tv Nuhr im Ersten Deutsche Welle May 12, 2021 7:30pm-8:15pm CEST
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i'm worried about the. i'm neal of the on the green fence post and to me it's korea remains to. join critics of the green transformation for me to use for the clouds. this is the double news coming up today in southeast asia on alert. the region is starting a sergeant called of others this is just as millions look to travel for the eve holiday as we look at the new lock downs and the risk of a new wave coming up. living with the taliban why many afghans to think they are the best bet for the country's future and while others fear of return to the past our special report from the taliban territory.
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welcome to news. even as india continues to cope with the world's worst coronavirus outbreak the situation across southeast asia is also was saying thailand cambodia and laos are among countries reporting a major surge in infections the rising cases of the prospects of celebrations over either have prompted some nations to impose lockdowns and ramp up testing and vaccinations. queuing for a test in bangkok latest hot spot and. has been set up next to tinged and market signs of a new plaster of infections in the city. many of the recent cases involve the b 117 variant 1st found in britain. this strain of covert 19 is very infectious and spreads much faster in 3 to 5 days the patient status can change
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from green to yellow to orange to read in no time during the past 4 days we've had 100 deaths. just over 2 percent of the population have received a cave a job in thailand and a mass vaccination campaign is not due to start until next month and locked down that was due to end last weekend has now been extended. in indonesia to tougher restrictions have been reimposed ahead of aid roads were jammed in bus stations packed with travellers leaving jakarta for their hometowns before a domestic travel ban came into force. malaysians will also have to forgo family gatherings this eed as a new nationwide lockdown has been put in place social gatherings and travel have been banned and shops remain closed seeing that there's a big spike in new variants a also understand. that you know if we toned down or celebrations this year then
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you know if it helps keep the various happy that's ok with. the seller you regarding aids it's been almost 2 years since i've come back to my hometown to visit my mum and dad and that's really affecting me because that. that's a sentiment shared by many across the region that's having to choose between celebrations and safety. correspondent david joins us now from kuala lumpur with more dave just last week the government said it was planning to stick but for instructions in targeted areas and to be a mission wide lockdown has begun why the change. well just skyrocketing numbers of coded 19 cases you know positivity rate of about 5 percent last week and intensive care unit beds and hospitals across the country are filling up we've got new variance and higher infection rates and there's just been
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a real concern that so much of the public you know have gotten lackadaisical about basic safety precautions such as wearing a mask that's why they went forward with this decision and now you know the schools are closed no social gatherings interstate and in their district travel has been banned limits of 3 people to a car including the driver no dining at restaurants and at mosques mosque that can accommodate a 1000 or more people are now limited to no more than 15 at a mosque and accommodate less than a valve and people it can have more than 20 people so tiger standards restrictions starting today across the country because through the night of the across our many of the nations in southeast asia but experts at also suggesting that increased rates of vaccinations potentially a way out of these new surges of money seeing in these nations where it is when they show when it comes to vaccinations and testing it so as of may 8th malaysia had vaccinated just a fraction over 2 percent of its population of more than 32000002 percent and when
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you talk to help experts about this they say the real choke point for this has really been the supply that's the problem not the laser is slowly making ground on that number but very slowly and that's obviously going to be key said to stopping the spread of infections among his his neighbors indonesia and thailand also seeing a surge in corona virus cases dave is that concern that new video could potentially slip into when they see. there's certainly concern now you need to break this up into 2 categories here people who are coming into the country legally and people are coming to the country illegally people are coming in legally you know obvious the most common way would be at the airport well they believe they can really catch those people here you have to take tests negative for covert $1000.00 within 72 hours of travel and then when you get here it's a mandatory 14 day quarantine and it's not a home quarantine it's a quarantine and
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a government approved hotel there are several tells most hotels set aside for this you got to stay in one of those and you'll get past it why are there so they feel confident they can catch anyone who's coming in with kobe 1000 that way but then the other question that comes up of course is what about people who slip in illegally you don't come through the proper immigration channels you know we've got lamb borders this country with thailand and indonesia they've certainly scaled up patrols to try and cut down for that but as the old cliche goes there's a will there's a way so people who are determined to get in from those countries could find a way to slip in they're going to be in kuala lumpur thank you very much for that update. afghan officials have confirmed that the taliban have seized new territory close to the capital kabul the capital needed district comes ahead of a cease fire between the taliban and afghan forces the begins on thursday the
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taliban now controlled more of promises than at any time in the past when 2 yeahs and b. what are you going to get a 1st time view of life on the taliban rule. a rare glimpse of another world a home visit with the taliban. welcome come on in. this father and his son don't want to tell us their names but they are willing to tell us why the son recently decided to join the taliban. i did this for 2 reasons one i had no job and 2 i wanted to do something about our unjust and corrupt government so they're oppressing the people of this country. well his father welcomes his decision he's proud his son is now on the taliban side . this makes me happy because we are muslims and we should defend these limits state islamic state allows us to fight
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infidels we dedicate our lives to it we also want islamic sharia and taliban law to be implemented. but. many afghans are scared of the taliban's increasing power. ali khan is a truck driver he drives all across afghanistan and has to pay passage fees to the taliban on a regular basis just recently he paid the equivalent of $75.00 euros about a quarter of his monthly salary. yet you look at. the taliban are increasing in number and their power is growing. they set up checkpoints and force drivers to pay for safe passage the government can't stop them although the official checkpoints are very far away. jannot cool a farmer has had a similar experience he makes his living growing and selling grain from his meager
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earnings he has to pay the taliban over $100.00 euros on a regular basis the taliban threatened to imprison or even kill him if he didn't pay up he's afraid of what will happen when foreign troops finally leave the country. i would prefer that the soldiers stayed international troops have kept peace here for the past 2 decades if they leave afghanistan the country will go to pieces. the taliban are already taking control of more and more places around the country and they make no secret of their ultimate goal. we want an islamic state and an islamic government that provides law and order. to foreign troops and all infidels must leave our country. nato troops have announced they will withdraw from afghanistan by september at the latest after they're gone the taliban hopes to turn back the clock and return the country to
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where it was 20 years ago and joining me now for more is correspondent. in kabul you travel around the country quite a bit interacting with people do you find that many of them actually support the taliban and its aims of establishing an islamic emirate. even if there is support it's more out of necessity you know it has to do with how much has actually reached the people and how much ryan lands they're subject to so if you have people who don't have access to healthcare we don't have access to jobs who don't have access to roads and schools and think never got a chance to hobble because of where they live because of the conditions there and then at the same time you would drop strikes in your bag rates and you know these other very violent. forms of quote unquote counter terrorism then that will lead people especially out of necessity towards the other side has also been criticised
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and this have you spoken about in the past of being caught up in arms something useful to buy a necessity and people having no other choice i'm wondering if this corruption plays did actually into the hands of the taliban. what ends up happening. again. you know some harm talking about even say or our driver's license or are to go to see a doctor in a government hospital you have to pay a bribe along you have to know somebody. and that really that you know again that that that drives a wedge between the people. right and farmers that divide and that's feeling that you know you can only get something simple something basic high paying a bribe by knowing somebody somewhere and hearing all these reports of millions going getting rot and then you call places where there aren't proper roads where
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there are proper schools that proper clinics and hospitals where you know for someone to get to a hospital in some provinces can take them up to 14 hours or you know just to get from a district to a city so then all of the you know again it comes back to it's not even necessarily support for the 2. all of on is just in the fact that you know if someone isn't providing something for you then you go likely to the people who say they can take arms against the people who are of you than you and who at the very least claim that they can protect you and secret your view should if for instance say there's a night raid or a drone strike or an air strike your son or your daughter or your wife you know gets killed or goes disappearing. that's really how this cow this recruiting works and how it increases over time i had a baby remove a bag for the time being thank you so much for joining us thank you. i mean if you're there joining us from one of the most dangerous places in the world to be
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a journalist is of course more stories from asia on our web site did. we leave you today with the images of eve celebrations from across the region thanks for watching it's you tomorrow. they. have to say matters to us. that's why i listen to their stories. reporter every weekend on d w. can you hear me now oh yes we didn't hear you and how the last 2 years german
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chancellor will bring you uncle a mascot and you've never had to have surprise yourself with what is possible who is magical really what moves fast and want also to talk to people who followed her along the way maurice and critics alike join us for michael's last stop. stats shows and i would inside the bush awards in london. join us to unpack the highlights and the gossip at the british music industry's most glittering night as the year also on the show. and look back at the long and varied career of center bad as the acts and produce a tense 80. and put use. to tony crack place tribute to his former mentor
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joseph for this special exhibition. welcome to arts and culture the british board is one of the biggest nights in the music industry's calendar this year it made history as the 1st major indoor music event to take price with a low noise audience since a pandemic closed the doors of cultural the news everywhere thousands of fans and front line workers were invited to london's o 2 arena for the glittering occasion with some stars even braving quarantine to collect the accolades in person and some spectacular performances. the 2021 british words kicked off in grand style with a performance by the band coldplay from a pontoon on the river thames. but it was women who took center stage with 8 of 10 brits going to female artists including album of the year for future must tell jokes by do the reaper.
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sound girl band little mix who became the 1st women to win the trophy for best british group. it's not easy being a female in the u.k. pop industry we've seen the what might dominance mr cheney sexism and lack of diversity we're proud that we stuck together by said i'm proud to surround ourselves with strong women and i'm now using our voices more than ever to work performances in front of a live audience including by iconic elton john this year's brutal words marked a welcome return to normal for a music industry battered by a year of code lockdown. i was watching from home and so was the w's culture reporter scott rock's he joins us now from bone scott's high that as we heard
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a big night for female artists dearly little mix spite celebrated let's talk about the other winners of the night. yeah i mean the brits have come under a lot of criticism as have so many award shows for in the past over emphasizing male artists and ignoring female artists but they made a lot of changes last year and it seems to have paid off because the majority of the winners last night were female artists we saw artists like arlo parker who won breakthrough british artist last night for her debut album collapsed and sunbeams taylor swift the indomitable taylor swift took the stage to become the 1st woman to win the brits global icon award and the all 'd female band hine took the best international group on earth is interesting they're actually from l.a. and they spent 10 days in quarantine in london just to be able to be at the brits personally well that's what i call dedication scott how it was the 1st event at
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london's i'm 2 arena since the pandemic started and there was a mix of live in previous performances but very significantly there was a knife or do you tell us about that. yeah that was only made possible because the u.k. government designated the brits a past event so they allowed them to try out new protocols to see if you could do life music with a live audience safely under coded conditions so the stadium had several 1000 people in it many of them were actually workers from the british national health service the n.h.s. who got free tickets to attend the event and they were treated to a really impressive a lineup of live performances including rigo who performed her megahit driver's license live on the o 2 stage we had. he won a u.k. drill band that really got the audience on their feet but i was actually even impressed by the pipe in performance as the pretty pointed ones like that from the
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canadian pop star the weekend which looked quite impressive in general i think the brits felt like a return to normal and a sign of hope that maybe in the very near future we'll pawn stars with real audiences can take place again. keep our fingers crossed for that now the push towards i'm not 9 for being political but briefly if you can this year that changed . yes definitely everyone who took the stage used it basically to make some political point to. dress the british prime minister boris johnson directly telling him to raise the pay for workers of the n.h.s. who we can't use his acceptance speech to call for more action for the victims of violence in ethiopia and even taylor swift her acceptance speech to thank the n.h.s. for helping out during the pandemic of course so many of the members of the n.h.s. or in the audience there said it was over very very well in general it was incredibly activist night at the brits scott reporting from bone thanks so much for your analysis. big screens small screen over the
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stage center bag a is most of them all from teenage starlets in 1950 s. austria to hollywood leading lady charlton heston in cut douglas wood just to leading men she's been on the berlin film festival jury twice and in 2622006 she became one of the 1st female actors to talk about sexual harassment in hollywood long before people started listening in the weeks and to bag turns 80 we look back at her career. sent a bad guy has brought the power of her charisma to both the big them small screens in a career spanning more than 6 decades she's become a role model of self-confidence femininity she gets even the most conventional characters that certainly something special making them authentic and strong but never arrogant. as to come from the caption.
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manacles to me if i'd always been pretty realistic about my job i wasn't interested in signing autographs but in just being allowed to act and being seen of course there was some youthful exhibitionism involved but you get over that as you go through life. batgirl was born in vienna in 1941 her father was a musician and her mother a teacher though her parents were not well off she was able to take ballet and acting lessons. economic integration i never felt my childhood was hard just the opposite i think we along with the rest of society were very fortunate to be able to feel we were able to look forward to the future belong to us he wanted to get out of the social housing i grew up in and conquer the world and. with the very. center bagger ended up going to hollywood where she acted alongside stars like charlton heston your brother and kirk douglas seen here.
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what about bob swanson my mother was 23 and was suddenly working with a list actors over there that wasn't always easy haag i think she was almost mobbed by all those men and one concluding for instance kirk douglas but they were also friendly to my mother i wonder why when i look at her from back then i can understand why the men were so friendly to her they were all after her but then my mother always charmingly put the mufti because she was already with my father this diva the screen goddess will stay true to him luckily because otherwise i wouldn't be here gives me. a 966 bagger married director mr cooper who from together they started the centanni production company their sons also work in the film business zeman federation gave his mother a lead role in the successful comedy welcome to germany. be coming by did in house. and as you can see it by the way i might involve.
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all ok those fish will only look. in their live in east indies in the house and i'm not finished as i think there's a particular challenge for an actress it has to be said but she's mastered it brilliantly she's remains a young soul she tries to confront the difficulties that are a normal part of life with a smile and to take joy in her life she tries to find some things each day that makes life worthwhile because i hope i'm able to grow old like that too. if jo sure i think i've been very lucky and still am but i also think that i've learned to make the right decision at the right moment not always but often lifting moments of . whether on screen or on the scent about god has had a rich and fascinating life full of success and joy we wish her many more years to come. a strong woman with some to. hales to tell now
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german conception artist joseph boyce would have been 100 dismay one of the many artists he inspired is pushing scott said 10 he cried he later my gemini his home voice was both a mentor and a friend to cry as a tribute to voice in his city to me yeah crack has selected 20 of his works from 5 that collections and put them on display in his own special gallery. tony cracks greatest because our constitution is arguably this sculpture park which was transformed from an abandoned plot of land in. where the british artist has lived for some time now. boyce he believes that art is always political. in a world where everything is becoming impoverished and weaker in destroyed scotcher is one of the only ways of producing new forms new language new ideas new
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emotions and i think that's a very very important role you know while the industry's death killing everything around us the sculpture park is a space of energetic exchange. cracks on works enter a dialogue with the works of other artists. currently those of joseph boyce. boyce and a lot of artists of that generation they were the 1st ones to talk about the environment they were the 1st ones to really start to talk about our relationship to nature they were the 1st ones to talk about our acceptance of political systems of of ideas of hierarchy and so when you look at it today and you see how many platforms for protest have opened up. tony crack 1st met boyce in london in 1972. first time to see. in him in the white fab he stood there with
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his face a jacket on in his hat and a curious curious figure and not very good english i have to say the exhibition perpetual motion comprises small works that make for big art replete with symbolism like the rose for democracy or cup repatterning. voices complex thoughts compacted into little sculptures raise more questions than they answer. indeed there's not so much to see but what the observer is left with is what owns one's own reflection you find out what you think what you have in your head. so you don't have to understand it all to get boyce just be creative and follow your intuition. for this it is not the least of all to be. some plastic good there .
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enter the conflict zone with tim sebastian america's secretary of state grounds in a blimp it was in ukraine last week visiting the bar these are also words of comfort to support for the country also russian troops of mostly huge numbers close to a border my guess who's wheat is ukraine's foreign minister dimitriou cool a box what do you get out of the visit for what was a. conflict zone. 90 minutes on d w. how does a virus spread. why the repairman and when we'll all miss them. just 3 of the topics covered and a weekly radio program. if you would like and new information on the crawl of virus 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 w dot com look for inside science.
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are we alone it's a fundamental question of humanity trying to figure out whether or not. life existed on mars pretty clear water was there and quite abundance well that would be and so on mars the atmosphere is $100.00 of what we have here on earth it's very very cold at the past it's like you have started you could imagine bringing some supplies and you know if you do them to build a little self-contained pressured vehicle or vessel which would be on the surface there are things like oxygen that you can harvest from the atmosphere to help make living possible. if you want to think of humanity if we really want to survive forever we're going to have to move off the earth eventual end i know that seems a little crazy but you've got to start somewhere.
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this is what we need is live from berlin shock and all israel intensifies airstrikes on gaza. fresh strikes topple a high rise media building in guns a serious escalation in violence has killed dozens and left entire city blocks in groups hamas says one of its top commanders has been killed also coming up the growing of irish regions like wildfires to an opponent pushing the health care system there to the brink of collapse people worry their country will mimic the
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crisis in neighboring india. plus ecstatic fans of live music make a comeback at the brit awards. pop star's thriller a packed concert hall of the 2021 brit awards and this is a glimpse into a post from to make future. the rockets a pleasure to be with you we opened our broadcast with a major crisis in the middle east israel and gaza on the brink of a full scale war this footage that we're about to show you shows an israeli airstrike destroying the highrises that house a hamas affiliated television channel health officials in gaza say the death toll
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from israeli airstrikes has risen to 56 including 14 children a mosque rockets fired into israel have killed at least 6 people that you use the top diplomats as violence must be halted immediately to prevent a broader conflict washington says it's sending a special envoy to the region and a bit to deescalate tensions. fighting continues between palestinian militants and israel with more and more dead and injured israel's army has released footage it says shows its aircraft launching strikes on 2 weapons manufacturing sites belonging to hamas and the islamic jihad in the northern gaza strip israel also claims its forces have killed weapons specialists in the years really town of lloyd arab youths rioted burning buildings and cars both sides are fighting and both are causing death and destruction. in tel
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aviv palestinian militants overwhelmed israel's defense system with a barrage of rockets. if israel wants to escalate we're ready for it and if it wants to stop we're also ready if they want to remove their hand over jerusalem we're ready. early or israel had launched a number of attacks on gaza and prime minister benjamin netanyahu george this may only be the beginning. of us of a judge those hamas and islamic jihad have paid and i tell you here they will pay a very heavy price for their aggression when i say to you now their blood will be on their heads it will show them. world leaders are very concerned it's the worst violence since 2014 and there are fears it could become a full scale war they are pleading for both sides to put down their weapons but so far there's been no sign of that. i'd like to welcome now where daniel kurtzer who
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is a former u.s. ambassador to egypt and israel and he is currently professor of middle eastern policy studies at princeton university sir thank you so much for your time on the biden administration arguably facing its 1st major international a crisis and it is choosing to stay on the sidelines is that a good idea. no it's not a good idea at all because we're in a mad rush to full scale full scale war and it's a war that neither hamas nor israel really wants but each of them has reasons to respond to the other's provocations and neither of them has the capability of getting out of this on their own we've seen this movie before 2014 and that war went on for almost 2 months with hundreds and hundreds of casualties and so with there needs to be an activation of very serious diplomacy and not just words there
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has to be actions by the united states and others including in the arab world to try to tamp down this rush to a war where arguably the only country really with any significant leverage and the ability to make a meaningful impact and intervention at this stage is the u.s. well we have the relationship with israel to hopefully have some prospect of success but we don't talk to hamas and much of europe does not talk to hamas and that means that the united states cannot do this alone we certainly can't take the lead we can certainly be a major player but we're going to have to work with egypt other arab states including those states that just recently normalize relations that are able to talk to hamas and find ways to reduce this escalate tory spiral now earlier we for her death from the state department spokesperson who actually is calling for
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both sides to deescalate tensions but also saying that israel has the right to defend itself a lot of people are asking at this stage do palestinians have the right to self defense. well there's no question that everyone has the right of self defense and that's why it's so hard to sort out responsibility here the immediate issue to deal with is the escalation between hamas and israel that started with hamas rockets but you have to remember that the hamas rockets were in a sense a reaction to a situation in jerusalem that had been provoked by israeli extremists not the government but israeli extremists who were seeking to dispossess palestinians of homes in their neighborhood and so there's a lot to be adjudicated on both sides simply hiding behind the idea of self-defense is not going to get us anywhere we're going to have to solve problem number one
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which is the rocket fire in the bombing that's taking place now and could lead to war but as soon as the cease fire a cease fire is arranged there's going to have to be very concerted action to deal with the issues in jerusalem that started this present process of on the way to war in the 1st place sir this is such a difficult balancing act isn't it i mean you are you've lived in the region you know it intimately in terms of you know this violence is almost cyclical homes being destroyed people being killed hard brake on on all sides really you know what is the way out right now in the immediate future just it to seize these hostilities in the next 48 hours possibly. you know there's a sense all the time that a status quo is sustainable people get comfortable they go about their lives and then you have these events that spiral out of control and the problem is that when
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the status quo is quiet there's no real incentive to do active diplomacy and then when the status quo breaks down you end up in crisis diplomacy ignoring the underlying issue the underlying issue here is that you still have an israeli palestinian conflict united states has tried hard for more than 30 years together with the international quartet the un the e.u. and russia we've not succeeded in breaking through to an outcome but that still has to be the goal after all of these other activities whether they're in jerusalem or gaza are diversions from the ultimate objective of reaching a solution to the israeli palestinian conflict and that requires hard diplomacy all right former u.s. ambassador to israel danielle a cursor thank you so much sir for your time my pleasure. let's get you caught up now with some of the other news making headlines around the world this hour
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funerals have been held for the victims of shoes the school shooting in the russian city of cazan hundreds of mourners faith their final respects to the 9 people killed by a teenage gunman president vladimir putin ordered a review of the nation's gun control laws. republicans in the u.s. house of representatives have voted to remove fellow party member list cheney from a top position the way republican has been under a mounting pressure for her repeated criticism of former president donald trump before the vote cheney was the 3rd highest ranking house republican. ugandan president yoweri was 70 has been sworn in for his 6th term after winning a controversial election this january during the inauguration ceremony police surrounded the home of opposition leader bobby why who has called the 70s victory a sham police described the measure as normal security deployment for v.i.p.'s. the european court of justice has ruled that tax breaks for amazon were not to only
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go to court overturned a prior ruling by the european commission ordering amazon to pay went to a $50000000.00 euros in back taxes you commissioners say 3 quarters of the company's profits have gone untaxed through its european headquarters in luxembourg . in a paul authorities have extended a lockdown in and around the capital katmandu until the end of may the number of covert $1000.00 cases is skyrocketing in that country prompting concerns now that it's had it for a crisis like the one in neighboring india. india's deadly 2nd wave has spread to neighboring nepal. in katmandu health care workers and authorities are struggling to contain a massive surge of co 1000 cases. in the last 3 weeks the pulse daily trajectory has shot up with 2 out of every 5 people tested now returning positive for the
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virus with hospitals filling to capacity with covered 1000 patients the country's health system has been overwhelmed by the spike patients are scrambling to find hospital beds and oxygen for loved ones. shoot as nice. as a few saxon's. to the brink of collapse. hospitals are. communities near to. are only able to handle. number of people who need treatment. the threat from cover 19 is even reached the world's highest peak as china announced on sunday it would set up a line of separation on the summit of mount everest to keep chinese climbers from catching the virus from those ascending from the nepal side.
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along the 800 kilometer open border nepal shares with india the pollies fleeing the virus or hurrying to return home. authorities fear even more covert 1000 cases are on the way. when i say now about some of the other major developments in the pandemic. well n.d.s. covert 1000 death toll now has passed 250000 on wednesday but comparisons of official data with that from frontline workers suggest that the true number may be much much higher and the catastrophic scale of the pandemic could have been prevented according to an independent global panel assembled by the united nations experts concluded early warning signs have gone unheeded and britain will hold a public inquiry into the government's handling of the pendennis prime minister boris johnson said the investigation would begin next year. and staying in the u.k.
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4000 people no masks no social distancing it is seems unthinkable but london made it happen the 41st brit awards became the 1st major indoor music event with a live audience in the u.k. capital you know over a year's time. to research could sound so good that 2021 brit awards on music triumphantly returned to the big stage after the coronavirus hiatus and in front of an audience of mostly essential workers this year's nominees proved they still know how it's done. deal after being slammed for snubbing female artists in 202050 years brit style women dominate all major categories the pop trio little mix made history becoming the 1st all female them to take home the award for best british group.
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it's not easy being a female in the u.k. pop industry we've seen the wow my dominance mr cheney sexism and lack of diversity we're proud that we've stopped talking about the city of god and surround ourselves with strong women and now using our voices more than ever to. the big winner of the night with solo artists do a leap to awards and the dream come true. thanks last summer excepting the so rude in 2018 i said that i want to see more women only stages and i feel sorry for. 3 years later when seeing that happen and it really is such an honor to be a part of this wave of women in music britain's biggest celebration of musical achievements culminated with a performance honoring front line workers when. national health service choir
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showing dragon bone mass and a larger than life on screen pay. after a year most people would like to forget the brits were able to stage a show memorable for all the right reasons. the news continues right here which you know them allow with your business lines and i'll see you again tomorrow. what secrets lie behind. discover new adventures in 360 degree. to explore the mating world heritage sites. w world heritage 360 get to know.
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