tv Nahaufnahme Deutsche Welle May 18, 2021 4:00am-4:30am CEST
4:00 am
no instead there is the light that you never you never see. you come from the research team to the pacific to. your job or you know those stories true forced onto w. . this is d w news and these are our top stories u.s. president joe biden has told israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu that he supports a ceasefire between israel and palestinian militants israel pounded gaza with asterix on monday while hamas continued to those rockets at israeli cities more than 200 people have been killed in over the past week of violence most of them palestinians. around 5000 by brands have reached spain's north
4:01 am
african enclave of say uta by stemming from neighboring morocco nearly a 3rd of them are said to be minus see it as one of 2 spanish regions on mainland africa that's a key arrival point for migrants hoping to start a new life in europe. the u.s. treasury has imposed sanctions on $16000000.00 more officials and their families fighting their support for the military crackdown the army seized power in february after the country's election claiming it was raids it has also attacked pro-democracy supporters killing at least 800 people. this is g w news from berlin you can find much more news in a website that is g.w. dot com. sunday was the deadliest day of fighting between israelis and hamas and as the
4:02 am
attacks interest 2nd week all signs point to a crisis going from bad to worse a mosque today threaten to point more of its rockets towards tel of eve and the israeli prime minister says the campaign of air strikes in gaza will take more time can diplomacy break through yet another cycle of death and destruction and could a roadmap to peace involve a detour through northern ireland tonight a methodist minister from belfast tells me there is a way to get from hate to hope i bring call from berlin this is the day. we've been working intensively behind the scenes to try to bring an end to the conflict. israel has no choice but to stop these come atsic that's where they are being launched.
4:03 am
is it telling you. put yourself through coercion is it is not. it is working to meet the needs. of the clutch it still distillation of the violence. every single life the human life lost is a tragedy the senseless cycle of terror that is not. immediately. also coming up he's been poisoned and thrown in prison should kremlin critic alexina all knee be labeled an extremist well that's now up to. russian court the decision could crush the country's political opposition movements of the example of alexina vonnie who came back to russia knowing that he would almost definitely be arrested strengthens my sense that sometimes you have to pay a personal price in order for you and your country to have
4:04 am
a bright future. to our fuehrer's on p.b.s. in the united states and to all of you around the world welcome we begin the day beginning a 2nd week of bloodshed between israelis and palestinians with no end in sight it has been a week since hamas and israeli forces began exchanging rocket fire and missile strikes across a border battle is now the deadliest in 7 years some 200 palestinians have been killed in israel 10 people have died as the 2nd week of fighting begins the battlegrounds are expanding last week residents in both israel and gaza looked in fear to the skies now israeli forces are targeting below ground the network of tunnels known as the metro which israel says hamas uses to move weapons and to avoid detection the pressure for a diplomatic solution is growing tonight the u.s. egypt and qatar have sent mediators to diffuse the situation the u.s.
4:05 am
says those mediators need more time to convince both sides to say yes to she managed terry in polls in the fighting yesterday the u.n. security council met for the 1st time to discuss the crisis here is the u.n. secretary general. to lead the poll. the latest round of violence slowly but equates the sight of that that's not going to be fair and we should follow in the eyes of any hope that we exist of and. fighting must stop. well the international community is asking for a cease fire but israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says the fighting will continue he w. spoke earlier today to israel's ambassador to germany jeremy sakharov it asked him hell for israel is willing to go. look we didn't see this exchange and essentially i think you need again hamas needs to cease their rocket fire on israel
4:06 am
i don't tell it does israel will not this is the in defending its citizens so i mean the question has to be addressed to them. and as far as what i'm concerned i do not see this as something that has to be purchased without and eventually it will come to a close there are a lot of different conversations happening now. there are conversations between the americans and israel we also have very open channels between the foreign minister of germany who's speaking to speaking to egypt and he's also speaking frequently to the ashkenazi the foreign minister and i also believe there will simply be very continuing high level discussions that will go on in the coming hours. we're no doubt the israeli palestinian conflict counts as one of the world's most entrenched and it appears resilient to reconciliation but my 1st guest tonight says and into conflict even in the most hopeless situations is possible gary mason is
4:07 am
a methodist minister from belfast northern ireland he played an important role in the northern irish peace process which resulted in the 1998 good friday agreement since then he has continued to work for peace at home and has expanded his reconciliation efforts abroad his work has been recognized by the queen queen elizabeth and former u.s. president bill clinton robin mason we are happy to have you on the program with us tonight it's good to see you i know that some viewers may be asking what in the world does the conflict in northern ireland have in common with the current fighting between israelis and palestinians i mean the 2 seem worlds apart in just about everything what do you say to that. i think at the root of most conflicts invariably the issue of identity the issue lound on the issue of religion and i would say here here is the night that i am not comparing the 2 conflicts and
4:08 am
saying they are identical but in relation to some of the lessons from the northern irish peace process they are upset people so many spaces from the middle east south africa colombia the president some tell us the colombian president said recently that the good friday agreement had a significant and fluence on him as he tried to bring peace to colombia so you're exactly right they're not identical but at the root causes of most conflict is a breakdown and shimon relationships and identity and religion and deservedly are playing a bite. to some degree and loose work like conflicts in 2015 you founded the nonprofit rethinking conflict and on the website it reads that the organization seeks to model the principles of the historic good friday agreement and apply them to more fractured edges of society so i mean i knew we could go into all of that maybe you could give us the sheet the cheat sheet version of how you do this with
4:09 am
the israelis and the palestinians and i suppose if we were having this conversation interestingly in the early 1990 s. we hear what people call a mutually hurting state on it so very simply put the british army were not going to think the ira the ira were never going to one of the most elite armies in the world and the loyalist groupings were not going to think the ira and i guess what spelled out in our city is in the early 1990 s. leading up to the good friday agreement was political leaders began to realise that they needed to take risks to achieve peace but there was also a strong desire within northern irish society and grif help from the united states from people like george mitchell and bill clinton and the european union a real desire to break the cycle of olens the see a future generations from the horrors of conflict they interestingly when i'm working with this release and palestinians invariably they say to me they say gary
4:10 am
you don't understand and i don't say tell me what i don't understand they say there is no trust and they often are and i'm going to some of the work that night and an hour east contacts. duce 1st meetings there was no trust i often kind of say tongue in cheek do you think it was all hugs and quick kisses and the ice contacts when war a enemies met for the 1st time and they despise each other trust never comes at the start of the process that comes through hollow times meeting secretly meeting commitments building confidence through concrete actions but only other key components we realize lists but it tends to us all of our conflict through military force was ultimately feet on and i actually didn't result insists the end it will security for either community so it simply went like this it is you that knew it as a as a journalist and a political commentator you hurt us we will hurt you but when people here realize
4:11 am
that downloads needed to be prioritized and we address it the root causes of the conflict not that count opened up the door to what still is a franchise and of peace process i mean i wouldn't hold the good friday agreement as utopia we are still a side building peace but since the good friday agreement they've been very very shrewd deaths in relation to political violence let me ask you reverend last year you brought israelis palestinians and northern irish people together for a zoom virtual meeting in tell me about that what did the israelis and the palestinians what do they want to know most from the northern irish. yeah. the size of israelis and palestinians and bathos and the doublet of the last 10 years but interesting concept you referring to the it was a younger generation twenty's and thirty's and when it was over and some of the
4:12 am
briefings on afterwards both the israelis and palestinians said quite categorically the northern irish people who that defies irish and british on their stand are pretty active conflict they said you know sometimes with other young people who are not in trouble zones so we are not comparing like with like but i think it's reasonable enough to say we were comparing paean with p.n. and looking at our situation which is not utopia but looking back over the last 23 years the space i live in and i'm speaking to you from tonight is a tremendous amount different than the place i grew up i remember as a as a little boy and then 978 we have a terrorist incident every 40 minutes today and 2021 we don't have a terrorist incident every 40 minutes not a huge change and so much is a major change so much of what you were talking about to me did centers around the way people talk to each other and the way they talk about each other flare ups
4:13 am
between israel and hamas they've been referred to by israelis and i'm quoting here as campaigns to mow the grass and critics say that this only dehumanizes people on the other side so talk to me about the power of language to keep the fighting going in there how we're to bring about peace yeah i mean there's some israelis are furious focusing on the nests i mean one great jewish the other genset dehumanizing precedes genocide. and joel who cites the former chief rabbi of the british commonwealth the saudi time to answer there just a number of months ago uses this grid for is linguistic the home. i bring religion into the night more than happy to say the history of the christian church is not clean either as regards linguistic violence where we kind of virtually assassinate the other person theologically because they do believe exactly as i do so we need
4:14 am
leaders in israeli and palestinian society here speaking into those spaces because it's reality this new solution and the comfort zone of woman's womb absoluteness position there's a great ted talk of your viewers if you want to watch and you chip simply hold the d.n.c. chair of the single narrative. this new single narrative solution yet it was no hussein deal not a solution in the british context no victory for one side or the other and the irony is if one side laws win a victory we end up passing that in from generation to generation robyn let me ask you before we run out of time if the european union if the european union or if the u.s. president were to phone you in and say they would like for you to help with mediating some type of humanitarian pause in the fighting what would be your response. it's i
4:15 am
think a lot to let's not spend a lifetime talking to people pursuing violence on all sides of my conflict but at the end of the day the good friday agreement the key thing really that george mitchell that was he created a win win situation for both sides soha in the israeli palestinian conflict for ordinary people for the short time we have and planet earth highly critical win win situation for powell stiliyan children for israeli children to give those kids a new beginning and then you future and nate's leadership to step into the public speeches to feast on their detractors and to lead from the front reverend jerry mason it's been very interesting talking with you we appreciate your time and your insights an important voice needed to be heard around the world right now thank you . thank you best wishes. a russian court is expected to hand down
4:16 am
a decision next month that could be the final blow for the country's political opposition the court will decide whether or not to label kremlin critic alexy devolving as an extremist the designation could mean long prison sentences for activists convicted of opposing russia's leadership. sure win tonight on the power of a label for those still daring to dissent in russia. this letter seals the deal it officially ends under contract with. team andre headed the opposition politicians regional office interior for 4 years. russia will be free he says one day was arrested at recent an authorised protests his team organized into the air but now his office along with 36 others in the campaign network have had to close russia's state prosecutor wants them declared extremist and then he tells us he wants to create a new local political organization to keep working. for politics was always
4:17 am
centered on the russian capital moscow but thanks to the of on the campaign offices political activity has bubbled up across russia's regions rootsy now it's time for us regions to jump into the deep end and swim for ourselves it's hard and dangerous but it's a necessary phase in the development of political life not only in fairness but across the country. and that he and his team until have become friends over the years like andre most of them have been arrested several times and i've accepted threats and pressure as the price to pay for pushing back against the kremlin but the extremist label takes that to another level that could make symbols like this a relic and for any illegal activists found to be part of an extremist organization could face up to 10 years in prison. i lost my job and when i tried to get a new one recently they told me in private that their security service wouldn't let them hire me we have already had problems with work. if they really start
4:18 am
tightening the screws and i see that they're making a show of putting former employees activists and volunteers of the not only offices in jail of course i will think about how i may have to lay low somewhere for a while. but. even people outside of not buying nice actual team have been facing increasingly serious consequences for protesting against the government earlier this year thousands were detained during demonstrations in support of me and there have been several reports of employers firing people for backing the politician since the recent protests in support of. kremlin critics across russia have been under increasing pressure and that pressure is unlikely to let up ahead of parliamentary elections in september including for the activists here. but. is unrelentingly optimistic the 31 year old wants to keep pushing for
4:19 am
a more democratic russia and he says he's willing to take personal risks to further strengthen the role of civil society in his home city and the whole to their region . but he gives. the example of alexina who came back to russia knowing that he would almost definitely be arrested strengthens my sense that sometimes you have to pay a personal price in order for you and your country to have a bright future. now and that he wants to register as a candidate for the regional parliament in the upcoming elections he hopes his association with now by nice team won't get him barred from running. in for more now i'd like to speak with vladimir executive director of the anti-corruption foundation in london he's also a close friend of alexey. good to have you on the program it looks likely
4:20 am
than of all these organizations will be banned by the court what does that mean for the future of the anti-corruption foundation and the future of the vollies other organizations. this is unprecedented the level of pressure on our organization and on our supporters but this is not the 1st instance of pressure we have been prating under pressure from the authorities for the last 10 years we are making precaution that would have disbanded our regional network of activists and will likely have to disband the un to corruption phone dacian but our people our supporters our employers they're not going anywhere as well as the sense the dissatisfaction of russian people with putin's government is not going anywhere so it is it will continue in some other form but it will obviously not become safer
4:21 am
for the supporters of the ball nice work if the court indeed labels these organizations to be extremists how worried are you about these people and their future safety. we have a and there is a sense of about 200 people working throughout russia you know on full time basis if you senior people like myself several years ago but if you. manage to move outside of frustrating recent months i think the majority of people will stay and you know if there is danger will will make all efforts to make sure they have a majority of them will continue being in russia how big would you say the support is still for and of all these organizations among the russian people. there are several. that let you judge that i wouldn't believe the policy
4:22 am
because people are really afraid to speak up their minds given all the. pressure and information campaign from the 30th but if we look at he got 28 percent of fault in moscow. elections of moscow mayor in 2013 and since then he has a rick of the nation. but the larry king and the number of supporters has only grown so i think that if by the pressure and the repression of the thought it is. his recognition his support and the support of our nation is a growing. call the executive director of the anti-corruption foundation in london we appreciate your time and your insights tonight thank you thank you. the country chile is about to get
4:23 am
a new constitution political independence and left wing parties looks set to dominate construction of the 1st draft after this weekend's landmark poll as the votes were counted it became clear that the conservative coalition the president. had not achieved winning a 3rd of the seat say new constitution was a key demand of protesters who took to the streets in 2000 in weeks of demonstrations that left several dozen people dead the vote being called most important election since its return to democracy 31 years ago this is what said about the results. in these elections people have sent is a clear and strong message. to the government and also to the traditional political forces. not that we are not adequately in tune with the demands and hopes of the citizens a man equal of the needles. not only today indigenous people
4:24 am
want attending just participation which is relevant in the future a constitutional convention today women also one and not for the 1st time in history there will be equal representation unique in the world in the future constitutional convention it is in our if morning i want to go to my colleague benjamin alvarez gruber you happens to be from chile he joins me now going to do you let me ask you i mean this is your home country were you surprised by this result good evening ban thank you very much for having me it was a surprise not by the fact that their candidate supported by center right and right pieties did not got the majority in this assembly this was something something that was expected but the fact that they pulled so low and did not even achieve their one path that they wanted to get in this assembly to be part of this group they will draft a constitution was quite shocking also for them and big parts of the population on
4:25 am
the outside this looks like chileans have decided for a clear break with the past is that what it is. it is and that's why it's considered to be the most important vote since the return off democracy and not just the break with the past but also with political parties if we look how they voted for candidates that are supported by center left in political parties for example they were in government after the military dictatorship and they also did not poll very well so if we look at independents they achieved many seats and this is indeed an equal race so if you have candidates that don't have the support the financial support to do campaigning during this pandemic and that they made it into this convention it says a lot about how would chilean people are really not happy with the way that the government and not just the current government of presidents of attempting it but also the other governments have dealt with this problem that they want to change with this new framework. voting going on here and with these independents being
4:26 am
elected do we know what these independents what they stand for. there are several topics that you can see during the campaign so this a lot of the indigenous population also in the in the campaigns of this independent and candidate it's important to remember that this assembly of the one $155.00 members will have gender parity that's a 1st world wide and will also have 17 seats reserved for the indigenous population so with the independence we have a lot of topics when it comes to climate change when it comes to protecting the environment when it comes to changing the constitution from this that the current state that has for example the rolled the state out of that is fraud a subsidiary when it comes to health when it comes to pension when it comes to education and those that have been demanded on the streets and let's remember how this protest started in october of 2019 massive protests demanding these changes and people in chile know that
4:27 am
a constitution itself of course will not so for all the problems that it will set a framework for the next 4050 years to do several needed reforms in the country you know this is the beginning of something very good for the people that worked. with elise tonight on this important election thank you. well the day is almost done but the conversation continues online you'll find us on twitter either if you can follow me a break. and remember whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day we'll see you later but.
4:28 am
4:29 am
got a spot at the institute for inclusive education. here people like jenny who have mental disabilities are trying to be education specialists they know the issues mentally disabled people deal with 1st hand. academic trust for people with disabilities closer. to 60 minutes. several dead in line to a mainstream associations rice requested again well must be a couple raped and burned in south africa and his ability is more likely to lose their jobs in the pandemic black lives matter comes shine a spotlight on racially motivated police minds same sex marriage is being legalized in our country. discrimination in court are part of everyday life for
4:30 am
30 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on