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tv   Euromaxx 2  Deutsche Welle  May 18, 2021 1:45pm-5:46pm CEST

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so much all 3 points and confirmed their place and the champions league next season, the tenfold from total gun gave up increased and a chance to grab a consolation. but there was no dampening dartmouth mood as they finish a difficult season with a flourish. cup run up like the hosting both spoke who were looking to pick up the last champions. the ticket maximilian philip put the walls in front with this only one to strike. he struck again just before half time as light. 6 defense fell apart, but the hosts pulled back after the break 1st just employee, but up the deficit with his 2nd legal of the season. and also this foul on i'm a do hi dara. my cell garbage equalized from the spot. the sale a point is enough,
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but both spoke their place and the champions league is now secure. cyberg spots found study on is heading into retirement saturday's match against fire and might well have been the last buddhist lead to the fixture that this i tonic ground, every host of insulation us let it be. that was the last game yet. and it was a worthy and this has hosted many, many great games over a lot of year was a start it was a historic occasion for more than one reason was i live in dorski is opener from the thought was his 40th lead goal, the season with that equals gap miller record for the most schools ever scored in a single buddhist legal campaign. so this will be the no special we have to recognise and express that as a t. that's it. right. but it still fryeburg went thrown off by the big gold pulled
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his side level before half time. the 2nd half brought a 2nd goal for the champions this time through leaving sunny but fryeburg wouldn't be beaten. captain john go into, grabbed a lady, call either a worthy end to momentous match in buddhist legal history. this week's hero can be none other send all that levin's ascii is all against fryeburg was his 40th of the season already securing him a place in the history books. he's in good company tied with the law school he goes and it goes from here. oh so well, i feel incredible. now i don't understand maybe what, what exactly happened was i did have because you know the record to be done
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something and if there's anything you could possibly gripe about, it's that 8 of his 40 goals were from the penalties spot. whereas miller stored all his goals in the 197172 season from open flay. pretty impressive, although is all psychos? no, they all use the shock is final home game in the buddhist league for the time being at least no fans to see them off, but visitors frankfurt were out to make it a lively affair. with that top full hopes hanging on a thread, we knew a we have one task which is winning at chalka, and that's where all our focus is on. so i talked have been out of sorts since been use of audi. who does the parts are in the summer and at least one frankfurt was
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not properly focused early on against ciocca, to handed the host a penalty by founding amine or eat classy on whom le saw his spot saved, but coolly tapped in the rebound. although this season shall going ahead, has meant little to nothing. and just before the hour mark, their lead was canceled out by andre silva, as famine showed off. shuck is typical defending one all at the break, but this would be no ball draw. frankfurt did look more focused early in the 2nd half, and that precious soon paid off. when evan and depot rose to head and died. she come at us corner. but frank fitz defensive was the season return to hold them once more. a neat back heel from angela. put blendy. it is easy, threw on gold, and the young midfielder marked his 2nd appearance by opening his bond asleep
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account. he's been exclaimed, look this, i'm over the moon. i can't put it into words. it's just a dream to play here and to manage to score his fantastic middle school it belongs to evolve. and with frankfort, still reeling from the equalize that the host spin re took the lead with another dave, you go. and in florida and flicks case, it was actually his 1st ever shot for shot because 1st teen shelter with basking and the kind of joy they haven't felt in months. and a couple of minutes later, matthew hope embarked on a solar run from the halfway line and finished with ease in the far corner. frankfurt. conceited, 3, inside kilometers. 10 minutes to one lead. and we have to play the game down. get our own point that break them maybe go when we go, but we get off the received receive, receive straight to, to,
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to after we go. so it's very difficult in a moment to explain what we do to the it wasn't game over for andre silva, at least to pin bold in his 27th go the campaign. a club record. frank hood had 18 minutes to create 2 goals for the women. instead, it ended in a 3rd straight home defeat, ending any hopes of a champions league finish. makes is having the european action starts next year. will be there. that's what counts. the bigger picture of the whole year and not whether we didn't play too well in the game. we've completely earned this position . i'm glad somebody told me i'm on soon. that was, is super ashby's the points might be irrelevant for the win itself should provide some much needed confidence for the upcoming rebuilding project. like this year will be different in the 2nd division with my teams use it a lot deeper and let us have possession of it. but i had the feeling today that the
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lads really wanted to score goals and they were making runs into dangerous areas. so that's really important to take with us into the 2nd division. i mean, it's not legal all going down, but it seems that youngsters have given them plenty to be optimistic about heading into next season. the news, our move of the match day was this beautiful assist from veteran class yon hunter law to set up linda easy. one of south as promising academy products in the move was the highlight of their win against frankfort. but it's also with demonstrations for the future of how to integrate one generation with the next fall . but it was a great assist the way you played the ball through to me you can see is quality control that well and shot to the far post. i'm really happy it worked out the way
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it did go the longest. this is blendy. it's a good job. i'm not going to miss league gold, but what i'm like that we can look at a young man. that is a very, very good state . 33 had a lots of upsets, fryeburg held the champs to draw a white glove box filter stood up. i'm shaka choked up just a 3rd when of the season against frankfort. but the biggest result was at the bottom of the table with outspoken victory over breyman. now to the best goals of the weekend, the ah,
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in 3rd place we've got the la sales and they are focus them on the whole. now that is a free kick for a goal that might yet prove crucial in his nice fortunes. ah, 2nd spot, it's roughly i'll get those 5th goal of the season. ah, i'm not to be so much. hit me. and that number one. how about this from black box, captain? large tindle. the marines.
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at the top of the table. don't mind. i'm both. we'll have locked up leak spots frankfurt and leave a cruise. we'll have to settle for the year. i believe. while on your own glove box boots got em cyberg all have a shot at the new conference leak parents her mind sent alex berg all escape the drop. and while a rare shaka, when can save them from dead last cologne, breyman and beale failed, still have it all to play for. let's take a look at what next weekend has in store. well the final matt state is coming up the last chance to stay in the league for cologne. for villa felt full brain cologne have to be all ready relegated shaka, can they do it? i don't know. i think they they will try to win the game like ramen,
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need of victory over us. the we have to believe we have to believe that there will be fighting for 7th place. and the new conference league, while really felt had to stood guard, who also shooting the 7 spot i think in the end, every with the everything was like something yes. find out who next week on kick off. the the the news, the news,
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the the, the, the the i have the she got a spot and cologne's institute for inclusive education. here people like jenny who have mental disabilities, are trying to be education specialist. they know the issues mentally disabled people deal with 1st have academic track for people with disabilities close.
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oh, the news. the news. it's been ongoing quest for this is the arab spring began in 2011 people stood up against corrupt, rulers and dictatorship. all these moments have left the box in my memory. they had hoped for more security, more freedom, more dignity, have their hopes been from 10 years after the arab spring. now rebellion
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starts june 7th on d. w. o. against the current roma virus pandemic has the rate of infection in developing what measures are being taken. what does the latest research say? information into context? ah, i received a special monday to friday on d. w. are you ready to get in? the places in europe are smashing all the records into a venture. just don't lose your grid. the treasure map for modern globe trotter's gone for some of you. it's wicker,
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breaking on, you know, doing book form me the news . this is the w 9 from berlin. us president joe biden express his support for a sci fi between israel and mass, but stopped short of calling for lost on the students. and i left sifting through the trouble following the latest israeli as strike, so to speak to the un inside garza also on the program. thousands of african migrants that trust from the rocker to the spanish territory of state and
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warm day hoping for a new life in but spanish, of course, is already sending them back and asking for the future as, as data troops prepared to leave the country for good and taliban rebels, stefan recruited. ah, i feel gail, welcome to the program. he was president joe biden has told israel's prime minister that he supports the seas 5 between israel and palestinian medicines. even though washington has repeated the block to un security council statements calling for an immediate end to hostilities, israel's jets, at least another barrage of air strikes on garza overnight and palestinian millison group. hamas continue to fire rocket factories, right? the cities. more than 200 people, mostly palestinians have been killed in more than
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a week of violence. israeli, as strikes had caused earlier on tuesday morning. the 9th day of fighting between israel and commerce militants in garza, the casualties amounting many of them civilians. gather hospitals already struggling with their covert, $900.00 pandemic, a stretch to the limits. the small girl is among the injured and this boy has lost several members of his family. the bachman have destroyed homes and displaced tens of thousands of people who many terry in situation is deteriorated and the power supply for all that has been reduced to 6 to 8 hours per day. on average with the number of fetal lies, not functioning. that it turns disrupts the provision the health care and other
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basic services including water hygiene and sanitation. israel has its targeting senior hamas militants and the groups tunnel network. the military release. this footage, which says shows abstract on 5, how this belonging to commerce commanders. and i'm sure the directive is to continue to strike a terror targets. the idea is doing well today it has eliminated another senior islamic jihad commander. we have a dot com us novel unit and we continue to strike its underground infrastructure from us metro and other targets. we will continue to act as necessary to restore peace and security to the residence of israel for the escalation and violence began after clashes between israeli police and protest is over the planned eviction of palestinian families in east jerusalem. since then, has kept up a steady stream of rockets. some of them make it pass israel's iron dome defense
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system, like here in ashley where a residential building was damaged and several people were injured. as global calls, mound for and then to the blood showed the white house as president biden told him 10 years when a phone call that he supported a cease fire, but stopped short of calling for one as sees fire that is urgently needed as the violence on both sides continued to sparrow. let's get more from matches schmilo. he's director of the united nations relief and works agency for palestinian refugees in gaza. welcome to de w. the gaza strip is a densely populated area, so when tens of thousands get displaced, as we've just seen in that report, why did they get displaced to good afternoon to you? well, we, as of this morning, have 48000 people in 58 of our united nations order our schools
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here. clearly the population, not least based on the experiences in 2014, still see un installations painted in blue and with a blue un flag on top of it as relatively more safe and secure than their own homes . so that's basically one place they can go to. and then we also know that many have gone to friends and relatives in areas they perceive as length of a target, you know, and that's away from border areas and so on. so there's also significant numbers with friends and relatives, and we should not overlook them either. and all those un buildings respected in the chevy. we have assurances from both sides that un installations are not targets and we rarely know the coordinates of all our installations. we've shared them with them including recently. unfortunately this
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time around, some of the strikes are just too close to our installation. so this morning, you know, we had a massive explosion right next to our office compound here and not far away from one of the schools that are housing refugees. and we know that the solar panels, for example, were destroyed and not destroyed completely but damage. so we are seeing a lot of destruction of civilian infrastructure as i would call it because the strikes are too close to the infrastructure. and when you say that to close today, you're talking about damage being sustained to these un buildings in schools. well, on my own compound here, again, the office compound. if i could take you around that you would see there is considerable damage to the building and you know that's, that's one aspect is the, the damage itself. i also would like to mention not just one right nations. we know
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that 2 primary health care centers run by the old forest. these have been destroyed . we know, and m s. f clinic has been destroyed. we know that the central lab for colbert 19 testing is no longer functional as a result of, of strikes. and we know that the central ambulance unit of the palestine red crescent has been badly affected. so it has a serious impact on our collective ability provides humanitarian service. and where are these rockets coming from? these, these bills have been destroyed by, by, by who's rockets. it's the israeli retaliation strike. you know, now i am very well aware that for me it's of course unacceptable. as the u. n. person, the number of rockers, any rockets flying from here to israel. we know that some of them have fallen short, but all the information i have and i believe it's credible and reliable. and i've seen some of it with my own eyes is that by far most of the damage is being caused
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by the c. v, or israeli retaliatory strike. mathias such modest thank you for joining us to such valid from the united nations relief and works agency of palestinian refugees in gaza. thank you. well published, it is an arabic wr, alias have gone on striking east jerusalem and other towns within israel. on the west bank. the strike was called to protest the conflict in gaza and other israeli policies. the rights groups say, leave our disadvantage compared to jewish citizens, out of communities inside israel make up a 20 percent to the country's population. protest are also expected later today as joint dw cars on the de tanya kramer who is in ash cologne in southern israel. welcome, tanya. is there any sign of this general strike by israeli arabs there?
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no, not in ask alone at the moment. i mean, this is going on mainly in the occupy it west bank and also inside israel and are of israeli towns received also some protests and also unfortunately already some classes also in, in bethlehem. so this is a general strike which was called for today of re just some describe it, but more of a general strike, more of the you know, coming together and also seeing what's, what's happening right now in gaza. now we are standing here with our equipment and security protect because we have here in the minutes coming up to this broadcast, several tried several barrage of rockets coming into ask alone and also other cities like our start and in the south around. right. and as you start to outline that back, he's asking on these,
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one of these really cities was hit by how much rockets. so how bad is it that at the moment? well, it actually has been law. the quiet in the morning had been, you know, during the night of about 6 hours in a few records, but mainly in the morning too, with the southern envelope as equality with community standard. it started just when we were driving down to ask alon so people usually you have just a few seconds over here. either the iron doom or maybe an impact, or you see it in the sky and people stop the cars and run for cover. or if you're like us, we are standing next to a shelter so we could go in the now we understand that in the cobra which is next to, to gaza. there were at least one person was killed and 9 wounded. so people here were thinking, you know, it might quiet to quiet down,
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but actually as we can see right now, this is not the case. thank you for that tiny kramer and ask them and southern israel will take a look at some more news making headlines around the world. now at least 14 people have been killed after a powerful cycling for heavy rains and storm. so just to india, the west coast, around 200000 people have been moved to safety countries. navy is searching for schools of people missing after one ship san counter, another lost power. the us treasury has imposed sanctions on 16 of me and mars military leaders and their families of the deadly attacks on civilians following the military code. the army seize power in february, claiming that elections had been rigged. it's killed at least 800 people in attack from pro democracy supporters during widespread protests was 40000 people in china's li owning the province had been placed in home quarantine because of
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a surgeon cove. in 1900 cases, authorities how the measure will help prevent a large scale outbreak and providing supplies to people in 1998 quarantine neighborhoods. at least 6000 migrants have entered spain's north african territory as failed to with some swimming almost to columbus. as along the coast line from neighboring morocco authorities say it was a record one day influx and the worst thing relations between spain and morocco. the migrant from africa had been trying to get into europe by this speech for years . but never before have they crossed in such numbers. at least $5000.00 arrived within a 24 hour period. the largest number in a single day. most young men from morocco. but there were also significant numbers of women and at least 1000 children. some explained why they had decided to
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attempt the dangerous journey because you end up because when you have nothing, no money to spend, you have to pay your rent and you have to take care of your children and parents. there is no room for fear. looking at the health care she has to burn. as you see, all the young people want to leave the country. there's no work, aren't you afraid of the sea? no, i'm not afraid if i stayed here, i wouldn't be afraid. i have to save myself that we don't know the things you've held the beach. they want to reach it in the spanish. i exclaimed, a filter which borders morocco. it is in northern africa, but as part of the european union and such has long been a magnet for migrants seeking a better life to be the new arrivals reach saved by swimming from 2 kilometers along the coast of morocco, or using inflatable boats. scaling this 10 meta high wall is one of the only of options of getting in to see spain, a wreck to defense, to try to close off the land route. but this has not stopped some microns from
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trying to look over the years. oh yeah, madrid say several 100 miles to get interesting to each year, but many deported back to where they came from as they have no right to asylum in the you the most of those arriving of the last few days will also be sent back to morocco. some reports suggest moroccan, please allowed so many to move towards the board in the 1st place because of a diplomatic spat with spain over another issue. but official, the madrid say they have already reached an agreement about sending the migrant back. and when are we enforcing security to prevent further arrivals? let's get moving data because bonded nicole reese who's in madrid. welcome, nicole. what's behind this? sudden surgeon migrants arrivals and sen. so basically, what is happening now is that rock and border forth are not stopping them from
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going to fail to which they have been doing usually away. and the influx 30, the 24 hours is very much the biggest influx of migrant spain. as seen in a single day, and it's also being interpreted as a display of power from the rock and 5 and possibly also a french thing. and the rest of europe as thing last week decided to offer medical assistance to the leader of the group, which support the independence of the weapon, the horror region. and well, this region was annexed by morocco in the seventy's. they also other countries who would support the independence for example, germany or spain itself of this region. but that is pretty much formed by morocco site and now they're putting on the display maybe to show what they're capable of using these migrant flows as bargaining chips. but thing maybe that they're all upset about the situation. and this is pretty much what we're observing these days
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. and then there's also the possibility that this might be established. faint political system as well as your opinion because it's just another huge migrant slow that confronting right now. and we've been looking at pictures from theater as you've been speaking and people are going to look at this. and i wonder, well how is it that spike has been able to deploy people so quickly? is that and why, why isn't there an asylum process that these arrivals have to go through? well basically that has been agreement and agreement between the morocco and spain for a very long time, which has also been backed by constitutional court last year that it is not unlawful to bring these people back to morocco. is they enter legally, that's what they can do. now, within 10 days without proper process, except when the group that are entering upon rules are under age. and usually this has always been a mutual between the 2, which has worked just now we see that it's
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a very fragile one as well. there has been talk in the past of asylum seekers in africa being processed on the continent, sort of off short as it were. if that is that still a live proposal? while the you need to look into options. this is urgent and i think what pretty much reflects what is coming up next is a statement by marguerite. this is tina who is the you for mission vice president. teach. we said that the spanish board of is european border. i quote, the full holiday charity with spain. we now need the european migrant migration quality fact agreements with countries. a robust projection of our border followed derek. you between the member and a policy of legal migration. and that is pretty much on the table again, after a long time of quiet around this issue. okay, thank you for that. and the called reese and madrid. more
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news from around the world now, starting here in germany where police say they have caught one of the keys suspects in a high profile robbery. i from 2019 back then the still priceless historical jewels from the famous green vault museum and the eastern city of dressed and the rest happened on monday nights during a ride on a flash in berlin. u. s. supreme court has agreed to consider a major challenge to abortion. rights of the state of mississippi seeks to ban most abortions from the 15th week of pregnancy, a court ruled a court ruling in favor would overturn decades of legal precedent. decision is expected next year. heavy rains in brazil's amazon rain forest, of course, rivers to rise to nearly records levels. authorities say more than 400000 people have been affected by flooding with many forced to leave their homes. environmental research say, climate change is behind the latest extreme weather. heavy fighting has resumed
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in afghanistan after the end of a 3 day truce of the muslim a holiday of aid says us and nato continue their military withdraw that are currently around $2500.00 us troops in afghanistan. that's on top of 7000 from nato allies. in april us president joe biden promised that all of us troops would be out by september. the 11th the 20th anniversary of the 911 attacks of triggered american military involvement, taliban ruled a most of the country before the us led invasion. now these group is seeking to regain control and is recruiting more fighters a rare glimpse of another world, a home visit with a taliban. welcome come on in his 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.
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for the other one. i did this for 2 reasons. one i had no job and to i wanted to do something about era, unjust and corrupt government. so they were pressing the people of this country when there's a long way his father welcomes his decision. he is proud, his son is now on the taliban side. hotel shot and we got hungry them. so this makes me happy because we muslims, we should defend the islamic state. islamic state allows us to fight infidels and the we dedicate a lot to us. we also want is lemming shari'a and taliban law to be implemented by police them at the water. many afghans are scared of the taliban, increasing power. ali khan is a truck driver. he drives all across afghan is 10, and he has to pay passage fees to the taliban on a regular basis. just recently he paid the equivalent of 75 euros about
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a quarter of his monthly salary, which was it was from the taliban are increasing in number and their powers growing. they set up checkpoints and full drivers to pay for safe passage. the government can't stop them. although the official checkpoint on for far away jer not cool. a farmer has had a similar experience. he makes his living growing and selling grain from his meager earnings. he has to pay that 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. rather than that, i would prefer that the soldiers stayed by the international troops of p. c. for the past 2 decades, if they leave afghanistan, the country will go to pieces. where did you see that there was? the taliban are already taking control of more and more places around the country.
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and they make no secret of their ultimate goal. and that we won't and islamic state, and the engine is limit government that provides law and order for a modern foreign troops. and all infidels must leave the country. then he said it, nato troops have announced they will withdraw from afghanistan by september at the latest. after they are gone, the taliban hopes to turn back the clock and return the country to where it was 20 years ago. let's speculate about that to future with mariam. sappy, who is director of the organization of policy research and development studies in cobble. welcome to d. w. foreign true numbers in afghanistan have already been v to time. much difference, you think a total withdrawal will make well for, for again, and then the removal of the additional us soldiers and i also needed
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soldiers in addition to that also private contractors would most evidently have an impact both on the capability of the national security forces to be able to tackle this search and violence that we're witnessing from the taliban. you know, having the withdrawal of a combination of almost 10000 us soldiers in addition 280-0000 contractors, contractors are really important when it comes to maintenance logistical support. technical support for different divisions of the national security, for especially the air force and having to complete the role of that in this short time span so quickly would in evidently hamper the ability of the national security forces to be able to tackle this upright though the national security forces are right now deployed across the country and are on the battle lines.
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but this, this difficulty in this challenge will be upcoming for them when this withdrawal does take place in this manner. so you've described a situation which is essentially a country that is still at war despite the even though nato troops are now leaving yes, it is very much a country at war. we are, we are not in a situation where we can see we are close to political settlement that has been ongoing as part of the peace process. the taliban have mentioned very recently a couple of days ago that they will be looking to potentially return to the peace table. and doha, but without any progress on the political front to reach a political settlement, the which role will most definitely put the national security for this in
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a very vulnerable position. but we are expecting as the u. s. journal miller very recently said in his interview to b. b. c. that he expects there to be a rise in violence by the taliban in the very near future. so we're very much a country at war and award escalating. so given that i want to do, you feel at all let down by the, the u. s. decision which nato effectively rubber stamps to withdraw their troops. well, what, what atkins are disappointed at which they have articulated is that this would roll is being done without any conditions that was quite disappointing for the people of afghanistan having conditions on this, which would have put a lot of more pressure in leverage for the international community to police on the taliban on the negotiation table with, with, without any conditions,
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without any withdraw conditions, such as improvement in reduction of violence, improvement in the security situation, parts of the country. you have a withdrawal that is happening basically giving the television the upper hand on the battlefield in this scenario and basically waiting out this withdrawal to take place. let's not forget that between 12 to 19 percent, depending on different studies the, the 12 to 90 percent of the territory is under the control of the taliban, and nearly half of the districts of the country are being contested. so of course this puts, this puts atkins in a, in a difficult spot. ok, mary, i'm sorry, that's very clear. thank you so much for joining us from the organization for policy, research and development studies in cobble will finish with a quick line of sports or bow madrid. it feel that tony cross has the tested
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positive for covey. 19 ahead of the spanish leagues final match to the face of the german international will mr. rouse key game against the vera on saturday. cruces clubs, just 2 points behind, athletic madrid down to a when could mean a leak championship? cross is expected to be part of germany's national team when it plays in the european championships. as it show up today. more world news at the top of the hour, i close up a set of next looking at a training program of people with mental disabilities. with me the news
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the news the news the really happy she got a spot cologne's institute for inclusive education. here people like jenny who have mental disabilities, are trained to be education, special. the know the issues, mentally disabled people deal with the 1st half academic track for people with
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disabilities. oh you feel worry to me too. i'm neil. host of the i'm agreement protocols, and to me is clear. we need to change the solutions or out this is join me for a deep green transformation to me for the me species and expedition into the
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secret language of wales. the exciting part of the underwater listening, if you're giving you a window into their, their life, that you would never, never see me accompany your research team to the pacific to the language of wales june 4th on d w. me today we're going to meet several people who have intellectual disabilities, signed up for a 3 year program to train them as education specialist at the university level. the candidates the institute for inclusive education can tell me
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the program is saying to helping individuals who have disabilities become more fully integrated into the academic world and to help them lead more in dependent lives. a total of 50 people apply to be admitted to the program. wonder what a, there's a lot of competition co who can i didn't know what to expect to find that. but i'm excited about the institute to promote inclusion in higher education. i'm the thing lucky out. i'd be like a different sort of professor at the university lecturer says me out that i'd like math and low. i. yeah. okay,
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here i am. you were born in the wrong war. yes. i speak 3 languages. well. version, curtis german. well, the problem, bob, bye me, i suffered from oxygen deficiency early on and, and that caused some visual impairment i think in my own technology. but my disability is not an obstacle for me is for miss calhoun. denise, wish people would give me more time to say things if you leave them and say it's 20 years, i mean i've been living with this disability for 28 years now. and i've had a lot of ups and downs that normally people haven't gone through. but i can get along fine when i have to begin to run for this. most of the candidates have jobs and workshops for people with disabilities. don't continue to work there until they find out what's been exempted for the university training program. i am making along the people who move
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him. i have a learning disability. so it takes me longer to memorize things from i suffered from a lack of oxygen and that destroy some of my brain cells. and whether it's just something that i have to deal with mr. and sometimes i think about it quite a bit. and it's not always easy for me to come to terms with knock him over life. permit me for this. coming up and lunch is blind. for a long time. he's been looking for the job. it's more challenging. matter i need more work please. soundproofing material coming will be with you. monday, february 22nd 2016. i need more again. jenny
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joyce had choppy and you know say went shopping. i don't know. i see the chunk the i've got a chance now to teach people about what life is like for those who have disability to my name. i think that's really exciting, fun. florian lives in his own department, it is not his house was the thought of further. they used to say that you'd probably never learn to walk. do you recognize these photos in lips that was in lips. start the in the right before they put you on the ventilator that you were breathing for several days with the help of the machine went off and then things slowly started to get better off. yeah, oxygen deficiencies among infants can cause serious problems in the development.
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florence mother has learned to cope with the situation. the father has not a girl with a one think i think it was incredibly difficult for his father to accept that florian is the way he is is or was at that time. so i love his dignity for humans and i think he always wanted a son that he could do things where you like roller blading or playing football. when florian was growing up, that just wasn't possible place. you know, how did you deal with them? it was tough and they are very difficult, but i said to myself, he's my son. it doesn't matter that he has a disability. my child from the handicapped part and i love him just the way he is on, even though via is now. yeah
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well as a come one guy missed him when i look at pictures from when he was younger than gun . and then think about all that he's accomplished in his life for food. yeah, it's pretty amazing that isn't vans and was a mock that also i'm leaving as hello now stop it or start trying to communicate and it's hard for me when i think that a problem i had when i was born can will you want us to make such a big difference later on 3 things, good career. this is really not ok you when i look back on it now it's really just don't think you've done so well. flow was just
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a few minutes. can change your life forever. new. you just a few minutes and then renew the week later, the administrators at the technical university in cologne, have decided who will be able to join the training program. this isn't. we're very impressed on in you sound happy. yeah, yes. and i just wanted to say that i'd really like to have you in our program. i'm so used. yeah, yeah. i'm glad i was in that workshop was like jail, but i had to get out of those. yeah. and now you can mom and dad. congratulations and yeah, the way it is for the last month or so, he's been saying that he's the 1st college student in our family. i don't that i
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kept my fingers crossed that this what happens. and now it has to come in the design that i wanted to say that we were all very impressed with you and we think that you'd make a good education specialist and we'd like to join us, right. i have a training position. yeah. 2 me with the chinese university educational opportunities had seen limited. that's going to change things. and in this hallway we have classrooms on the right and left 50. also, in some cases the professors conduct the seminars that can last up to 90 minutes or
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is that what we're going to do? we had a lecture like that in the 3rd semester in a room like you see here, with my phone call. so we stand up in front of the class and teach right before the face and number he challenges in this program. the you have 3 years to learn the road. it was it'll go by quickly the i have tons of questions. like i said, this may be the longest job title in the building. my social worker and social education specialist means master, right? master's time. master of disaster. when i have master,
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my brain shuts down. this exercise is aimed at helping you to get to know each other better. now i can learn. it's called a triangle of common ground. no one by the group begins by showing the likes and dislikes, but simply they have much in common. great, a friend of mine does that new music. yeah. right. but not who i like everything. and i i like writing all, all write this down. i don't like writing, i mean either the write about what you will have in common. what should i write that we both have
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muscle spasms 1st. most fun. let's do like this. keep it made to it's no offense, but there is something that i don't like to talk about. the thing that me do, i get as much you can talk to me normally flowing and being could you find out that they have not in common and not just a disability now discovery national ah, 2 months later the training program is moving right along. hello. it's been here, i'm the university instructor here. i'm done my brother,
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and over there are other students with here a little shy the my income. wondering why i'm on, where are you from? indonesia? the common form is welcome everyone. i'm really glad that you're here today for our joint seminar. supported decision maker. don't know the client. we'd like to tell us a bit about yourself. if you want to, for example, whether you'd like to start a family. it's showing me while my top priority right now is my career as i'm done and once you get a job and then figure out how to do it, you can be a lot of fun. so i 90 or anything
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that you guys can different options. you can say i'll do the seminar and this one and this one. we can do that too. but because of disability are choices limited on for the job for the 1st group today. why? why should the for the seminar, i was a bit nervous. i hadn't had a lot of contact with people with disability. it's not even in school. and that's it was unusual. i really like the seminar for tubes to me. and that was really impressed that i think we were a little shy and interested in the corner. and then i started asking all kinds of questions. i'm looking, i thought the seminar was great. can we go through a lot out of it?
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from the program participants have to get used to suicide. you experiences that include speaking to a group today, actress and performance coach, uni dillman is here to help them develop their skills. you know, shouldn't have you folks here. i'm pleased to be here, and i've really been looking forward to this coin, me to this in great love for them. what are some of the things you can do to make a good impression on your audience? instantly? so if you have to present yourself with tara, tara, what do you mean by sort of take this when you go to show people that you want to tell them something that it's like you're saying to the audience, hey, look at me, i've got something important to tell you how you always wrote. yeah. so you draw attention to yourself right now. okay,
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very good. what. what else was paul snuck out in time for not you need to be a bit spontaneous that. teach people in a way that it's not boring in makes them one to interact with you in the middle. so can we say that you should try to make the best impression possible for sure latins either side was something like that. well, there's no right way or wrong way to talk to an audience. we used a lot of different techniques for each of us here today. we'll do it in their own way. it would really be a shame if we all sounded the same. that wouldn't be interesting hot of and no one would listen like to highlight when it says also. now i'd like to talk to him about some of your muscle. please keep reading naturally. don't make it to 10. ok. ok. let's do the biceps for tens of muscles and you keep holding it for 15
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seconds and then the con on your mark gets set up. it goes on hand release. yeah. just get you kevin reading normally right off. oh, that's a good exercise, isn't it? now? now each of them will make the 1st presentation in front of the group. the main goal, it's guide that people need is freedom and but you can't find that freedom with me and we laughed a lot together and did a lot of stupid stuff in there to come at the in the future. the word we has no meaning for you. you know, i often go out and look for
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a place that belongs only to us. god, when no one can disturb bus by the time i spent with you was wonderful, but that's over now. and it has no place in my future. i'll wait for you at the next traffic light, the negative red light in the war number and i won't stop my car without you only in the thank you. thank you. and that sounded natural. yeah. well done. that's the way to do it. so that was powerful stuff. i found that really powerful to a hosted site. you can set up the electrons any way you want to raise it or lower it so that you feel comfortable when you speak of a shot. you don't want to keep looking down for the 1st of all that's important for proper breathing. and 2nd, you can make better eye contact with the audience flow. and what i want to tell you
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florian, and this is important for all of you to send things up before you get started and will for and be easy because i know they can't even see you again. the 1st week. they are standing by the door. com to make that you've just come in. so now i'll guide you over there. okay. okay, so that was his model. okay. so total move you to move to move it to me. you turn me all
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the me. marie mooney, 8 months now to become friends tonight among you wanted 30 new hobby tennis for the visually impaired. always work from the center line. you can feel it with your feet. it hit the top of them in the midst of each. now find the center line. step back a bit. the manager the hand on the list. so what do you think is too great? we have to be on the line considering the
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standing. sorry, leave him, he's not a bit story. i mean it's me. hello. okay. you're up in fabi and each other without disabilities or they get acquainted with them. all right, great, thanks like this. you know, we've still got time. i'll just roll my chance. go, we'll push you in something about us. who was it like for you guys? growing up as twins because of the disability mac, and i'm looking for also to me,
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english at some top fort i think i had a few advantages and think of the despite in their example at school, he used to have a lot of problems. but our parents always tried to raise us the same way. they still do give him your in spite, and they made sure that we both did things together. the 1st, like on vacation, often we'd go way up in the mountain. but if you need me to avoid any of what we take him up there, whether he wanted to go or not, i live so that we could all share the experience. and of course, we have the usual squabbles that all brothers dead just like it'd be boring without time, but it's completely different for everyone. farther from fossil of our father, more or less favoured me over my brother, to be honest. of course, i didn't have any say in the matter and i didn't ask my father for any special favors so fluent rosel and turned out and move it up. and it wasn't easy to get out
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of that situation was from this because later our father just wasn't there for us. and my dog had also soto so, but i think that this brought fluffy on and me closer together. and now we get along just like any other brothers do, some good on very small afterward flowing through so much about that conversation in the bowling alley. he now realize is how much he misses his father. he wondered whether he should contact him and tell him about the teacher training program. ah. yeah. let me know. you always wanted me to change somehow or do things differently for him. but i want him
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to say that i've come a long way all by myself who had been that wouldn't have happened if i didn't have a disability. so it's sort of a blessing in disguise. this person might, i think if you really love your child, then it doesn't matter how he's developed and then you don't say, okay, now with this program, he's had a positive development. and if you were still in the workshop for example, then i wouldn't regret it. and then i still would have done everything right. that doesn't really change anything that could say right now that he regrets leaving. but that doesn't make up for all the years that he was gone. this is one of my well, i just wanted to see how he'd react to find out whether he still cares about me. i needed to have that when i was younger, doesn't matter what he left us. i just want to feel that he still cares the may i mean, but how would that help you do you still really need that?
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thank you. the next step is to conduct the seminar. now it's getting closer and closer. and it's just making me crazy. bush off, but i'm also really excited and sometimes all that makes me cry. that's my value. but that's how i get the emotion out of my system because this is, that's a natural reaction. you are not an actress. you should just be yourself and to see people if they really aren't going to be fit on the fact that i did that, that i don't want to screw up the seminar and we won't because we work pretty well together and help each other. it'll turn out fine the
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for 9 months now, this group has been trying to become university teachers. they've been studying education and improving their public speaking skills. the him on the, on. i'm doing the introduction tomorrow for i'd like to read it to you and then you can tell me what i need to fix my goods. the me give was not too many good. i'm taking part in the training program at the institute to inclusive education. quitting for every 3 years, fulltime program is unique in unit participants, complete the program and pass the final exam. they'll be hired education specialists, the university level i think it flows today today
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we're all excited so and so you probably less than we are anyway, i'm pleased to be able to present to you the 1st to now series of seminars. it's called my world boy sharing our expertise on disability mentoring. been the will have been i never some one to mention cannot whom i know this, but i'll read what i've written down. even when we are here, we are allowed and we learned of a steel and i think that's important to me and to the rest of us that they come take away our rights and stand on please me. i'm right here. but don't stand in front of me. i won't be able to see the audience . now we're going to play a get to know your game. i'll say my name and make a motion. exactly. go ahead. as time crazy a munch munch,
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and your motion. i'm the loud one, low gluco. and that's your movement. and i'm quiet ruth. the loud luca, one quiet, rich, brave michel and intelligent is the me just looking at that right now. i feel like i was to do this job. now. i can't get used to hearing the word lecturer but i'm working on it. i get my big good as the answer when you think that we're all different from you know, why not as long as you do a lot more things than i do. see, you've got these hobbies,
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which i don't have most of the next deal, who will be teaching courses in social studies, medicine design. when those of us, they want to understand what life is like for us. and we can explain that to them when the member and when you do that it triggers something positive inside you. if i move came forward to doing this, to me, it's a great thing to come to it. i think that the students learn a lot today here in on a proud of lutely wouldn't be ah, ah
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ah, please listen carefully and don't know how to do the field on the discover the world around you subscribe to d w documentary on youtube. mm . ah excuse
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ah, does it need to be used from us president joe biden express their support for a cease fire between israel and hamas, but stopped short of calling full on how the stadiums that 15 through the trouble following the latest israeli, as strikes, will speak to the un inside garza also on the program. the african migrants cross from the rocket to the spanish territory of fame in one day hoping for
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a new life in europe. the spanish started already sending them back and ask for their futures. as nato troops prepared to leave the country for good and taliban rebels. step up, the recruitment police in germany achieve a breakthrough in that investigation into 2019 spectacular jewel highest interested . ah, i'm sure girl, welcome to the program. us president joe biden has told israel's prime minister that he supports a ceasefire between israel and palestinian militants, even though washington has repeatedly blocked a un security council statement that calls for an immediate end to hostilities. israeli jets unleashed another barrage of abstracts on garza overnight and palestinian medicine group. hamas continued to fire rockets at israeli cities. more
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than 200 people, mostly palestinians have been killed in more than a week of violence. israeli asked, strikes his cause early on tuesday morning. the 9th day of fighting between israel and commerce militants in gaza. the casualties amounting many of them civilians gathered hospitals already struggling with their covert, $900.00 pandemic, a stretch to the limits. the small girl is among the injured and this boy has lost several members of his family. the bombardments have destroyed homes and displaced tens of thousands of people. who many, terry and situation is deteriorate and the power supply for all that has been reduced to 6 to 8 hours per day. on average with a number of fetal lines,
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not functioning. that it turns disrupts the provision the health care and other basic services, including water hygiene and sanitation. israel says it's targeting senior, how much militants and the groups tunnel network, the military release. this footage which says shows as strikes on 5, how this belonging to commerce commanders, and i'm sure that directive is to continue to strike in terror targets. the idea is doing well to date has eliminated another senior islamic jihad commander. we have had a novel unit and we continue to strike it underground infrastructure. there must metro and other targets. we will continue to act as necessary to restore peace and security to the residence of israel for. 7 the escalation and violence began after clashes between israeli police and protest is over the planned eviction of palestinian families in east jerusalem. since then has kept up
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a steady stream of rockets. some of them make it past israel's iron dome defense system like here, and i showed where a residential building was damaged and several people were injured as global calls mound for an end to the blood showed the white house as president biden told. nathan, yeah. when a phone call that he supported a cease fire but stopped short of calling for one as sees fire that is urgently needed as the violence on both sides continue to sparrow. let's get more from the w. corresponded, tiny kraemer and ashton on in southern israel. welcome time you. i'm the city is close to garza. it's brian has to be one of the areas worst hit by how much rockets just outline for us. what's happening that absolutely. we've seen and heard the sirens going off several times in the past 2 hours or so over bucket
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barrage came in from got into on but also i still and now are in have sounded in the tone of several now as we speak. so, you know, just came off of some hours of quiet actually also during the night there was a lot of about 6 hours. and then in the morning there were more rockets. but only a few. rockets fired from garza into many southern israel, but just a few hours ago, another barrage into some communities around the gaza strip made a direct hit and a people were injured and 2 people were killed. this comes after morning, whereas seem to get a bit more quiet and people were preparing for that. but it seems it continues like that. so now ok, i tend to stay with us. i'd like to get your input into a new development in the gaza conflict because the palestinians are holding a general strike across the israel and the west. brian, with
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a protest against the war in garza also taking place, a protest in the west bank, the tires and through and some through stones and israeli soldiers who appeared to be responding with tear gas shows a several people have been injured. back to tenure, kramer in ash gone. and tanya, is there any sign of this general strike that go on? no, certainly not around here. this is a strike that has been closed by all sectors across the occupied west bank and also in cities and israel. these are mixed cities and inside israel, they're called for gathering for protests, for just marching in the cities had been also high turn out in bethlehem was received and people are just coming out to so you know, to highlight what's going on. people are also when you palestinians and what's happening in gaza, so they're turning out the to, to so into protest and to highlight for their cold i to be looking at life
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pictures as we speak, tanya, and it's interesting. just looking at the smoke rising in the, in the, in the street. but listening to you there and what sounds like a very peaceful park. it's obviously a very touchy picture across the country. well, absolutely. i mean there's so many different realities at the moment. it says here in the south, you have to be prepared, you know, to run any minute, could the star and the, the alerts could go off and you have to be prepared to go into a safe room. or if you're out in the street to run some house cover or lay down on the, on the road. and then you have, of course, a totally different picture in gaza itself. and of course in the occupied was thing . it's a different reality. so people are used to living in these different realities here, but maybe and tons of conflict even more. so. tell you thank you for joining us.
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kind of crime and escal and southern israel. well i've been speaking about but the situation actually in god's or itself with a mature schmilo, he's director of the united nations relief from works agency for palestinian refugees in garza. i think 1st by the thousands of god who is currently displaced by the israeli offensive, are displaced to as of this morning, have 48000 people in 58 of our united nations order our schools here. clearly the population, not least based on the experiences in 2014 and still see un installations painted in blue and with a blue un flag on top of it as relatively more safe and secure than their own homes . so that's basically one place they can go to. and then we also know that many
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have gone to grant friends and relatives in areas they perceive as length of a target, you know, and that's away from border areas and so on. so there's also significant numbers with friends and relatives, and we should not overlook them either. and others, un buildings, respect in the chevy. we have assurances from both sides that un installations are not targets and we rarely know the coordinates of all our installation. we've shared them with them including recently. unfortunately this time around, some of the strikes are just too close to our installation. so this morning, you know, we had a massive explosion right next to our office compound here and not far away from one of the schools that are housing refugees. and we know that the solar panels, for example, were destroyed and not destroyed completely but damage. so we are seeing
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a lot of destruction of civilian infrastructure as i would call it because the strikes are too close to the infrastructure. when you say that to close today, are you talking about damage being sustained to these un buildings in schools? well, on my own compound here, again, the offers compound. if i could take your rounded, you would see there is considerable damage to the building and you know that's, that's one aspect is the, the damage itself. i also would like to mention not just one right nations. we know that 2 primary health care centers run by the old warranties have been destroyed. we know, and m s. f clinic has been destroyed. we know that the central lab for colbert 19 testing is no longer functional as a result of, of strikes. and we know that the central ambulance unit of the palestine red crescent has been badly affected. so it has
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a serious impact on our collective ability to provide humanitarian service. and where are these rockets coming from? these these bills have been destroyed by, by, by who's rockets. it's the israeli retaliation strikes. now i'm very well aware that and for me it's of course unacceptable. as the u. n. person, the number of rockers, any rockets lying from here to israel. we know that some of them have fallen short, but all the information i have and i believe it's credible and reliable. and i've seen some of it with my own eyes is that by far most of the damage is being caused by the c. v, or israeli retaliatory strike. mathias says model. thank you for joining us to such valid from the united nations relief and works agency of palestinian refugees in garza. thank you. take a look at some more news making headlines around the world. at least 19 people have
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been killed after a powerful sight close. what heavy, rain and storm surges to india's west coast, around 200000 people have been moved to safety. the country's navy is searching for scores of others missing at faith after one vessel san got another lost power. the us treasury has imposed sanctions on 16 of me in march military leaders and their families over the deadly attacks on civilians following the military code. the army seize power in february, claiming that elections had been rig killed, at least 800 people in attacks of pro democracy supported during widespread protests was 40000 people in china, certainly owning providence have been placed in home quarantine because of a surgeon covered 1900 cases, authority hope the measure will prevent will help prevent large scale outbreaks, providing supplies to people in 98 quarantined neighborhoods. about
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6000 migrants of enter spain's north african territory of failed to with some swimming, almost 2 kilometers along the coastline from neighboring morocco authority say it was a record one day influx amid worsting relations between spain and morocco. the michael from africa had been trying to get into europe by this speech for years. but never before they crossed in such numbers. at least $5000.00 derived within a 24 hour period. the largest number in a single day. most to a young man from morocco. but there will also significant numbers of women and at least $1000.00 children. some explained why they had decided to attempt the dangerous journey. because people closer when you have nothing, no money to spend, you have to pay your rent and you have to take care of your children and parents. there is no room for fear. looking to help you out of class as he has got to see
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all the young people want to leave the country, there's no work, aren't you afraid of the sea? no, i'm not afraid if i stayed here, i wouldn't be afraid. i have to save myself that we don't know the things you've held the beach. they want to reach it in the spanish exclaim, of sale to which borders morocco it is in northern africa, but as part of the european union. and the thought has long been a market for migrants taking a better life. most of these new arrivals reached by swimming from 2 kilometers along the coast of morocco are using in place for boats. scaling this 10 meta high wall is one of the only other options of getting into theater spain, a wreck to defense, to try to close off the land route. but this has not stopped some migraines from trying to look over the years. madrid say several 100 miles to get into say to each year, but many deported back to where they came from as they have no right to asylum in
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the you the most of those arriving of the last few days will also be sent back to morocco. some report suggest moroccan, please allowed so many to move towards the board in the 1st place because of a diplomatic spat with spain over another issue. but official, the madrid they have already reached an agreement about sending the migrant back. and when are we in forcing security to prevent further arrivals? let's get more from the w, corresponded the cold rece, who's in madrid. welcome, nicole. what's behind this? sudden surgeon migrants arrivals and sen. so basically what is happening now is that rock and border forth are not stopping them from going to sale to which they have been doing usually away. and the input will 30 will be 24 hours. is very much the biggest influx of migrant spain. as seen in a single day,
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and it's also being interpreted as a display of power from the moroccan side and possibly also affect what pain and the rest of europe as st last week decided to offer medical assistance to the leader of the group which supports the independence of the weapon, the horror region, and well, this region was annexed by morocco in the 17th other countries who would support the independent for example, germany or spain itself and of this region. but that is pretty much a form by morocco site and now they're putting on the display maybe to show what they're capable of using these migrant flows as bargaining chips. but thing maybe that they're all upset about the situation and the pretty much what we'll serving these days. and then there's also the possibility that this might be established. faint political system as well as your opinion because it's just not a huge migrant slow that confronting right. now, people are going to look at this and i wonder,
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well how is it that spike has been able to deploy people so quickly? is that and why? why isn't there an asylum process that these arrivals have to go through? well, basically that has been agreement and agreement between the morocco and spain for a very long time, which has also been backed by constitutional court lafayette, that it is not unlawful to bring these people back to morocco if they enter in legally. so that's what they can do now within 10 days without proper process, except when the group that are entering a vulnerable or under aged. and usually this has always been a mutual agreement between the 2, which has worked just now. we see that it's a very fragile one as well. there has been talk in the past of asylum seekers in africa being processed on the continent. sort of off short as it were. is that, is that still a life proposal? while do you need to look into options? this is urgent and i think what pretty much reflects what is coming up next is
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a statement by marguerite. this is tina who is the you vice president. he tweak that the spanish board of sale. 5 is european border, i quote, the full holiday charity with spain. we now need the european migrant poll migration. follow the pack agreements with countries a robust protection of our border. all the derek you between the members and the policy of legal migration. and that is pretty much on the table again of the after a long time of quiet front issues. ok, thank you for that. and the cold, reese and madrid. take a look at the current of our situation around the world. and we'll start in india, where the total number of cases is search pass 25000000 making into the only country only the 2nd country in the world to pass that figure after the u. s. death in the last 24 hours rose by more than $4000.00 small developments in the pandemic
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. the number of weekly destro cove at 19 in the u. s. has fallen to its lowest level, so nearly 14 months, a number of new cases declining for 5 weeks in a row. chinese bond tech company, a clover biotech company, beg your pardon? clover says a new version of its current via fax. it showed a strong response again see original corona virus, the strain and some variance during testing on mice and the stray, the us government is resisting cold to open up overseas travel camera plans to keep its board as close to most international travelers until the middle of next year, the master authorities here in germany face severe criticism for the country slow vaccine roll out some areas and are trying a new approach by offering jobs to the public on a 1st come 1st serve basis. as the project got underway in one district of berlin, there was certainly plenty of demand. hundreds of people have raved the rain and a 2 hour wait to get vaccinated at this site, in berlin's neu,
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co neighborhood. at the major vaccination centers, priority goes to old people, then people in high risk groups, then medical workers, then everyone else. today though, it's 1st come 1st serve without an appointment. from how this fun i found out about it from a notice pinned outside my door. i took advantage right away later. the thing my does is it's a one off oppertunity. man. you have to wait for a while, but i think people should take the chance. i wish i haven't gotten the virus, but i've been at home for 2 months and i'm getting vaccinated. so i can go back to work y'all and inform them and thought about manuel dana on fear. my johnson johnson, this side is part of the pilot project, meant to see that berlin's vaccination raid at 1st job was only available at major
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vaccination centers. then personal physicians started distributing shots. now pop up sites like this, 10 to part of the mix in areas where the infection rates are particularly high, like here in the neighborhood is comparatively low income. many people here have migrant backgrounds. social distances can be difficult in the often crowded housing found here. so the city is trying out targeted measures and yet it works well. i think we can do the same thing and other neighborhoods to the code and repeated here as well. you have to bring the vaccination to where people live about sex. now come, depending on who lusting germany is. vaccination drive took a long time to get up to speed. the no current pilot project is meant to give it more momentum. the problem now is a lack of doses. many who came here today had to go back home, unvaccinated will staying in germany, i fully say they have caught a key suspect and a high profile jewelry high from 2019,
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but then fif stole priceless historical jewels of the artifacts from the famous green vaults museum in the eastern city of dresden police made the latest arrest during the right on the flat in berlin on monday night. despite such as more than a dozen locations that he still no trace of the stolen lived. let's get off from dw political correspondent, thomas sparrow in lin, welcome tara thomas. let's start with this arrest. what happened, phil? this is certainly an important arrest for german police. this is a pass and a 22 year old manners has been described by previously evaded police on various occasions on who has been described as the last main suspect. directly linked to this type in november 2019 police have now arrested 5 people in total who are considered to have a direct link to the, to the highest and best person. the 22 year old man that was arrested in berlin is
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also a relative of one of those who had been arrested previously. there were arrests in november 2020 in december, 2020 and now based particular arrest. this opens more questions for authorities as they try not only to find out where the further people were involved in the highest, but also what happened to the items that were stolen. the 22 year old person, but also the other 4 that had been arrested. i said to belong to a klan in berlin, that is linked to the criminal underworld. right now. this green volt high made headlines around the world, just reminded how big a deal. this was. absolute aid made headlines around the world when it happened in 2019 the whole process as well in the next the last few months has also got a lot of headlines here in germany and such. it is certainly one of the most important developments in germany's recent history when it comes to to museum heis
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. the green volt in dresden is one of the main tourist excites of the city, but it's also described to feel as one of europe, the biggest treasure collection. then in 2019, during that highest very important items were stolen. items that have been described as of incalculable, historical value. we're talking here of couplings, which i'll be here of jewelry we're talking here of song which will be even of a very important white diamond. so this gives you an idea of just how important and how significant this is and why authorities are particularly interested now in trying to find out what happened to these items. because one of the main fears that authorities have when it comes to these kinds of incidents is that the items are then destroyed and sold separately or at least distributed separately. because obviously it is impossible to sell a source or are very important diamond that people actually know about. so this is important for authority and it's certainly opens up the possibility for them to find, identify some of the biggest clues linked to this very important heist. ok,
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so one suspect in custody. where does that leave the investigation? it leaves the investigation with the 2 key questions that i already stressed. one exactly. what happened to those stolen items and the 2nd, the important issue where the other people were involved. authorities do believe that other people could have been involved in an assistive roles or not directly as the 5 people that i already mentioned, but assisting in other ways. so this is where thought is now looking towards and this is what authorities now a trying to resolve to dw political correspond, thomas better. thank you. couple of lines, a sports rel, madrid midfielder. tony cross has tested positive for coping 19 ahead of the spanish li gets final match day of the season. the german international will miss ralph key game against the v around on saturday. cruz's club is just 2 points behind, athletic
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o madrid. and the wind could mean league championship is expected to be part of germany's national team when it plays in the european championships. and i'm just 66 days to go before the plan, the opening of the tokyo olympics. athletes are publicly expressing doubt of the games will go ahead. australian team members gathered for the launch of the team uniforms in sydney, but most won't get to wear them at the opening ceremony. as numbers will be severely restrictive because of the pandemic, and with japan expanding it covered 19 state of emergency. some athletes are now opening, resigned to the possibility of the games being canceled. i will feel about that if it did get caught off because but i guess with everything happening we just have to have to grow well aware of what's going on. you copy and you've as an athlete to know that. and we don't want to threaten the safety and security of the japanese as well. that's really important for us. what we can do is
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what's in our control, taking the vaccines, doing everything we can move over that it's, i've got everyone but also being realistic that if it does get cold awful, they're happy with that. then we have to embrace that as well. coming up next in dw, and use asia. desperate cries for medical aid for koby patients, some flooding, india, social media, we meet the volunteer is trying to help. there's energy, we'll have that story and more. next. have a good news. the news, the news
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the the the the ah, the world to get to be on deals. yes. as we take on the world. the oldest, we're all about the stories that matter to use
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the leverage by police. my we are here is that fire for mines me. the news only going for a bit from the the spring began in 2011. people stood up against co rulers and engine dictatorship. all these moments have left the box in my memory. was a huge. it was an incredible feeling that people were liberated the
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to for more security, more freedom, more dignity, have their hopes, mental filled in. where does the stand today? 10 years after the arabs spring. and rebellion starts june 7th on d. w. yeah. a bit of the news coming up today and investigation into an army in control information. i need to speak to me about defectors, who explained public controls nearly every aspect of its soldiers lives, from their finances to their thoughts. indians organizing social media to help those facing have devastating 2nd wave of virus infections. and 1st,
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the panoramic now a storm one of the deadliest icons in decades bubbles in the west coast, leaving damage its way to the the i'm british manager. welcome to did up the news. a sure glad you could join us. an investigation by the w investigative team has found that the me and my army is brainwashing its soldiers and controlling every aspect of their life, even down to their finances. my colleagues spoke to 3 defectors to a form, a high ranking officers. the conversations are mainly over messaging apps and through some audio and video goals are just speaking to one of my colleagues who conducted the investigation in a minute. but he has a bit of what 2 of the defective said. everything is monitored, they want to turn people into robots who don't think for themselves.
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and another defect said if people post political things they can be arrested and put in jail for 3 or 4 weeks. and joining me on the line is my colleague now me conrad, who was part of the team that conducted this investigation. know me. where are these defectors you spoke to? and why did the defect? right, so i'm afraid i can't tell you very much about where they are that lee, because obviously they're not safe in the army is hunting down as well as we know defected. all i can tell you is that to i and hi, i'm hiding in me and me on a moving from one place house to the next day. and the other one is across the board in india. but again, i can't tell you where exactly 3 men decided to defect following the on the take any of this year. and the work is basically a brutal crack down on civilian protesting this take over. one man said i can't be part of an institution that took partner in the legal coo so much because of the
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they will defected. did they provide any explanation as to why the army decided to take power in this manner? in me, in ma say none of these men are actually part of the highest echelons of the army, but they're all very clear that they think the crew took place because the army was afraid that it was losing power. so the elections laughed late last year. one landslide for the governing national league for democracy, which basically meant that you know, the army with the fight, it might lose its power. and one man was particularly, he said, you know, the army wants to turn the entire country into a military base. meaning that, you know, the army wants to take control of the whole country and not see any power to 2 elected civilians elected politicians. now me, how is the army able to wheel so much influence in me? and my say the only me in my, basically a very powerful state within the me,
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in my state. if we look briefly at the history of me and mar, basically me in my being govern government by the military. for most of it, recent history since it came independent from the u. k. me from britain basically my time the army managed to mass great wealth. so land and can only can financial power for a long time. it was basically impossible to do business indian mart without going through the army or affiliated businesses of the army. and what they've also done is, you know, establish that and quote, for some men are accountable to the civilian court. they run their own universities to a very powerful pick state within the state that basic, uncomfortable from the one. what did these 2 factors tell you? did they provide a glimpse into the life of an average soldier in me and ma, they did, they did, and it's a very close to the very, strictly monitored life. i mean, they were very clear that the army has faced the monitoring team that, you know,
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looked at all that social media activity. you know, the whole people in that, you know, maybe voice that support for the nationally, for democracy or criticize the government, mental not as propaganda. and officers have to take part in a 3 month training course, which he knows paint the army is the savior, the defender, me and mark at the muslim. there's a lot of anti muslim rhetoric that so just the fed, the 3 men that we talked to, they didn't necessarily believe all that propaganda. but they knew well enough that they couldn't force any criticism because that would have been dangerous. and also right now they're basically soldiers are basically living this life on the face, but they're not allowed to leave. they need to ask the parents if they want to leave, they have to do all the shopping on the basis the school on the basis. so i think an average soldier, you can say, have very little to no contact with civilians. you did mentioned earlier that these 3 defectors in a dangerous situation. but for the moment being of the same i wouldn't say
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they say so it seems pretty clear that the army has drawn off the list is wanted activists and journalists and also defective. and they haven't published this because obviously embarrassing for them to, to publish how many people who have left the army despite the, the great danger. but the hunting down. these people know that putting a lot of pressure on the defects and families. i mean, one man told us that his parents received threatening phone calls basically telling them you know, ways to son that he did tell us where your son is. then we'll come and get you plenty, several communication with his family for the in a very dangerous situation. they're trying to leave the country, but they know that even if they make it to thailand to india, they're not necessarily safe. i mean, they could also get deported back to a complex situation at the moment. they didn't really know how to stay safe for them. you know, moved from one se, talked to the next thing,
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obviously turn away the phone they had when they were in a tree based, but it's dangerous. they're trying to remain safe. now, the camera, thank you very much for your reporting. and you can of course read to know me and my colleague yeah, bios report on our website d, w dot com the india reported its highest every single day. fatalities from over 19 on tuesday, 4329 people dead. that's the official count, but experts widely believed numbers to be much higher. the tragedy of the 2nd wave of good no virus cases is evident across the country. over about hospitals, exhausted medical stuff, and a lack of medical supplies. and here's where people have stepped up to help fellow citizens organizing on social media across various homes. people are connecting those in need to what they need. beds,
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oxygen hospitals. fil a couple of months ago, i received daily routine look a lot different. being a digital content creator per day mostly, and was planning what to post on a gram handle known for her humorous di and she has a big following on social media and has owned a reputation as an influence. but this rule acquired a different meaning as a 2nd. naval who would 19 it india suddenly lucy and other influences like her became a virtual lifeline for those in need of origin medical aid. we kind of found ourselves in the situation where the unwittingly people did not know where to go. we didn't have a number said or, you know, mean they're not even if there was nice, they weren't efficient enough to handle so many people are cause like ice cream into into we had a certain request started with 2 or 3 or be and went on 220
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a day and went and i'm at one point, it was a 100 or 200 a day. she says the request again was appealed for help in finding oxygen or hospital beds and soon went on to desperate please to plasma crucial medicine and eventually crematorium. and burial grounds which could accommodate more over the victims bodies. she kept amplifying these messages, connecting those who needed help with those who could whitehead, she asked that the reason people started reaching out to them was due to the absence of support from government authorities. who seemed to have bungled their response to the corona writers outbreak. over the past few years, social media has emerged as a fall from communication tool in a country with hundreds of millions of users. but the 2nd we've, i've brought forth, it's a mis potential to provide urgent time sensitive assistance during moments of crisis. and it's not just content creators who have sat down to assist the 2nd view
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. of course, we have seen other public figures using social media platforms, especially twitter to connect with and help those in need. she knew must be who had the youth ring of the biggest opposition political party has gained recognition for his college release work in the country. he says for him and his team of warranty of social media has proved invaluable in the fight against the virus because of the reach, it could provide them and mobile people needed a medium which could respond quickly and immediately coordinate their request or dimensions on social media you can add all the details like location, contact information, medical report in one, which makes it easier for our team here to coordinate. why she may not have the same resources as seen of us. she, the push to providing help is similar. the influence, along with a group of content creators runs a warranty group which was on providing verified leads and oxygen and other
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necessities to do sending in distress requests. at this point in time, there's really no way we could have, you will done and, and, you know, or social media platforms. then this, she says this experience has made her realize just how much different social media can make to her work. she has been feeling a wifi gap in india's overburdened health care system. turning her from a media influences to a real life, people are deadly psych loan along in the west coast is compensating health crisis . in several states, at least 16 people have died. a site loan topped a cloud its way along many coastal districts before making landfall in goods up on monday, more than 200000 people. there were given over 900 tests before they were taken to shelters, to try to limit the spread of infections. the storm has since weakened, but its left suffering in its wake. a lucky escape for these oil and gas
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workers rescued after the barge they were working on sank in the storm. nearly 200 have been brought to shore, but the fate of more than 100 others is not a certain. as the rescue operation continues, cycling town made landfall in good direct on monday, bringing its 200 kilometer when the shaw. it's the most powerful cycle to hit the region in decades, tearing through the villages, operating trees, and bringing down power lines. hundreds, there were left without electricity. on its way up the coast, the cyclop reeked havoc and go mahar rushed. restate to move by briefly closed it's a port and back you waited tens of thousands of residents. so either i mean this by the recent is by i have never seen such a devastating cycle in,
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in moon by there was a similar 1965, but not since then have i seen such a storm people have suffered a lot of damage. don't have to struggle hard to come out of it, call it up. i'm not up, you know, you're not an uphill battle for many in the city that per month was one of the worst effected by india's recent covert 19 outbreak. and that's if it has many other stories up there on our website, over the phone, both slash asia rebec tomorrow. see that the the fight against the corona virus pandemic. how has the rate of infection been developing? what does the latest research information and contact the corona virus? 19th national on d. w. can you hear me now?
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yes, yes, we can hear you. and how is germantown? we bring you uncle mack or you've never had before. right. just so, what is what it was? who is the medical really what was called her back to people who follow along the way, admirers and critics alike. and how is the world's most powerful woman shaking her legacy, joy macros last the is skepticism? undermining the united states vaccination success story. about 215000000 doses have been administered so far. almost every 2nd american has received a shot in the 3rd. a fully vaccinated pace is slowing,
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which has experts worried 5 or 6 percent to be the difference between you know, really having protection as a society versus still having a lot of active cases out there without her immunity. it'll be harder to stop the corona virus from always making comebacks. the officials say this doesn't slow down in vaccination rates due to some americans refusing to get this. taken short, that worried about the side effects for hesitancy and skepticism is stubbornly high among republicans and white evangelists, christians. but more black americans are lining up for the jap, dw college and more reports. the they are over 30 vaccination sites in jackson, mississippi, a city of 160000 residents. one of the locations is at the state university, se empty chairs and in a tap shape this key. they have 250 doses of the vaccine available today. sometimes
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we have to waste them and that's a shame because we know that there are many more people that need to be vaccinated . mississippi is last in the united states and coal with 1900 vaccinations. only 26 percent of the state's population is fully vaccine aid. it some have changed their mind. but vaccine hesitancy still poses a major problem. that was very hesitant. but once i thought about everything kind of prayed about it and, and gave her some thought, i felt like this was the most responsible thing to do. be safe with my family and people around me and i work on a rug and a lot of patients every day. so at jackson hands have center, doctor chapman and her team of her daily vaccines for free with no appointment required. but also at this side, the traffic of patients remains slow. we find in the self that a lot of conservative weiss are not getting it. and then
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a lot of that minority young is not getting and we try to just give them more and more education. even some health workers are hesitant, like barbara patrick, who eventually was convinced would you like them down the fibrous as a house worker? she was offered the vaccine in january, but didn't want to be the 1st in line trial. and it was not that i was anti vaccination, but my hesitate was because i want to see what the i comb all those will be facts with every shot of the vaccine. the risk of the spreads, returning dramatically decree this, that this is still not enough. the city of jackson has decided that if people don't attend the vaccination centers, they are going to bring the vaccine into their commune. the animal bites the make
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packed with vaccines and supplies the health workers, right 4 to 5 times a week to the suburbs. the goal is to make it as convenient as possible for people to get their vaccines today, it's a church after 2 hours, only 2 members of the community come in to get their shots. i work at night and as labor convenience when we come in the community in a day. so i can come in and take my shot. this time there, 100 vaccine doses available, a much needed tool and wanted around the globe. but demand here is quite low. some are still hesitant, but there are some who are barriers like transportation. we don't require appointments, so it makes it more convenient. but hesitancy is not only about convenience, maybe they're trying to use people of color to get the back saying to really do some research. that's one of the things, even asphalt, at 1st,
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facts and statistics convince her that this is the only way to return to normal also in their church. and let's bring in monica gandhi, a professor of medicine at the university of california. monica great to see you again. since we spoke last time, i don't know if things have really changed. why, why is this still so much i didn't see and resistance over this back thing? you know, i think there are 4 readings and you just illustrated some of them. one is in communities of color, which traditionally in the united states have had a mistress of the medical system. we have to work harder. we have to work with communities to do the messaging, church based messaging, things that you just talked about, the 2nd to distrust of the government. and we're a very polarized political country. and right now, this is being rolled out in the vine and ministration, even though it was made in the trumpet administration. and that i think it's the
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reason the cdc said you don't have to wear masks after vaccination. i think they're actually trying to motivate republicans right now that are not sure about it. and then i think there are people who are just simply inconvenient. they will get it when they get it, the young is among them. and then i think people are waiting to see if it's safe and i do think we will get there. but it's work, it's hard work. so what's the, what the governments need to put in? so what president by them is committed to is the hope is july, 4th, 70 percent of people will have gotten the 1st jose changed from a system where we have mass vaccination sites which we used to have. and now going out into communities which you just illustrated. so rural communities, putting it in doctors offices where people have trust and their physician's long standing relationships. they can talk to putting it in pharmacies. so this is called a spoke model instead of the hub that going out to actual communities it's,
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it's california put in $33000000.00 just for that campaigns for people to educate each other. this is actually no longer just putting up a site and hoping people will come. now it's actually work to think about how to message differently. and i actually think that's why the cdc gave us this message that you can have a normal life after you're backs me. no more math. i think they were trying to motivate doctor anthony felt she says her immunity is still somewhat of an elusive number. can you be any more specific? i mean that's what the aim is here with the bad thing, isn't it? it is, you know, heard immunity in a traditional infectious disease definition. i don't think is elusive. what her in unity means is that you get enough of the population vaccinated or immune by natural infection that hopefully vaccinated that anyone who's unvaccinated is protected by other people's immunity. and what it's reflected in is getting lower
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and lower cases with higher and higher vaccination rate so that a child who can't get back to needed is protected like they were in 2019 by very low cases. when we book at israel and we look at the u. k, they have such low cases even as they're opening up with the 1st dose, rate of 64 percent and 54 percent respectively. that i think will get there. but think that europe will get there. i think he gets monica. what, what happens when all these countries open? what about the fact that every country is moving in a different pace? south korea set a goal of reaching her community by november. but shipments have been slow, german officials hope holding unity by order, but caution the disease will not have disappeared by then. i mean, isn't it just going to keep coming back and coming back because it will disappear in one part of the world and reappear elsewhere. there is no doubt that global vaccine equity,
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there is no doubt that getting back seen to poor countries and places that need it is the only way to truly get to her community. absolutely, it will keep on coughing up. and that's why there's nothing more urgent, right? now than to getting the whole world vaccinated, this is unfortunate that quote of ours happened, but we actually have a tool that is not that expensive to get there. what, what do you have just briefly that we can beat this super bug? what gives me hope is that there are 4 countries that are going fastest. united states is the 4th bahrain in israel, and the u. k. are 12, and 3. and they are opening, they're actually opening people are seeing each other and cases are staying low. i also think the corner virus does not u t. i know it seems like it mutates the lot because it was transmitting a lot. but once we get the numbers down, i don't think it's, it doesn't mutate like influenza does this in our, in a virus that has a very strict proofreading mechanism. my hope is that these vaccines are incredibly
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effective and we can get it if we all work together on accounting, thanks for being on the show. again. take you and it's out of the show where our science correspondents derek williams. answers your questions on the korea virus o been vaccinated, and fields and side effects, and my contagious to others. oh, pretty much all of the vaccines approved so far in various parts of the world are fairly react o genic, which means they often cause mild side effects like pain and swelling at the injection side as well as things like, like fatigue or headache or fever or chills or, or aching joints, by, by some estimates. about 2 thirds of all recipients report. those sorts of effects . soon after having a shot, they generally disappear. within
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a day or 2 side effects appear to be more common in women than in men, and also seem to happen more often in younger recipients than in the elderly. but, but side effects aren't caused by live virus replicating in your body because the vaccines in use don't actually contain any live virus. instead, they employ a number of different tricks to, to fool your immune system into believing he caught the virus. many vaccine platforms work by delivering genetic instructions into yourself that caused them to build stars covey to proteins. these harmless components teach your defenses to recognize the virus without real exposure to it. the available chinese vaccines accomplish the same goal by using chemically inactivated or, or disabled virus to put the immune system on red alert. but,
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but because vaccines don't expose you to live virus, they can't give you the disease, hence, can't be contagious. assuming of course, that you didn't catch cove in 1900 for real, from someone in the days between vaccination and the ramp up of your immune response. the sometimes unpleasant vaccine side effects experts say are actually a kind of confirmation that your immune system is reacting as it should. the news, the news
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the news ah, chickens. decisions, surprises. and one for the record things are heating up in the boonies leader on the pin ultimate match day of a memorable season.
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90 minutes on d w. we've got some hot tips for your bucket. lift the magic corner, check and some great alter memorial to boot the a t w. travel off we go. a deal with was well, i come from the we don't run away from the conflict taishan. when i was 5 years old, my father took me to his friends and i was booked on the ball sports. i learned so early dentist, your soul is a language and a good thought. 5 is a conversation must lead opponents understand
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managed by from board. oh, i the news . this is the that we knew is life from berlin. the war between israel and gaza, stills over into other palestinian territory over israel's punishing palestinians. introduce women the occupied west bank of raley. go on, a general strike and demonstrate in solidarity with garza clashes. breakouts between the demonstrators and israeli police also coming up on the program,
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boots on the ground, fain deployed troops through the spanish enclave. as soon after, thousands of african migrants crossed from morocco in a single day. and reaching out to at risk groups a pilot contract. and the german capital berlin aims to boost vaccination race in an immigrant neighborhood. that's become a local hot spots, but they're still aren't enough doses for everyone. ah, a variable are welcome. i will hoc we apologies for the technical problems that we had at the start to show. but as you could gather, we start our broadcast with palestinians holding a general strike across israel. and the west bank with protests against the war in gaza. also taking place in the occupied west bank burn tires and some threw stones at israeli soldiers who appeared to be responding with tear gas shells. and
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several people we understand have been injured. well, dw correspondence and agreement join us now for southern israel. tanya, what more information can you share about the general striker that is currently being staged by palestinians across israel and the occupied territory? well across all sectors that have been this cold to come together today for a general strike. some also called it a day of rage to come together to express, you know, across the occupied was thing, but also in the parts of israel, bending mixed cities as well as a nice to slim to come together and pay solidarity with what is happening in gaza. right now, so people are very concerned about it. people are talked about it and so they have said they will be coming together in the say today, most shop. so it's a close. it's really, i've seen that before leaving here to the south port for us. there tanya,
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because i would like to get your reaction on another very important development in the war in gaza. us presidential by not told israel's prime minister, that he supports the ceasefire between israel and how much notice even though washington has repeatedly blocked a un security council statement, calling for an immediate end to hostilities, is religious on least another barrage of deadly air strikes on gaza. overnight and the militant group, hamas continue to fire rockets at israeli cities more than $200.00 palestinians, including $61.00 children have been killed in more than a week of violence. the israeli asked strikes his cause early on tuesday morning. the 9th day of fighting between israel and commerce militants in garza,
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the casualties amounting many of them civilians gathered hospitals already struggling with their covert, 900 pandemic, a stretch to the limits. the small girl is among the injured and this one has lost several members of his family. the bombardments have destroyed homes and displaced tens of thousands of people. the who many terry in situation is deteriorated and the power supply for all that has been reduced to 6 to 8 hours per day, on average with the number of feed lines, not functioning. that it turns disrupts the provision that health care in other basic services including water hygiene and sanitation. israel has its targeting senior, how much militants and the groups tunnel that work the military release. this footage which says shows as strikes on 5 houses belonging to commerce commanders.
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while i'm sure the directive is to continue to strike terror targets. the idea is doing well today has eliminated another senior islamic jihad commander. we have a dot com us novel unit and we continue to strike it underground infrastructure from us metro and other targets. we will continue to act as necessary to restore peace and security to the residence of israel for the escalation and violence began after clashes between israeli police and protest is over the plan of action of policy and families in east jerusalem since then come, has kept up a steady stream of rockets, some of them make it pass israel's iron dome defense system like here and i stood where a residential building was damaged and several people were injured as global calls mon, for and then to the blood shows the white house as president biden told nathan, yeah, when a phone call that he supported a ceasefire,
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but stopped short of calling for one as sci fi, as it is urgently needed as the violence on both sides continue to spare. an atomic time where it's still or whether she's in southern, if israel, in cologne, can you tell us what the situation is right there where you are right now? well, early in the afternoon when you hear that have been several very heavy, broken. farrar's is coming down here in the south in us, kill on also our store and also to us the city of chicago in the, during the night. actually there was a short lot of about 6 hours with no work at 5, and some rockets fire in the morning and then it started again around noon in the southern, just around the guy was his diary got injured. 8 people and 2 people killed. so people had thought, you know, today might be a bit more quiet after that night,
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but also inside cause of course and strike have continued. but at the moment it doesn't look like tony kramer reportings from masculine, southern israel. thank you very much for your update. now for more on the situation in the gaza strip, it's something that we knew spoke a moments ago with mathias a smaller. he's the director of the united nations relief and worked agency for palestinian refugees in gaza. and we asked him where the thousands of goblins, who have been displaced by the israeli offensive, have gone as of this morning, have 48000 people in 58 of the united nations or schools here. clearly the population, not least based on the experiences in 2014 and still see un installations painted in blue and with a blue un flag on top of it as relatively more safe and secure than their own homes
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. so that's basically one place they can go to. and then we also know that many have gone to friends, friends and relatives in areas they perceive as left as of a target, you know, and that's away from border areas and so on. so there's also significant numbers with friends and relatives, and we should not overlook them either un installations or not targets. and we rarely know the coordinates of all our installation. we've shared them with them, including recently. unfortunately, this time around, some of the strikes are just too close to our installation. so this morning you know, we had a massive explosion right next to our office compound here and not far away from one of the schools that are housing refugees. and we know that the solar panels, for example, were destroyed and not destroyed completely but damage. so we are seeing
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a lot of destruction of civilian infrastructure as i would call it because the strikes are too close to the infrastructure. if i could take you around that you would see there is considerable damage to buildings and you know that that's one aspect is the, the damage itself. i also would like to mention not just one rhymes relations. we know that 2 primary health care centers run by the old forest. these have been destroyed. we know, and m s. f clinic has been destroyed. we know that the central lab for colbert 19 testing is no longer functional as a result of, of strikes. and we know that the central ambulance unit of the palestine red crescent has been badly affected. so it has a serious impact on our collective ability, provides humanitarian service and that was mature smaller from the united nations refugee agency in cars are going to take step back now from the mid east,
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a conflict, and bring up to speed with the latest stories making headlines around the world, at least $900.00 people have been killed after a powerful cycle and brought heavy rain and storm just to india the west coast. around 200000 people have been moved to safety. the country's navy is searching for scores of people missing se after one vessel. thank and another loss power. the us treasury has imposed sanctions on 16 of me and marz military leaders and their families over the deadly attacks on civilians. following the military career, the army seized power in february, claiming that elections i've been rigs is killed at least $800.00 people in attacks on pro democracy supporters during widespread protests. more than 40000 people in china as we are now. willing province have been placed in home quarantine because of research uncovered 900 cases authority so that the measure will help prevent
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large scale outbreaks. they're providing supplies to people and 98 quarantined neighborhoods and germans. we have caught one of the chief fritz in a high profile robbery case from 2019 back. then thieves still priceless historic jewels from the famous green vault museum in the eastern city of driest and of waste made the arrest on monday night during her rate on a flat in berlin. about 6000 people have entered spain's north african enclave of pseudo with some swimming. almost 2 kilometers along the coastline from morocco. authority say it was a record one day inflexible worsening diplomatic relations between spain and morocco. migrate from africa had been trying to get into europe by this speech for years, but never before they crossed in such numbers. at least $5000.00 derived within
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a 24 hour period. the largest number in a single day. most of the young men from morocco. but there were also significant numbers of women and at least 1000 children. some explained why they had decided to attempt the dangerous journey. because because when you have nothing, no money to spend, you have to pay your rent and you have to take care of your children and parents. there is no room for fear. looking at the health care health classes he has to. as you see, all the young people want to leave the country does no work, aren't you afraid of the sea? no, i'm not afraid. if i stayed here, i would be afraid. i have to save myself all the things you've had. the beach, they want to reach it in the spanish exclaim, a filter which borders morocco, it is in northern africa, but as part of the european union. and the thought has long been a market for migrants taking
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a better life. most of these new arrivals reached by swimming from 2 kilometers along the coast of morocco are using in place for boats scaling this 10 meta high wall is one of the only of the options of getting in to see spain, a wreck to defense, to try to close off the land route, but this is not stop some microns from trying to look over the years. madrid they several 100 miles to get into say to each year, but many deported back to where they came from as they have no right to asylum in the you the most of those, the riding of the last few days will also be sent back to morocco some report suggest moroccan, please allowed so many to move towards the board in the 1st place because of a diplomatic spat with spain over another issue. but official, the madrid say they have already reached an agreement about sending the migrant back. and when we enforcing security to prevent further arrivals,
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i'd like to welcome now what julia states, she is the director of the global public policy institute in berlin. a very good day. oh, what's driving this development? well, you said it in your introduction, it's really a political dispute between morocco and spain or, and the e you, that's a very long standing conflict on western sahara. it's a territory who faces is disputed. morocco claims it as its own, but they the very powerful independence movement. call the police. are you front and back in april, spain admitted the hit of the front of brought him galleys for medical treatment and also gave him assurances that while he was in spain, he would not be legally prosecuted for alleged human rights violations. now this is something that morocco is obviously very unhappy about and even though they haven't
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been, i haven't seen a formal statement that links the to it does seem very plausible. that morocco opening the border is really a way of putting pressure on spain. and in the you and so we are in a situation where we really see these refugees and migrants being use of pouring in a much larger political game that has really nothing to do with themselves. so do we know for a fact that morocco open the board? i mean, doesn't spain have border patrol? normally we have a situation where morocco controls a lot of the exit. the also police forces from spain on the ground that as we've heard, they are reinforcing the truth. but we really saw a change in terms of the moroccan side, no longer trying to restrain people and to prevent them from leaving. so what's the message that robot to sending to madrid and you at large?
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well, i think that if you really look at the larger picture, it tells us something about the overall strategy. we have of dealing with migrants and refugees at the moment that the moment the main strategy is to close down really, really you try to do this closing down yourself. this is something that we see in greece, for example, where we see them, these push facts happening of many, many people which are not just nasty, but playing illegal. they also very problematic because it means that europe loses the credibility when it tries to other countries to treat asylum seekers property. right. so just, just if i forgive me for interrupting you is this also just another, you know, the you is essentially outsourcing its migrant policy. it wants to keep its hands clean it, i'll post it to places like morocco like turkey, and then says, well,
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you know, you do our dirty job. that's exactly the other advantage. so if you do not want to do these push back to yourself, you can do these packs with countries where that are transit countries for a lot of migraines or refugees, and indeed outsourced the dirty work. but as we see now, that really has a drawback that it makes you vulnerable for political pressure, almost blackmail from these countries that then use the pressure of migrants, the pressure of refugees potentially coming as a political argument on completely unrelated issues. i joined c, director of the global policy institute here in berlin. thank you so much for your insights. thank you. now, back to germany, where authorities here are face severe criticism for the country. slow, initial slow vaccine roll out, i should say some areas and are trying
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a new approach by offering shots to the public on a 1st come 1st serve bases. and the project got under way in one, a berlin, a bordeaux there that has seen plenty of demand. hundreds of people have braved the rain and a 2 hour wait to get vaccinated at this site, in berlin's neu, con neighborhood. at the major vaccination center's priority goes to old people, then people in high risk groups, then medical workers, then everyone else. today though, it's 1st come, 1st serve without an appointment for fun. i found out about it from a notice pinned outside my door. i took advantage right away. the thing my, this is, it's a one off on for $21.00. if you have to wait for a while, but i think people should take the chance. i mean, i haven't gotten the virus on this, but i've been at home for 2 months. i'm getting vaccinated,
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so i can go back to work and inform them that by thought about whom i'm a demo and fear. my johnson johnson, this site is part of the pilot project, meant to speed up berlin's vaccination raid. at 1st job was only available at major vaccination centers. then personal physicians started distributing shots. now pop up science like this, 10 to part of the mix in areas where the infection rates are particularly high. like here in the neighborhood is comparatively low income. many people here have migrant backgrounds, social distance, it can be difficult, and the often crowded housing found here. so the city is trying out targeted measures. and yet it works well. i think we can do the same thing and other neighborhoods to me and repeated here as well. you have to bring the vaccination to where people live about sex. now come depending on what the german is. vaccination drive took a long time to get up to speed. the no current pilot project is meant to give it
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more momentum. the problem now is a lack of doses. many who came here today had to go back home unvaccinated me. let's get you more on this story. i would like to welcome a dr. nikolai. so if i scan that, he's the head of the health department in berlin's nor chrome district where the vaccinations took place that you saw their features in our report. a very good day, doctor. thank you so much for your time. can you talk us through some of the challenges that health workers like yourself face trying to contain infections in no current and vaccinating people in hot spots like your district? yeah, as you mentioned, we started with a pilot project or focus program on machination. and what we actually learned about this program was that we reach the vast majority of the people. acceptance rate was very high. however,
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to reach out and to get in contact to those who are generally skeptical, i think that is the big task. so how do you go about doing these outreach to people who might still be on the fence or maybe or not on the fence? they just don't know enough about the vaccinations. is there a program under way to help inform those people? right, actually that's, that's the science of successful tweet work. i mean, what needs to reach those people who are generally maybe less well informed, which maybe in a low income situation, independent of them migration status or religion or whatsoever is that they need to raise the confidence in the program of destination. they need to build on relation they need to build on trust. and that's actually what we are doing all over the pandemic with our st work program. and when you say st. work program,
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can you outline that for us? i mean, do you have community leaders talking to members of their community? do health workers? i mean, how, how does it work? well, we have actually found the so called a corona lawton, an english would you say you would say they are guidance workers well trained in the topics of corona and pandemic. and these colleagues are reaching out to the st. managers to dos multiplication in within the communities and get in contact to those community leaders and race trust in the concept the local department provides. and by this measure us and there we focus on
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young people as well as on the elderly people. we try to, to get in touch and, and this is actually what we did not reach in our pilot focus program. can you, i mean, unfortunately it was a 20 seconds that we have together. what has the reaction been so far when the social workers reached out to these communities? while day, once the relation is boot, that is high acceptance in the work of these 2 workers. and there's also a high acceptance of all the containment programs and actually, and eventually it also leads in an acceptance of explanation. what we actually need is to, we need to actually a certain budget to spent in these communication structures. because what we learned on this pandemic was that probably more than a certain of our energy goes into these communication work. it's
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a very important part. so they're working simply. all right, sir, so much for your service and thank you for coming on d. w. news. we greatly appreciate your insights. doctor nikolai suffer. scott, thank you. thank you. thank you so much. have you meet with you? so football is now for you and the german men's national squad for next month. european football championship will be announced on wednesday by and unix thomas miller is widely expected to be recalled to the squad having been dropped in 21. 900 form with buying has propelled the 2014 world cup winner back into your lives. that plans as the depart and coach james to leave on. hi thomas meliss footballing, rene songs arguably started when he was dumped from both by and german national teams in 2019. the shock was size make for a man with an almost regal attachment of football, silverware. but the size and strength of his response has been even greater. almost
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1821 lot. not by the hand he flick at by and he returned to the starting 11 and sit about building a compelling case for his re inclusion in the german team. he added bonus league a title $9.10 for him personally, and a 2nd champion, lake title too, but he brings more than small skills and the out of football timing. the most intense isn't in this year. one year old is also an unabashed goosgo. not a father, but the man who birth one footballs all time. favorite dad jokes. yeah. we in by and we have for robert live on live on golf ski. you know robert live on golf ski. luckily thomas molar is not playing left with the man who dumped in your can live one of the one that of course i was also perplexed by the national coaches sudden
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decision. and i would just like to assure you that the game is not out. his intention was clear, but as to whether he placed germany at the euro's live will had the final say on wednesday. once you get your news coming up and i sent you w, news, asia w news learns about scare tactics allegedly used by me and more military to keep its soldiers enlisted for life. and as desperate cries for medical aid for korea, patients are flooding, india social media. we meet the volunteers trying to lend a helping hand. don't forget, you can always do that. we do on the go, just download our app from google or from the app store. they'll give you access to all the latest needs around the world as well as push notifications for any breaking news. and you can also use the app to send us photos and videos of what's happening around here. ah, stick with the w is the news asia up next with my colleague,
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rush about energy in just a moment. i'm going to rock and roll in on behalf of all i hear. thank you so much for spending this part of me. they would probably recommend somebody who's, [000:00:00;00] who's who's the, the,
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[000:00:00;00] who's the, the, the the the ah chicken decision surprises. and one for the record things are heating up in the boonies asleep on
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the pin ultimate match the day of a memorable season. when 60 minutes on the w 2 or not to own. what about assuring economy a change in thinking is changing the economy to create something new. b, e can nomics magazines and germany on d w. people in trucks injured when trying to see the city center,
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the more and more refugees are being turned away to be correct and traitors. people seeing extreme dreams getting 200 people around the world. more than 300000000 people are seeking refuge. why? because no one should have to use make up your own mind. w. need for mines the new day coming up today and investigation into an army in controlling the financial speech . to me and my defectors, who explained public controls nearly every aspect of its soldiers lives, from their finances, to the indians,
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organizing sorts of media to help those facing have devastating 2nd wave of virus infections. and 1st, the panoramic now a storm one of the deadliest site floods in decades, puddles in the west coast, leaving damage. its breaking the news. i'm british manager. welcome to did up the news. a sure glad you could join us. an investigation by the doubles investigative team has found that the me and my army is brainwashing its soldiers and controlling every aspect of their life. even down to their finances, my colleagues spoke to 3 defectors to a full, a high ranking officers. the conversations were mainly over messaging apps and through some audio and video calls. august. speaking to one of my colleagues who conducted the investigation in a minute. but he has
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a bit of what 2 of the defect said. everything is monitored. they want to turn people into robots who don't think for themselves. and another defect said if people post political things, they could be arrested and put in jail for 3 or 4 weeks. and joining me on the line is my colleague now me conrad, who was part of the team that conducted this investigation. know me. where are these defectors you spoke to? and why did the defect? right, so i'm afraid i can't tell you very much about where they are that lee because obviously they're not safe in the army is hunting down as well as we know defected . all i can tell you. is that to i? hi. i'm hiding in me and mana, moving from one place to the next day. another one is across the board in india, but again, i can't tell you where exactly 3 men decided to defect following the on the take any of this year. and the what is basically
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a brutal crack on civilians protesting this take over. one man said i can't be part of an institution that took partner and illegal qu so much because of the they will defected. did they provide any explanation as to why the army decided to take power in this manner in me and they, none of these men are actually part of the highest echelons of the army. but they're all very clear that they think the crew took place because the army was afraid that it was leading power. the elections laughed late last year, one lamplight for the governing national league for democracy. which basically meant that you know, the army with the fight. it might lead its power, and one man was particularly, he said, you know, the army wants to turn the entire country into a military base. meaning that, you know, the army wants to take control of the whole country and not seed any power to 2 elected civilians. elected politicians know me, how is the army able to will so much influence in me and my say the only me in my,
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basically a very powerful state within the me and my date. if we look briefly at the history of me and mar, basically me and my govern government by the military, for most of it, recent history since it came independent from the u. k. me from britain basically. and in my time the army managed to mass. great. well, the land, economic and financial power for a long time, it was basically impossible to do business indian market without going through the army or affiliated businesses of the army. and what they've also done is, you know, establish that in court for some men, not accountable to the civilian courts, they run their own university. so a very powerful pick state within the state that's basically countable from that one. what do these defectors tend to do? they provide a glimpse into the life of an average soldier in me in ma they did, they did, and it's a very close to the very, strictly monitored life. i mean,
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they were very clear that the army has a facebook monitoring team that looked at all that social media activity. you know, the whole people in that, you know, maybe voice that support for the nationally, for democracy or criticize the government nicholson. a lot of propaganda and officers have to take part in the 3 month training course, which he knows paint the army, is the savior, the end of me and markets, the muslim loan of wisdom, rhetoric that sergeant, the fed, the freeman that we talked to, they didn't necessarily believe all this propaganda, but they knew well enough that they couldn't force any criticism because that would have been dangerous. and also right now, they're basically soldiers are basically living the life on the face, but they're not allowed to leave. they need to ask the period that they want to leave. they have to do all the shopping on the basis the school on the basis. so i think an average soldier, you could say,
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had very little to no contact with civilians. you did mentioned earlier that these 3 defectives in a dangerous situation, but for the moment being of the same i wouldn't say they say so it seems pretty clear that the army has drawn off the list is wanted activists and journalists and also defective. and they haven't published this because obviously embarrassing for them to, to publish how many people who have left the army despite the, the great danger. but the hunting down these people know they're putting a lot of pressure on the defects and families. i mean, one man told us that his parents received threatening phone calls basically telling them you know, where your son, if you to tell us where your son is, then we'll come and get you plenty, several communication with his family for the in a very dangerous situation. they're trying to leave the country, but they know that even if they make it to thailand to india, they're not necessarily safe. i mean, they could also get deported back to by complex situation at the moment. they
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didn't really know how to stay safe for them. you know, move from one se, talked to the next thing, obviously turn away the phone they had when they were in a tree base, but it's dangerous. trying to remain safe. now because i thank you very much for your reporting. and you can of course read know me and my colleague yeah, bios report on our website the, the blue dot com the india reported its highest every single day. fatalities from over 1000 on tuesday, 4329 people dead. that's the official count, but experts widely believe numbers to be much higher. the tragedy of the 2nd wave of nevada cases is evident across the country, over about and hospitals, exhausted medical stuff, and a lack of medical supplies. and here's where people have stepped up to help fellow
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citizens organizing on social media across status, better homes. people are connecting those in need to what they need. beds, oxygen hospitals. fil a couple of months ago, i receive daily routine looked a lot different. being a digital content creator, how do you mostly involve planning? what to post on or instagram handle known for her humorous, di and she has a must a bit following on social media and has owned a reputation as an instrument. but this rule acquired a different meaning as a 2nd leave of course, 19 hit india. suddenly she and other influences became a virtual lifeline for those in need of origin medical aid. we kind of found ourselves in the situation ready and we think people did not know where to go. we didn't have planned numbers that are, you know, we did not even if there was, they weren't efficient enough to handle so many people or if it was cause for like
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ice cream into, into we had also reached way started with 2 or 3 or be and went on to 20 and then when i'm at one point, it was 100 or 200 the day she says that request again will appeal for help in finding oxygen or hospital beds and soon went on to desperate please for plasma crucial medicines and eventually crematorium and burial grounds which could accommodate more over the victims bodies. she kept amplifying these messages, connecting those who needed help with those who could whitehead, she asked that the reason people started reaching out to them was due to the absence of support from government authorities. who seemed to have bungled their response to the corona writers outbreak. over the past few years, social media has emerged as a possible communication tool in a country with hundreds of millions of users. but the 2nd we have brought forth its
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immense potential to provide urgent time sensitive assistance during moments of crisis. and it's not just content creators who have stepped in to assist the 2nd view. of course, we have seen other public figures using social media platforms, especially twitter to connect with and help those in need. she knew about baby who had the youth ring of the biggest opposition political party has gained recognition for his college relief work in the country. he says for him and his team of warranty or social media has proved invaluable in the fight against the virus. because of the reach, it could provide them and mobile people needed a medium which would respond quickly and immediately coordinate their request, tardiness, and on social media, you can add all the details like location, contact information, medical report in one go, which makes it easier for our team here to coordinate why she may not have the same resources as seen of us. she, the push to providing help is similar. the influence,
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along with a group of content creators runs a warranty group which was on providing verified leads and oxygen and other necessities to do sending in distress requests. at this point in time, there's really no way we could have, you will done influence, you know, or associated with like forms. then this. she says, this experience has made her realize just how much different social media can make to her work. she has been feeling a white gap in india overburdened health care system. turning her from a media influences to a real life people. a deadly type loan along in the west coast is competing to health crisis in several states, at least 16 people have died. sight lawn topped a loud its way along many coastal districts before making landfall in goods up on monday. more than 200000 people. there were given colbert 900 tests before they were taken to shelters,
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to try to limit the spread of infections. the storm has since weakened, but its left suffering in its wake. a lucky escape for these oil and gas workers rescued after the barge. they were working on thank in the storm. nearly 200 have been brought to shore, but the fate of more than 100 others is not a certain. as the rescue operation continues. psych loan towns k made land fall in good to run on monday, bringing it's 200 kilometer winds ashore. it's the most powerful cycle to hit the region in decades, tearing through villages, operating trees, and bringing down power lines. hundreds, there were left without electricity. on its way up the coast, the cyclops reeked havoc and go mahar rushed restate to move by briefly closed it's a port in evacuated tens of thousands of residents. so either on the 5
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recent years, i have never seen such a devastating cycle in my buy. i know there was a similar one in 965, but not since then. have i seen such a storm? people have suffered a lot of damage. i don't have to struggle hard to come out of it. i would have been on an uphill battle for many in the city that a month was one of the worst effected by india's recent covert 19 outbreak. and that's it for today. there's many other stories out there on our website. did that with us on both sides, asia, back tomorrow's event. ah. the fight against the corona virus pandemic. how has the rate of infection in developing? what does the latest research say?
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information and contact the corona virus. because the 19th special on d, w. ah, in the climate change the because what's the people here? what ideas do they have for their future? d, w dot com megacity the media. click and center ah, is skepticism? undermining the united states, vaccinations, success story about 250000000 doses have been administered. so far,
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almost every 2nd american has received a shot in the 3rd a fully vaccinated pace is slowing, which has experts worried 5 or 6 percent can be the difference between you know, really having protection as a society versus still having a lot of active case with out there without heard immunity, it'll be harder to stop the corona virus from always making comebacks. the officials say the sudden slowed down in vaccination rates due to some americans refusing to get this 2nd shot. they're worried about the side effects. the hesitancy and skepticism is stubbornly high among republicans and what he van jellicoe christians. but more black americans are lining up for the jap, dw scholarly energy more reports. the they are over 30 vaccination sites in jackson, mississippi, a city of 160000 residents. one of the locations is at the state university se
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empty chairs and an awaiting shape. this team, they have 250 doses of the vaccine available today. sometimes we have to waste them . and that's a shame because we know that there are many more people that need to be vaccinated . mississippi is last in the united states and cobra. 1900 vaccinations, only 26 percent of the state's population is fully vaccine made it. some have changed their mind, but vaccine hesitancy still poses a major problem. that was very hesitant. but once i thought about everything kind of prayed about it and, and gave some thought, i felt like this was the most responsible thing to do. be safe with my family and people around me and i work on a rug and a lot of patients everyday. so at jackson haines health center, dr. chapman and her team offer daily vaccines for free with no appointment required . but also at this side,
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the traffic of patients remain slow. we find in the self that a lot of conservative weiss are not getting it. and then a lot of the minority young is not getting and we try to just give them more and more education. even some health workers are hesitant, like barbara patrick, who eventually was compet. would you like them a daniel, so far as a health worker, she was offered the vaccine in january, but didn't want to be the 1st in line. it was not that i was anti vaccination, but my hesitate was because i want to see what the i comb or those will be things with every shot of the vaccine. the risk of the spreads, returning dramatically decree this, but this is still not enough. the city of jackson has decided that if people don't
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attend to the vaccination centers, they are going to bring the vaccines into their community. the animal by the name packed with vaccines and supplies. the health workers strike 4 to 5 times the week to the suburbs. the goal is to make it as convenient as possible for people to get their vaccines today, it's a church after 2 hours, only 2 members of the community come in to get their shots. i work at night and as labor come me when we come in a community in a day. so i can come in and take a shot. this time there, 100 vaccine doses available, a much needed tool and wanted around the globe. but demand here is quite low, some are still hesitant, but there are some who have barriers like transportation. we don't require a form, it's so it makes it more convenient. but hesitancy is not only about convenience,
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maybe they're trying to you people of color to get the back thing to really do some research. that's one of the things, even asphalt, at birth, facts and statistics convince her that this is the only way to return to normal also in their church. and let's bring in monica gandhi, a professor of medicine at the university of california. monica great to see you again. since we spoke last time, i don't know if things have really changed. why, why is this still so much hesitancy and resistance over this back thing? you know, i think there for reasons and you just illustrated some of them. one is in communities of color, which traditionally in the united states, have had a mis trust to the medical system. we have to work harder. we have to work with communities to do the messaging, church based messaging, things that you just talked about, the 2nd to distrust of the government and were very polarized political country.
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and right now, this is being rolled out in the, by the ministration, even though it was made in the trumpet administration. and that, i think it's the reason the cdc said you'd ought to wear masks after vaccination. i think they're actually trying to motivate republicans right now. that are not sure about it. and then i think there are people who are just simply inconvenient. they will get it when they get it. the young is among them. and then i think people are waiting to see if it's safe. and i do think we will get there, but it's work, it's hard work. so what's the, what the governments need to put in? so what present by them is committed to is the hope is july, 4th, 70 percent of people will have gotten the 1st dose changed from a system where we have mass vaccination sites which we used to have. and now going out into communities which you just illustrated. so rural communities, putting it in doctors offices where people have trust and their physician's long
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standing relationships. they can talk to putting it in pharmacies. so this is called a spoke model instead of the hub that going out to actual communities. it's, it's california put in $33000000.00 just for that campaigns for people to educate each other. this is actually no longer just putting up a site and hoping people will come. now it's actually work to think about how to message differently. and i actually think that's why the cdc gave us this message that you can have a normal life after you're backs me. no more math. i think they are trying to motivate doctor anthony felt she says her immunity is still somewhat of an elusive number. can you be any more specific? i mean that's what the aim is here with the bad thing, isn't it? it is, you know, heard immunity in the traditional infectious disease definition. i don't think is elusive. what her immunity means is that you get enough of the population
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vaccinated or immune by natural infection that hopefully vaccinated that anyone who's unvaccinated is protected by other people's immunity. and what it's reflected in is getting lower and lower cases with higher and higher vaccination rate. so that a child who can't get back to needed is protected like they were in 2019 by very low cases. when we book at israel, when we look at the u. k, they have such low cases even as they're opening up with the 1st dose, rate of 64 percent and 54 percent respectively. that i think we'll get there. we think that europe will get there. i think he gets monica. what, what happens when all these countries open? what about the fact that every country is moving at a different pace? south korea set a goal of reaching her community by november, but shipments have been slow. german officials hope how to community by order, but caution the disease will not have disappeared by then. i mean, isn't it just going to keep coming back and coming back because it'll disappear in one part of the world and reappear elsewhere. there's no doubt that global vaccine
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equity, there is no doubt that getting vaccine to poor countries and places that need it is the only way to truly get to heard immunity. absolutely. it will keep on hopping up . and that's why there's nothing more urgent right now. but to getting the whole world vaccinate, it is unfortunate that quote of ours happen, but we actually have a tool that is not expensive to get there. what we'll give you just briefly that we can beat this super bug. what gives me hope is that there are 4 countries that are going fastest. united states is the 4th bahrain in israel, and the u. k. are 12, and 3. and they are opening, they're actually opening people are seeing each other and cases are staying low. i also think the corner virus does not u t. i know it seems like it mutates a lot because it was transmitting a lot. but once we get the numbers down, i don't think it's, it doesn't mutate like influenza does this an r n,
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a virus that has a very strict proofreading mechanism. my hope is that these vaccines are incredibly effective and we can get it if we all work together on a gallery. thanks for being on the show. again. take you and it's that part of the show where our science correspondent derek williams. answers your questions on the corona virus. oh, it's been vaccinated and feel some side effects. and i, contagious to others. oh, pretty much all of the vaccines approved so far in various parts of the world are fairly react o genic, which means they often cause mild side effects like pain and swelling at the injection side as well as things like, like fatigue or headache or fever or chills or, or aching joints, by,
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by some estimates. about 2 thirds of all recipients report those sorts of effects. soon after having a shot, they generally disappear. within a day or 2 side effects appear to be more common in women than in man, and also seem to happen more often in younger recipients than in the elderly. but, but side effects aren't caused by live virus replicating in your body because the vaccines in use don't actually contain any live virus. instead, they employ a number of different tricks to, to fool your immune system into believing you've caught the virus. many vaccine platforms work by delivering genetic instructions into yourselves that caused them to build stars covey to proteins. these harmless components teach your defenses to recognise the virus without real exposure to the available chinese. vaccines
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accomplish the same goal by using chemically inactivated or, or disabled virus to put the immune system on red alert. but, but because vaccines don't expose you to live virus, they can't give you the disease, hence, can't be contagious. assuming of course, that you didn't catch cobra, 1900 for real, from someone in the days between vaccination and the ramp up of your immune response. the sometimes unpleasant vaccine side effects experts say are actually a kind of confirmation that your immune system is reacting as it should. of i the, the, me
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the, the news the, the, the, the the check off the decisions surprises and one for the record
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things are heating up in the boonies league on the ultimate mass day of a memorable season. in 30 minutes on the w. o. me species an expedition introduced like the exciting part of the underwater listening is here, giving you a window into their, their life that you never will never see your company,
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your research team to the pacific to include language of whales starts to force on d w. how does a virus spread? why the repairman and when will all of this 3 the topics that we covered in a weekly radio. if you would like any more information on the kroner virus or any other science projects, you should really check out our podcast. you can get it wherever you get your podcast. you can also find those at the w dot com or flash science the hello guys, that is the 77 percent. the platform is used to be used to share ideas you know, we are not afraid to capture and then you can talk to africa. population is really fast. and young people clearly
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have the solutions, the future. 77 percent. now every weekend on dw, the news . this is your new life from berlin, pension spillover as deadly violence in garza and israel continues anchor growing over israel's punishing bombardment. allison used in jerusalem and the occupied with fact rally. go on,
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a general strike and demonstrated solidarity with gaza clashes breakout between the demonstrators and israeli police. also on the show, boots on the ground. spain deployed troops to the spanish enclave. a suitor after thousands of african migrants crops from morocco in a single day and reaching out to at risk groups of pilot projects and the german capital berlin. boost vaccination rick in a neighborhood that's become a local hot spot. but there aren't enough shots for everyone. ah, i'm late, i thank you so much for your company. everyone. retentions from israel's military, bombardments in garza, or boiling over into the other occupied palestinian territories. the occupied west bank, east jerusalem as well as it is really towns with mixed populations. palestinians
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have been holding a general strike in solidarity with fellow palestinians in gaza, where israeli air strikes targeting, how mos millikan and their installations have killed and injured hundreds of civilians. clashes broke out between demonstrators and is really security forces is the largest show of palestinian anger since the onset of hostilities between gaza militants and israel erupted last week. but the w correspondence agreement joins us now for the southern israel. tanya, what more information can you share about the general striker that is currently being staged by palestinians across and the occupied territory? well and across all sectors that have been this cold to come together today for a general strike. some also called it a day of rage to come together to express, you know, across the occupied was thing, but also in the part of israel,
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mainly in mixed cities, as well as a nice to slim to come together and pay solidarity with what is happening in gaza right now, the people are very concerned about it. people are talked about it and so they have said they will be coming together in this day today. most shop. so it's a close to loose. and i've seen that before leaving here to the south. put for us there tanya, because i would like to get your reaction on another very important development in the war and gaza. you expressed michel by and told israel's prime minister that he supports the ceasefire between israel and hamas. notice even though washington has repeatedly blocked a un security council statement calling for an immediate end to hostilities, is religious on least another barrage of deadly air strikes on gaza overnight. and the militant group, hamas continue to fire rockets at israeli cities more than $200.00 palestinians,
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including $61.00 children have been killed in more than a week of violence. the israeli, as strikes had caused early on tuesday morning. the 9th day of fighting between israelis, commerce militants in gaza. the casualties amounting many of them civilians gathers hospitals already struggling with a covert, $900.00 pandemic, a stretch to the limits. the small girl is among the injured and this boy has lost several members of his family. the bombardments have destroyed homes and displaced tens of thousands of people. there who many terry in situation is deteriorate and the power supply for all that has been reduced to 6 to 8 hours per day. on average with the number of fetal lies,
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not functioning. that it turns disrupts the provision that health care and other basic services including water hygiene and sanitation. israel has its targeting senior, how much militant the groups tunnel that with the military release. this footage, which says shows as strikes on 5, how this belonging to commerce commanders, i'm sure the directive is to continue to strike in terror targets. the idea is doing well today it has eliminated another senior islamic jihad commander. we have hit a novel unit and we continue to strike its underground infrastructure from us metro and other targets. we will continue to act as necessary to restore peace and security to a residence of israel for the escalation and violence began after clashes between israeli police and protest is over the plan, the eviction of palestinian families in east jerusalem since then has kept up a steady stream of rockets, some of them make it past israel's iron dome defense system,
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like you're in ashley where a residential building was damaged and several people were injured as global calls, mound for and then to the blood shows the white house as president biden told. nathan, yeah, when a phone call that he supported a ceasefire, but stopped short of calling for one as cease fire that is urgently needed as the violence on both sides continue to spare an atomic time where it's still or whether she's in southern issue, israel in cologne, can you tell us what the situation is right there where you are right now? well, early in the afternoon when you hear that have been several very heavy, broken, farrar's is coming down here in the south, in us kill on. also i still and also to it's the city of best in the, during the night actually there was
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a short learn about 6 hours with no rock at 5 and some broken fire in the morning. and then it started again around noon in the southern, just around the goals and it was the diary where injured people and 2 people killed. so people had thought, you know, today might be a bit more quiet after that night, but also inside cause of course and strikes have continued. but at the moment it doesn't look like tony kramer reportings from masculine, southern israel. thank you very much for your update. and mature small is the director of the united nations relief and works or agency for palestinian refugees and gaza. and we asked him where thousands of godson's can seek shelter from the israeli bombardments. be as of this morning, have 48000 people in 58 of united nations order our schools
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here are clearly the population, not least based on the experiences in 2014, still see un installations painted in blue and with a blue un flag on top of it as relatively more safe and secure than their own homes . so that's basically one place they can go to. and then we also know that many have gone to friends, friends, and relatives in areas they perceive as less of a target, you know, and that's away from border areas and so on. so there's also significant numbers with friends and relatives. and we should not overlook them either un installations or not targets. and we really know the coordinates of all our installations that we've shared them with them, including recently. unfortunately, this time around, some of the strikes are just too close to our installation. so this morning, you know, we had
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a massive explosion right next to our office compound here and not far away from one of the schools betters, housing, refugees. and we know that the solar panels, for example, were destroyed and not destroyed completely by damage. so we are seeing a lot of destruction of civilian infrastructure as i would call it because the strikes are too close to these infrastructure. if i could take your rounded, you would see there is considerable damage to the building and you know that's, that's one aspect is the, the damage itself. i also would like to mention not just one right nation. we know that 2 primary health care centers run by the old warranties have been destroyed. we know, and m s. s. clinic has been destroyed. we know that the central lab for colbert 1910, no longer functional as a result of, of strikes. and we know that the central ambulance unit of the palestine red
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crescent has been badly affected. so it has a serious impact on our collective ability. provides humanitarian service and interpretation. after north africa we're about 6000. my rents have entered space north. the african enclave of suitor with some swimming, almost 2 kilometers along the coastline from neighboring morocco. authority. see was a record one day in flex and worsening diplomatic relations between madrid and robot . migrate from africa had been trying to get into europe by this speech for years. but never before have they crossed in such numbers. at least $5000.00 derived within a 24 hour period. the largest number in a single day. most to a young men from morocco, but there will also significant numbers of women and at least $1000.00 children. some explained why they had decided to attempt the dangerous journey. because it
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might be because when you have nothing, no money to spend, you have to pay your rent and you have to take care of your children and parents. there is no room for fear looking healthy out of class. she has to, as you see, all the young people want to leave the country. does no work, aren't you afraid of the sea? no, i'm not afraid. if i stayed here, i won't be afraid. i have to save myself that we don't seem to have the beach, they want to reach it in the spanish i exclaimed, of sale to which borders morocco. it is in northern africa, but as part of the european union and such has long been a market for migrants taking a better life to be new arrivals reached saint by swimming from 2 kilometers along the coast of morocco, or using in place for boats. scaling this 10 meta high wall is one of the only of the options of getting into theater, spain, right, to defense,
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to try to close off the land route. but this is not stop some migrants from trying to look over the years. madrid say several 100 miles to get into said to each year, but many reported back to where they came from as they have no right to asylum in the you the most of those, the riding of the last few days will also be sent back to morocco. some reports suggest moroccan, please allowed so many to move towards the board in the 1st place because of a diplomatic spat with spain over another issue. but official, the madrid said they have already reached an agreement about sending the migrant back. and when are we enforcing security to prevent further arrival? i'd like to welcome now where julia sticks, she is the director of the global public policy institute in berlin. a very good day. what's driving this development? well, you said it in your introduction, it's really a political dispute between morocco and spain or, and the you that's
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a very long standing conflict on western sahara. it's a territory who faces is disputed, morocco claims it as its own, but there is a very powerful independence movement. call the police, are you front and back in april, spain admitted the hit of the front that brought him god for medical treatment and also gave him assurances that while he was in spain, he would not be legally prosecuted for alleged human rights violations. now this is something that morocco is obviously very unhappy about and even though they haven't been noticed, i haven't seen a formal statement that links the to it does seem very plausible. that morocco opening the border is really a way of putting pressure on spain. and in the you and so we are at the to asian where we really see these refugees and migrants being use of poorly in
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a much larger political game that has nothing to do with themselves. is this also just another, you know, the, you is essentially outsourcing its migrant policy. it wants to keep its hands clean it, i'll post it to places like morocco like turkey and then says, well, you know, you do our dirty job. that's exactly the other benefit. so if you do not want to do these push back yourself, you can do these paths with countries where that are transit countries for a lot of my friends are refugees and indeed outsourced the dirty work. but as we see now, that really has a drawback that it makes few vulnerable for political pressure. almost blackmail from these countries that then use the pressure of migrants, the pressure of refugees potentially coming as a political argument on completely unrelated issues. june director of the global policy institute here in berlin. thank you so much for your insights. thank you.
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ok, you caught up now with some of the other stories making headlines around the world . at least 1900 people have been killed after a powerful cycle and brought heavy rains and storm surges to india, the west coast. around 200000 people have been moved to safety. the country's navy is searching for scores of people missing at sea. after one vessel sank and another lost power, the us treasury has imposed sanctions on 16 of me and mars military leaders and their families over the deadly attacks on civilians following the military coup. the army seized power back in february, claiming that elections, and then rigged its killed at least 800 people in attacks on pro democracy supporters during widespread protests. more than 40000 people in a chinese province have been placed in home quarantine because of
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a search in covert 900 cases authorities hope the measure will help prevent a large scale outbreaks providing supplies to people in 98 quarantined neighborhoods. after authorities here in germany face some harsh criticism for the countries initial slow vaccine roll out some areas and trying a new approach by offering jobs to the public on a 1st come 1st serve basis. and as a project kind of in the way, in one berlin district, there was certainly plenty of demand. hundreds of people have braved the rain and a 2 hour wait to get vaccinated at this site, in berlin's neu, co neighborhood. at the major vaccination centers, priority goes to old people, then people in high risk groups, then medical workers, then everyone else. today though, it's 1st come 1st serve without an appointment from have a cell phone system. i found out about it from
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a notice pinned outside my door. i took advantage right away. the thing my, this is, it's a one off oppertunity man named. you have to wait for a while, but i think people should take the chance. i wish i haven't gotten the virus on the screen, but i've been at home for 2 months. i'm getting vaccinated so i can go back to work next week, y'all and inform them by the database mcdonough own here my johnson johnson. this side is part of the pilot project, meant to speed up berlin's vaccination raid. at 1st job was only available at major vaccination centers. then personal physicians started distributing shots. now pop up science like this panter part of the mix in areas where the infection rates are particularly high. like here in the neighborhood is comparatively low income. many people here have migrant backgrounds, social distance, it can be difficult in the often crowded housing found here. so the city is trying
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out targeted measures and yet it works well. i think we can do the same thing and other neighborhoods to me and repeat it here as well. but you have to bring the vaccination to where people live about. now come depending new york with germany is vaccination. dr. took a long time to get up to speed than our current pilot project is meant to give it more momentum. the problem now is a lack of doses many who came here today had to go back home unvaccinated. let's get you more on this story. i would like to welcome a dr. nikolai so basket that he's the head of the health department in berlin's, nor chrome district where the vaccinations took place that you saw there featured in our report a very good day doctor. thank you so much for your time. can you talk us through some of the challenges that health workers like yourself face trying to contain infections in new chrome and vaccinating people in hot spots like your district?
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yeah, as you mentioned, we started with a pilot project or a focus program on machination. and what we actually learned about this program was that we reach the vast majority of the people. acceptance rate was very high. however, to reach out and to get in contact with those who are generally skeptical, i think that is the big task. so how do you go about doing these outreach to people who might still be on the fence or maybe or not on the fence? they just don't know enough about the vaccinations. is there a program underway to help inform those people? right, actually that's, that's the science of successful street work. i mean, what needs to reach those people who are generally maybe less well informed, which maybe in
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a low income situation independent of their migration status or religion or whatsoever is that they need to raise the confidence in the program of explanation . they need to build on relation they need to build on trust. and that's actually what we are doing all over the pandemic with our street work program. and when you think st work program, can you outline that for us? i mean, do you have community leaders talking to members of their community? do health workers? i mean, how, how does it work? well, we have actually found the so called a corona lawton, an english would you say you would say they are guidance, work of well trained in the topics of corona and pandemic. and these colleagues are reaching out to these st. manage as to
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those multiplication in within the communities and get in contact to those community leaders and race trust in the concept the local department provides. and by this measure us and there we focus on young people as well as on the elderly people. we try to, to get in touch and, and this is actually what we did not reach in our pilot focus program on vacation you. i mean, unfortunately it was 20 seconds that we have together. what has the reaction been so far when the social workers reached out to these communities? while day one said that the relation is boots, their high acceptance in the work of these 2 workers. and there's also a high acceptance of all the containment programs. and actually,
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and eventually it also leads in an acceptance of explanation. what we actually need is to, we need to actually as a certain budget to spent in these communication structures. because what we learned on this pandemic was that probably more than a son of our energy goes into these communication work. that's a very important part. so they're working simply right. they are so much for your service and thank you for coming on d w. we greatly appreciate your insights, dr. nichol. i have a scott, thank you. thank you. and the total number of coroner harvest cases in india has searched past 25000000, making it only the 2nd country in the world after the united states, with such a high number of case loads and death in the last 24 hours rose by more than $4000.00. meanwhile, the number of weekly debts from corporate 900 in the us has fallen to its lowest level for nearly 14 months, with numbers of new cases declining for 5 weeks in
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a row. and chinese biotech company, clover says a new version of its current of iris vaccine has shown a strong response against the original strain of the virus. and some various during testing on mice and australia, government is resisting calls to open up overseas travel canberra plans to keep its borders close to most international travels until the middle of next year. art change of pace. now in the netherlands, famous for its canals, like you can see right here behind me were made to serve peoples needs. but some of the human tinkering has created problems for the marine life below, like the fish who have also had to navigate the waterways. but now a product of human technology is helping to improve the traffic flow for some of the canals. aquatic inhabitants. it's spring time in the
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netherlands. and the fish and uterus canals are following the call of nature heading upstream to their spawning grounds. but there is an obstacle this medieval lock controls, the water levels. the lock is closed in spring because there are hardly any boats about and that creates an underwater fish traffic jam. you trace water managers have found a novel way around it. fish store, bill ecologist installed an underwater camera at the lock that can be viewed on a so that users who see a fish compress a digital door ringer to tell the lock keepers to open the gate. ryan, for example, this just scanned the q r code to see what's happening below the surface dock. there was an appeal from the 1st i thought it was an april fools joke because the fish doorbell went online in the last week of march. but it does seem to be serious. serious business
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indeed, and successful. in the last month alone, one and a half 1000000 people have clicked on the fish can triggering 50000 rings. a busy time for luck, keep her tom to board. at least twice a day. he has to crank open the ancient luck to let the fish through the air come to melding benefit. all the luckily the priest sorts of the rings, clicks registered, but we don't open the law until we see that enough fish have gathered there. and on the cord about the fish know instinctively where to go. the bell also tracks and stocks of fish. the camera has so far identified 18 different species to felicia duke energy. the fish used to lose a lot of energy because they had to wait here for weeks at a time. and that increases the risk of being a mccormick. in fact, they saw the fish traffic gym easily. hello, not me,
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a fish. it's no longer the next fish friendly citizen. the trish is ringing the bell while down below a crustacean is waiting to continue its journey along the waterway. i never knew there was life in the canals then and there you go. we're just 66 days to go before the plant opening of a took your olympics. athletes are publicly expressing their doubts that the games will go ahead. well, australian team members gathered for the launch of the team uniforms in sydney, but most won't get to wear them at the opening ceremony because numbers will be severely restricted because of the pandemic. and when japan expanding its covered 1900 state of emergency, some are now openly resigned to the possibility of the games being cancelled. i will do that if it did get caught up and because that claim but i guess with everything happening, we just have to take that septic rural, well aware of what's going on,
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you're copying as an athlete to know that. and we don't want to threaten the type in the security of the japanese as well. that's really important for us. what we can do is what's in our control, taking a vaccines, doing everything we can move over that as i've got everyone, but also being realistic that if it does get cold awful, they're happy with that. then we have to embrace that as well. you're up to date with the latest headlines next up is their football magazine. kick off with a review of what we can think. 33 for now. thank you so much for your company. will have the world headlines. we have the news the news,
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the news, the news, the news, the
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kick off, the decisions surprises and one for the record things are heating up in the boonies on the ultimate mass day of a memorable season. the in b w. o was the it's an ongoing class or the spring began in
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2011. people stood up against correct rulers and dictatorship. all these moments have left the box in my memory. that was, it wasn't an incredible feeling. the people were liberated they had hoped for more security, more freedom, more dignity, have their hopes for 10 years after the arab spring, rebellion starts june 7th on d. w. me.
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the welcomed him that stay 33 and the weekend of football where history was made. robert live in dusky, finally, did it. 40 goals and a season equaling an almost 50 year old reco by the legendary gas min get malaysia. miller, it's probably more important than any current player because just club would not be as big as it is without the actual is despite the leak already being in the bag. this gave buying something new to celebrate. it was also a match day with some resignation. threatened sides got to celebrate safety, like alex book who hosted brain, and this is, i'm not biased grandmother and had to belinda followed up that jewel with fellows still as well as cologne with a gift for that coach. what could be inside?
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ah, i was like the my moment going be thing you're saying? i'm going to get on that. i and i was my say 331 where the impossible could happen . like shocker getting a wind against frank, but no less kick off on an irresistible pronouncement weekend. of the season, let's start in our book. the embattled coach flowing on call failed, has been interesting brains, patients prior to their relegation. 6 point with augsburg. the teen where windless, and 8 matches, losing 7 of them. cold felt seemed to shrug off as business as usual, rather than red alert. honestly, so last 10 years of better bremen. only one year, 2 years ago, it was like not fighting paul going down. i believe this is what everyone in bremond has also realized. the realistic part of this club at the moment,
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more proactive than their visitors elsewhere, made a coaching change with 3 matches left in the season, bringing back marco's fine. he had led outlook for 4 seasons before leaving for shelter and could secure safety for 14 placed outpouring with a victory over 15 to place the missing the nose of never in the same position as us . they know they're below us and that they'll need to when will feel that in every challenge and will be ready. and then doors and fans in and outside the stadium made as much noise as possible and depend emmett conditions and events on the pitch in turn compared to us as well. 15 minutes in reuben bar got kicked out at deborah last a burning the ellsberg attacker. a red card, the freeman now had a big advantage which they can try to squander. it was clear why brain and have
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only scored 4 goals in their last league matches. they had little trouble working their way into dangerous positions, but missed chance after chance. what they were not missing was physical commitment, which they may have made a bit too gritty. in the 49 minute close down close clattered into my anita less now and was shown his 2nd to yellow. despite his protests, it was back to a level playing field the end with just over half an hour to play out board made their break through chaos in the green box. and suddenly an explosion of celebrations for the home side, a classic relegation scrap goal from ronnie could be around. he's transferring to you on berlin next season, but this school could help him live on and now spoke history. freeman didn't give up,
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though they had their best chance to equalize in the 70 seconds, minute leonardo bits in court with outrageously bad luck, a few centimeters to the right and brain, and would have been back in the game a few centimeters. that could mean the difference between the 1st and 2nd division, but graham and sealed their own faith with a late fell by me. little red sheets on andre hon pending outscored, a clear penalty. daniel kelly, julie cooley. it's not the way to make it to nails and safety for mark was fine seal, let the celebrations, knowing his club no longer needed a result against byron in their final match at the season the manager. but it seemed to have a lot of heart and character. we showed that today, i'm playing with a man down after 15 minutes and really fighting is not a good. and i'm just glad the team got their reward and that the club will be playing in the bonus again next season. meanwhile,
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breyman slide down to the relegation. play off spot. co felt was let go shortly after the match and outcome. he didn't foresee in his last interview with coach. everything is possible. it's possible that we go down. it's possible that we have to go through negation and it's possible that we, when we say direction. so, but we, what we can influence the game against us and we have to collect the points. that's the most important. if raven do collect those points, it will be under my shot who won the leak with raymond, in 2004. he'll take the reins against glad to help them steer clear of the 2nd tier, the bull home are currently in the 2nd division, but perhaps not so much longer. that sounds gave the team a rousing stemmed off as they departed for they came in urine bug already top of the table. when would mean promotion for 2 guys as men? their hosts weren't playing both and fields market. i put your bug ahead in the 1st
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half, and it took a full 40 minutes until about school headed in an equalizer to get full from the band hearts racing again. but one, all that remained meaning a nerve wracking final match day with 3rd placed foot gaining ground boom could still drop as low at the place. place a point on sunday would be enough to see them to the top flight after an 11 year absence. the there was something of a doomsday field here it was class with cologne. the fear of losing on both sides outweighed that of temporary anguish through injury. although harrison had the better prospects going into the game, the berlin took a huge step towards safety. by winning their postponed midweek outing,
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a chalka even if somewhat fortunately i may head off the post. remember dad also to assist you can i can further me that can thought and cologne had lost their previous game to fryeburg. thanks also to a fair bit of bad luck. ah, it is a horror, horrible one man, who knows those moments all too well is the town finkel, is experienced. relegation some 8 times as opposed to sleek, a coach. so with this old dog has some new tricks up his sleeve. it proves to be a real dog fight. indeed, with plenty of commitment, but little in the way of quality on the ball, a bruising encounter. but when with scraps 1st, survival ever pretty. but the 2 teams did manage to muster up the odd effort on
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gold. elvis wedged the tie for to save from alexander, swallow in the 17th minute. at the other end, jesting gun, come here to hero against chalka, powered into the home box 6 minutes before the break. but this time, it was timor horn, with a smart save. by half time, the nets faced a bigger threat from bugs than the ball. and there was at least action in the stands after the break, as sammy could hear, was celebrated. the news of his brother ronnie, having scored for our sport as things stood with frame and now 4 points below. hair to we're safe. so the host, we're happy to sit back and absorb what cologne had to throw at them, which wasn't much. there was one more bit of drama at the n l yes. desperately trying and failing to win in penalty. a jubal intend to the season for palatine, who was rewarded with a nice little box of cigars for keeping her to the top flight globe if some snow
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hung. now finally have a team, you can love and come and leave it. if we don't lose our last game, then we can go into the summer break on the back of a fantastic rum, which would be a big boost for next season. and everything as for cologne, well, one point is certainly better than none. points give up on. i'm sure this point will give us confidence next week. we have to win again. shall we want to overtake the others and hope that they dropped point. ah, the outlook isn't the brightest for cologne, although it's small but slim feeling of hope does remain the another club, baffling to stay in the buddhist is armenia felt and while the fans gave the play as a mighty welcome ahead of their class against health and time they stuck to the game, could hardly have been worse, one mailed to the guests in the 5th minutes. thanks to andre kraemer ich what had
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begun as a biller filled corner quickly turned into a sweeping hoffen home counter attack, which culminated in kraemer, which is 19th league go that the season. that's a new club record for the creation strike up. who's phillip else and they are supposed to have had his side level midway through the 1st half with this, unstoppable free kick from there on, in the home side, took the flight to their opponents. but a host of 2nd half chances. first off, for those on himself, then the central defender yorkie nielsen. then strike a bobby and close went begging with one game left to play the lapels, buddhist, a future is still hanging in the balance. this
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was very well for michael, who was in his last home game as glad of coach after 2 eventful years at the helm. ah, he looked to be heading out on a high when captain large tindle pushed the falls in front on the stroke of half time with this magnificent turning volley the bod. at the end of his rein, things have gone seriously south for glad boss and things were no different. again stood guard 1st. what taro and those efforts flew in right over the glove? the goalkeeper young man? 5 minutes later sasha collage its post home winners. the austrian strikers and things just touch secured, 3.5, wait for a conference lea coats the live one time champions leak. hopefully glass off are
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now resigned to chasing the same prize. and their coach looks increasingly keen to put this whole story season behind him. but got back and stood up. could both be outflanked by all suspicious, only on berlin, who are also chasing the conference league a saturday on your travel euro believe candidates leave accusing it was the whole side who drew 1st blood against the belinda's lake. passing move coolly finished off by patrick sick. the check strike left on. yon's nico, a lot of scrambling around on the floor before slotting past cheaper. absolutely. but the point was enough to leave it to them to wrap up 6 place. so they obliged their guests. it was none other than leave accuse a lonely jewel play on pablo who level the scores,
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the 72nd minutes. when you have now overtaken by a single point, they occupy the conference league qualification spot with one game left to play. wrong say now it's in seems crazy that we're still in with a shot at europe on the final match day. it's a shame today wasn't the last game lose late. meanwhile, have secured 6 plays finished confirming best fault in the next season. this year, i believe stuart men's were all smiles after the mid week german cut the victory over light safety. this weekend they faced minds who recently secured their safety and the dislike top hero jayden santo provided the assist for a gorgeous opening for beth. i'll get nothing doing for mines keeper, finn john and the 2nd assist with forces captain marco's
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voice female to the gas halftime a 3rd after the break from the landscape, dartmouth all 3 points, and confirmed their place in the champions league next season. the handful from total gun gates been placed in a chance to grab a constellation, but there was no dampening documents moved as they finish a difficult season with a flourish cup run up light thing hosted both schools who were looking to pick up the last champions. the ticket maximilian philip, put the wolves in front with this early one to strike and he struck again just before half time as light. 6 defense fell apart, but the host spoke after the break. first. just employees have the deficits with his 2nd li goal of the season. and off of this
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fall on, i'm a do hi dora. so it's

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