan properly and you will want about it you know i think what is clear is that we didn't know the situation regarding a trade deal until the very last minute of the 20 it was christmas eve and i believe that we are licensed i deal with the european union so the fact that people are criticising the under par in this on either the government or the european union customs officials in terms of getting everything up and running is a little bit unfair there were no the militia called considerably earlier than christmas eve we are aware that there are issues in terms of the stuff coming across the irish sea into northern ireland and what we none of us want to see every again and shells and markets. you know i think. we are very sure and certain the stuff we have taken since the early weeks trying to make sure that. the stuff gets
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not nolen means that we will not be seeing those scenes nobody wants to happen in this place about it was staggering to read mr johnson's christmas eve speech that his practice it still means certainty for business from financial services to our world leading manufacturers in fact there's no certainty it over business financial services that because. there's almost nothing in the deal about them and mr johnson is have regretted that at least didn't he said that the odds fail to meet examinations in that sector so certainly no certainty there in fact the old tape was came in the losses that hit the city of london the 1st full day of trading this year i think the prime minister was saying on the 24th which is what this deal does is guarantee 17 prepare we are having a united kingdom where relationship will be with your opinion for the business can go on plan for the next few years and decades. as we move forward the prime
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minister saying about harley i'm sorry consigns were there nearly 6000000000 euros worth of e.u. share dealing shifted right out of london on the 1st day of trading and into other european capitals the chief executive of acme jane said it's not big banks it's banks and it's gone the city has lost its european chef business has a hefty cut in tax receipts for the government and some of that prediction didn't make it its way into the cracks it is. prospectus did it before the referendum. chris there are obviously areas of the deal maybe we might just always have gone further and we might may have liked to see in financial services included in terms of the overall i'd be able what we achieve with what people nobody expects hardly anybody anywhere expects the scales are cheap and the prime minister says if you stop and say for business that's exactly what we did it says neither know what our relationship with the content of your will be for the next year and probably ask you that if the markets are very good place to start with the government they don't
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know if they don't know because the e.u. hasn't accepted the equivalence between britain's financial services and its own so you have no idea whether they're going to do that and perhaps the only certain thing is what the office of budget what the people respect but i think it's an issue and i've just been at the office of budget responsibility says you're going to take a 4 percent hit to g.d.p. over the next 10 years that's the only certainty that's coming up really well i mean the only certainty is that in the making accommodation for the millionaires barons to be better to be proven wrong in some respects indeed i can't even remember the last and the only arbitration that was and anyway near correct last 10 years the united in the fact is in your opinion you know it's ethical or. sector that they would be coming off their nose at us by their faith relationship between the london stock exchange right promoter of speech and injury and will continue to be so and i look forward to the european union accepting that accepting
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a quick words is beneficial not just to us that is well well it's good of you to tell them what's beneficial for them but they may well have other ideas about it as they have done throughout the negotiations over this comes as the new study from the london school of economics predicts british exports to the e.u. will nose dive by around a 3rd over the next 10 years with total u.k. trade falling by 13 percent those dark predictions of backed up by figures for last year compiled by the financial times released in december they show that u.k. goods. exports have lagged behind peer countries and 2020 in both the e.u. and other markets. are always commissary hardest to build up our manufacturing sector and to increase exports from the united kingdom to be dire predictions from the london school of economics from the financial times and others were there things that the same people that were predicting dark consequences on the day that we left the european union last year they were predicting
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a line to go and somehow become a pariah state in the north sea that's absolutely not the case this year we have demonstrated course to call $26.00 hosting the g 7 that we are a leading player on the world stage and we will continue to be so working with our friends and allies in the european union yes of course we want to export more yes of course we want to move ahead of its legality exports to the united states americans should be building more british things in the absolutely and we should be selling them abroad and that's not just it's not just. predictions just about in the 6 months to october u.s. imports from the u.k. fell by almost 30 percent that's almost twice the drop recorded by germany and spain so there's clearly nervousness about trading with britain at the moment isn't that one hope that people in the countries in the world and companies across the world overcome nervousness in the months ahead as they see. blossom between ourselves and the european union they see that there is nothing but nothing has
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changed within the united kingdom in terms of our issue to be an outward facing exports a free trading nation and that is exactly what we are going to be focusing on as we move out of this period of the pandemic and all the rest of the over the next few months and years is a fact the having sovereignty is little more than a myth as former deputy prime minister michael heseltine said recently sovereign in charge control regained none of that creates a single job one pounds worth of invest. any rise in living standards that's what he said he's right isn't it and that's what the figures already are showing all of those there's an argument about whether a country is so vernon or an argument about how you develop the economy create jobs we can do both then by britain has achieved sovereignty it's independence from the european union now our focus is on building off our economy recovering from coronavirus creating jobs and the prime minister is
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a leveling off across the united kingdom and that is very much where our focus is now that you are not until late just because one has become sovereign does not mean that was suddenly a choice exceed in every other aspect and we are determined you can get your voters back you've got a 25 percent quota transfer over the next 5 years far less than you originally demanded and you fishermen are not accusing you rightly of a trial on pay why people who may promise is going to tell you how understand i understand the frustration i represent exigence in the northeast and i represent i understand very much the concerns in the fishing industry and yes we've got a 25 percent accord with transfer over the next 5 years i give us the opportunity to build up our fishing industry so that in 5 years' time when we become independent coastal states taking our seat at the table and negotiate access courses and all the rest of it with european union with norway with iceland that we will be doing that on the same basis as all the others so yes i understand the
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frustration in the beijing industry it's not what they expected on day one but we have now the prospect of years sign of becoming an independent sovereign coast state and nice what we're working towards next we can build our own fishing industry be ready to retire wards of the sea of opportunity that lies with us for 2025 homers it wasn't what they expected because it wasn't what you told them to expect it was never going to happen that way was it because some of that sovereignty that you won through leaving the european union you bargained away in the day. well didn't you as you always do with sovereignty you bargain that's the way sovereignty is bargain by britain's membership of the w t l the world health organization nato it's not an absolute is it sovereignty no it's not the british people but it was hard to an absolute it was sold as an absolute what the british people voted for in june 26th in was to have control over their borders and their laws and where british money british tuskers money was
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indeed being nice but we're cheap through reading your opinion and leaving the transition agreement with this deal and in 5 years time british fisherman will have control over more stocks of fish and they have ever had since we 1st joined the european community as it was in the 1970 s. it was only then by the way that the europeans even created a common fisheries policy so yes we're going to have to bide our time and be patient the less like you don't do it a little dust over a $100000000.00 times in building up our fishing industry so it can reap the rewards when the day comes that we take our seat as an independent. i would look in coastal states in the negotiations of your enormous well your currents and your businesses aren't buying that the national federation of fisherman's organizations told mr johnson recently it would be much better if you with humility and on a state that word again humility and honestly conceded that you tried but failed
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rather than implying that you've handed us the keys of our liberation when you haven't so there's a long way to go to convince your clients that you've actually got what you say you've got because in all the wrong and now they're not buying now there is a long way to go i guess now and i get the frustration i speak to them on european daily basis so i understand what we have to do to make sure that we retain the trust of fishermen and the fishing industry in the united kingdom but it's all the banks are saying that we have got this deal across the line. we are still able to trade and sell british pressure in the european union would otherwise be the 85 percent want to transfer by the way what the e.u. were initially asking for a troll in 5 years' time given we have you know better of this conflict we always say which our own people say ruined the british fishing industry of last 4 years i think overpriced and we will return benefits in a few years all right anger about it's been great having you all come for example
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to. the to. go wrong and. a and she hopes to. taddeo clegg us supports belorussian activists who want to flee the country. their destination is neighboring lithuania. where they hope for a safe future far away from police violence and state oppression. and some good sponger of. 30 minutes mon d w. a tragic amount
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a rarely very old people here these are young kids are just kids guatemalans violent. a drug chill and terrorize with no fear to consequences drugs are the good years boys deaf the kids are asked. why don't they see it another way. in 75 minutes on d w. life on earth one of the coming to an end. but gigantic coincidence. bam-bam previously the earth was just a mess the chemistry lab i thought mission. where the impossible but.
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a room in the world. a constant. stream. the over the years. such. as mrs w. news and these are our top stories joe biden has taken office as the 46th united states of president signing executive orders including rejoining the paris climate accord and stepping up measures to fight the coronavirus pandemic and comma harris has become the 1st woman to be vice.
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