tv World Stories Deutsche Welle May 10, 2021 4:00pm-4:15pm CEST
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this is the news live from batman hundreds injured as palestinians confront police at jerusalem's acts of mosque ahead of a monster of the city by israeli hardliners the u.n. security council is due to meet in emergency session to discuss the violence also on the program should happen to the women and families who left the west to join the men fighting for so-called islamic state years later they're finding it impossible to get home from detention in syria. turkish people at home under strict coronavirus lockdown and ask why don't the rules apply to tourists. under
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forced away consider the line of fire and ice from all to show from this icelandic volcano reaches new heights. to come to watch. with. i'm sure welcome to the program emergency services in jerusalem say hundreds of people have been injured in fresh clashes between palestinians and israeli police. fighting broke out inside the al aqsa mosque police firing stun grenades and tear gas at palestinian demonstrators as follows days of protests so the big promise to get residents from jerusalem to make room for jewish settlers today tensions are
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particularly high as israel marks to roussillon day out of you by the israeli troops captured east jerusalem in 1967 not even jewish flag matsu the city has. some palestinians view this as provoked provocative and there's concern that this type of situation could be rocked interview from books by. going straight to jerusalem and join d.w. correspondent tanya kraemer welcome tanya what's happening there now. well i'm standing here right at damascus gate this is one of the areas where the whuffie know not of tensions and also right know there's a lot of israeli police over here just some time ago some stun grenades fired here chasing some of the palestinian youths that are usually gathering here away so what we understand is usually this black march of the true slim they
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should have passed through damascus gate here from but from what we understand this has now been be routed through one of the other gates apparently i'm what reason has been given the. knowledge the potential for violence. if this is about the. decision actually while it's very well known the tensions on jerusalem day and the flak march this is an annual event and there are always tensions and it always almost always ends in violence of course know what's happening in the. past weeks here this has caused you know security officials to say that it would be better to read. this march which usually goes from damascus gate than inside here the old city through what's been known as a muslim quarters through the palestinian neighborhoods it's nationalist israelis who are marching through there celebrating the capture of some
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a 9 to 67 they are celebrating division if you cation for palestinians this is not a day of celebration. for them is true islam is occupied and they want to see the. capital of their future state so obviously there are a lot of tensions here even now. as you've been speaking we've been looking at live pictures of some of those protesters that that time yes these clashes have been going on for weeks and it's fueled by these plans to rethink palestinian residents of east jerusalem to make way for jewish settlers we will take a look at your reports and then come back to. more now i quote it's documenting everything that happens here for social media her family is one of 4 families facing eviction from their homes in the palestinian neighborhood of shaikh shut off in east jerusalem writing settlers could soon move in here but hey i know this is
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our life as palestinians we are the owners of the land we lived here legally and everything is documented legally. and they come here and occupied the place and they want to occupy what remains of the neighborhood i. hate this part of the house has already been taken over by to resettle as a decade ago just like across the street where setlist moved into this house they claim parts of this neighborhood is actually their land and have waged a lengthy court battle against the family if you want to do is almost a 100 years. jews lived. and jews own the land. nothing changed beside one thing that the arabs suddenly decided that there was all of the land of the property and decided not to accept the jewish
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ownership like other palestinian families who live in this neighborhood live every saturday here by jordan and the un after the israeli arab war in 1948 they had lost everything after being displaced at that time israeli law prevents them from claiming their last properties. and that's the supreme court allows a european if there are no other legal options for the family. then look it's very painful a very tiring psychologically speaking we're exhausted each one of us has packed evac with the most important papers passport identity cards anything important next a typical from school. university in case they victimise and that's what we need to take with us and. it's sunset residents and supporters come together to break their ramadan fast soon after school missions break out at some point riot police harshly disperse the crowd arresting some of the palestinian
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protesters the eviction back over the homes it's like a symbol of what's at stake in the israeli palestinian conflict thank you back to tanya kraemer in jerusalem tanya families like the wall that we just saw a report based been waiting for a court to decide. what's going on but that has been postponed why. well that's right that has been postponed the hearing was supposed to happen today it was already rescheduled from last week to today you know apparently appalling every cross by the israeli attorney general this was postponed further they will set a new date in 30 days. but that means for the family right now they can stay in their homes but what it doesn't mean actually is. a previous decision by a lower court the district court that had authorized that was filed you know after
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a lengthy court battle it was decided upon by a jewish organization that has been cancer the fiction so it's a brief response for the for families but it's also just actually a postponement time here in jerusalem thank you. mr. the doctor who 1st treated her like saina valley after he was poisoned with a nerve agent has been found alive alexander motor confiscate was reported missing on saturday after he failed to return from a hunting expedition in siberia is disappearance cause concern as to other doctors who treated the russian opposition leader who died this year. germany is making the one shot corona virus vaccine by johnson and johnson available to all adults the country's health minister but previously recommended only people over 60 should receive it because of the rare blood clotting siemens seen in some recipients moves
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expected to help germany speed up its fascination programme. india's daily coronaviruses death and infection levels remain close to record highs leading to a growing calls for a national lockdown as hospitals deal with shortages of oxygen and beds experts blame the government for allowing large festivals on the election rallies to go ahead ask case numbers were surging. where mass deposed leader aung sang suu kyi has been ordered to appear in court in person this month she faces a number of charges the most serious of which could see her jailed for 14 years this will be the 1st time she's been seen in public since the military coup on the 1st of february. there have been protests in iraqi cities following the killing of a leading anti government activist. was shot dead in karbala early on sunday and a journalist is in critical condition after being shot in the head early on monday
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both men have been key figures in iraq's 29 t. and t. government mobilizations. now the un is urging countries to repaginate their citizens from detention camps in syria's. province more than 60000 people most of them women and children live in squalid conditions in 2 camps to al hall and al raj sent there after syrian kurdish forces helped defeat the islamic state militant group in northeastern syria journalist daniel heckler has been to the camp a towel raj and he's spoken with women who say they have given up their militant ideology and now just want to go. a dusty playground in northern syria mothers from germany france and the us watch over their children former members of the terror group i ass they're now captors of the kurds and want to return home cree dad is from the german city of tal of moroccan descent 8
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years ago she followed her husband to live in the self-proclaimed islamic state something she now bitterly regrets she fled taking her 4 children with her. but. after only a scaped returned ourselves over to the kurds when we arrived here i didn't even realize we were in a camp i just slept for 2 days because the stress was finally over they told us that we'd be handed over to our government within a couple of months. that was 3 and a half years ago even then it's also avoided. nearly 3000 women from 35 countries are stranded at raj camp it's smaller and better equipped than others in northern syria and life is largely peaceful but the authorities say half the women detained here still hold it stream mr views they
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want to deal radicalize the mothers so they can go home and that many. our aim is to rehabilitate these women and give them a chance to reintegrate into society so they can lead a normal life back in their home countries. a rehabilitation session for 6 women from europe and canada they make drawings showing a positive and a negative experience in the camp. the pictures reflect the mood fences burning tense a mixture of despair and friend turn. to candy's on his in is cutting him i can see the sun in the sky to me that symbolizes freedom and safety but i'm 10 stone and i can't leave this camp it's like a cage my children teach asking me what life outside the camp is like so there's
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also. something exercises like these are useful others are much more skeptical it's a reminder of what we have seen what we do see and i think it's always helpful if you can feel that you're not alone thank my country it might help some people but every time i put my emotions down on paper it just reminds me of my bad experience that was slashed or none of the women hope these are the 1st steps towards a better future but the chances of returning home soon are slim few of their home countries want them back. let's take a closer look at this with professor. un special rapporteur turn on the promotion of protection of human rights while countering terrorism she's one of the experts calling for states to take these women children home welcome to do don't leave
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professor what is the hold up do governments just say we don't want to back. well there are a variety of responses some governments in fact are taking their nationals back we have governments like now the russian federation tunisia we've seen with significant returns to countries like has a cost of a has taken back large numbers so there are a group of states living up to their international responsibilities and bringing back their nationals unfortunately the states who have been in some ways the most recalcitrant on return are the states the self-confessed human rights states who profess commitment to the rights of the child women's rights and the protection of human rights many of them in western european states including germany who have been extremely many of them unwilling to take back their nationals for a variety of one is the view that they are not obliged to take them back the other is the view that these women have abandoned their country of nationality and that they are therefore not entitled to return and the 36 security concerns stated
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security concerns that it's not safe to bring them back. so the question that cases i wanted to bring down but very human rights states you say should not take them back. so i would say a couple of things so 1st of all the vast majority of the individuals held in the camp are children most of them are under the age of 12 and a large percentage of them are under the age of 6 none of these children including german children need choices to go anywhere choices were made for them and it is particularly incumbent on states to protect the rights of their children including their children over seeds and in doing so advancing the rights that every child is treated equally.
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