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tv   37 Grad  Deutsche Welle  January 30, 2021 3:45am-4:16am CET

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could this be real how is it possible that a human being off lashon blood should have to die in such a pitiful fashion. german occupation murdered 90 percent of the jews here. is heartbreaking and if you can imagine that not only does the wall go through the heart of the city right in the middle of a street it stops but on the other side of that wall. starvation disease and very soon after deportation to death.
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the. good news. for security reasons i order that the ghetto of warsaw be demolished all utilize it will building parts and other materials of any value to 1st be salvaged an overall plan for the raising of the ghetto is to be submitted to me we must in any event ensure that the living space occupied until now by 500000 subhumans and in no way fit for habitation by germans disappears completely and that warsaw the city of 1000000 always the center of corruption and revolt is reduced in size you are rights fear as s. . ghettos scholarship against.
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through at the same time as an organized resistance group was preparing to fight. the jews in the ghetto or going into hiding. slipped the. yes they shamble to go i went into that bunker in january 43 and in april the uprising broke out that my brothers left to take part in the us rising this bunker was built around a basement that had been dug deeper with boarded up sides the dug out earth was piled up all around and it provided some kind of insulation when the fire started everything in the neighboring basements collapsed and burned by you with this bunker survived. an entire remember 943 seeing uncanny clouds of smoke rising from the north from
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the poor nazi fighting in the gaps arc of against something was happening bouncers . there is no longer a jewish quarter of warsaw. you can stroll s. as group in fear. for them thak are set clear on your body it still pains me that after all these years i never got to mourn my family i never even had time for that i lost everyone here i had 6 brothers and a sister parents yet i'm the only one who survived it all i was left as a witness without me there'd be nobody. going everywhere the value of life is in
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bearing witness to musician yes. geishas street concentration camp was set up to hold people needed to demolish the ghetto yorkie it wasn't any blown up with dynamite but also dismantled it was completely plundered and that camp was how people died they're. not there when you get the ruins of the ghetto the nazis wanted to create a park for germans were rich hence the demolition of. don't reality i was to be covered over with off of them you know i'm turned into a garden paradise for only i ski over. the intention was to destroy the camp of of what was formerly poland
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that was the main intention to destroy be idea alone of a capital because there was no more poland. grab europe i spent almost a year on the area inside there was a whole network of helpers if things got dangerous someone would come by and take you by the hannibal to. the mean time his it was here on the 1st of august 1044 the uprising broke out twice i lived through the burning of warsaw no so sure but. the co of the drugs and all around the walls were almost red hot. and people were being herded along the ground or the front both sides of the streets burning debris was
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coming down but all that shit you need your saw was on fire to is that good and you could feel lighter shit to what the the car by us about sherman. after liberation in 1905 you couldn't live in warsaw really. and slowly trying to. build and then getting. again undermined by soviet occupation and oppression.
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firstly it's difficult to imagine what was here before the war this area has changed so much certain streets and squares ceased to exist names were changed directions were altered for no more than a dozen or so original buildings have survived all you can i share. the frustration of the evil of them you know this area has many layers underneath the ground is a 2nd layer which shows itself when workers dig down to lay pipes in laos a business which then the remains of the past are uncovered. difficult will fold given the good chance. that they will get gone $949.00 of the architect thought than law had created a housing estate which was to be a memorial space or is it
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a simple medium and that. is a push that was only a pull in the nothing what was unique was that the bricks of the buildings were made from rubble on top of whatever else that was in the rubble including human remains of the group the work of shuttle missions trying to commute to get me. almost to the building stand on concrete foundations made using whether or not they rise from these strange little hills that stands out because warsaw is a flat city. people calling me and saying there are spirits in my apartment i'm in the old ghetto can you do something. well i have that that's beyond my competence but i did go and i said sounds because if a person feels i can make them for if i go to someone for more peace and i'm happy
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to do so. place chunk only similar leased line shows where modern off scott street or
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whatever your building was here on the corner number 10 that yes there are plenty as on this map as marks the location of your foma so grim housing it on the current image egypt you know it was on this street tell his family intersection you yeah that's where your home used to say that if you don't know what you are i was born here.
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the memory of the ghetto is beginning to really return into the memory into the soul of war some. gift people a chance to remember and chances are they will remember. it on 1000th the anniversary of the what you know uprising while we're moving farther away from the event actually the number of people coming is growing that's a sign of hope.
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i. i. i. i.
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how is this dolphin doing and what is this polar bear feeling right now unfortunately we can't just ask someone. so how can you measure animal wellbeing. researchers are developing methods to find out when are animals doing
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well. to the world to doing. 30 minutes on d w. i self to. live on clay. and here spider web. great thinking in the world in a more poetic way. meet the artist. interview with. 60 minutes. hi neal and i'm game if you know that 17 trillion land of them are killed worldwide sure so that we can eat them but it's not just the animals of all suffering it's the environment we went on a journey to find ways out of the meat machine if you want to know how awake lifted the priest and the whole just changed into he says listen to our podcast on the
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clean fence. to play. this is a deadly news live from birth in germany bans travel from countries hardest hit by new variants of the coronavirus government says it has no other choice to prevent a surge in new infections also on the program. european union approves the astra zeneca coronavirus vaccine after breaking his brain might the jab for adults it's as if the speed of the delays to vaccine deliveries. and portugal's parliament
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votes to legalize assisted suicide will take a closer look at the euthanasia debate in the store actually catholic nation. i'm actually held welcome to the program germany is imposing a travel ban on countries most affected by new coronavirus variants the measure has come into effect just hours ago and will remain until at least the 17th of february berlin says the restrictions are necessary to prevent a surge in new infections. the fear of new coronavirus mutations is real in germany it's also one of the main concerns for german authorities to prevent them from spreading frosts in the country but government has now announced new travel restrictions the interior ministry has imposed an entry ban until the 17th of
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february for travelers from countries that are particularly affected by them ireland portugal south africa the u.k. and a swat team. mutations have not hit germany as hard as other countries but a radio hospital in berlin was forced to halt admissions after several cases were fond of the mutation 1st discovered in britain and health officials are stressing that the situation could deteriorate. also we have to assume that of the more contagious variants continue to break in this country they will lead to even more cases in the near future and the situation will probably get worse we must work together to prevent. just one downturn is misleading. the travel ban is seen as a step in that direction but it is still unclear how effective it could be. the ban takes hold just when transmission rights appear to be slowing in germany for the
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1st time in months the country's 7 day incidence has fallen below 100 or 100000 residents so why impose the travel ban now current restrictions appear to be working he's a deadly political correspondent hunts but. well the answer to that is fear fear of the new mutations in the virus the ones that were 1st detected in south africa in great britain and in brazil and are said to be a lot more infected with their 3rd to spread a lot more quickly than the corona virus variants that we've had to deal with recently until now and we have seen in countries such as portugal that there have been explosions of infections in ireland 2 and earlier in the united kingdom so the fear that these virus variants could enter germany is the reason why this travel ban was not posed of course there have been similar sorts of restrictions in place for dozens of countries already for many months it is not easy to travel around the
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world as everyone who has tried to do that knows there are restrictions such as. isolation that one has to go into quarantine rules or possibly presenting a negative test so this is the highest possible restriction travel from these countries into germany is going to be banned now from saturday for 2 weeks or so. in berlin well meanwhile france has also announced international travel restrictions starting sunday people arriving on non-essential travel from outside the e.u. will be entry the government says that it's responding to the virus variants 1st to take it in britain and south african countries also increasing its internal for spring chickens non-essential shops are to close and police checks on break is something increased. and not like if you also comes into force at 6 pm.
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they you commission has approved astra zeneca has corona virus vaccine for use across the e.u. this after the european medicines agency gave the go ahead to allow inoculations the people of the age of 18 u.s. facing a storm of criticism for the slow pace of its back same rollout. this is the 3rd vaccine to get approval from the e.u. following shots from biotech pfizer and modern the a.m.a.'s executive director explained why the body gave astra zeneca the great loss the recommendation to approve the aust as the seneca vaccine is based on that data that shows that the vaccine offer its protection against cope with 19 with a reassuring safety profile while the 1st 2 approve both were for messenger r.n.a. foxy means the astra zeneca vaccine is based on another technology it's an at the you know virus based vaccine this this means spoke about 15 uses a common virus from the virus family that has been modified to carry
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a portion of the covert 19 corona virus called the 5 protein. i think of our respective vaccines are easier to handle than m.r. in a box scenes in terms of transport and storage and this should simplify the latest sticks of rolling the vaccine out across the e.u. and hopefully it can provide a boost to vaccinations in the member states. well but you will prevail comes amid a bitter dispute between the e.u. and astra zeneca of the delays to the delivery of vaccine supplies brussels accuses the pharmaceutical company of failing to fill its contractual obligations the company says it's working hard to overcome production problems but that its deal with the e.u. requires it to make its best efforts to supply vaccines with no clear delivery timeline redacted copy of the contract has now been made public. this contract is at the heart of an ongoing feud between the european commission
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and special swedish family company astra zeneca over the lace and vixen deliveries the e.u. has made the contract public but many of the crucial parts have been blacked out but astra zeneca a scandal say members of the european parliament. the phone your problems are simply not acceptable that pharmaceutical companies which gets a lot of your money tax prio money. i'm not really. it's those who all of the information last week astra zeneca shocked e.u. states by announcing significant delays in its 16 deliveries to the bloc especially because the e.u. has paid hundreds of millions of years to produce projection and because supplies to the u.k. do not face the same shortages the dispute prompted the e.u. to introduce a scheme to monitor vaccine experts but the e.u.
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commission emphasizes this is not an expert ban we're not in competition or in a race against any country the only race we are in is against the cyrus this comes as the block is facing criticism for its low tech syndrome which so it is states are relieved that the vaccine has been recommended for use in the blog this by the difficulties with astra zeneca it's a 38 seen to gain approval. now some more promising news on the vaccine front u.s. drug novak says that its vaccine in development provides robust protection against non thing a british trial of $15000.00 patients found the drug to be almost 90 percent effective the shoppers nearly as successful in preventing the u.k. variant of the virus but the job was only 50 percent effective against the new spreading in south africa. with that here's a look at some of the other developments in the pandemic right now in u.s.
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drug market johnson and johnson says it single shot vaccine is more than 70 percent effective against the corona virus the company will apply for regulatory approval in the u.s. next week the famous u.s. coachella music festival has been canceled by local authorities in california united nations has called the 20202020 rather the worst year interest in history with global losses topping one trillion euros and theaters have begun pre-opening in romania as authorities coronavirus restrictions in the capital book arrest and other cities. portugal's parliament has voted to legalize euthanasia the bill passed by a large majority allows assisted suicide for terminally ill patients it's to workwise the approval of the conservative president if he signs the bill into law portugal will become the 4th country to legalize euthanasia the move faces sharp criticism from the religious and conservative groups. for the year
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this is the right response from our democracy. to the fundamentalism and to the strategies of fear that some wanted to use to constrain these legislative process. you crazy. this is a mistake because it permits killing people who could be saved through advances in medicine or due to a change of will. it's a mistake because it allows propaganda corresponding to a culture of death and suicide are going to. be. a reporter federica joins me with more frederick assisted suicide is a very polarizing topic as we just heard how did portugal get to this decision well anthony as in other parts of the world and europe where this topic is being debated
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it was a decade long discussion there were demonstrations over the past is with advocates supporting the idea that this practice would allow people to who are terminally ill to avoid needless suffering and on the other hand many opponents who feared that it would encourage vulnerable people to. decide to end their lives and that of course is the fact that you know catholics ism is prevalent in portugal and it firmly rejects rejects use uneasy as as a crime nevertheless a poll last year showed that 60 percent of portuguese people were actually supporting this bill and it also found big support in parliament now it's up to the portuguese president to to decide in the coming weeks whether to make this into a law or to veto it or ask for him and so what exactly does the draft law in title so it would legalize both use uneasy and position assisted suicide and the
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difference there is the different level of involvement of the doctor in the 1st case euthanasia doctor administers a lethal drug to the patient in the 2nd case the patient takes a lethal drug under monitor medical supervision and monitoring and most practices would be allowed under the. but under strict circumstances they would be applicable to people over 18 who are ill and suffering from lasting and i'm bearable pain and it will be limited to portuguese nationals or residents in order to avoid for people coming from other countries to get to see this practice their what's the state of legality of. europe what so there are similar debates that have been going on in several european countries right now there are 3 countries that allow both use an easy and assisted suicide those are the netherlands belgium and luxembourg
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and then there are other countries that have some degree of assisted death for example here in germany passage euthanasia is legal that means withdrawing from medication at the end of a patient's life when they are terminally ill and in their us also here germany is discussing whether to introduce legislation to make assisted suicide legal so it's an ongoing debate. over europe's federica bet you thank you so much thanks. to german football in stuttgart hosted monts in the bundesliga friday night fixture . support of diversity on and off the pitch. 55 minutes to get on. such a collage of. us. went on to win this one.
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what do you do if you're an olympic skiing hope you can get to the slopes because of the pandemic well 14 year old george brown has the. he's building zinah mini slope in his back garden in england after a flurry of snow is goal is to make the 2026 winter olympics he's also been busy training in the garden even when there is not a steady cash. or restaurants in new york city are set to welcome back for indoor dining starting on valentine's day in his latest briefing new york governor andrew cuomo said restaurants can reopen the inside spices that 25 percent capacity from february 14th and the if prices continue to fall restaurants and have tried to stay afloat on and delivery as well as outdoor dining. halls was once
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a piece into all of the pandemic. you're watching datable the news from the business is up next remember to keep up with all the latest stories from around the world for that matter on our website at www dot com you can also follow us on twitter and instagram handle in a day is at news and i'm anthony howard in berlin for me in the team thanks for watching. the fight against the coronavirus 10 damage. has the rate of infection been developing what does the latest research say. information and contacts the coronavirus not day 19. on t w. e b a gemini with the name.

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