tv Projekt Zukunft Deutsche Welle May 10, 2021 5:03pm-5:31pm CEST
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it's through another gate. now we are hearing the sirens to slam i can't tell you right now right here in the air raid sirens this is happening right now we know there was an ultimatum by hamas given by 6 o'clock to israel to basically get security forces out after i don't like some mosque and from the sex it off area say we are at the moment hearing air raid sirens in jerusalem all right time here if you have to leave absolutely you should leave i'll continue we are absolutely understand if you have to go there. but we don't know at the moment that that means whether that might be also. something else we would update you of course we will see you have but what's going to happen at the moment i see that most of the police forces are still standing if that's
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what i can tell you otherwise it's pretty quiet so i think everybody is wondering right now what that means. when the court had so there's a court decision expected about be fiction of palestinian as palestinian families. the decision was delayed when that court this is not becomes. a thought she was expecting trouble. i mean i think it's not a question of a traveller i think everybody is expecting i can hear i can hear you know there was some kind of impact. yeah this impact definitely. i can tell you right now what exactly is happening but behind it could be also. ok so we have to wait and see but back to your question. all right we'll leave it
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there. and let you find out what's what's going on there but for knocks on your crimea in jerusalem thank you all right yeah we will update you from here for sure ok thank you. well tony i had a chance to spend some time with one of the palestinian families facing eviction and she filed this report. more now i quote a stuck human to 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. this is 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
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a decade ago just like across the street where settlers moved into this house they claim parts of this neighborhood is actually their land and have raged a lengthy court battle against the family. and with. it jews lived. and jews own the land. nothing changed one thing that the arab suddenly decided. over the property and decided to accept the jewish ownership like other palestinian families who live in this neighborhood they have every saturday here by jordan and the un after the israeli arab or 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
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a european if there are no other options for the family. it's very painful a very tiring psychologically speaking we're exhausted each one of us has. back to back with the most important papers passport identity cards anything important makes it difficult from school and university in case they victimise and that's what we need to take with us and actually an issue with other than not. it's some said residents and supporters come together to break their ramadan fast soon after skirmishes break out at some point riot police harshly disperse the crowd arresting some of the palestinian protesters the eviction battle over the homes is like a symbol of what's at stake in the israeli palestinian conflict. take a look now at some more after a story started me in my home where the deposed leader on some suchi has been
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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 which will be the 1st time she's been seen in public since the military coup on the 1st of february. the doctor who 1st treated her like say novelli after he was poisoned with a nerve agent has been found alive alexander motor kosky was reported missing on saturday after he failed to return from a hunting expedition in siberia his disappearance cause concern as to other doctors who treated the russian opposition figure have died this year. have been protests in the iraqi cities following the killing of a leading anti-government activist he had a was named was shot dead in karbala early on sunday a journalist was also shot in the head and is in pretty critical condition following brain surgery after being shot in the head on monday both men have key figures in iraq's 2019 and
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a government mobilizations. have you any surging countries to repatriate their citizens from detention camps in syria's. province more than 60000 people most of them women and children live in squalid conditions into comes at al hodge and al raj al whole beg pardon raj sent their syrian kurdish forces helped defeat the islamic state militant group with northeast syria journalist daniel heckler has been to the camp at our blog and spoken with women who say they've given up their militant ideology and now just want to go home. a dusty playground in northern syria mothers from germany france and the u.s. watching 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 years ago she followed her husband to live in the
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self-proclaimed islamic state something she now bitterly regrets she fled taking her 4 children with. definitely escaped returned ourselves over to the kurds when we arrived here i didn't even realize we were in a camp that i just left for 2 days because the stress was finally over they told us that we'd be handed over to a government within a couple of months. and that was 3 and a half years ago even doesn't and it's also provided. nearly 3000 women from 35 countries are stranded at road 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 want to deal radicalize the mothers so they can go home. head of the mill.
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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 there is. 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 france's burning turns a mixture of despair and friend turn. on his own as it is telling him i can see the sun in the sky to me that symbolizes freedom and safety but i found stern and i can't leave this camp it's like a cage my children keep asking me what life outside the camp is like so it is also something exercises like these are useful others are much more skeptical
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it's a reminder of what we have seen and 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 experiences as leicester and none. the women hope these are the 1st steps towards a better future but the chances of returning home soon a slim few of their home countries want them back. so can his women and children be devalued allies and integrated back into the societies they left well dr anne speckhard is a director of the international center for the study of violent extremism and joins us from washington d.c. welcome to day doubly dr many governments don't want these women and children back
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because they see them as potential security risks are others fears justified. well of course they are justified we have had. people coming back from isis when isis once in its heyday attacking in brussels and attacking in paris and we've seen all kinds of attacks throughout europe although the majority of those attacks took place with people that were. that hadn't gone to syria there were living in europe so to be fearful of i since it's normal and to be fearful of the people coming back but i can say that i've been in both camp roche and camp hole and talked to 24 german citizens or legal residents that are being held by the u.s.g.s. both men and women and the women don't look at that actually men and women don't look that threatening to me they're sick of isis they had a bad experience but i sense they went there thinking it was going to be this grand caliphate that it would be good for them. they rejected european society in germany
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believing that they'd have a better life and they had a horrible and horrible experience torture some of them appeared in prison beaten raped they saw all kinds of things that they want nothing to do and we had our center we call the spontaneous the radicalization that's the ticket up the ranks they don't need a program ok so so i know it's hard to generalize but do you what you're describing there are people who are fed up a and safety of what they're going through not necessarily people who have a should be the philosophy so of these people that you would be happy to have living next door to you. many of them yes and no you got me right up of course they're sick of a hole in their 2nd production the 2nd the overcrowded prisons for the man of course but they are also sick isis and most of if they're telling the truth told me stories of going there with great dreams of helping the syrian people building
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a caliphate and when they got there they saw the reality and little by little they were like wait a 2nd i don't want anything to do with us this isn't mean this isn't my it's this isn't even islam and they've given it up so yes i would be comfortable to live next to them i think they should be in some kind of that once they get home and they should of course be watched all right so so. we're going to summarize it under a minute if you're cab a massive become plex process but what should governments therefore be doing should governments be a accepting them back b d radicalizing them or doing that over there before they bring them home well if we're talking about germany i've had the pleasure to work with your federal prosecutor claudia go and she's amazing and so are the police and what i would say to the german people as you can trust your authorities they're good they know what they're doing you know how to german come back a woman that pleaded innocence and same thing is what i'm telling you i'm sick of isis i don't like it well between r. and b.
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i and your german authorities they found out that truth was she wanted to go back shouldn't part of that has father she had killed a child with her husband you see it it's late child and according to them a slave just a human being right and she was caught and prosecuted so the authorities are doing a good job of prosecuting and i do believe that all of these people should go through a judicial system they should be prosecuted and then they should be put in programs but they need to be brought out of the camps camps are deadly and deadly for children it's a hard sell though for a politician to a skeptical public isn't it. it is but it what i would say is look you just cleared up something of a woman that's 3 years susan or president cant that can't cannot be characterized as anything other than a present but she hasn't been tried in a court of law but trust your authority skippering her home try are in a court of law 1 and my suggestion would be a give her
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a state prison sentence and say if you found her terribly cooperate in a good rehabilitation program and we see that you are taking part in it you won't have to go to prison if you're defiant a new style of isis women sit in prison. sounds very you have a clear and simple way you're exploiting their doctor thank you so much for joining us dr spec out of the international center for the study of violent extremism turkey is currently under a nationwide coronavirus lockdown with people under orders to stay at home for 3 weeks until may the 17th and the rules apply to everyone except foreign tourists are very exempt from the curfew and free to walk the streets and see the sights almost as though they were on holiday you'll hear ha reports. this is eastern boards most visited tourist attraction but hardly anyone is here these days. there is
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a very relaxed atmosphere instead of the usual crowds of thousands. it's not only like this at the hadia sophia but everywhere in the city the few tourists who are here right now pretty much have to themselves. this is their. sights there's a good time to be tourists we don't have many travel in the 1st 2 to stem from 2 crane at the moment and istanbul and turkey is one of the many countries that are open for us that's why we decided to come here after like a year. to lockdown is a great time to visit istanbul the city is much calmer now under normal circumstances it's very crowded but it is tough. but while those on the cation are happy many locals are annoyed they have to adhere to a strict curfew until mid may. they can only leave their homes for grocery shopping
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and other essential needs and going to work requires a special permit. it's unfair my kids are asking why are the tourists allowed to be outside while we are stuck at home. here the tourists know that we are a high risk country i'm fine with them coming because they know the coronavirus situation here. we had threatened would have to finds if we leave our homes but the tourists can walk around freely that's not fair but there is nothing we can do about it. turkey has one of the highest coronavirus infection rates in europe and that's why many people here support a strict lockdown they just don't understand why tourists are exempt but the government is trying everything to keep turkey attractive as a holiday destination because the economy urgently needs a successful some
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a season. bringing down the number of infections without drug. having foreign visitors the way many of those who earn their living from tourism think that's a good strategy. like the souvenirs sellers need a hug a sophia who have barely earned anything for months. this is them as a pandemic has ruined the tourism industry here but as long as there are still some visitors there is hope at the moment there are just a few but we are happy about every single one is stand bull can accommodate many guests but 90 percent of the city's capacity is not being used right now. none of the sellers here expect the holiday season like before the pandemic. but many are hoping that a bit more life returns to the hugin sophia once the lockdown is over. look now at some more of today's stories starting in india where the daily coronavirus
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death of infection that will remain close to wreck or eyes are leading to growing calls for not a lockdown as hospitals deal with shortages of oxygen and beds experts blamed government for allowing large festivals of the election rallies to go ahead even as case numbers are surging. germany is making the johnson and johnson one shot corona virus vaccine available to all adults rather than only those in priority groups but the countries vaccine commission is recommended that only people over 16 receive it because of rare blood clots seen in some recipients most expected to help the country speed up its vaccination program. i'm not asteroid probe is due to begin its return to earth today the space agency says it will take around 2 and a half years for the cyrus rex to make it home it's carrying a precious one kilogram cargo of material sucked up from the asteroid surface scientists hope the cosmic rubble will provide more clues about the origins of life
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here on. the asteroid named venue gives researchers a window into the past. it's about 500 meters wide and composed of the same material that shaped our planet earth. and that's what makes been to such a great find. every 6 years its orbital path brings it close to earth. even a small change in its flight path could result in a collision course. asteroids have changed earth's development about 4000000000 years ago they rained down on the young planets asteroids actually brought things like water and organic chemistry the chemistry that were based on to earth of the 1st place so when you go out and you see what this was like billions of years ago is that going to give us a better window into how how we got here how life started on earth are some of the
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chemicals in your body some of the water in your body today did they originally get delivered to earth through asteroids. in the space probe set out to answer these questions after landing on the asteroid it spent 500 days mapping the surface the probe also researched its inner structure. the data showed how different pockets of warm air on the surface influenced by and it was flight path this was vital information in case the asteroid ever threatened to crash into earth. oh a robotic arm was designed especially for the probe it was installed in october 2020. last year the probe edged close enough to bend to allow the arm to be shot a half meter into the asteroid surface pressurized nitrogen gas was set free and off matter was shaken up that the probe was able to catch pebbles and dust
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after churning up the material it was vacuumed up by the spacecraft getaway thruster the robotic arm placed this collection in a special capsule then in april the probe sent photos documenting the location of the sample collection now the probe is returning to earth when it gets close it will drop the capsule researchers around the world look forward to examining the contents. the perfect kind of mission of discovery that many of us have dreamt of i mean we saw apollo and the the men walking on the moon returning samples but doing this all robotically in a place that would be very hard to send woman or man kind of makes it all very real the precious cargo is set to land in utah in september 2023. now to iceland thousands of people have flocked to a volcano to watch it's all inspiring eruptions in the countries on the partial lockdown but plenty of foreign tourists amongst the sights this will canines one
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steady flow was changed to a spectacular gaze a display it's not visible from a comfortable reykjavik around 60 kilometers away. lover spurts out of fishes in the fire god does she act volcanic system fountains of molten rock. in the olden days the icelandic people told tales of the craters being the footprints of giants and of dragons scorching the earth bison and is the real land of fire and ice. fractures in the earth's crust might be the gates of hell where true women carried out the mischief they say is a smaller option by icelandic standards there are more than 30 act of volcanic systems under the island country in the north atlantic ocean and they've been erupting since time began. here the lava moves slowly
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and there are no settlements in its path there's little danger for now if you keep a safe distance spectators hike to the area to witness the power of mother earth. it's amazing all warm it is you know it's so many it is away from here the soul and spirit it's a pretty intense experience the colors it was the salt everything combined that's. in the book which. i feel. yes on. here to this hour. but that helps get. the lover ever others were in it for the bond that. the north american and your asian tectonic plates a pulling away from each other under iceland. scientists say this eruption may continue for years and warn that with volcanic forces as with the mythical dragons
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how does the virus spread. why do we panic and when we'll all miss. you just through the topics covered and i weekly radio. if you would like and the information on the krona larysa or any other science topic you should really check out our podcast you can get it wherever you get your podcast you can also find us at d.f.w. dot com look forward slash science. we're all such a ticket to go beyond. many. as we take on the world. i think all this is where all of the stories that matter to you. take
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on relief from me. and. we are yours actually on fire made some of us. they still wore some of that has evaporated from rivers lakes and oceans and returned it to the earth in the form of rain. down its cover more than half of our planet on any given day. what secrets do they hold who researches. this imo coming up on today's program. hello and welcome to tomorrow to do.
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