tv Euromaxx 2 Deutsche Welle May 18, 2021 5:45pm-9:45pm CEST
5:45 pm
last month, all 3 points and confirmed their place and the champions league next season, the tenfold from toy gun gave up increased and a chance to grab a consolation. but there was no dampening doors man's mood as they finish a difficult season with a flourish. cut run is up like thick 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 upon, but the hosts pulled back up to the break 1st. just include that of the deficits with his 2nd li goal of the season. and off of this fall on, i'm a do hi dora. so it's a equalized from the spot. filled up point is enough,
5:46 pm
but both spoke their place and the champions league is now secure. cyberg spots found study on is heading into retirement, saturdays match against fire, and might well have been the last buddhist lead to the fixture that this i tonic ground. every host of insulation does lead to be. that was the last game, and it was a worthy and this has hosted many, many great games over a lot of years. it start, it was a historic occasion for more than one reason why levin dorski is opener from the spot was his 40 a league goal this season. with that equals gap miller, the record for the most goals ever scored in a single buddhist legal campaign. this will be those special we have to recognise and express that as a t we were still fryeburg went thrown off by the big goal now pulled his
5:47 pm
side level before half time. the 2nd half brought a 2nd goal for the champions. this time through leaving sunny bus fryeburg wouldn't be beaten captain to say i'm going to grab delayed equalizer, a worthy end to momentous match in this legal history. this week's hero can be none other than all the 11th of his goal against fryeburg was his 40th of the season, already securing him a place in the history book. he's in good company tides with 40 goals and he goes from here. well, i feel incredible deal now. i don't understand maybe what, what exactly happened, what i did to because you know, like, and record to be done something american company. if there's anything you could
5:48 pm
possibly gripe about. it's that age of his 40 goals were from the penalty spot. whereas miller stored all of his goals in the 197172 season from open flay. pretty impressive, although is all factors know they all count. ah . 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 until i tossed have been out of sort since been use of audio who does departure in the summer and at least one frankfurt was not properly focused early on against
5:49 pm
ciocca to handed the host a penalty by founding amine or eat classy on whom i saw his spot pick 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 cancelled out by andre silva. as i got a pam and showed off. shuck is typical defending one all the break, but this will be no ball draw frankfurt did look more focused early in the 2nd half. and that pressure soon paid off. when evidence beka rose to head and died, she candidates corner but frank fitz defensive was the season returned to hold them once more. a neat back heel from hintock put blendy it easy through on gold. and the young midfielder marked his 2nd appearance by opening his bundis li account
5:50 pm
has been exclaimed, look 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 me to call it. and i'll go along as is to bog, and with frank, but still reeling from the equalize. the host spin re took the lead with another dave, you go. and in florida and next case, it was actually his 1st ever shot for shock. his 1st teen shocker were basking in the kind of joy they haven't felt in months. and a couple of minutes later, matthew hopie embarked on a pseudo run from the halfway line and finished with ease. in the far corner. frankfurt conceded 3, inside a kilometer is 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 didn't receive the straight it to to after we go. so they did,
5:51 pm
it goes in the moment to explain what we do to this. it was a game over for andre silver, at least to pin bold in his 27th go the campaign. a club record. frank said, had 18 minutes to create 2 goals for the when. instead it ended in a 3rd straight home defeat, ending any hopes of a champions league finish. makes use of in the european action starts next year. will be there. that's what counts. the bigger picture over the whole year, not whether we didn't play too well in the odd game because we've completely earned this position. i'm glad somebody told me i'm on soon. that it is super ashby's. the points might be irrelevant for the win itself should provide some much needed confidence for the upcoming rebuilding project. this doesn't feel 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
5:52 pm
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, the legal are going down, but it seems the 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 the veteran class. yon hunter le setup lendy easy. one of south as promising academy products choose the move was the highlight of their win against frankfort. but it's also a demonstration for the future of how to integrate one generation with an ex paula 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
5:53 pm
it did over long as this is blendy. it's a good job. what a young i'm now this is tony. glory, 1st league gold, but one on one second. look at a young man. that is a very, very good job. the state says he 3 had a lot of upset fryeburg help attempts to draw a white glove by the filter stood up, and shaka choked up just a 3rd when of the season against fine foot. but the biggest result was at the bottom of the table with outspoken victory over breyman. now to the best goals of the weekend. ah,
5:54 pm
in 3rd place we've got the la sales and they are focused on the whole. now that is a free kick for a goal that might yet prove crucial in his size, fortunes ah 2nd spot. it's roughly i'll get those 5th goal of the season. ah, mass to be. so let's say me and that number one. how about this for me, blah blah. captain large tindall. the chance to me at the top of the table
5:55 pm
diamond i'm both will have locked up leak spots frankfurt and leave it cruising. 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, cent ellsberg all escape the drop. and while a rare shocker when can save them from dead last cologne, breyman and bill 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. full cologne . full miller felt full brain and cologne have to be all very relegated shaka, can they do it? i don't know. i think they were tied to the last game, like raymond, need
5:56 pm
a victory over the bus. we have to believe we have to believe that the bus will be fighting for 7th place. and the new conference league, while wheeler failed head to stood guard, who also shooting the 7 spot? i think in the end, everything was something yes. find down to next week on kick off. ah, the news? the news,
5:57 pm
5:58 pm
monday to friday on d. w. and then how many pushed out in the climate change cost the stores. this is my plant the way from just one week. how much less can really get. but we still have time to go. i'm going to be double used crime fighters, the car back africans, most radio dramas, continues the seasons. a story focus on have speech, cholera, prevention and sustainable charcoal production. all of those are available online. and of course you can share and discuss on c, w, africa, facebook page, and other social media platforms,
5:59 pm
crime fighters to noon. now some people don't care about me because they don't see my beauty. some people don't care about me because they think i have nothing to give me but 2000000000 people due to i am everything at home, the food and livelihood that day by day i and so does everything. to 1000000000 people came about me. me me. and now i use me. ah,
6:00 pm
the ah! this is it renews. live from brill intention. spill over is deadly violence in besieged garza and israel continues. anger grows over israel. punishing bombardments. alas, phineas, in jerusalem, and the occupied with the fact rally, go on, a general strike and demonstrate and solidarity would garz's clashes. breaking out between the demonstrators and israeli police also on the program. taking back control spain. sense in troops to restore order in its enclave. a suitor after morocco turns a blind eye to thousands of african migrants swimming to the spanish territory.
6:01 pm
ah, i'm layla rock. thank you so much for your company. everyone will pensions from israel's bombardments in garza or boiling over into the other palestinian territories the occupied west bank, east jerusalem, as well as in his really towns with mix populations. well, palestinians have been holding a general strike in solidarity with fellow palestinians in garza where is really airstrikes targeting hamas militants and their installation have killed and injured hundreds of civilians. clashes of broken out between demonstrators and is really security forces is the largest show of palestinian anger. since the onset of hostilities between god militants and israel last week.
6:02 pm
and i can talk now to journalists hasn't been shot in gaza. city has in the palestinians in israel and the west bank are on strike rallying against israel's military operations in gaza. can you bring us up to speed in terms of what the situation is like where you are right now? well i'm in, i'm in garden city and i can hear the days really straight in the same time. there were, at some point they were launching off rockets from gaza into israeli towns. mainly today there were fire angles, motors at the border as, as the glittering of amazon is that means you had announced in the same time they really were just hit many places in the morning. there was a target of a building that contains some, some bookstores, either the culture of places where these ladies are saying that this is where my
6:03 pm
son is, is and many other streets where we're targeted during the last night now has been in the us that the nation says that 48000 people according to the united nations, have fled their homes in a garza. what can you tell us about their situation? do they have a safe place to go somewhere to shelter? well since like 4 days ago, when is really shilling at the border area? some, some of the residents of north gaza strip and been doing village in the north as well. they flipped their houses and they went to the owner. were schools about 53 schools were become open and as chilton is preparing these places, but in the same time, still this is not a proper shows. it's just schools. there are some food provided to those
6:04 pm
schools to the people are taking them as a shelter from the minister of health in these places are a good place for, for viruses including the, the krona virus, the spread of a virus, as it's not well prepared for, for such a huge number of people, right, and of course, no social distancing. and we understand also the only covered 1900 lab in gaza, also fell victim to the air strikes. what can you tell us about the situation in the hospitals in gaza? how are they coping with the influx of injured well the, the, the health system in gaza is already in a week position. they experienced 15 years of located according to the spokesperson of the master. felt that i talked to him earlier, he was complaining that many clinics belonging to the, to the minister of health where damaged one of them was when yesterday, when
6:05 pm
a building near the main clinic in garden city was, was hit. and there was some damage. the main hospital is run off of equipment and, and, and medicine as like there is a huge drain off due to the big number of injuries. they are talking about more than $1400.00 injuries during the, the 9 days. so in general, and they were exhausted boy as well the, the year off. coffee 19 out to break in dollars. trip has a marble asha lucia. sorry. and gaza city are reporting. thank you very much. thank you. and with us smaller sorry. we spoke to him before,
6:06 pm
and he is from the united nations refugee agency in casa. but that is a mistake in the prompter. now let's just see with some of the other stories making headlines around the world, at least 19 people have been killed after a powerful cycle and brought 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 people still missing at sea. after one vessel sank and another lost power . more than 40000 people in china as the yo ning province have been placed in home warranty because of a search in covert 900 cases. authorities have hope rather that the measure will help prevent large scale outbreaks. they're providing supplies to people in 98 quarantined neighborhoods. german police say they've caught one of the key suspects in
6:07 pm
a high profile robbery case from 2019 bank. then thieves stole priceless historical jewels from the famous green vaults museum in the eastern city of dresden police. made the latest arrest on monday nights during a raid on a flat in berlin. new wildfires have broken out in western siberia and russia forcing hundreds of people to evacuated from their homes were last year. siberia experienced a devastating fire season. and this year, the fires started even earlier signed to see climate change could be to blame. now about 6000 migrants have entered spain's north african enclave of pseudo with more swimming with some rather swimming, almost 2 kilometers along the coastline from a neighboring morocco. well, authority say it was a record one day in flux, amid worsening diplomatic ties between spain and morocco.
6:08 pm
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 derived within a 24 hour period. the largest number in a single day. most were 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 see all the young people want to leave the country. there's no working order, 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 that we don't seem to have the beach they
6:09 pm
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 as such, has long been a magnet for migrants taking a better life. most of these 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 the options of getting into theater, spain, a wreck to defense, to try to close off the land route. but this is not stopped some microns from trying their luck. over the years. madrid say several 100 miles to get interesting to each year, but many are deported back to where they came from as they have no right to find them in 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
6:10 pm
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 arrival? just get an update on the situation. dw corresponded nicole reese is in madrid. spain. nicole, we understand that spain prime minister pet sanchez has arrived in the enclave. can you tell us more? yes, indeed. a federal sanchez has arrived only a short time ago. this was a visit he only announced a few hours ago. and he is now obviously showing presence after what is the same date, but i've never seen before. so many my friends at once. i've never entered any 40, and this is also the most southern border of spanish tortilla and also i'll see you . so you need to show presence. he also will speak to the chief minister and say
6:11 pm
about the situation and how to solve the situation. in the meantime, as seen, there also supports coming out that morocco is sending riot police to stop my greg coming in to say. so this is one of the latest pieces of information that we got. yes, things are moving, things are moving and as you're reporting actually we are showing life picture pictures from the beach as tough and somebody is actually being dragged away or carried away by 1st responders that we also see basically your troops there massing. how, how sensitive is this issue for madrid because obviously sending the prime minister to search or that's a big deal. it is sort of a big feel, but you also have to see that this is unprecedented. never before or has been such a huge influx in just one day. spain had announced a counter action for counter action, and that is what they're doing. a display of power to send back the migrants to
6:12 pm
morocco, which they actually can do, because that is an agreement between morocco and spain. it has been there for many, many years. so they actually accept that that being sent back. but the situation on the ground seems to be 10, as, as more military deploying there to help order forces. it doesn't very chance. we're still showing her last pictures where we were actually, when you were reporting a troops spanish troops there in through to why. what is driving as this development? why is this happening now? nicole? well, it's not officially confirmed, but experts think that this is sort of show up. a display of power from the rocky side at the thing had decided to give medical medical attention to the leader of the group which supports the independence of a western sahara. now you have to know that morocco has an ex west and are in the
6:13 pm
tendency and pain and also other countries like germany, one independence. so this may be how they show what could happen if they're not satisfied with what is happening in front of that territory. and also say what is the most southern border from spain to a 3rd country? it's a very, very strategic point as well. and so both countries have time and again, try to make sure that, that getting on smoothly. but this time, it apparently it hasn't worked out. and now of course, the moroccan authorities would argue that they consider a demand that you just reference. they consider him an enemy of the state. thank you so much. nicole reached the reporting from madrid, spain greatly appreciate it. and finally, a spectacular football moment for a brazilian go keeper. playing in the english for premier league, allison becker was put forward from his usual position on sunday with his liverpool club desperate for a score and the goalie headed in the game winner. a very rare events listen to the
6:14 pm
brazilian broadcast. oh this oh. 7 it was an especially touching moment for allison because he lost his father recently back in brazil in a tragic drowning earlier this year. all right, that does it for us. so you want to renew, stick with us. the business is up next with stephen appears we, i'm, we will rock and berlin on behalf of all of us here. thank you for spending this part of your day with the news news
6:15 pm
6:16 pm
always understand this new culture. so you are not a visitor, not against you, want to become a citizen info migrant. your platform for reliable information the of death looms over africa already flow. pandemic recovery can wealthier nations and private investors throw the continent a lifeline. we'll look at a today's summit in paris with just that aim. also in the show, the world can reached 0 carbon emissions by 2050. if all future fossil fuel projects are scrapped. that's according to a new report by the international energy agency. but is that even realistic? we'll take a look and we take a look at the growing number of fema entrepreneurs wants to do more with business than just make money flowing. walk into the show. i'm seeing beardsley in berlin.
6:17 pm
well, richard nations are emerging from the pandemic. but poor ones are facing steeper climb toward economic recovery. vaccine shortages on the one hand and a sharp drop in tourism. on the other hand, have it countries in sub saharan some hard africa rather especially hard. the region is expecting growth of just over 3 percent. this year, that's compared to 6 percent for the world overall. meanwhile, an additional 32000000 people have been plunged into extreme poverty. now, the recovery across africa is won't be even south africa. the most advanced economy in the region is on a far better track than oil producers like say, and gold and agirri, a in east africa. ethiopia, as economy has lost a lot of theme. kenya is a notable exception of the growth of more than 7 percent being forecast. and when several nations in the region already facing debt distress, the international monetary funds as an additional $425000000000.00 and funding is
6:18 pm
needed for subs, hard african countries to whether the crisis and france wants to help drum up. some of that financing in 2 days of meetings with african leaders and international lenders like the i m f and world bank. president manuel, manuel macross has encouraged, new debt will be for the continent. he's also announced that france will write off $5000000000.00 of debt to suit on as part of the broader international effort to bolster the new government there. the streets of dakar, senegal may appear calm now, but there is an undercurrent of tension. depend, demik has hit the tourism dependent economy hard. just a few weeks ago, the capital erupted in violent anti government protests fueled by economic inequality. and falling living standards among the countries youth depend, demik has left already fragile economies in dire shape all over africa. this week summit between french president emanuel mccall and african leaders hopes to help africa lift itself out of the current financial crisis,
6:19 pm
but also to find long term solutions. but some deeply suspicious of france, his motives and question, what role the former colonial power should play on the continent proper quote, boston, i don't know why people think that it's france that has to solve our problems. sometimes it's hard to understand. it's just that people think that it's a culture for african countries, especially the french speaking african countries to think that france always has the solutions to their problems. at least really sharla from france still maintained significant investments in many african nations. more than 60 years after it relinquished the last of its colonies, like a project to modernize the light rail network in a b, john could dive wow. you know, you're rated by the french economy minister in their last month. some economists argue african countries should go to international bodies for funds,
6:20 pm
rather than accepting frances loan conditions if possible. particular de la la. i think that the credit that franz grant says comes with conditions, condition over done the labs, we give you money and in return, it's now companies that will win the market. and sometimes with strategies to kill your national private sector and also allow the state to be dependent on france, sentiment. because if you owe money to france, you're dependent on friends that are mistrust, created by centuries of colonial history, still reverberates earlier this year. protest is in, senegal, directed their rage against french businesses, setting fire to french own supermarkets and other stores and china has spent the better part of 2 decades investing in africa and binding african nations to large, long term loans. europe is now moving to challenge china's influence on the
6:21 pm
continent, but they have a lot of catching up to do over to the energy economy, the international energy agency, which has long been dedicated to the use of fossil fuels now says all future fossil fuel projects must be scrapped as the world is to reach net 0 carbon emissions by 2050. and then any chance of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees di e a predicts, a sharp decline and fossil fuel demand in the next 3 decades. once a rapid and vast ramping up of investments in renewable energy i from on this i'm joined by landry and interesting. he's managing director for after at 350 dot org. that's an environmental advocacy group. landrick good to have you on the show. your organization is devoted to getting out of fossil fuels or to encouraging global economies to get out of fossil fuels. what is the realistic timeline for that happening given the lack of investment and renewables, lack of build out, i should say. and some of the social terminal that could be caused by getting out of fossil fuels. right,
6:22 pm
thank you very much for helping me today. so i will say that we don't have enough time to solve this crazy. so instead of having 0 net defense targets the countries and corporation, marcia, the focus to stop any new was the project and prioritize in rebel in it. because clearly this is not kent. i don't know, said the target to 2050. why we know the country, especially the google sal already know, cigarette heat by departure. so i will say there is no time to, to, to act. and we do have to probably ties radical actions that forms the still, or any new for you to predict at the moment. here in germany, which is by many nations considered to be very progressive on climate policy. the chances of america has said that she doesn't see a pull out from coal until 2038 at the earliest. i'm guessing that would be
6:23 pm
considered too late by your timeline or the needs that you express, right? i mean, if germany can't do it, how likely is that for other countries to be able to i think what we need is really called leadership. and when to advance and to speed up the transition. we definitely the ward can't afford another 1020 years before making this radical sheet, which, which is the award the climate justice of the moment. so there is no really we don't have to wait in terms of the case to new political do brookman. this is something that has to stop now, and we've seen some countries like germany as a state being progressive. and this is a couple pretty and additions that we're glad to see from the rest of our national, especially those historic group responsible for the rising of emotions. but if germany says it's not going to get out of coal until 2038,
6:24 pm
which some active here, a lot of most climate to say is far too late. doesn't that bowed poorly for other nations? we're going to try and do the same thing. yes, i do agree with the rest of countries might be might consider following the germans way. but however, as an advocacy group working for a just transition and award based on what you do to to continue pushing for more urgent and you know, you've been great to be some done or has been currently in what is being currently proposed as, as a target to 20 thirty's. so there is of cause great work to be done at the moment to make sure that and, and radical action is taken the moment and not keep like the so the current target of 2050 or even beyond. alright, laundrin interest,
6:25 pm
the managing director for africa at 350 dot or thank you for joining us. let's take a look now. some of the other business stories making headlines. us tech jain, amazon is in talks to by metro goldwyn meyer movie studios that according to several media reports m g m is one of the world's oldest film studios, known for blog post buck busters, including the james bond franchise. both amazon and m. g m have reportedly declined to comment on reports about the deal i will make, or fox con, has signed an agreement with car makers to lantus the tech company and assembly of apples most profitable product. the i phone will develop digital car cockpits with one of the biggest players in the auto industry. the tire emerges, the worlds of technology and car making. japan's economy contract at 1.3 percent the 1st quarter after the government, reimpose corona vice restrictions, and major cities drop followed to strong quarters for the world. 3rd largest economy expansion being stopped in his track by winter increase in coven cases.
6:26 pm
argentina spinning beef exports for 30 days to combat recent price increases on the domestic market. the country is a major export of b with over 800 tons sent abroad and 2020. its biggest foreign markets are china, germany and israel. why level female executives are still all too rare as our female entrepreneurs. but among those that are striking out on their own, a global trend is emerging. women want to do more with business and simply make money patterns collection for the next batch. entrepreneur, christina, is our producers bes wax wraps for home and kitchen use in her company as an alternative to plastic. cling wrap. those and you about washed off? well, this is an organic fabric and it's covered with a mixture of these wax tree, resin and hobo. those components together, they're then applied to that fabric by us bad. then all the stuff from is alsco box,
6:27 pm
the mother of to develop the prototypes in her home kitchen with lots of wax and an iron today she and her company supply 9000 outlets across europe. one important aspect to the entrepreneur is that all raw materials are organic. production takes place exclusively in berlin. as their numbers grow around the world, female entrepreneurs say they want more than just to make a profit. plenty of women who want to go out and profit. so most important thing to them, but by and large in the gym data really speaks very directly to this. this idea that when it comes to prioritizing social goals, environmental goals, and economic goals, men tend to prioritize economic goals over other goals. women tend to prioritize social goals or for other goals. this is also true for designer karen jordan. she only uses fabrics from europe that is produced under fair working conditions. she
6:28 pm
wants to set an example against the cheap textile and fast fashion industry. who does mock calvin is that what we buy today is definitely basically you shouldn't be able to sell clothing at those prices because i know what the cost here are. like, even if we consider economies of scale, what's on offer here is still too cheap. that devalues have garments along with the people who make them. we simply can't do that to each other unless it's a conventional number. with more women creating their own opportunities in the business world, new values and modes of operation are bound to emerge. and finally, a german car technician is going back to the future, making a business out of fixing up the 1980 s classic delorean sports car. michael. michael wagner. originally just wanted to own the stainless steel car, which was made famous as a time machine in the 1980 classic back to the future. but demand for the eighty's icon is high and parts are therefore rare. so uses
6:29 pm
a 3 d printer to make parts when you can't source originals or that's it for me. and the dw business team here in berlin to find his own line. he w dot com slash business is watching the news every day for us and for our plan, it is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do we make cities greener? how can we protect animals and their habitats? what to do with all that were waste. we can make a difference by choosing reforestation over deforestation recycling over disposable
6:30 pm
martin solutions over saying that in our ways is truly unique. and we know that that uniqueness is one allows us to live and survive. why dia, the environmental to global $3000.00 on dw and online news. coming up today, investigation into an army in control of financial need to speak to me and my defectors, who explained public controls nearly every aspect of its soldiers lives from their finances to their indians. organize all sorts of media to help those faces have demonstrated such a way of going about as infections. and 1st, the panoramic now a storm one of the deadliest pipelines in decades, bubbles in the west coast, leaving damage. it's great.
6:31 pm
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 in 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. i'll be speaking to one of my colleagues who conducted the investigation in a minute. but he has a bit of what 2 of the defect to 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 can be arrested and put in jail for 3 or 4 weeks. and joining me on the line
6:32 pm
is my colleague now me conrad, who was part of the team that conducted this investigation. now 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. exactly. 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 line? hi. i'm hiding in me and mana, moving from one house 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 be on the take any of this year. and the wolf is basically a brutal crack on civilian protesting this take over. one man said i can't be part of an institution that took part in that illegal qu, they much because of the qu, they will defected. did they provide any explanation as to why the army decided to
6:33 pm
take power in this manner? indian 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 was a fight, it might lead it with power. and one man was pretty clear, 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 palate to, to 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, in my state. 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 to independence. when the you came from britain,
6:34 pm
basically i'm not time the all the manage to mass. great. well, so land, economic and financial power for long time, it was basically impossible to do business in the market without getting through the army or affiliated businesses. and what they've also done is established in court system. they're not accountable to the civilian courts. they run their own universities to a very powerful paid state within the state that basically countable from their one . what did these defectors tell you? did they provide a glimpse into the life of an average soldier in me, in law? they did, they did, and it's a very close to the very, strictly monitored life. i mean, they were likely that the army has a facebook monitoring team that looked at all that 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. so
6:35 pm
a lot of propaganda and officers have to take part in a 3 month training course, which he knows paint the army is the savior, the end of the markets. the muslim team lives in rhetoric that so just fed the 3 men 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 parents if they want to leave, they have to do their shopping on the base of the school on the basis. so i think an average soldier, you could say, have very little no contact with civilian. you did mentioned earlier that these 3 defect as 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
6:36 pm
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, where to suddenly tell us where your son is. then we'll come and get you. and i was pointing several communication with his family for the end of a 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 don't really know how to stay safe. other 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 based, but it's dangerous. they're trying to remain safe. now because i thank you very much for your reporting and you're going to post read, know me and my colleague,
6:37 pm
you'll get bias report on our website, d, w dot com the india reported its highest ever think of the 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 nevada's case is, 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 citizens organizing on social media across status, but homes, people are connecting those in need to what they need. beds, oxygen hospitals fill a couple of months ago, i received daily routine looked a lot different. being a digital content creator per day mostly,
6:38 pm
and was planning what to post on her instagram handle known for her humorous time. she has a must a big following on social media and has owned a reputation as an influence. but this rule acquired a different meaning as a 2nd call with 19 hit india. suddenly she and other influences like her became a virtual lifeline for those in need of origin medical eat. we kind of found ourselves in the situation ready and we think people did not know where to go. we did not have a number set or, you know, they're not even if there was nice, they weren't efficient enough to handle so many people are cause for like us to into we had also reach quite started with 2 or 3 or be and went on 220 a day and went and i'm at one point, it was a 100 or 200 a day. she says the request again was abused for help in finding oxygen or hospital
6:39 pm
beds and soon went on to desperate please. the 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 has brought forth if the mens potential to provide urgent time sensitive assistance during moments of crisis. and it's not just content creators who have stepped into assist the 2nd we will call. we'd have seen other public figures using social media platforms, especially twitter to connect with and help those in need seen of us be who had the
6:40 pm
youth ring of the biggest opposition political party has gained recognition for his school would 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 necessities to do sending in distress requests. at this point in time, there's really no way we could, if you will. and, and, you know,
6:41 pm
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 white gap in india overburdened health care system. turning her from a media influences to a real life, people are deadly psyched. loan along in the west coast is competing to health crisis. in several states, at least 16 people have died. as site lawn topped a plowed 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, to try to limit the spread of infections. the storm has since weekend, but if left suffering in its wake, a lucky escape for these oil and gas workers rescued after the barge. they were working on sank in the storm. nearly 200 have been brought to shore,
6:42 pm
but the fate of more than 100 others is not a certain. as the rescue operation continues. psych loan towns pay made landfall in good to run on monday, bringing its 200 kilometer windsor shaw. it's the most powerful cycle and to hit the region in decades, tearing through the villages, operating trees, and bringing down power lines 100. there were left without electricity. on its way up the coast, the cycling reeked havoc and go mahar rushed. restate to move by briefly closed its airport and evacuation tens of thousands of residents. so either i mean by the recent is i have never seen such a devastating cycle. and in one bye, 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 and i don't have to struggle hard to come out of it. out of the not,
6:43 pm
you know, you're not an uphill battle for many in the city. that for months was one of the worst effected by india's recent covert 19 outbreak. and that's if it did it as many other stories out there on our website, over the phone from asia rebec tomorrow. see that the, the the secret. why behind the discover new adventures in 360 degree. the explore fascinating world heritage site w world heritage $360.00. yes. yeah. now i'm agreeing worried about the meal host of the recent
6:44 pm
post. to me, it's clear we need to change the solutions or out join me for a deep sized into the green transformation. for me, for the the time now for 13 minutes of arts and culture and we'll be heading to the netherlands, where the eurovision song contest is back after last year. contests were called on . now finally contested from 39 countries are going head to head today that's coming up a little later. but 1st, a story of 4 children who dance dress and dream drac the documentary drag
6:45 pm
kids follows preteens stefan jason bracken and now miss as they team up for a female impersonation performance. the w is currently showing the canadian documentary. we'll talk about the controversy. it's generating interest a moment. miss each 9 appears as his alter ego queen lactation nemesis. one of the younger subjects in the documentary directed by megan wynberg ah, dr. follows the quartet of youngsters all under the age of 12, as they enter the world of competitive 3 boys and one girl taking on hyper feminine persons their peers. don't all get it. neither do a lot of adults, but their parents support them. i actually love right stefan,
6:46 pm
a lottie ga go seems to be in his element. i think people immediately he said drag their top sexuality to that and that's the problem. people need to separate say nothing sexual, it's about expression. you are the art, that's it. and it's extreme brown, it's extreme. so just you know, look at, look at the sistine chapel. that is an extreme, as the film shows child performers becoming famous for a once marginalized form of expression, previously reserved for adults long as it never ever infringes on his personal life . because like i know what seemed as the people and i know how it affects like affects their lives. and yeah, you have to sacrifice a lot, i think for them. and i'm not willing to give that up so easily. so
6:47 pm
and then more famous, it might start being fun. and then i'll start to slowly shrink until i'm his little fruity pebble. and i have to deal with everything that i've said i would say, i'm not mad or sad about what i'm doing is just kind of overwhelming. but when i'm kind of caught in a moment, i love doing oh, just don't come in a with a group to shannon said to lady ga, goes born this way at montreal's pride festival. together the 4 kids are given the stage to be different. the and continuing our coverage for diversity day here on the w,
6:48 pm
the documentary dragged kids have been sparking lots of debate on the youtube channel b. w documentary in the comments section, d w report or mike, a crew is following the reactions, micah would have users been writing about this film. well, it's really amazing how differently people can react to the same stuff. you know, right from the beginning, the documentary wasn't even a couple of hours online. we have this huge number of comments and immediately a lot of concerns whether this is about abusing the kids or sex, realizing them, we've been seeing a lot of criticism from religious and conservative uses. and really from around the globe, a lot of people are writing night club is not really a place for a kid and they are talking about stolen childhood. there is really a lot of criticism but, but of course, we have also one, the ones who are celebrating the parents and the families for their support and their love and giving the children the freedom to do what they really wanted to do
6:49 pm
. right. and as we saw, the parents do play a big part in the film. how did they respond to criticism? some refuse to even think about it and there are others who really find their own way to cope with it. the family of jason, for example, they were really conservative and the beginning, but he forced them to change their mind. right. i want to, i want to show another quote from the movie. this is jason and his parents. and i guess i still i have and i can then every child has the right to do it feels natural to them in nothing dresses him, you know, weren't airings. no, that's always i tell it to tell him about it.
6:50 pm
and then when he gets from and we're talking about the documentary dragged codes online now on the youtube channel, the w documentary, micah, what's been the response like from the drag seem to this movie? yeah, very interesting. first of all, we have to say that the gay community is the one who gave the children the platform and maybe they would love to perform on a school even. but there's no possibility for them. but there are some people in the direct seen, well, really low. it's that this actually odd from, from them as being sanitized. but maybe this is the way goes when something becomes so mainstream, because drag so popular in these days. and so many countries, and of course, as so many children now, really feel inspired by watching group will strike raise, for example, all instagram all picked up. for example. tell us, what did you think of the movie?
6:51 pm
didn't leave any lasting impressions on you? well, i was really touched by watching this for children from those different backgrounds, becoming friends this, this was really touching, maybe friends for life span because they finally got to me to children like them for the 1st time they had the competitive moments. but in the end they would just glass to meet each other. further your thoughts, micah, thank you and the documentary drag kid is online now on the youtube channel dw documentary. thanks so much. well, oprah winfrey and prince harry drops the trailer for their new series on mental health. the meet you can't see, and both of them speak emotionally about their own lives. it's just something except the theory, the aims to break down the stigma surrounding mental health issues. it also features lady got a been through it and people need help as well as actress quinn,
6:52 pm
close professional athletes, and a syrian refugee. the me you can't see, comes out this friday on apple tv plus german police have made a new arrest in connection with the jewel highest at dressed in green vaults museum, the priceless gem snatched back in 2019 are still missing, including diamond encrusted objects. once belonging to the queens of saxony and the $17.18 hundreds will prosecutor say the 22 year old now in custody is part of an organized crime family. his twin with actually one of the 4 other suspects already arrested in the case last year. well, it's kitty, it's weird and for a lot of people it's the highlight of very year. the eurovision song contest held annual annually since 1956, except for last year when it was cancelled due to the corona virus. now finally, the competition is happening again this week in the netherlands. oh,
6:53 pm
they're getting ready for the world's biggest music contest, dimitry, and event devlin and gap or die hard, your vision fans. despite the pandemic limiting this year's event, they're excited for it to go ahead in their hometown rotterdam. i was ready to celebrate everywhere to do everything, to be all out on the, on the streets. and those use a tiny bit more turn down. but the fact that it went to rugged them made my heart so happy in 2020 singers and bands from 39 countries will participate in this year's your vision. like destiny, and 18 year old singer, for motto, the italian rock fan motor's. i got i and pumps. thing among pain from australia
6:54 pm
the the winner of this year's contest will be chosen here. in rotor dams, a reno inside rehearsals are ongoing with lot we own center stage. the next up is switzer. during rehearsals, the seats remain empty when the contest takes place up to 3500 fans will fill the arena. it's a big challenge to do that while maintaining safety. during the pandemic, everyone is tested at least once every 48 hours, to make sure that we don't get any infections inside of the reading compound. the secondly, of course, it's the usual measures it's hand sanitizing, its face mask and social distance thing at all at old places. except if you're sitting down and can maintain your social distances as a backup, all 39 contestants have recorded performance as in case of infections or need to pointing jenko. mcroy is also excited to finally perform in front of
6:55 pm
a live audience. again, he'll be singing for the host country, the netherlands. his song, birth of a new age is an old 2 people standing up for themselves with his powerful message. he is one of the front runners in this years event. my song is about resilience, about knowing your own work yourself worth and realizing that that is the thing that keeps you standing on both of your feet in difficult times. it's also owed to people who stand for themselves and who claim their space within their society. within the world saying, i deserve respect, i deserve to be seen, can average have is a crisis sharing his music with europe and the world is an awesome thing. but he admits that he does miss the typical year revision moments in
6:56 pm
a penny that you don't get to me. like a lot of the fan, sometimes our fans standing like the venue and that's that's, that's a nice moment. always because they always want pictures. yesterday they were singing the course of my song, you know, and then you get like a taste. you know what it probably usually is that your vision experience. the song contest comes at a challenging time this year. but the fans are determined to celebrate their champions. no matter what phone, you know, germany, the netherland, everybody. you looks like someone's going to be happy no matter who wins. now a few of the delegations did have to quarantine because of positive corona virus test results. but it looks like the all be out in time to compete, of course will have much more your vision for you in the next days. see that
6:58 pm
6:59 pm
strong competition, rival, marketing numbers, atmosphere, whole information loss, hate money, 1000000 fans and funds because we love football. the take off on youtube, join us. are you ready to get all the places in europe are smashing all the record? step into a venture. just don't lose your grip. the treasure map for modern globe. trotter's me, governor. some of us are wicker breaking also in book form. mm.
7:00 pm
ah, excuse me. this is, you know, we do live from berlin, united in protest. hundreds of thousands of palestinians joined a general strike against israeli air strikes on garza as the deepening humanitarian crisis. contin unfold in the strip. well, anger boiling over against israel's punishing fun, barton palestinians, jerusalem, and the occupied west bank rally. go on, a general strike and demonstrate the solid there. and he would god, this clash is breaking out between the demonstrators and israeli belief also coming up,
7:01 pm
taking back control spaces in troops to restore order in its enclave to after morocco turns a blind eye to thousands of african, mike was swimming to the north african spanish territory and leading by example, us climate envoy, john kerry tells you that we news that europe and the us must make significant cuts in carbon emissions by the end of the decade. both are some of the world's leading foods. ah, my heart, thank you very much for your company. everyone tension is over, israel's bombardment of garza are boiling over into the other palestinian territories the occupied west bank east jerusalem, as well as in israeli towns with mixed populations. in many places palestinian demonstrators have clashed with israeli police is the largest show of palestinian
7:02 pm
anger since the onset of hostilities between israel and gaza militants last week. while the frustration comes amid growing international appeals for an end to the fighting, which have so far gone unheeded. the streets of hay bron full of palestinian protesters. part of a day of anger that saw strikes and demonstrations in jerusalem and the occupied west bank. a show of palestinian unity shared outrage over the death toll in garza and israeli policy toward the occupied territories. because we had to put them in law. so we must all go out into the streets and fight in solidarity with our people dying and gossip. because here we have settlements and checkpoints, and an occupation, all palestinians must play a role by the death toll roads again on both sides. on
7:03 pm
tuesday, on the israeli side, rockets from gas struck a house used by guest workers in the israeli town of dog killing to tie nationals. the sound of explosions is constant in israeli areas within the rocket's range. the iron dome anti missile system stops most, but not all the time we've lived in this situation all our lives. we could say that we're used to it, but it's not logical that a terrorist group is dictating how we live. for a few hours, you can rest then after that, how much launches rocket. it can't continue like israeli air strikes on garza continued fueling a humanitarian crisis. most of the dead here are civilians. and now thousands of thousands are cut off from clean water and have no access to medicines. hospitals already struggling with the coven, 1900 pandemic, or stretch to their limits. israel says it is targeting leaders of the militant
7:04 pm
hamis movement that governs garza and a system of tunnels. israel says are used to move weapons as global calls mount for an end to the bloodshed. the white house says president fight and told israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu, that he supported a ceasefire, but stopped short of calling for one. meanwhile, netanyahu has that israel will not stop airstrikes until her mouth pays a price. a price guidance are already paid. and meanwhile, your foreign minister is just wrapped up talks on the latest deadly violence. let's get you the latest from our brussels bureau chief, alexander vaughan. nominate alexander a 1st off. what has been decided? well, actually nothing. we have to say after the video conference concluded e u foreign policy achieve. joseph barella held the press conference and he talked
7:05 pm
to us reporters urging that it's the most important thing right now is to end the violence and to implement as he's fire immediately. he also sat that israel has the rights to defend itself by that, that it's also important to respect the international law and to protect civilians . and he could them condemned rocket attacks by hamas. but important point here is to say that only 26 of 27 e u member states backed this statement hungry was against that. and of course, when we know that the nature of your foreign policy making is to speak with one voice, we don't have any decision is here and any, we don't have a common position on israel gas crisis right now. just another vaguely worded statement. how has the you navigate at the crisis so far? alexandra, and what is influencing use response to this crisis was not very well,
7:06 pm
i would say so there were not very quick to respond. and now as i was just said, they don't have a common position on the crisis right now. and that it's of course because they have different interest as some of the u. member states has, they have very close ties with the israeli government. states like hungry, for example, they support the israeli government and try to soften any possible criticism of the israeli government. other states in the note and part of the european union like sweden or island for example. they are very critical of israel. so it's very difficult to bring all this position all these positions together. and this is sort of embarrassing for the european union ahead of the video conference today. the german foreign minister said that it's important for the european union to play a bigger role in the process. but as it seems, it's not quite possible right now. a mixed bag, w, brussels bureau chief of
7:07 pm
a non reporting from brussels as always, thank you. that's going to be now with some of the other news making headlines around the world. at least 900 people have been killed after a powerful psych loan brought 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 people missing at sea. after one vessel sank and another lost power. more than 40000 people in china's yawning province have been placed in home quarantine because of a search in covert 900 cases authorities hope the measure will help prevent large scale outbreaks. they are providing supplies to people in 98 quarantine neighborhoods. police say they have arrested one of the key suspects in a high profile robbery case from 2019. while back then these still priceless
7:08 pm
historical jewels from the famous green vault museum in the eastern city of dreams . the police made the latest the rest on monday night during a raid on an apartment in berlin. fresh wildfires have broken out in western siberia and russia forcing hundreds of people to evacuate from their homes. well, last year, as i very experienced a devastating wildfires season and this year the fires started even earlier scientists, the climate change you could be to blame. spain has vowed to restore order in this north african enclave of suit after a record number of migrant arrivals in a single day, while about 6000 migrants, some of them swimming almost 2 kilometers along the mediterranean coastline. breach the border from neighboring morocco space. prime minister pet sanchez has made an
7:09 pm
emergency trip to sue to amid worsening diplomatic relations with 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. 2 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 it 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 to help you out of class. she has actual fun. as you see, all the young people want to leave the country. there's no work. aren't you afraid of the sea? no, no, i'm not afraid. if i stayed here,
7:10 pm
i won'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 slave 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. most of these new arrivals reach seems 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 in to see spain direct to defense, to try to close off the land route. but this has not stopped some migraines from trying their luck over the years. oh yeah. would you say several 100 miles to get in to say to each year, but many audi posted 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 morale complete,
7:11 pm
allowed so many to move towards the board in the 1st place because of a diplomatic spat with spain over another issue. but officials madrid say they have already reached an agreement about sending the migrant back. and when are we enforcing security to prevent further arrivals? climate change is waiting for a huge psych loan that hit india's west coast this week, killing at least 27 people. and many more are missing exports say the cycling is part of a growing number of extreme weather events and severe storms. to develop in the regency as climate change warms its waters while that warming tendency is increasing the risk of disasters in other parts of the world as well. many nations are trying to enact reforms to curve the damage and the earlier d. w spoke to us climate envoy john kerry, about the measures his government would like to see taken to combat climate change
7:12 pm
. settling void carry the cycling we're seeing in india is really hitting home. the message that more of those stones in the future are a global threat at the same time, the us is continuing fracking. so how do you want to convince poor countries to do their part in the climate effort? well, it's critical that the 20 biggest emitters in the world of which we are one and you counts as a whole, as one in india and china and others. we have to step up. all of us have to lead here by example, and that means we need to be achieving significant reduction goals, not just by 2050, but over the next 10 years. if we 20 nations that are the largest economies of the world don't mitigate meaning reduce our emissions during 2020 to 2030.
7:13 pm
then we would be responsible for denying the rest of the world. the ability to hold the temperature of well below 2 degrees or $1.00. here in germany, there are elections in september. the polling. so is that for the 1st time that could be green led to government. how would you feel about a green government at the home of europe, the largest economy ahead of that crucial summit in november and got that? well, it's up to the people germinated aside. you know, it's not up to me and how i feel are present 9 deals about it. we certainly support the policy of addressing climate crisis. and obviously the greens are, are very seized by and engaged in that particular issue. but this is for the campaign ahead not for us. and unlike russia, we're not going to involve ourselves and other people's elections. now you yourself
7:14 pm
have cited 9 years left to go to avoid no longer to meet the 1.5 degree aim at the same time. you want to rely on not uninventive technology. are you simply being optimistic? the idea is we have a very short period of time and we have to, we have to make those decisions. now what i said about invention with respect to it, the i. e, a, the international energy agency has said that 40 to of 46 critical technologies are not yet capable of being brought to scale put into the marketplace. that's what i was saying. it's not that we haven't invented some of these things. it is that they're not at a scale where they are commercially viable yet. and what we need to do is get green hydrogen, or battery storage or storage of some kind and other things able to be able to be brought to the marketplace at scale. special envoy for climate on carry. thank you very much for talking to you. thank you very much. appreciate it. thank you. you
7:15 pm
want you to use our top story. this now we're hundreds of thousands of palestinians joined a general strike against israeli airstrikes on garza and the deepening humanitarian crisis by growing international appeals for truth. there's been no let up in the violence. you're up to date with the headline next up, colbert 19 show. we've been watching the fight against the corolla virus pandemic. how has the rate of infection in developing? what does the latest research information and contact the corona virus? coven, 19 special next on dw. are you ready for some great news? i'm christine when black. i mike, a junior with a brand new the news africa, the show that tackle the issues chasing now with more in the bill cuts all of the
7:16 pm
trans stuff to you, what's making his license and what's behind, where on the streets to give you in the report on the inside of the w news africa every friday on d. w. in the is skepticism undermining the united states vaccination success story about 250000000 doses have been administered so far. almost every 2nd american has received a shot in the 3rd, a fully vaccinated paces 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
7:17 pm
a lot of active case with 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 the explanation rates due to some americans refusing to get this 2nd shot. and 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. 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 an awaiting staff shape the they have to hire to 50 doses of the vaccine available to be some time we have to wait then, and that's a shame because we know that there are many more people that need to be vaccinated
7:18 pm
. last is last in the united states and cobra. 1900 vaccinations, only 26 percent of the state's population is fully vaccine, needed. some have changed their mind. but vaccine hesitancy still poses a major problem. that was very hesitant, but once i thought about everything kinda prayed about it and, and gave us 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 around a lot of patients everyday. so at jackson haines health 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 remain slow. we fun in the south. 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,
7:19 pm
who eventually was convinced would you like them? so by madame as a house worker, she was offered the vaccine in january 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 comb all those will be with every shot of the vaccine. the risk of the threads returning dramatically decreases, but 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 vaccines into their community in a mobile scenic 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 vaccine. today, it's
7:20 pm
a church after 2 hours, only 2 members of the community come in to get their shots. i work at night in his 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 dozes available. 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, maybe they're trying to use people of color to get the vaccine to really do some research. that's one of the things even about at 1st facts. and it takes convince her that this is the only way to return to normal also
7:21 pm
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 that still so much hesitancy and resistance over this? i think, you know, i think there are 4 reasons you just illustrated, some of them. one that 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 were very polarized political country. and right now, this has been rolled out in the, by an administration, even though it was made in the trumpet administration. and that, i think it's the reason the cdc said you ought to wear masks after vaccination. i think they're actually trying to motivate republicans right now. that are not sure
7:22 pm
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's the government's 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 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 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
7:23 pm
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 back to 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 hurt in unity mean 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 and lower cases with higher and higher vaccination rate so that
7:24 pm
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 we'll get there. we think that europe will get there. i think he gets monica. what, what happens when will 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 being slow, german officials hope hurting 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'll disappear in one part of the world and reappear elsewhere. there is no doubt that global vaccine equity. there is no doubt that getting back seen to poor countries and places that need it is the only way to truly get to community. absolutely, it will keep on coughing up. and that's why there's nothing more urgent right now
7:25 pm
going to getting the whole world vaccinated. this is unfortunate quarter of our it's happened, but we actually have a tool that is not that expensive to get there. what, what can 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 by rain and 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 coroner virus does not need. 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 in our, in a virus that has a very strict proofreading mechanism. my hope is that these vaccines are credibly effective and we can get it if we all work together on accounting, thanks for being on the show. again. thank you. out of the show where outsides
7:26 pm
corresponding derek williams answers your questions on the career buyers call has 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 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,
7:27 pm
but side effects aren't caused by live virus replicating in your body because the vaccines and use don't actually contain any live virus. instead, they employ a number of different tricks to fool your immune system into believing you've taught the virus. many vaccine platforms work by delivering genetic instructions into yourselves that caused them to build sars 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, 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,
7:28 pm
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. of i the news, the news, the news
7:29 pm
7:30 pm
really what move back and walk back to people who follow along the way. admirers and critics alike. how is the world's most powerful woman shaking her leg as being join us macros? last a new venture. coming up today and investigation into an army in control of a nation, he'd have to speak to me and my army defectors, who explained public controls nearly every aspect of its soldiers lives from their finances, to the indians. organize all sorts of media to help those facing have devastating 2nd wave of virus infections. and 1st and demick now a storm, one of the deadliest cycles in decades, bubbles in the west coast, leaving damage in the
7:31 pm
news. i'm british manager, welcome to deed 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 a bit of what 2 of the defect to 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 can be arrested and
7:32 pm
put in jail for 3 or 4 weeks. and joining me on the line is my colleague down conrad, who was part of the team that conducted this investigation. now 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'm high, i'm hiding in me and me on a moving from one house to the next day. another one is across the board in india, but again, i can't tell you where exactly few men decided to defect following the on the take any of this year. and the work is basically a brutal crap around on civilian 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 qu, they will defected, didn't provide any explanation as to why the army decided to take power in this
7:33 pm
manner. in men, 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 bleeding power. so the elections laughed late last year. one landslide for the governing, national lead 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, 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. now me, how is the army able to will so much influence in me and my say the only me in my, basically a very powerful state within the me, in my state. if we look briefly at the history of me and mar, basically me and 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,
7:34 pm
my time the army managed to mass great, well, land, economic and 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, established that and quote, for some men not accountable to the civilian courts, they run their own universities to a very powerful pick state within the state that basic, uncomfortable from their one. what did these defectors 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, looked at all that social media activity in oklahoma. people in that, you know, maybe voice that support for the nationally, for democracy or criticize the government,
7:35 pm
mental not of propaganda. and officers have to take part in the 3 month training course, which he knows paint the army, is the savior, the defender, me and mark. and the muslim wisdom rhetoric that soldier, the fed, the 3 men 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 that 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 base of 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 are in a dangerous situation. but for the moment being, this is i wouldn't say they say so it seems pretty clear that the army has drawn
7:36 pm
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, where your son, if you to tell the way your son is, then we'll come and get you plenty, several communication with his family for the end of a 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 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 based, but it's dangerous. they're trying to remain safe. now, conrad, thank you very much for your reporting and you can of course read. now me and my
7:37 pm
colleague, you'll get buyers report on our website, d, w dot com. the india reported its highest every single day fatalities from covered 1900. 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 nevada's cases is evident across the country over about and hospitals, exhausted medical stuff, and the 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, oxygen hospitals. fil a couple of months ago, i receive daily routine looked a lot different. being a digital content creator,
7:38 pm
how do you mostly involve planning what to post on her instagram handle? known for her humorous time. she has a must a big following on social media and has owned a reputation as an instrument so but this rule acquired a different meaning as the 2nd 19 hit india. suddenly she and other influences like her became a virtual lifeline for those in need of origin medical eat. we kind of found ourselves in this situation. very unwittingly, people did not know where to go. we didn't have a plan number set or, you know, we did not even if there was nice, they weren't efficient enough to handle so many people or if it was cause for like eyes to. and we had also reach quest started with 2 or 3 or be and went on $220.00 a day. and when i'm at one point, it was a 100 or 200 the day she says the request again was appealed for help in finding
7:39 pm
oxygen are hospital beds and soon went on to desperate please stop plasma crucial medicine and eventually crematorium and burial grounds, which could accommodate more over the victim bodies, she kept amplifying these messages, connecting those who needed help with those who could, to whitehead, she adds 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 vidas outbreak. over the past few years, social media has emerged as a communication tool in a country with hundreds of millions of users. but the 2nd we have brought forth is immense potential to provide urgent time sensitive assistance during moments of crisis. and it's not just content creators who have stepped into assist the 2nd call. we have seen other public figures using social media platforms, especially twitter to connect with and help those in need seen of us
7:40 pm
b b 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 have 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 the media p coordinator request already mentioned 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 along with a group of content treaters, 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 and, and you know,
7:41 pm
or send me the 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 white gap in india's overburdened health care system. turning her from a media influences to a real life. people are that lead loan along in the west coast is competing to 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 colbert 900 tests before they were taken to shelters, to try to limit the spread of infections. the storm has since weekend, but if left suffering in its wake, a lucky escape for these oil and gas workers rescued after the barge they were working on sank in the storm. nearly 200 have been brought to sure that the fate of
7:42 pm
more than 100 others is not a certain. as the rescue operation continues. psych loan town k made man fall in good to read on monday, bringing it's 200 kilometer windsor shore. it's the most powerful cycle and 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 cyclop reeked havoc and go mahar rushed ra state to move by briefly closed its airport and evacuated tens of thousands of residents either by the recent is by have never seen such a devastating cycle in one 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 doesn't follow up.
7:43 pm
i'm not, you know, you're not an uphill battle for many in the city that a month was one of the worst effected by india's recent cove at 19 outbreak. and that's it for today. there's many other stories out there on our website from both slash asia. we're back tomorrow. ah hey there, i'm david and this is a climate change briggs. it happiness in 3 books. this is a book for you. you'll get smarter for free. w book. choir culture. high hair. a woman's
7:44 pm
super food. stylish style, like on the lead owes lifestyle europe 0, dw the the time now for 13 minutes of arts and culture and we'll be heading to the netherlands, where the eurovision song contest is back after last year's contest was called off . now, finally, contested from the 39 countries are going head to head today that's coming up a little later. but 1st, a story of 4 children who dance dress and dream drac the documentary drag
7:45 pm
kids follows preteens stefan jason bracken and now miss as they team up for a female impersonation performance. the w is currently showing the canadian documentary. we'll talk about the controversy. it's generating in just a moment. miss. each 9 appears as his alter ego queen lactation nemesis. one of the younger subjects in the documentary directed by megan wynberg ah, drag kids follows the portrait of youngsters all under the age of 12. as they enter the world of competitiveness draft, yeah, 3 boys and one girl taking on hyper feminine pursue their peers. don't all get it and neither do a lot of adults, but their parents support them. the and i actually love right stefan. a lot he go go,
7:46 pm
seems to be in his element. i think people immediately he said, drag their top sexuality to that and that's the problem. people need to separate say, nothing sexual, it's about expression. you are, they are, that's it. and it's extreme, it's extreme. just you know, just in general, that is an extreme as the film shows child performers becoming famous for a once marginalized form of expression, previously reserved for adults long as it never ever infringes on his personal life . because like i know what things as to people and i know how it affects their lives and yeah, you have to sacrifice a lot, i think for them. and i'm not willing to give that up so easily. so
7:47 pm
they're not more famous. it might start being fun, and then i'll start to slowly shrink until i'm because little fruity pebble. and i have to deal with everything that i've said i would say i'm not mad or sad about what i'm doing is just kind of overwhelming. but when i'm kind of caught in the moment, i love doing it. oh, just don't come in h with a group to shannon shit to lady gog is born this way at montreal's pride festival. together the 4 kids are given the stage to be different. the and continuing our coverage for diversity day here on d w. the documentary drag case has been sparking lots of debate on the youtube
7:48 pm
channel b. w documentary in the comments section d w reporter mike. a crew is following the reactions, micah would have users been writing about this film. well, it's really amazing how differently people can react to the same stuff. you know, right from the beginning the documentary was in the even a couple of hours online. we have this huge number of comments and immediately a lot of concerns whether this is about abusing the kids or sex, realizing them, we've been seeing a lot of criticism from religious and conservative uses. and really from around globe, a lot of people are writing night club is not really a place for a kid and they are talking about stolen childhood. there is really a lot of criticism but, but of course, we have also one, the ones who are celebrating the parents and the families for their support and their love and giving the children the freedom to do what they really wanted to do
7:49 pm
. as we saw, the parents do play a big part in the film. how did they respond to criticism? some refuse to even think about it and there are others who really find their own way to cope with it. the family of jason, for example, they were really conservative and the beginning, but he forced them to change their mind. right. i want to, i want to show another quote from the movie. this is jason and his parents. and i guess i still i and i can then every child has the right to do it feels natural to them in there's nothing dresses him you know weren't airing. that's always bang. i told him i still have a letter with a phone and then when you get in
7:50 pm
and we're talking about the documentary, drag kids online now on the youtube channel d w documentary micro. what's been the response like from the drag seen to this movie? yeah, very interesting. first of all, we have to say that the gay community is the one who gave the children the platform and maybe they would love to perform on a school even. but there's no possibility for them. but there are some people in the direct seen, well, really low that this actually odd from, from them as being sanitized. but maybe this is the way goes when something becomes so mainstream, because drag so popular in these days. and so many countries. and of course, there are so many children now. we feel inspired by watching group will strike raise, for example, all instagram all picked up. for example. tell us,
7:51 pm
what did you think of the movie didn't leave any lasting impressions on you? well, i was really touched by watching this for children from those different backgrounds, becoming friends. this was really touching, maybe friends for life because they finally got to me to children like them for the 1st time. they had the competitive moments, but in the end they were just glad to meet each other. further. your thoughts, mike, i thank you and the documentary drag kid is online now on the youtube channel dw documentary. thanks so much. well, oprah winfrey and prince harry drops the trailer for their new series on mental health. the me, you can't see, and both of them speak emotionally about their own lives. it's just something i accepted the theory, the aims to break down the stigma surrounding mental health issues. it's also features lady gaga a been through it and people need help as well as actress glenn,
7:52 pm
close professional athletes, and a syrian refugee. the me you can't see, comes out this friday on apple tv plus german police have made a new arrest in connection with the jewel highest at dressed in green vaults museum, the priceless gems snatched back in 2019 are still missing, including diamond encrusted objects. once belonging to the queens of saxony and the $17.18 hundreds will prosecutor say the 22 year old now in custody is part of an organized crime family. his twin with actually one of the 4 other suspects already arrested in the case last year. well, it's catchy, it's weird, and for a lot of people it's the highlight of their year. the eurovision song contest held annual annually since 1956, except for last year when it was cancelled due to the corona virus. now finally, the competition is happening again this week in the netherlands. oh,
7:53 pm
i know they're getting ready for the world's biggest music contest, dimitry, and event devlin and gap or die hard. you're a vision fans. despite the pandemic limiting this year's event, they're excited for it to go ahead in their hometown rotterdam. i was ready to celebrate everywhere to do everything, to be all out on the, on the streets and those tiny bit more turn down. but the fact that it went to raga made my heart so happy in 2020 fingers, and bands from 39 countries will participate in this year's your vision like destiny, an 18 year old singer, for motto, you buy the italian roxanne morris. i got an pups thing or mom pain from australia.
7:54 pm
the winner of this year's contest will be chosen here. in rotor dams, rena, inside rehearsals are ongoing with lot we own center stage. the next up is switzerland. during rehearsals the seats remain empty. but when the contest takes place up to $3500.00 fans will fill the arena. it's a big challenge to do that while maintaining safety. during the pandemic, everyone is tested at least once every 48 hours, to make sure that we don't get any infections inside of the reading compound. then secondly, of course, it's the usual measures it's hand sanitizing, its face mouse can social distancing at all. at old places, except if you're sitting down and can maintain your social distances as a backup, all 39 contestants have recorded performance as in case of infections or need to call into jangle mcroy is also excited to finally perform in front of
7:55 pm
a live audience. again, he'll be singing for the host country, the netherlands, whose song, birth of a new age is an ode to people standing up for themselves with his powerful message . he is one of the frontrunners in this years event. my song is about resilience, about knowing your own worth, your self worth and realizing that that is the thing that keeps you standing on both of your feet in difficult times. it's also owed to people who stand up for themselves and who claim their space within society. within the world saying, i deserve respect, i deserve to be seen can that the rich habits mcroy says sharing his music with europe and the world is an awesome thing. but he admits that he does miss the typical year revision moments. a penny that, that you don't get to me like
7:56 pm
a lot of the fan, sometimes our fans standing like the venue and that's, that's, that's a nice moment always because they always want pictures. yesterday they were singing the chorus of my song. you know, and then you get like a taste. you know what it probably usually is. they all your vision experience. the some contest comes at a challenging time this year, but the fans are determined to celebrate their champions. no matter what, sonia or germany, the netherland, everybody you looks like someone's going to be happy no matter who wins. now a few of the delegations did have to quarantine because of positive corona virus test results. but it looks like the all be out in time to compete, of course will have much more your vision for you in the next days. see that
7:58 pm
decision surprises and one for the record things are heating up in the boonies asleep on the ultimate match day of a memorable season. 90 minutes on d w. 2016. that's a good bye to the queen and wanted to see if germany was the last few years have been quite right fully in touch with the when it comes to germany. and of course i always look in the eyes birches, but perhaps the biggest signs, a new hobby of mine, i'm no longer approved. i love to be in the news. every person never comes when you've seen them all together, you'll realize it's culture. another way of living, are you ready to meet the germans? then join me, right? just do it on the w. the cutting through the noise where i
7:59 pm
come from, people are known for being fair. new york can be loud and people tell it like it is . they call it the concrete jungle, the melting city that never it's this energy that makes it feel like cold. but amid the hustle, it's important to listen and pay attention because it's not just the loudest voice . this needs to be heard. we all have a story town. i see it is my job as a journalist to go beyond the obvious. now i'm based in europe and my work around the world. but my instincts for me in the space to tell the important story behind the headline. what is the heart of the story? why does it matter? what impacts they focus? if you want to cut through the noise to get to the truth. my name is sarah kelly, and i work with the
8:00 pm
me ah, ah was ah, this is news life from berlin, united in projects, hundreds of thousands of palestinians joined a general strike against israeli air strikes on garza and the deepening humanitarian crisis. there are clashes between demonstrators and israeli policeman, jerusalem, and the occupied west back israel says it's preparing for another night bombardments on god's astonishing and rocket fire continues also on the program leading by example, u. s. climate and john kerry tells me news that europe and the us make significant
8:01 pm
cuts in carbon emissions. by the end of the decade. both are some of the world's leading polluters and taking back control space in troops. there was order in its enclave is true to spain says about half of the 8th fells was african migrate, swam to the territory, the beaches had been sent back to the me. thank you very much for your company. tensions over israel's bombardment of garza are boiling over into the other palestinian territory is the occupied west bank, east jerusalem, as well as in israeli towns with mixed populations in many places. palestinian demonstrators clashed with israeli police. it's the largest show of palestinian anger and unity since the onset of hostilities between israel and gaz militants
8:02 pm
last week. while the frustration comes in and growing international appeals for an end to the fighting which have so far gone unheeded. the streets of hay bron full of palestinian protesters, part of a day of anger that strikes and demonstrations in jerusalem. and they occupied west bank a show of palestinian unity shared outrage over the death toll in garza and israeli policy toward the occupied territories. because we had to put in the last we must all go out into the streets and fight in solidarity with our people dying and gossip. because here we have settlements and checkpoints, and an occupation. all palestinians must play a role by the death toll rose again on both sides. on tuesday, on the israeli side, rockets from guys struck a house used by guest workers in these railey town. start killing to tie nationals
8:03 pm
. the sound of explosions is constant in israeli areas, within the rockets range. the iron dome anti missile system stops most, but not all the time we've lived in this situation all our lives. we could say that we're used to it, but it's not logical that a terrorist group is dictating how we live. for a few hours you can rest then after that, how much lunch is rocking. it can't continue looking. israeli air strikes on garza continued feeling a humanitarian crisis. most of the dead here are civilians, and now thousands of thousands are cut off from clean water and have no access to medicine. hospitals already struggling with a cove in 1900 pandemic or stretch to their limits. israel says it is targeting leaders of the militant hamis movement that governs garza and a system of tunnels. israel says are used to move weapons as global calls mount for
8:04 pm
an end to the bloodshed. the white house, as president biden told israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu, that he supported a cease fire, but stopped short of calling for one. meanwhile, netanyahu has said israel will not stop airstrikes and tell us pay the price. a price guidance are already paid and you are, your foreign minister is just wrapped up talks on the latest deadly violence. let's get you the latest from our brussels bureau chief, alexander vaughan. nominate alexander a 1st off. what has been decided? well, actually nothing. we have to say after the media conference concluded, you foreign policy chief, joseph barella, held the press conference and he talked to us reporters urging that it's the most important thing right now is to and to violence and to implement as he's fire
8:05 pm
immediately. he also sat that israel has the rights to defend itself by that that is also important to respect the international law and to protect civilians. and he could them condemned rocket attacks by hamas. that important point here is to say that only 26 of 27 each member states backed this statement hungry was against it. and of course, when we know that the nature of your foreign policy making is to speak with one voice, we don't have any decision is here and any, we don't have a common position on israel guys about crisis right now. just another vaguely worded statement. how has the you navigate it? the crisis so far, alexandra, and what is influencing use response to this crisis was not very well, i would say. so there were not very quick to respond. and now i just said they
8:06 pm
don't have a common position on the quiet says right now. and that it's of course because they have different interest as some of the u. member states has they have very close ties with the israeli government states like hungry, for example. they support the israel, the government, and try to soften any possible criticism of the israeli government. other states in the northern part of the european union like sweden or island for example. they are very critical of israel. so it's very difficult to bring all this position all these positions together. and this is sort of embarrassing for the european union ahead of the video conference today. the german foreign minister said that it's important for the european union to play a bigger role in the process. but as it seems, it's not quite possible right now. a mixed bag, w brussels bureau chief alexander phenomena reporting from brussels. as always,
8:07 pm
thank you. was you cut off now with some of the other stories in making the headlines this hour more than 40000 people in china's yawning province have been placed in home quarantine because of a search in cobra. 1900 cases, authorities hope that measure will help prevent large scale outbreaks. they're providing supplies to people in 98 quarantine neighborhoods. and new wildfires broke out in western siberia in russia, forcing hundreds of people to evacuate. their homes were last year, siberia experienced devastating a fire season, and this year the wildfires started even earlier. scientists lay the blame squarely at climate change. heavy rains in brazil's amazon rain force. meanwhile, have caused rivers to rise to nearly record levels. authority say more than 400000 people have been affected by the flooding, with many forced to leave their homes. environmental researchers,
8:08 pm
the climate change is behind this latest extreme weather event. well, damage change is also being blamed for a huge cycle and hit india's west coast this week, killing at least 27 people. many more are still missing, receive the cycle and as part of a growing number of severe storms to develop in the arabian sea. if i would chain climate change rather warmed its waters well, that warming, tennessee is increasing the risk of disaster and other parts of the world as well. and many nations are trying to enact some reforms to curve the damage. what really a dw spoke to us climate envoy john kerry, about the measures that his government would like to see taken to combat climate change says i'm boy, carry the psycho where thing and injures really hitting home the message that more of those stones in the future are a global threat at the same time,
8:09 pm
the us is continuing fracking. so how do you want to convince poor countries to do their part in the climate effort? well, it's critical that the 20 biggest emitters in the world at which we are one. and you counts as a whole, as one in india and china and others. we have to step up. all of us have to lead here by example. and that means we need to be achieving significant reduction goals, not just by 2050, but over the next 10 years. if we 20 nations that are the largest economies of the world don't mitigate meaning reduce our emissions during 2020 to 2030. then we would be responsible for denying the rest of the world. the ability to hold the temperature of well below 2 degrees or $1.00. here in germany, there are elections in september and the polling. so it's not for the 1st time that
8:10 pm
could be green led to government. how would you feel about a green government at the home of europe, largest economy ahead of that crucial summit in november and gothic? well, it's up to the people germinated aside. you know, it's not up to me and how i feel or present mind details about it. we certainly support the policy of addressing climate crisis. and obviously the greens are, are very seized by and engaged in that particular issue. but this is for the campaign ahead not for us. and unlike russia, we're not going to involve our selves and other people's elections. now you yourself have cited 9 years left to go to avoid no long. well, to meet the $1.00 degree aim at the same time, you want to rely on lucky uninventive technology or you simply being optimistic. the idea is we have a very short period of time and we have to,
8:11 pm
we have to make those decisions. now what i said about invention with respect to it, the i. e, a, the international energy agency has said that 42 of 46 critical technologies are not yet capable of being brought to scale put into the marketplace. that's what i was saying. it's not that we haven't invented some of these things. it is that they're not at a scale where they are commercially viable yet. and what we need to do is get green hydrogen or battery storage or storage of some kind and other things able to be able to be brought to the marketplace at scale, special envoy for climate on kerry. thank you very much for talking today. very much appreciate it. thank you. and return attention. now to not there africa, spain, as we going to sending back migraines from its north african enclave of madrid, has vowed to restore order after a record number of arrival in a single day,
8:12 pm
thousands of migrants, some of them swimming, almost 2 kilometers along the mediterranean coastline. breached the border with morocco, spain prime minister sanchez has made an emergency trip. now to sue tom, if worsening bilateral relations with morocco 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 arrived within a 24 hour period, the largest number in a single day, most to a young man 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 the end of the month, 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 out of the classes,
8:13 pm
he has got to 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 know the things you've had the beach they want to reach it in the spanish exclaimed failed 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 to be new arrivals reached, painted by swimming from 2 kilometers along the coast of morocco, or using inflexible boats. scaling this 10 meter high wall is one of the only other options of getting into theater space direct to defense, to try to close off the land route. but this has not stopped some microns from trying the luck. over the years. madrid say several 100 miles to get him to say to each year, but many deported back to where they came from as they have no right to asylum in
8:14 pm
the you. the most of those are 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 and we want to end on some lighter fare as on a musical note. it's really happening. the vision song contest last year, the fandom enforced the cancellation of the most camp and colorful event on europe cultural calendar. but the competition is back where they strict corona virus testing regimen for the contestants and the limited fans. the 1st semi final is taking place in post city rotterdam tonight, and this entry from mazda is one of the favorite to qualify for the big finale on
8:15 pm
8:16 pm
ah, the amounts of debt looms over africa is already slow. panoramic recovery can well be nations and private investors throw the content lifeline. will look at a 2 day summit in paris with just that aim also on the show, the road can reach net 0 carbon emissions by 2050. if all future fossil fuel projects are scraps. that's according to a new report by the international energy agency. what is that even realistic? take a look. and we take a look at the growing number of female entrepreneurs once do more with business,
8:17 pm
and just make money and walk into the show and seem busy in berlin. well, richard nations may be emerging from the pandemic, but poor ones are facing a much deeper climb toward economic recovery. vaccine shortages on the one hand and a sharp drop in tourism. on the other hand, countries in sub saharan africa, especially hard the regions expecting growth of just over 3 percent this year as compared to 6 percent for the world over all. meanwhile, an additional 32000000 people have been plunged into extreme poverty. the recovery across africa won't be even south africa. the most advanced economy in the region is a far better track than oil producers like and gold and nigeria in east africa, if you'll be, as economy, has also lost a lot of steam. can you meanwhile, is a notable exception with forecast growth of more than 7 percent. now, with several nations in the region already facing debt distress, the international monetary fund says an additional $425000000000.00 and funding is needed for sub saharan african countries to whether the crisis among,
8:18 pm
among those offering their help. france says it wants to help them up some of that financing. and today's the meetings with african leaders and international lenders like the i, m, f, and world bank. president, manuel macross has encourage new debt relief for the continent. he's also announced that france itself will write off $5000000000.00 of debt to sue don. that's part of a broader international effort to bolster the new government there. the streets of duck synagogue may appear calm now, but there's an undercurrent of tension. depend, demik has hit the tourism dependent economy hard. just a few weeks ago, the capital erupted in violent anti government protests fueled by economic inequality. and falling living standards among the countries youth depend, demik has left already fred charl, economies in dire shape all over africa. this week summit between french president manuel mccall and african leaders hopes to help africa lift itself out of the current financial crisis. but also to find long term solutions. but some deeply
8:19 pm
suspicious of frances motives and question, what role the former colonial power should play on the continent if up a quote, boston, i don't know why people think that it's france that has to solve our problems. sometimes it is hard to understand that it's just that people think that it's a culture for african countries, especially the french speaking african countries to think that france always has the solutions to their problems. at least the other problem, france still maintained significant investments in many african nations. more than 60 years after it relinquished the last of its colonies. like a project to modernize the light rail network in a b, john could have, you know, you're rated by french economy minister, bruno le, may of last month. some economists argue african countries should go to international bodies for funds,
8:20 pm
rather than accepting frances loan conditions as possible. cuz it could be like, i think that the credit that france grants us comes with conditions, condition of the labs, we give you money and in return it's now companies that will win the market. and sometimes with strategies to kill your national private sector. and also allow the state to be dependent on france. c settlement because if you owe money to france, you're dependent on from the mistrust created by centuries of colonial history, still reverberates. earlier this year, protest is in senegal, directed their rage against french businesses, setting fire to french own supermarkets and other stores. china has spent the better part of 2 decades investing in africa and binding african nations to large long term loans. europe is now moving to challenge china's influence on the continent, but they have a lot of catching up to do over to the energy economy,
8:21 pm
the international energy agency, which has long been dedicated to the use of fossil fuels now says all future fossil fuel projects must be scrapped as the world is reached. net 0 carbon emissions by 2050. and then any chance of limiting global warming for 1.5 degrees di e a predicts a sharp decline and fossil fuel demands in the next 3 decades. once a rapid and vast ramping up of investments in renewable energy or smallness, i'm joined by luxury and interesting. he's managing director for after at 350 dot org. that's an environmental advocacy group. landrick good to have you on the show . your organization is devoted to getting out of fossil fuels or to encourage in global economy to get out of fossil fuels. what does the realistic timeline for that happening given the lack of investment in renewables like a build out, i should say, and some of the social terminal that could be caused by getting out of fossil fuels . right,
8:22 pm
thank you very much for helping me today. so i will say that we don't have a lot of time to solve this crazy. so instead of having 0 net defense targets the countries and corporation must see the focus to stop and in you was your project and prioritize in regards to because clearly this is not kent. i don't know, said the target to 2050. why we know a lot of countries, especially the google already know, cigarette heat by the charger. so i would say there is no time to, to, to act. and we do have pro prototype radical actions that forms the still, or any new for you to predict at the moment. here in germany, which is by many nations considered to be very progressive on climate policy. the chance of america has said that she doesn't see a pull out from coal until 2038 at the earliest. i'm guessing that would be
8:23 pm
considered too late by your timeline or the needs that you express, right? i mean, if germany can't do it, how likely is that for other countries to be able to what we need is really called leadership and will to advance and to speed up the transition. we definitely the ward can't afford another 1020 years before making the threat because sheet which, which is the award the climate justice require at the moment. so there is no really, we don't have to wait in terms of the case was taught, new project will be broken and this is something that has to stop now. and we've seen some in a country like jim and his date being progressive. and this is a type of production and additions that would love to see from the rest of our initial decisions, those historic group responsible for the rising of emotions. but if germany says it's not going to get out of coal until 2038, which some active here,
8:24 pm
a lot of most climate to say is far too late. doesn't that bowed poorly for other nations who are going to try and do the same thing? yes, i do agree with the rest of the countries my be my consider following the like the germans talk way about however, as an advocacy group working for a just transition and award based on what you saw, what do to continue pushing for more urgent and you know even greater ambitions done or has been currently what is being currently proposed as, as a target of 20 thirty's. so there is of cause great work to be done at the moment to make sure that bridge and, and radical action is taken the moment and not keep like the current target, open to city, or even beyond. right. landry and interest of managing director for africa at 350
8:25 pm
dot or thank you for joining us. let's take a look now. some of the other business stories making headlines. us tech giant amazon is in talks to by metro goldwyn meyer movie studios that, according to several media reports m g m is one of the world's oldest film studios, known for blog post buck busters, including the james bond franchise. both amazon and m. g m have reportedly declined to comment on reports about the deal. i phone maker fox con, has signs in agreement with car makers to lantus the tech company and assembler of apple's most profitable product i phone will develop a digital car cockpits with one of the biggest players in the auto industry. the tire emerges, the worlds of technology and car making. japan's economy contract at 1.3 percent. the 1st quarter after the government reimpose crone of ice restrictions in major cities dropped, followed to strong quarters for the world's 3rd largest economy. expansion being stopped in his track by winter increase in coven cases. argentina spinning beef
8:26 pm
exports for 30 days to combat recent price increases on a domestic market. the country is a major export of b, with over 800 tons sent abroad and 2020. its biggest foreign markets are china, germany, and israel. why level female executives are still all too rare, as are female entrepreneurs. but among those that are striking out on their own, a global trend is emerging. women want to do more with business and simply make money. the pattern selection for the next batch entrepreneur christina, is our, produces bees wax wraps for home and kitchen use in her company as an alternative to plastic cling wrap. those and you about washed off. well, this is an organic break and it's covered with a mixture of these wax tree, red and hobo. those 3 components together there then applied to that fabric by us. bad. then off off from those ask about the mother of to develop the prototypes in
8:27 pm
her home kitchen with lots of wax and an iron. today, she and her company supply 9000 outlets across europe. one important aspect to the entrepreneur is that all raw materials are organic. production takes place exclusively in berlin. as their numbers grow around the world, female entrepreneurs say they want more than just to make a profit. plenty of women who want to go out and profit finished important thing to them. but by and large in the gym data really speaks very directly to this. this idea that when it comes to prioritizing social goals, environmental goals, and economic goals, men tend to prioritize economic goals over other goals. women tend to prioritize social goals over other goals. this is also true for designer karen jordan. she only uses fabrics from europe. that is produced under fair working conditions. she
8:28 pm
wants to set an example against the cheap textile and fast fashion industry. who does mock kelvin is definitely what we buy today is definitely to basically you shouldn't be able to sell clothing at those prices because i know what the cost here are. like, even if we consider economies of scale, what's on offer here is still to cheap that devalue garments along with the people who make them. we simply can't do that to each other unless it's a conventional number. with more women creating their own opportunities in the business world, new values and modes of operation are bound to emerge. and finally, a german card technician is going back to the future, making a business out of fixing up the 1980 s classic delorean sports car. michael. michael wagner. originally just wanted to own the stainless steel car, which was made famous as a time machine in the 1980 classic back to the future. but demand for the eighty's icon is high and parts are therefore rare. so uses
8:29 pm
a 3 d printer to make parts when you can't source originals. right? that's it for me. and the dw business team here in berlin to find is online. he w dot com slash business. thanks for watching. ah, was the fight against the corona virus pandemic? how has the rate of infection in developing? what does the latest research information and contact the corona virus off the 19 special next on dw, are you ready for some great news? i'm proceed when glad i am eddie micah julia with a brand new to the news africa. the show that tackled the issues chasing now with
8:30 pm
more time to do all of the trans stuff to you, what's making the headlights and what's behind bins? where on the streets to give you in the reports and insights. you w news africa every friday on d w. me ah ah, is skepticism undermining the united states, vaccinations, success story? about 215000000 doses have been administered so far. almost every 2nd american has received a shot in the 3rd, a fully vaccinated paces 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
8:31 pm
a lot of active cases out there without heard immunity, it'll be hard to stop the corona virus from always making comebacks. officials say this doesn't slow down in destination rates due to some americans refusing to get their 2nd shot. that was about the side effects. for hesitancy and skepticism is stubbornly high among republicans and what he's angelica christians, but more black americans are lining up for the jap dw college. in more reports the they are over 30 vaccination sites in jackson, mississippi, city of 160000 residents. one of the locations is at the state university site, empty chairs and an awaiting staff shape. the see they have $250.00 doses of the vaccine available to be. 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
8:32 pm
. mississippi is last in the united states and cobra. 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 around a lot of patients every day. so at jackson hands health 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 low, fun 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,
8:33 pm
like barbara patrick actually was convinced would you like them? so if i let me as a health worker, she was offered the vaccine in january. that 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 or those will be factors with every shot of the vaccine. the risk of the spreads, returning dramatically decreases, but 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 vaccines into their community. in a mobile scenic 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
8:34 pm
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 it's 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 the map 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, 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
8:35 pm
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 it still so much didn't see and resistance over this back thing. you know, i think there for reasons and you just illustrated some of them. one that is in communities of color, which traditionally in the united states, have had a mis track 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. and right now, this is being rolled out in the, by the ministration, even though it was made in the trump 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
8:36 pm
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 why it's present by this 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 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
8:37 pm
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 it no more math. i think they are trying to motivate dr. as if he 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 immunity 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 and lower cases with higher and higher vaccination rates. so that
8:38 pm
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 will 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 hurting 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'll disappear in one part of the world and reappear elsewhere. there is no doubt that global vaccine equity, 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?
8:39 pm
now than to getting the whole world vaccinated, this is unfortunate that quote of ours happen, but we actually have a tool that is not that expensive to get there. what, what gives 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 byron and 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 coroner virus does not new ti. 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. you? tate, like influenza does this in our, in a virus that has a very strict proofreading mechanism. my hope is that these vaccines are credibly effective and we can get it if we all work together on accounting. thanks for being on the show. again. thank you. and it's that part of the show where our science
8:40 pm
correspond. 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, 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, them in the elderly. but,
8:41 pm
but side effects aren't caused by live virus replicating in your body because the vaccines and use don't actually contain any live virus. instead, they employ a number of different tricks to, to fool your amune system into believing you've caught the virus. many vaccine platforms work by delivering genetic instructions into your cells that caused them to build stars covey to proteins. these harmless components teach your defenses to recognise 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, 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,
8:42 pm
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 little guys, this is the 77 percent. the platform is due to the beat issues and share ideas. you know, that will be enough to capture and then the african population is ruling class and young people clearly have the solution that belongs to
8:43 pm
the 77 percent. now, every weekend on the w, the news, it's been ongoing for a bit from the spring began in 2011 people stood up against co rulers and dictatorship. the, all these moments have left the box in my memory. the drug was a huge. it was an incredible feeling that the work liberated the i had hoped for more
8:44 pm
security, more freedom, more dignity, have their hopes, mental filled me. where does the stand today? 10 years after the arab spring, arabella and starts june 7th on d. w. the. the time now for 13 minutes of arts and culture and we'll be heading to the netherlands, where the eurovision song contest is back after last year's contest with called on . now, finally, contested from the 39 countries are going head to head easy i today that's coming up a little later, but 1st a story of 4 children who dance dress and dream drac. the documentary drag
8:45 pm
kids follows preteens stefan jason bracken and memphis as they team up for a female impersonation performance. the w is currently showing the canadian documentary. we'll talk about the controversy it's generating and just a moment miss each 9 appears as his alter ego queen lactation. nemesis, one of the younger subjects in the documentary directed by megan wynberg, ah, dr. kids follows the quartet of youngsters all under the age of 12, as they enter the world of competitive draft. 3 boys and one girl taking on hyper feminine persona. their peers don't all get it and neither do a lot of adults, but their parents support them. the i actually love right. stefan aka lottie,
8:46 pm
go go. seems to be in his element. i think people immediately he said drag that sexuality to that. that's a problem. people need to separate them with nothing sexual, it's about expression. you are the art, that's it. and it's extreme, it's extreme just isn't, you know, just in general, that is an extreme well, as the film shows child performers becoming famous for a once marginalized form of expression, previously reserved for adults long as it never ever infringes on his personal life . because like i know what the people and i know how it affects their lives and yeah, you have to sacrifice a lot, i think for them. and i'm not willing to give that up so easily. so
8:47 pm
they're not more famous. it might start being fun. and then i'll start to slowly shrink until i'm just little fruity pebble. and i have to deal with everything that i've said i would do. i'm not mad or sad about what i'm doing. it's just, it's kind of overwhelming. but when i'm kinda caught in the moment, i love doing oh, just don't culminates with a group performance said to lady gog is born this way at montreal's pride festival . together the 4 kids are given the stage to be different. the and continuing our coverage for diversity day here on the w,
8:48 pm
the documentary dragged kids have been sparking lots of debate on the youtube channel b. w documentary in the comment section. the w reporter micah crew is following the reactions, micah would have users been writing about this film. well, it's really amazing how differently people can react to the same stuff. you know, right from the beginning the documentary was in the even a couple of hours online. we have this huge number of comments and immediately a lot of concerns whether this is about abusing the case or sex, realizing them, we've been seeing a lot of criticism from religious and conservative uses. and really from around globe, a lot of people are writing night club is not really a place for a kid and they are talking about stolen childhood. there isn't really a lot of criticism, but of course we have also one, the ones who are celebrating the parents and the families for their support and their love and giving the children the freedom to do what they really wanted to do
8:49 pm
. and as we saw, the parents do play a big part in the film. how did they respond to criticism? some refused to even think about it and there are others who really find their own way to cope with it. the family of jason, for example, they were really conservative and the beginning, but he forced them to change their mind. right. i want, i want to show another quick from the movie. this is jason and his parents. and i guess i feel good. i and then every child has the right to feel it feels natural to them in him. you know, weren't airings. no, that's always bang. i talk to him and tell him no matter what.
8:50 pm
and then when he b, and we're talking about the documentary drag codes online now on the youtube channel b, w documentary, micro, what's been the response like from the drag seen to this movie? yeah, very interesting. first of all, we have to say that the gates of unity is the one who gave the children the platform. and maybe they would love to perform on a school even. but there is a possibility for them. but there are some people in the direct seen. well, really well that this odd from, from them as being sanitized. maybe this is the way goes when something becomes so mainstream, because drag so popular in these days. and so many countries. and of course, there are so many children now really feel inspired by watching rupert strike way, for example, all instagram on pick up, for example. tell us,
8:51 pm
what did you think of the movie didn't leave any lasting impressions on you? well, i was really touched by watching this for children from those different backgrounds, becoming friends. this was really touching, maybe friends for life because they finally got to me to children like them for the 1st time. they had the competitors moments, but in the end they were just glad to meet each other for the your thoughts, micah, thank you. and the documentary drag kid is online now on the youtube channel dw documentary. thanks so much. well, oprah winfrey and prince harry drops the trailer for their new series on mental health. the me, you can't see, and both of them speak emotionally about their own lives. it's just something i accepted. the theories ends to break down the stigma surrounding mental health issues. it also features lady gaga a been through it and people need help as well as actress, claim close,
8:52 pm
professional athletes, and a syrian refugee. the me you can't see, comes out this friday on apple tv plus german police have made a new arrest in connection with the jewel highest at dressed in green vaults museum . but the priceless gems snatched back in 2019 are still missing, including diamond encrusted objects. once belonging to the queens of saxony, in the $17.18 hundreds will prosecutor say the 22 year old now in custody is part of an organized crime family. his twin with actually one of the 4 other suspects already arrested in the case last year. well, it's kitty, it's weird and for a lot of people it's the highlight of their year. the eurovision song contest held annual annually since 1956, except for last year when it was cancelled due to the corona virus. now finally, the competition is happening again this week in the netherlands. oh no, i'm those,
8:53 pm
but they're getting ready for the world's biggest music contest, dimitry, and event, devlin and gap or die hard. you're a vision fans. despite the pandemic limiting this year's event, they're excited for it to go ahead in their hometown rotterdam. i was ready to celebrate everywhere to do everything, to be all out on the, on the streets. and those 2 for the tiny bit more turn down. but the fact that they went to rotterdam made my heart so happy in 2020 singers and bands from 39 countries will participate in this years. your vision like destiny? 1018 year old singer from water. the italian rock fan motor's the i got i and pumps thing or mom pain from australia.
8:54 pm
the winner of this year's contest will be chosen here. in rotor dams, a high rena inside rehearsals are ongoing with lot, we are on center stage. the next up is switzer. during rehearsals, the seats remain empty, but when the contest takes place up to 3500 fans will fill the arena. it's a big challenge to do that while maintaining safety. during the pandemic, everyone is tested at least once, every 48 hours, to make sure that we don't get any infections inside of the reading compound. and secondly, of course, it's the usual measures it's hand sanitizing, its face mask and social distance thing at all at old places. except if you're sitting down and can maintain your social distance thing. as a back up all 39 contestants have recorded performance as in case of infections or need to pointing jenko. mcroy is also excited to finally perform in front of
8:55 pm
a live audience. again, he'll be singing for the host country, the netherlands. his song, birth of a new age is an ode to people standing up for themselves with his powerful message . he is one of the front runners in this years event. my song is about resilience, about knowing your own worth, your self worth and realizing that that is the thing that keeps you standing on most of your feet in difficult times. it's also owed to people who stand up for themselves and who claim their space within society. within the world saying, i deserve respect, i deserve to be see scan as rich, have a stomach crisis, sharing his music with europe and the world is an awesome thing. but he admits that he does miss the typical your revision moments. a penny that you don't get to me
8:56 pm
like a lot of the fan, sometimes our fans standing like the venue and that's that's, that's a nice moment. always because they always want pictures. and yesterday they were singing the chorus on my song, you know, and then you get like a taste. you know what? it probably usually is your mission experience. the song contest comes at a challenging time this year, but the fans are determined to celebrate their champions. no matter what, sonia germany, the netherland, everybody you looks like someone's going to be happy no matter who wins. now a few of the delegations did have to quarantine because of positive corona virus test results. but it looks like the all be out in time to compete. of course will have much more your vision for you in the next days. see that
8:58 pm
decision surprises. and one for the record things are heating up in the boonies on the ultimate match day of a memorable season. to go in 30 minutes on the w o. the news. how does the virus spread? why do we panic by and when will all of this 3 of the topics that we've covered and our weekly radio if you would like any more information on the kroner virus or any other final topic,
8:59 pm
9:00 pm
this is the w news live from berlin tonight across the occupied territories. and in israel, people united in anger, thousands of palestinians to the streets in the west banks protest. israel's air strikes on god's railings also protested, and there were clashes with police. there's been no lead up in the conflict after 9 days of fighting. also coming up tonight, spain since intrudes to restore order. it's enclave in northern africa. it says about a half of the $8000.00 african migrants he swam to reach western have been sent
9:01 pm
back to morocco, plus us climate envoy, john kara sales d w. that europe, the us, 2 of the world's top polluters, must make significant cuts in emissions by the end of this decade. and a pilot project here in berlin, aiming to boost vaccination rates in an immigrant neighborhood that has become a local corona virus hotspot. ah, i'm bri golf. it's good to have you with those tensions over israel's bombardment of garza or boiling over into the other palestinian territories the occupied was bank, easter roofless, as well as in israeli towns with mixed populations. in many places. palestinian demonstrators have clash with israeli police. it's the largest show a palestinian anger since the onset,
9:02 pm
the possibilities between israel and gaza militants last week. the frustration comes amid growing international appeals for an end to the fighting, which have so far gone unheeded. the streets of hay bron full of palestinian protesters, part of a day of anger that strikes and demonstrations in jerusalem and the occupied west bank. a show of palestinian unity shared outrage over the death toll in garza and israeli policy toward the occupied territories. because we had to sit them put on the law so we must all go out into the streets and fight in solid charity with our people dying and gossip. because here we have settlements and checkpoints, and an occupation. all palestinians must play a role by the death toll rose again on both sides. on tuesday, on the israeli side, rockets from guys struck a house used by guest workers in these railey town of s, dawn killing to ty,
9:03 pm
nationals. the sound of explosions is constant in israeli areas, within the rockets range. the iron dome anti missile system stops most, but not all the time we've lived in this situation all our lives and we could say that we're used to it, but it's not logical that a terrorist group is dictating how we live. for a few hours. you can rest then after that, how much launches rocking. it can't continue like them. the team is really airstrikes and garza continued fueling a humanitarian crisis. most of the dead here are civilians. and now thousands of thousands are cut off from clean water and have no access to medicines. hospitals already struggling with the coven. 1900 pandemic, are stretched to their limits. israel says it is targeting leaders of the militant hamis movement that governs garza and
9:04 pm
a system of tunnels. israel says are used to move weapons as global calls mount for an end to the bloodshed. the white house says president fight and told israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu that he supported a ceasefire, but stopped short of calling for one. meanwhile, netanyahu has said israel will not stop airstrikes and so how much to pay the price? a price guidance are already paid. or for more enjoy. now by journalist cousin pollution from garza city, it's good to have you with us palestinians in the west bank along with arab israeli in israel today, went on strike, where we witnessing an attempt to speak with one palestinian voice today. well, this is the hope for philistines, at least for the fullest indian people. i'm not sure it is one voice, at least in your in conflict. but as teens are having sympathy and solidarity with
9:05 pm
each other, what have been in garza and other factions on saying this has been disabled teresa limb and rate evaluations. i guess policy change and ra unlock. so most today the strike in the west bank and the inside is, will with our, of israel is there. but still there is like a political disputes among palestinians factions, but among palestinian people. of course they are willing and, and hoping that to have one fellow stadium voice. let's talk about the situation in gaza tonight. the united nation says that 48000 people have been displaced, have had to flee their homes in gaza. do we know where are these people being sheltered? well lose people moved from mainly from border areas a few few days ago when, when their where is where the strikes and mainly israeli artillery shilling at
9:06 pm
these borders. many of the people, according to the previous experiences in confrontations and escalation, they evacuated their houses and went to the owner. was schools on or was said, at least 58 schools were opened for those people to provide them with, with food and water. and it's, it's, it's, it's stuff there. i'm not sure if the are safe or not the, you know, a previous experiences, some of those where one of the schools in 2014 was targeted by boy a tank chill. and some of them were killed and many accidents happen, but this time, so far, luckily, they are safe in their own schools in the house. and what about the situation in the hospitals in guys? i mean, how are they coping with the influx of newly injured people?
9:07 pm
first of all, according to the officials from the ministry of health that the system, the health system in gaza is exhausted. with the many things the best is the 15 years of located. second is the, the escalation from time to time with well, and recent, most recently is the year off of it 19 and drained and exhausted the whole system. so plus the minister of sales accused is, will many click in the clinics where, where completely or partially damaged because of the airstrikes the, the spokesperson of the minister of health told me that at least for clinics. where, where, where het, with complete directly or indirectly. and one of them was out of service completely . yesterday there was the clinic in the garden city where a building across the street was attacked and the,
9:08 pm
the main lab of gaza that this thing the covered 19 samples is out of service now. so in general, we are talking about exhausting system plus the, the shortage of medicine and disposal materials for the hospitals. ok, journalist has him pollution when he gets tonight from garza city with the latest their situation on the ground. awesome, thank you. welcome. israel says that one objective in it's because the airstrikes has been to destroy an underground tunnel network used by hamas. the tunnels are used to smuggle goods, including weapons, which are prevented by israeli blockade from reaching gods overland. and see, it's not the 1st time that israel has salt to cripple the underground infrastructure. the israeli as strikes hitting gaza. only one of a series of strikes that the idea has carried out on alleged military target.
9:09 pm
we've hit him our naval units and we continue to strike an underground infrastructure. the him out metro, the so called metro. it's a network of tunnels. dozens of kilometers. long believe to be under the surface of garza, some beneath its cities as well as smuggling tunnels, connecting the strip to neighboring egypt. and animated video released by the israeli defense forces provides what it calls an inside. look at the mouth metro tunnel forever a decade. gas, those tunnels have been lifelines to the outside world, passageways, for importing essential goods, as well as weapons under a long standing israeli blockade. they've also repeatedly been the targets of israeli attack budget about in january this year, a senior, her mouse commander cautioned against the continued use of the tunnels. i do know
9:10 pm
that the enemy has discovered a large, a ton of the resistance either in, during the years, stay prepared for a campaign of when we're hitting. what is that? do you know china? unless you must worry a brother to move on the surface. i let it at the head of the bar in a heavy mass militants arrested sally after the video was released. but the claims of the idea that it's only targeting the tunnel system or other millison science and the gaza strip are disputed on saturday and israeli. as strike destroyed a high rise that housed al jazeera, the associated press, and other media organization, press freedom groups accused the military which claim the building house, him our military intelligence of trying to sense the coverage of israel offensive, and the densely packed on
9:11 pm
israel set him also using palestinian civilians as human shields, while critics say israel is using disproportionate force. earlier this year, the international criminal court launched an investigation into possible war crimes committed by israel and palestinian militants during the last war. in 2014 holes are being made for a similar investigation into the current conflict. now, for some other news making headlines around the world. police and bella roofs have rated the offices of the country's largest independent online media outlet. toot dot by. they've also shut down its web site to buy has been a key source of information on the opposition protests that started last year. it's the latest crack down on free media in bella routes. german police say they have caught one of the key suspects in a high profile robbery case. in 2019 thieves stole priceless historical jewels from the famous green vault museum in the eastern city of dresden. elise made the arrest
9:12 pm
late on monday night during a raid on an apartment here in berlin. fresh wildfires had broken out in western siberia in russia, forcing hundreds of people to evacuate their homes. last year siberia experienced a devastating fire season. and this year the blazes had started even earlier, scientists say climate change could be to blame. spain has begun sending back migrants from its north african enclave of so you to madrid has bound to restore order after a record number of arrivals in a single day, thousands of migrate, some of them swimming, almost 2 kilometers along the mediterranean coastline, reached the border from neighboring morocco, spain prime minister sanchez, has made an emergency trip to say to amid worsening bilateral relations with morocco. migrate from africa had been trying to get into europe by
9:13 pm
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 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 when you have nothing, no money to spend, you have to pay your rent. when 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 see all the young people want to leave the country. there's no work, aren't you afraid of the sea? no, no, i'm not afraid. if i stayed here, i would be afraid. i have to save myself that we don't think you've held the beach, they want to reach it in the spanish, i exclaimed, of sale to which borders morocco. it is in northern africa,
9:14 pm
but as part of the european union. and as such, has long been a magnet for migrants taking a better life. most of these new arrivals reach seems by swimming some 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 into theater space direct to defense, to try to close off the land route. but this has not stopped some microns from trying the lock over the years. oh yeah, madrid say several 100 miles to get in to 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 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,
9:15 pm
the madrid say they have already reached an agreement about sending the migrant back. and when now we're forcing security to prevent further arrivals. for more now i'm joined by south sky, a brick wall, a member of the european parliament, and part of the parliament's delegation for relations with north african countries . it's good to have you on the program. it appears according to reports that moroccan border forces basically look the other way as thousands crossed into the spanish enclave of so you to, if that is indeed the case. will europe demand that morocco enforce its borders? well, my analysis is that what is happening in stuart for the moment illustrating the failure of european policy when it comes to migration. and if it defensively, diplomatic issue related to another case that the decision of the american
9:16 pm
authority to open its folders have been taken. so that migration for youth as you try to teach it he, it happened earlier with turkey. it happens now with my roku. and this is part of the sorting of you of own migration quality newspaper. but, but is the case that morocco allowed these migrants to illegally cross the border? how is it a failure of the e u migration policy? well, i think my record might be using it because the use of worsting its own policy is actually asking 3rd country, such as morocco, the, to turkey such as libya, to take care of migrants in order not to know them, to cross the border and to come to you we're talking about thousands of migrants
9:17 pm
and this is shown by the images. but i think today that do you have to question itself about the quality that you're supplying? those people know well, we prevent them to, to, to, to seek for a better life. we've heard that too many, we've heard them thing, death, nothing. and if they try to migrate, if they try to reach the youth directory even even a sense of their life, they say they would swim and cross the sea. and every day show that there in independence or in, in this is also because the, you have to contribute to adopt a proper migration policy and not only by relying on 3rd country what, but let me ask you, if you had been, i know you're with the greens, if you had a, a reform of migration policy in the u. then what would happen if you did have
9:18 pm
thousands of migrants illegally crossing the border into spain? what would have been the reaction? well, i think we 1st have to, to have a structural approach and not or reaction every time there is a problem or a group of migraines crossing today, the lack of strict on approach is proto and i think, and we see that working properly, the approach on the new should be solidarity approach to decide to have a procedure and to allow people to seek for a zoom into open a procedure to open a file into the you inside the you. and if there are not a load to see because of several key tyria, that would be transparent, that would be objective. then they would have to, to return. this would be
9:19 pm
a legal way of ensuring legal and also safe channel safe pathways toward you to return to day building walls illegally returning people. because this is also what is happening. people do not even have the possibility to open a, a procedure into up for in the room. although some of them might be a load to stay in the directory because of economic or career. those people do not even get this possibility and they're also miners and we've seen it into images miners and miners specific rice. and this is also in conformity with you, but also international law. ok, saskia been a member of the european parliament this break while we appreciate your time and your insights tonight. thank you. thank you. climate change is being
9:20 pm
blamed for a huge cycle that hit in the west coast this week killing at least 27 people. many more are missing. experts say the psych loan is part of the growing number of severe storms to develop in the iranian sea. as climate change warms its waters and that warming tendency is increasing the risk of disasters and other parts of the world as well. many nations are trying to enact reforms to curb the damage. earlier d w. new spoke with the u. s. climate envoy john kerry, about the measures his government would like to see take into combat climate change specially void carry the cycling we're seeing. and india is really hitting home the message that more of those stones in the future are a global threat at the same time. the us is continuing fracking. so how do you want to convince poor countries to do their part in the climate effort?
9:21 pm
well, it's critical that the 20 biggest emitters in the world of which we are one and you counts as a whole, as one in india and china and others. we have to step up. all of us have to lead here by example, and that means we need to be achieving significant reduction goals, not just by 2050, but over the next 10 years. if we 20 nations that are the largest economies of the world don't mitigate meaning reduce our emissions during 2020 to 2030. then we would be responsible for denying the rest of the world. the ability to hold the temperature of well below 2 degrees or $1.00. here in germany, there are elections in september and the polling. so is that for the 1st time that could be green led to government? how would you feel about a green government at the home of europe,
9:22 pm
largest economy ahead of that crucial summit in november and got that? well, it's up to the people germinated aside. you know, it's not up to me and how i feel are present mondale's about it. we certainly support the policy of addressing climate crisis. and obviously the greens are, are very seized by and engaged in that particular issue. but this is where the campaign ahead not for us. and unlike russia, we're not going to evolve ourselves and other people's actions. now you yourself have cited 9 years left to go to avoid no longer to meet the 1.5 degree aim at the same time. you want to rely on large, uninventive technology. are you simply being optimistic? the idea is we have a very short period of time. and we have to, we have to make those decisions. now what i said about invention with respect to it,
9:23 pm
the i. e, a, the international energy agency has said that 40 to of 46 critical technologies are not yet capable of being brought to scale put into the marketplace. that's what i was saying. it's not that we haven't invented some of these things. it is that they're not at a scale where they are commercially viable yet. and what we need to do is get green hydrogen or battery storage or storage and some kind and other things able to be able to be brought to the marketplace at scale. special envoy for climate on kerry . thank you very much for talking to you. thank you very much. appreciate it. thank you. but germany, his face, severe criticism for it's slow vaccination roll out. now some areas are trying a new approach by offering shots to the public on a 1st come 1st serve basis. the project began in a district here in berlin, and there were certainly plenty of demand. hundreds of people have braved the
9:24 pm
rain and a 2 hour wait to get vaccinated at this site. in berlin's know, i kind of 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, is 1st come 1st serve without an appointment from funds. if i found out about it from a notice pinned outside my door, i took advantage right away. and the thing my, this is, it's a one off opportunity when you have to wait for a while, but i think people should take the chance. i wish i haven't gotten the virus on this, but i've been at home for 2 months. i'm getting vaccinated, so i can go back to work y'all and inform them and thought about mama dana own fear. my johnson johnson this side is part of the pilot project, meant to speed up berlin's vaccination raid. at 1st,
9:25 pm
the 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 terms 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 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 site. now come depending me awkward. buskey . germany vaccination drive 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. i am shots to the weather despite recent cool weather. in many parts of europe,
9:26 pm
manascale hit a record high of just over 29 degrees celsius. today. it's the highest mid may temperature in more than 120 years. many musket vines went outside to enjoy the sunshine. some stayed close to cooling fountains. the russian capital could expect to see even hotter temperatures this week. 2020 was the warmest year on record. in russia. i summer. you're watching the w news. his reminder of our top story, anger over israel's military operations and gaza has spilled over to other palestinian areas with clashes between demonstrators and israeli. police is flight of international appeals for an end to the fighting. there's been no lead up in the hospital. you want you need w news. next up is our football magazine kick off. i'll be back at the top of the hour with more world news followed by the day i hope to see you then the
9:28 pm
9:29 pm
every journey begins with the 1st step and every language with the 1st word. hello, it's been nico, germany, german, the why not learn with him? to stuff. it's simple online, on your mobile and free. p w e learning course. nikos. german made easy. the william had been on it with i and if i had known that would be that small, i never would have gone on the train. i would not have put myself in my parish danger. 15 even later would love. and
9:30 pm
i think i had serious problems on a personal level, and i was unable to live there, but it wasn't gonna use you want to knew their story to migrants. terrifying and reliable information for migrant. the me the the welcome to not stay 33 and a weekend of football where history was made. robert live in dusky, finally did it. 40 goals in a season equaling an almost 50 year old records set by the legendary gath miller
9:31 pm
get malaysia. miller, it's probably more important than any current player because this club would not be as big as it is without actually despite the league already being in the bag, this gave buying something new to celebrate. it was also a match day with some revocation, threatened sides, got to celebrate safety, like our book through hosted brain. and this is, i'm a liberal pre mother and has a belinda followed up that jewel with fellow stella as well as cologne with a that coach. what could be inside? ah, i'd like the my moment. you're saying you're dealing with, i'm going to good on that. i was my say 331 was impossible. could happen like shocker getting a wind against frank, but no less kick off on an irresistible announcement weekend. of the season,
9:32 pm
let's start in our book. the embattled coach slowly on coal failed have been interesting brains, patients, prior to their relegation fixed, pointed with our exports. the team were winless and 8 matches. losing 7 of them fell seem to shrug office business as usual, rather than red alert. honestly, so last 10 years, the fed bremond only one year, 2 years ago, it was like not fighting for going down a believe this is what everyone in bremond has also realized. the realistic part of this club at the moment, more proactive than their visitors elsewhere made a coaching change with 3 matches left in the season, bringing back michael spines here. he had led out for 4 seasons before leaving for shaka and could secure safety for 14 placed outpour, with
9:33 pm
a victory over 15 to place freeman to mrs. mary in the same position as us. they know they're below us and that they'll need to win. i will feel that in every challenge and will be ready with all the doors and fans in and outside the stadium made as much noise as possible under pandemic conditions and events on the pitch in turn compared to us as well. 15 minutes in reuben bar got kicked out at deborah lassie, burning the ellsberg attacker a red card. the freeman had a big advantage which they contrived to squander. it was clear why breyman have only scored 4 goals in their last 8 league matches. they had little trouble working their way into dangerous positions, but missed chance after chance. what they were not missing was the physical commitment which they may have made a bit too gritty. in the 49 minute cause down close clattered into anita lay snuff
9:34 pm
and was shown his seconds yellow. despite his protests, it was back to a level playing field the and with just over half an hour to play, our board made their break through chaos in the brain and box. and suddenly an explosion of celebrations for the home side. a classic relegation scrapped goal for ronnie could be around. he's transferring to you on berlin next season, but this school could help him live on and now it's book history. framing didn't give up 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
9:35 pm
with a late fell by me. la sheets on andre hon pending outscored, a clear penalty. daniel kelly duty coldly moderate way to make it to neil and safety for sport. marco finds, he'll lead the celebrations, knowing his club no longer needed a result against byron in their final match of the season. the month of the team have a lot of heart and character. we showed that today. i'm playing with a man down off to 15 minutes and really fighting is not a given us. and i'm just glad the team got their reward and that the club will be playing in the sea again next. clearly in the meanwhile, brandon fly down to the relegation play off spot. co felt was let go shortly after the match an outcome he didn't foresee. and his last interview was coach. everything is possible. it's possible that we go down. it's possible that we have to go through renovation and it's possible that we, when we save,
9:36 pm
delete directly. so, but we, what we can influence the gaming and laptops and we have to collect the points. that's the most important. raven do collect those points that will be under to my shop who won the league with breyman in 2004. he'll take the reins against glad to help them steer clear of the 2nd tier. the whole home are currently in the 2nd division, but perhaps not so much longer. that fans gave the team a rousing stand 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 the market either put your bug ahead in the 1st half. and it took a full 40 minutes until about sure, headed in an equalizer to get full from the find the cart racing again. but one,
9:37 pm
all that remained meaning and nerve wracking final match day with 3rd placed foot gaining ground. both home could still drop as low as the player place, but the 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 to help us class with cologne. the peer of losing on both sides outweighed that of temporary anguish through injury. although harris, i had the better prospects going into the game. the berlin took a heap towards safety by winning their postponed midweek outing, a childcare, even if somewhat fortunately supposed reload the guy supposed to show the current for me. second thought and cologne had lost their previous game to fryeburg. thanks also to a fair bit of bad luck. it is
9:38 pm
a horror, horrible one man, who knows those moments all too well it's 3 towns phone call. he's experienced relegation some 8 times as opposed to sleep coach. 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 we're scraps 1st, survival ever pretty. but the 2 teams did manage to muster up the odd effort on gold elvis edge baton ford to save from alexander swallow in the 17th minute the at the other end, jessica young come here to hero against soccer powered into the home box 6 minutes before the break, but this time it was team o horn with a smart space. by half time the nets faced
9:39 pm
a bigger threat from bugs than the ball. and there was at least action in the stands after the break, and 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. both the host were 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 end las kerry desperately trying and failing to win a penalty. a tuple in 10 to the season time, who was rewarded with a nice little boss, the cigars for keeping house in the top flight. a globe if some snow hung now finally have a team. you can love uncommonly, but 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 to loan, well,
9:40 pm
one point is certainly better than none. points get these up. 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 with small but slim feeling of hope does remain the another club battling to stay in the bundle is armenia felt. and while the fans gave the play, as a mighty welcome ahead of their class against health and less stop to the game, could hardly have been worse. one mailed to the guests in the 5th minutes. thanks to andre kraemer ich what had begun as a biller felt corner quickly turned into a sweeping hoffen home counter attack, which culminated in kraemer richard 19th. lee go that the season. that's a new club record for the creation strike up.
9:41 pm
really felt under the i suppose i'm a ham at 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, 1st off portals on himself. then for central defender yorkie nielsen, then strike a bobby and close. all went begging with one game left to play. the lapels. future is still hanging in the balance the this was very well for michael, who was in his last home game as glass coach after 2 eventful years at the helm. he looked to be heading out on a high when captain large tindle put the falls in front on the stroke,
9:42 pm
half time with this magnificent turning volley. the thought at the end of his reign, things had gone seriously south for glad and things were no different. again stood guard. first. what taro and those efforts flew in right over the gloves? the goalkeeper young man. 5 minutes later sasha collage its post. ho winners. the austrian strikers instinct . just touch secured. 3 points. she thought the way for a conference, li coast, the live one time champions leak, hopefully glass off are now resigned to chasing the same prize. and their coach looks increasingly keen to put this whole story behind him. but glove bus and stood up could both be outflanked. why all the fishes on your
9:43 pm
berlin, who are also chasing the conference league saturday on your travels to your robot, candidates leave accusing it was the home side who drew the 1st blood against the bananas. lake passing move coolly finished off by patrick said. the cheque striker left on your nickos not a big scrambling around on the floor before slotting past keeper. and the absolute bottom point was enough. leave occasion to wrap up 6 place. and so they obliged that guests. it was none other than labor, cruise and lonely jewel. hello, who level the scores? the 72nd minutes? when you have now overtaken by a single point, they occupy the conference league qualification sport with one game left to play involves the now. it's in seems crazy that we're still in with
9:44 pm
a shot at europe on the final match day. it's a shame today wasn't the last game. louis late, meanwhile, have secured a 6th place finished confirming best spot in next seasons. europe police department were all smiles after the mid week german cut victory over light safety . this weekend. they faced mines who recently secured their safety and the blue displayed cup hero jayden santo provided the assist for a gorgeous opening for ghetto. nothing doing for mines keeper fin done. the 2nd assist with forces captain marco's voice female to the gas the time. a 3rd after the break from muley on palm bay doors month, all 3 points and confirm their place and the champions league next season, the both and forgotten gave up
9:45 pm
increased and a chance to grab a consolation. but there was no dampening doors. men's mood as they finish a difficult season with a flourish. cut run is up like dig hosted both spoke who were looking to pick up the last champion, the ticket maximilian philip, put the wolves in front with this early one to strike. he struck again just before half time as light 6 defense fell across but the host spoke back after the break 1st just included the hub, the deficits with his 2nd legal of the season. the and also this fall on i'm a do hi dara. my cell job is to equalize from the spot the sales a point is enough but both spoke their place and the champions league is now secure .
27 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on