Skip to main content

tv   Hart aber fair  Deutsche Welle  April 28, 2021 7:00am-8:00am CEST

7:00 am
cut. cut cut. cut cut. cut cut cut. this is deja vu news live from berlin a race against time as emergency cope with 9000 medical supplies arrive in india hospitals are in dire need of oxygen and intensive care beds as the number of patients surges and india's official death toll now tops 200000 also coming up. the leaders of divided cyprus are meeting in india a meeting in geneva talks there hoping to find common ground before resuming peace negotiations that have been stalled for years.
7:01 am
arjuna mohammad welcome to the program international aid supplies are arriving in india as of battles another wave of covered 19 infections ventilators and oxygen were flown in from the u.k. and germany says it will be sending medical equipment in the coming days and he has confirmed the death toll is now climbing to around 200000 hospitals are struggling to cope with the tracing number of cases and turning patients away authorities us founding to get equipment to those who need it the most as well. in some indian hospitals the oxygen supply has run out. people who might have survived the disease are dying as a result. there's no oxygen in all of town.
7:02 am
my mother was admitted 3 days ago i was told she was fine and recovering all the tests were done then last night they said they didn't have any more oxygen she passed away. hospital's an i.c.u. units across the country are overwhelmed after weeks of a sharp rise in cases the health care system is collapsing. oxygen has become the most precious of commodities. i'm buying or to going to put it toward your order of the federal government or that level or. they are lowering the oxygen level one. but it needs to be higher. so this is a problem. with oxygen and hospital beds running out the government is scrambling to get equipment to the areas that are hardest hit.
7:03 am
the have compressed oxygen that's moving across the country using the country's very basis to get it to the places that need it the most emergency supplies from the u.k. have begun arriving and more help as promised from abroad to be gets hit after the final details have been clarified with the indian side the 1st shipment should be on its way in the next few days but in the meantime many indians are left to fend for themselves. doing all they can to care for loved ones some dry for hours in search of oxygen. by going on that i have come from very far to collect oxygen from my father. that i'm scared that although the oxygen is available today what will we do for it's not available tomorrow. but don't tell how to arrives on a larger scale many people in india almost gasping for air.
7:04 am
daily spoke to dr krishna would i have kumar director of the if you can invest the global health innovation center in durham north carolina he explained what's gone wrong with india's health care system we should remember that the indian the health system is under-resourced to begin with that there's about 4 percent of g.d.p. that's spent on as mental health services and health expenditures while the global average is closer to 10 percent so there's not a lot of capacity to start with and what we saw after the wave in the fall were really several months that should have been time for preparation and in fact were wasted as time of complacency of indifference and we saw a very large religious gatherings go forward we thought election rallies being held that turned into super spreader events so this was really a task for a fee in the making that could have been avoided right now people are dying because they can't access the basics whether it's medical oxygen or a hospital bed so the ability to ramp up act immediately is really
7:05 am
critical to save lives today and tomorrow so the more supplies that we can. the more capacity that we can help to support is what the world needs to be doing at the same time the way we're going to turn the corner over the several weeks from now is really to make sure we're reducing the infection rate and taking real public health measures to try to bring down. the amazing spike that we've been that we've seen in cases over the last several we. well here are more dates on the pandemic hong kong will reopen bars and nightclubs at the end of the month for people who have received their 1st vaccine dose it comes as authorities try to boost a sluggish take up of vaccines and israel has announced plans to reopen for tourism vaccinated tourists can travel into groups next month and individuals will be allowed to enter in july and let's take
7:06 am
a look at other stories making headlines around the world thousands of people have been protesting in chad against a military takeover offer the death of president idriss deby at least 3 people were killed the transitional gentile led by deadly son has promised an inclusive national dialogue but protesters are calling for a return to civilian rule. somalia's president mohamed of the lucky for marjoe has dropped a bit to extend his term in office by another 2 years he made the announcement after 2 key states rejected the extension earlier far modulus efforts to prolong his time had sparked clashes between rival political fracs factions within the security forces in the capital mogadishu. around 200 migrants have been rescued in the mediterranean by the ocean rescue ship they were found on overcrowded boats off the coast of libya when the vessel picked up distress calls that's according to the age group s.o.s.
7:07 am
that is her army. chile's president sebastian pinera has signed a law allowing people to withdraw up to 10 percent of their privately held pension funds it's the 3rd time chile has approve such a measure to ease hardship caused by the pandemic earlier the congress passed the bill by a large majority. now inutile makers have voted on a post break the trade agreement between the european union and the u.k. even though many are dissatisfied with the deal it's expected to get the green light on wednesday when the results are announced the vote was delayed because london has yet to fully implement custom checks in northern ireland one of the most contentious issues of the devil. the new normal one form after the other after the other after the other all too often a confused glance and they transporting reg's. this company delivers groceries to
7:08 am
northern ireland supermarkets most of the meat and vegetables come from within the united kingdom but they still need customs documentation. whenever you look at the amount of paperwork that's associated with one of those commodities which. documentation is a problem one of those $3400.00 lengths truckstop custom checks between britain and northern ireland are an unfortunate result of bragg's it but so far full customs checks have not been applied jus to a transition period in place. here 6 separate markets a lot of what's come from j.b. to northern ireland simply wouldn't have got here we were seeing empty shelves and that would have brought all sorts of problems within the province with the worst still to come the british government unilaterally extended the transition period for traders until the end of summer without consulting brussels and against the
7:09 am
wishes of the e.u. . if the e.u. is going to be very very dogmatic and you can't bring british sausages into. then frankly i'm going to have to take further steps but the rules on the northern ireland issue of bonding the e.u. has already taken legal steps many in the european parliament are skeptical of the british government especially the center right conservative block they voice their mistrust ahead of tuesday's vote. in b.c. the northern ireland a practical implementation and how johnson behaves the message is i don't care i don't care even about my signature european commission president on the line called on lawmakers to ratify the post break the trade deal but at the same time hinted at possible sanctions and let me be very clear we do not want to have to use these
7:10 am
tools but we will not hesitate to use them if necessary. many lawmakers were reluctant to ratify the deal but reluctance to compromise on both sides does not help those delivering goods to northern ireland the paperwork is only said to get worse they're hoping to see a little more cooperation to help find solutions which will work for the future of northern ireland u.n. secretary general antonenko terence's holding meetings with leaders of divided cyprus in geneva cyprus has along ethnic lines the decades the 2 sides are hoping to find common ground and resume formal peace talks that have told. time seems to have come to a standstill and for russia it's largely greek population fled during turkey's invasion of cyprus in 1974 the once popular tourist destination has been stripped
7:11 am
of life ever since in a nearby village. east out a living from the arid landscape the farmer is disappointed that peace talks between the turkish and greek parts of cyprus have been unsuccessful all these years. we want the same opportunities that the e.u. and the rest of the world offer the greek cypriots the sanctions against us should be lifted and we should be recognized as an independent state. the president of turkish controlled northern cyprus arison ta tower and turkey's president aired a one both want a 2 state solution that would former allies the deficient of the island the un and the e.u. favor a federal solution with 2 states under a central government. to. take a different position. and position based on a 2 state solution for health
7:12 am
a century we have been negotiating. but leftist groups recently took to the streets to demonstrate for a federal system they want to see cyprus united and anchors sway over the island curbed the turkish cypriots in the north are divided. the few border crossings between the north and the south are closed because of the coronavirus pandemic un peacekeepers have patrolled the ceasefire line for decades . anger over deadlock negotiations is also evident in the greek part of the island. the current government. from corruption to environmental destruction to. peace talks then. people on both sides of the divide are united in their frustration with their
7:13 am
leaders. this is and of course. disillusionment has grown over the past years and expectations are extremely low for a few people expect the cyprus dispute to be resolved many don't even know that talks are being held. but those talks will have to be successful for a life to return to the abandoned streets of the russia. now in football premier league side chelsea drew with real madrid in their 1st semifinal match in spain chelsea struck only through christian put a chip but by the half hour mark the score was level at $11.00 thanks reales karim benzema their next match is on may 5th at stamford bridge in england. and in women's football song a bomb buster has made history becoming the 1st woman to coach the french women's champions in the on. a former player for france previously coached at leon academy her 1st task is to defend the club's domestic title currently leon is 2nd in the
7:14 am
standings with 5 matches to go the powerhouse has won the last 14 french league titles. and to some spectacular images of a phenomenon that lasted so far several days here the superman added just a little extra to the star alliance of the world's greatest cities here it is illuminating rome istanbul and london when the full moon occurs during the runes closest approach to it is a super moon and then appears larger and is more visible and if you've missed this one you can see the next super moon and know about 4 weeks time. you're watching the unions here's a reminder of our top story we're following for an emergency supplies are arriving in india as it battles a catastrophic ways of cava time to infections with more than 200000 official deaths the country is now enjoying its darkest chapter of the pandemic.
7:15 am
and reminder you can find much more news and analysis and video on our website that w. dot com up next is dr phil taking a look at the return used in the chernobyl area and we have the hard facts watch and also using. the green. army of people on the green french and so we're. joined pretty deep dive into the green transformation. to get.
7:16 am
i am. i am what. i am i have. a hand i have. got one point i want. to get good. good good good good good good how what he and prays ashleigh does to the accident or rather the catastrophe that took place was the biggest technological
7:17 am
disaster in human history. the accident affected all of ukraine. all of the systems in russia and the u.s.s.r. as a user of this from georgia and other countries to your deluded so great so in my opinion with the people who contains the damage actually saved the whole world at the. the opposite deals my devoted my life to building power stations in nuclear
7:18 am
reactors. with a. noble reactor was the last i've built. i knew i wish i knew for many years i tried to forget it it was
7:19 am
a childhood trauma and i didn't tell anyone about it. i'm still afraid. it still hasn't got the sound that you shot it. should know most of the chernobyl disaster still affects people. people who are suffering through from dealing with only serious people who are dying. of there since i came back the doctors did their best to help me. yeah i thought. i had 2 strokes here and so the blood vessels in my head were damaged by the accident the flu and more and more of.
7:20 am
several deaths from it torques me alive one night philonous horrible memories of chernobyl come to me and i can't fall asleep because it keeps haunting me every day as monk was. according to your. brother. robert am. i am. not am i am perfect i am. but i also got a sunny come to the book and so on the day of the disaster. i woke up in the mornings when it was a friday and i had school that day in a queue of obey i went to school as usual and the gun you know it did him but on the way to school i saw lots of ambulances and machines washing the streets with
7:21 am
some chemical some kind of foam that is the most course and it looked like snow all over the street it was foam a chemical yes this was unusual. they usually just use water treatment soon the classic focus of the mind. that was book you earlier. and when i got there no one was around the school was closed and i didn't understand why. there was no announcement that there was no school or you wouldn't have no decision. in the day you and the when i got to school the door was closed hug the hordes there was no one outside i stood there for a few minutes and knocked on the door. then they opened the door and they let me in . i went to my classroom and so kids they are. somewhere crying because their parents were on duty at the reactor that night and they didn't come
7:22 am
home. and i love them. but i don't know where the church numbers guys. go i only found out about the accident at the turn noble station 3 or 4 days later when they had to tell the whole world about it from the benefit of people merely because the radiation had already reached sweden i said therefore i was up or with the sheriff. i mean we all had no idea about it neither the army nor the civilians. movies of. there was a call the roof of reactor 4 is on fire stands the station was secured by a military firefighting unit. if a nuclear station is on fire that's the biggest emergency there is and was that beautifully a little dupri the 1st to arrive were to fire fighting units who were a 5 minute drive away and they went right to work to be
7:23 am
a women me and they were the 1st ones to make it to the reactor when you know. every single one of them died just to. see who. could of course all the people working there they were so horrible. none of them survived obviously none of them survived. and you look i don't know what i slept for the 1st time. when we ate for the 1st time. and you know i can't remember i only remember the young men the soldiers coming in with burns and we thought there are going to the helicopter you want to keep. your is he going that's all we could think of a hot meal gonna look how you did none of us knew what to do so we didn't know what you watch radiation was one of us had ever seen such a thing it was like we were at war. so tragic so horrific
7:24 am
a ship got what i want in the so many people i'm so much chaos there were people on the floor but it's so many people everywhere for how you have city you understand. yes nozzles are also i knew the reactor had exploded and that radiation began to spread all around into the air. when radiation rises in the air it's like detonating an atomic bomb the shockwave collapsed the reactor roof and destroyed the reactor which as you know made the graphite fly all the way to reactor 3 that there was graphite everywhere spores. were producing much that's got from the bomb the night between april 25th and 26th i was operations commander of the brigade that is. we are poised.
7:25 am
really bored i had a whole control room with instruments but our instruments didn't show anything because i've gone through they didn't show that the radiation was increasing so we didn't know what things were. being sure you can argue genes for sure that when we went outside we saw that around the puddles left by the rain some substance that accumulated in the door. now you. know i figured naturally that it was pollen from the surrounding trees. here. were offended at the person i actually think it was nuclear fallout and when they were pregnant or next person not the time we thought it was calling dog and the truth is neither regional a cheer nor the brigade commander told us there had been an accident at the reactor . you said should you not don't show up for those live audience for.
7:26 am
this moment you know the foreman found me and told me to move out so i went. i had no idea the situation was so bad that the radiation level was so hard with them to know who said anything everything was top secret somewhere we were the greatest country we had to catch up with and beat america and so on the. market by the government gave us no information nothing on the radio or t.v. only rumors iraq's more sinister there was a malfunction some said there was an explosion a fire in the locker of the flat earth where we had no idea what happened you know that's another who were given no information so we decided to go ourselves and see what was happening on the back of the little. micro day. my father took all the clearances for kids. my mom was busy at home. and we went to the
7:27 am
stadium and prepared. it was a fairly open space and we could see the reactors have there so much. and i saw. because it was daytime i could really see the flames as you noted but i saw the smokes. black smoke coming out. and i saw lots of helicopters and planes and cars and military men on the way to the reactor and shots of our show you it was then that we realized. i disaster had occurred to get us on. the ground would be your friend should know when we got to turn on the set me straight to city hall. it's city hall they told me your mission is to check the courses and prevent any disorder shouting disturbances and so on. skirts this
7:28 am
pretty secure the area but what does that mean. with means we checked vehicles going in and out of the escorted buses carrying the evacuated people and children of the abuser and we caught looters. we supposed old enough to be assisted me he's did to me 3 because it will be limited to one of. the news a quarter that's made up but if it only has a good local i only remember being in prepared nothing before that and also my whole life began there. that is i went to kindergarten and school there i grew up there until the disaster happened. all the families living in town had
7:29 am
something to do with the reactor some worked there some worked in town in the schools but they all had some connection it was the town's whole purpose i knew. there were plenty our families and most of them had many children. and because of that we have lots of kindergartens and schools 1. i knew i had to get that wasn't 3rd grade in the morning i went to elementary school and around noon i went to art school but illuminati. i have lots of friends there are sort of it was a wonderful life for you you could even call that perfect. i didn't see what was happening around me all right maybe it was just because i was a child you got that's how i remember it. it was a special time is ahead of the get or are there are you from mars from.
7:30 am
columbus to be luxury should not be a woman in labor came and she was giving birth so we took care of her very much before that the same woman he was married to a fireman stopped on her balcony and watched the reactor explode i had been in constant contact with the radiation for 24 hours she knew. and when the baby came out. it was black. jordan of executed. that was the 1st incident. but a few hours later another girl in labor came and she gave birth but the baby was dead and then will you please listen me after that all the pregnant women at every stage of pregnancy were called in for emergency examinations. and when they were all examined which was done very quickly because time was of the essence the initial of time determined to do live and to die i crossed the 1st day i knew the
7:31 am
women were in a terrible state blue. glasses but drugs that. what we saw and saw it with all the features since it was exactly like in the books. the to store all the heart the facts the eyes the limit but within just a few hours all those babies were contaminated. with $36.00 women at all stages of pregnancy and it went on for a nice or a bit longer. maybe a bit longer has washed which north which that's how we dealt with the problem should you wish. it was the most to reflect day of my life the book which instruction indeed i wish i could to raise it will be your ideal of which disarranged.
7:32 am
by order of whether there are more later that evening soldiers went to all the houses and told us he's allowed to prepare to leave. and. we never thought we'd live in forever they told us it will last for days. on the lake told us to take only casual clothes by going on a picnic or camping in a tent. song we thought we were leaving because they said there were things they had to do want to thank you cleanse the town and so everyone had to leave then we'd
7:33 am
be gone for 4 days and then come back so we took nothing with us and move us closer to the other cars from the lord and he pretty much people didn't know where they were going what was happening here or why she knew they didn't take any closer possessions. i heard them crying screaming because they have to submit imagine leaving all your possessions behind your stated that through the drug everything and they take you somewhere you have no idea where the desert the thing is most productive of those don't know where they're taking you. to these magical devers you don't know what's going to happen with. me that was the 1st day. the 2nd stage was.
7:34 am
living. here for me.
7:35 am
that was the worst thing that had ever happened to me. a song that i had a crisis. of activists with ms but my life was torn into flames shooting and cornish. i want that on my door this is my house the other yaml to me
7:36 am
it's a dirty look i haven't been here in 33 years. my children grew up here instead of living with a little we spent the best years of our lives here for a little schimmel living really.
7:37 am
good very good about through the room when i 1st entered the zone they put a mask on me and my face about 20 kilometers from the station got my. dressing through chicago and we have a friend and i wore that mask all day yeah. that was on the 1st day the curriculum for. the very day. knocked out always on the 2nd day i didn't wear a mask when i entered the zones only when i went up on the roof you almost were going to put them on some workers and i treated you good with you on the 3rd day i only wore it when i was actually on the roof of the workshop and sometimes on the roof i take it off so i can smoke right there now explain why but until you can you read to me the enemy is invisible you goose and you drop the can you believe it has no flavor of smell or form so people weren't afraid or going through our.
7:38 am
knees we didn't realize at the time what it could eventually carmen's. when you've been in my life. we were pretty poor. poor do you have mercury vigil later i saw the results when people i had worked with started dying skimmer of what they could not very well but we weren't afraid after the korean war . we'll talk or solution the why didn't you know i heard about 2 general bad men who are in charge of the platoons working near the reactor. in the orange forest. you know what the orange forest is ridiculous one was walking toward the forest you the other toward the reactor. and they started talking you started to worry there was a puddle by the path. you had you know the bust one of them stepped into the puddle . they always carry radiometers he tested the 1st of them and the radiometer showed
7:39 am
200 reckon the puddle measured 200 run and they sent him straight home he'd only stood there for 10 minutes one foot in a puddle was all it took what should. the jets know that the radiation had struck many people choose to live and by then it was felt in other countries too she learned in finland in poland in italy if it. is not considered much of wisdom she did have a chav gave a speech on may 14th and on may 15th there was a government meeting where it was decided to charge our bureau with the task of building up protective structure over the reactor that exploded the people nicknamed the structure of the sarcophagus those ones that go.
7:40 am
kirsty. took video and the city where for me should be the route that period before they finished the sarcophagus the protective structure could you love rule mccurdy she's a reactor you gave off a massive amount of nuclear missions which would have been an area where not millions were going to rot tens of millions live. still milling g.c.l. communal. but almost at most you're in a you've written here theatre there is not 0. you do have good natural functions like the wind carried not just the nuclear fallout from the explosion but also the contaminated dirt and sand. it was a huge catastrophe the devil is listening to us through. egypt that will still be cut in order to reduce the nuclear fallout yeah it was decided
7:41 am
to stop trying to extinguish it with water you understand why it was a bit less of a sneer at the instead it was decided to cover the reactor with sand so in the way in the used to look they're looking for this they put together a special brigade of military helicopter pilots who drop sacks of sand and lead around the reactor to reduce the nuclear fallout will mean should leave those with the seal. but if the death if there's a boat on. the beach and. previous to that specific relief was there a robot or a bird or the neutralization process robots were used which were brought from japan
7:42 am
and germany are very pretty relieved or bushy resume or a few. here when they brought them there apparently they didn't tell the engineers about the radiation levels on the roof of a broader 3 storage locker for bertram or. when they activated the robots on the roof they started working through. our neighborhood you lived through it i've lived here for one robot fell off the roof because it lost control. but you were there was room for theory of gravity. after we were over there i mean that was just the robots rear we were living human beings who would work and absorbed all that radiation with your short periods of time granted corrupter for all but they called us by all robots most of rollergirl with the. bureau with. time we didn't need more work in places where the robots couldn't do
7:43 am
the job the buyer wrote much did it people had to do it until it's sure there was no time to find another solution. they made every effort not to endanger human lives but nothing else could be done the looting a feeling of a star yet seen moving there was no other solution and she won us the world the robots simply didn't work you see when you have that and we were very frightened by your genes you. know lua ability operation of pumping out the water and removing the nuclear waste around the station had to be done quickly that it had to be raked out with a shovel. by hand. you can. preserve your work for you do recruit from mum go to work harder than we
7:44 am
came out on the roof they'd say there's a graphite rod it has to be removed if you continue but there were others you could always reduce it was impossible to measure the radiation levels or the graphite rods the richer they were far beyond what our instruments could measure be and water into drugs so showed them to sort of complete good although we worked in short chips we had to work in difficult conditions and near the reactors them some of them for me at the power distance from the reactor determine how much radiation we absorbed says so we used monitors in the and at the end of the day we saw that they'd absorbed an almost lethal amount of radiation yeah you'd have to call that they saw. the. girl in the car. i thought. it was a move for good my remark original sin there was some sort sure we sent 800 men to
7:45 am
the roof every day through school where. bushfires are well i mean it was crazy to put on lead aprons and went straight on to the roof where they used shovels to rake the waste and dump it into the reactor below news. i took up for the 2nd their time was up they were ordered off the roof for the welcome under the middle of the concrete and then they'd come down and go change clothes while the next 20 men went on preferred to get there were discovered to rip up the majlis for the others and this process was repeated nonstop but if you desperately want. to. live if you felt you through and come up through our doors we were instructed that
7:46 am
the men could take a maximum dose of 11 can you work very soon if you're out the door for comfort or it was very similar to this amount of radiation determine how long the soldiers were allowed to stay on the roof or your mom has to work the fisheries work through reparative going to remember her junior mt creature from up with the notion of what we continued working as we saw fit and did as much as we could without absorbing the neck some amount of radiation growth for. what they got at the bottom of the do parting back the blood pressure on you can you pull me over for me there was a young man a firefighter. i don't remember his last name. was a young man and he was diagnosed with level 3 radiation you know on some systems face was badly burned just his face but since he had a high dose of radiation he had other symptoms to kimi he looked at me as you
7:47 am
face was covered in burns on those 2 dots really finds he looked at me leaving the door in the mean yes mike really please. help me somehow god. i remember what i told him. everything will be all right. let's hope for the best. and he replied. can you tell my mother that. at that his she was eyes were like enough this was at the same time but was of ray of hope i'm the one that was rough i didn't tell his mother anything. i knew he wouldn't survive i can use the ones.
7:48 am
via emulation she never did live here the accident affected all of ukraine as she is his cousin who is in all the systems in russia and the u.s.s.r. and other countries to use so in my opinion with the people who contains the damage actually saves the whole world really so boil water school and all the people who blocked off the burning reactor with their own body parts that were both really of the sort of prefer those who built this a compass did it at the expense of their health it was little you. can make them live like if they were you have to understand they treated us as living materials for those. who thought it would cost us the liquidators our lives really if you got her. where material goods really were the living material
7:49 am
supplied by the induction centers and they are matters. sure nobody had of which are noble there were 3 special units and representatives of every military region everywhere u.s.s.r. africa for you see here they all had no choice but to work to contain the radiation coming from the reactor from the guys from the good that. a lot of people you know how many i won't say she said go for exulting the sarcophagus alone involved over half a 1000000 people 460-0000. milledge you know there were 12 districts $50000.00 per district. but they couldn't make them work 24 seventh's or on 8 hour shifts you know what. they worked as much as the radiation allowed live stuff new through someone's up for 3 minutes they raged dump it and let me assure you. and that was that. here's what sort of war they worked below for 2 hours when
7:50 am
they had to prepare equipment of the people couldn't be kept in the area for over 2 hours. we were responsible for that as a. luthier but. the people who went through went through. should know but they knew they had to carry out a national governmental mission that had been placed before them. reaches the moon is the best you can they believed it was their duty. he should. look ok if not me then who. someone had to do it it had to be done. how can anyone regret it. there was no time to think let along regret it. we had to work to get the job done. with fewer days to do it before you do it liquidator had
7:51 am
a child today they would be automatically designated a disaster victim of a child rebuild. if you will if your doctor you know for. sure did you the number of children in ukraine that would be designated as disaster victims is in the millions you just read from you doing man. again you don't get jupiter he's our only those who were born afterwards but also those who were born there at the time of the accident number right here in areas affected by the radiation or birth of dreaded words that are better. than. me us and you know has that's a i hadn't been back to prepared since i didn't want to go back i was afraid to go
7:52 am
and. it was all very traumatic for me. and i am not sure how to be sure.
7:53 am
if the center have is this the town square up there is a culture hall is that it was it was a condo where is the music school the i'd like to see the music school with my
7:54 am
staff there she was and that's just it isn't far we can walk it's just 100 meters from western with or. is there still radiation here. yes but it's low about one unit it's about one micro steve it and i'm going to what's the normal level of the green and in ukraine and 0.3 but it's ok it isn't considered critical schuster. this is all that's left of the concert hall doc this is the concert hall yes we have to come here often.
7:55 am
to love that. and again and my sister took violin lessons here and she also performed in concerts. and i took painting courses so i sat in the audience when she performed on stage the stick played violin and you know i look in order and. can talk i'm speechless. i don't know. just a little it's funny it's a painful memory. and you could want to prove with it but no one could have been protected from all of it
7:56 am
. because he wasn't mush it's part of our lives and we can't escape it of the thought of seeing you go to the morgue. these people did a heroic deed. if they knew you could there is an issue where they rewarded for it. nor. i think they were simply forgotten. i knew brewster were you because no one needs the now but the most i need she wouldn't you come home you can. eat when you're so sorry. when i delve into memories of the past few would and i recall the people who gave their lives and remained anonymous. brutally nobody knows them. that's the truth or the nice way usually i knew you could do it use not you no
7:57 am
one's heard of them and they did a heroic deed you say they should by saving the lives of millions with you near the war. menuhin the new g.
7:58 am
a temple servant was once a respected profession in india. today the so-called devore darcy's are being forced into sexual slavery in. their greatest hope is that their daughters will have better opportunities in the future thanks to education over the. net result. in 30 minutes on d dollars for. i'm fearful * that's the promise of the
7:59 am
drug of the moment crystal man. but the only ones getting a great high. and the criminal contacts in washington national need and are increasingly brutal we. mean. chris uhlmann. 90 minutes on d w. you ready to go to. places in europe or smashing the records stick them to move the furniture. just don't lose your grip it's a treasure map for trotters scum for some of europe's signs. also in book form.
8:00 am
this is news coming to you live from india's cupboard 19 death toll surpasses 200 found its darkest hour of the pandemic so far shortages of medical supplies and hospital staff how in the problem of infections tearing through the country also coming up $5000.00 music fans rocking out at europe.

46 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on