tv Global 3000 Deutsche Welle May 25, 2021 7:03pm-7:30pm CEST
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simians, but he also said that he aims to reopen the u. s. consulate in jerusalem. that's a very, very important question, a message to the palestinians, the ty for downgraded under the trump administration. and you as president, the former us president donald trump moved the embassy from television to jerusalem . and then moving also the palestinian affairs of where does this in this u. s. consulate to the embassy? so for the policy, no story to this is very important. meeting is somehow to re establish ties with the us administration, and disregard and also be heard the us secretary of state antony, bring who talk a lot about equality, dignity for both people equal opportunity for both people. he also said that, of course, the underlying larger issues should be addressed, but he didn't really go into details how he would consider doing this. and you know this, the question of organizations until they bring it also said that the u. s. want to
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help them, garza without helping how much so, how do they do that? yeah, that has been really a dilemma for the international community for the past 10 or almost 14 years now. that em us is ruling garza because there's no contact policy. i must have seen as a terrorist organization and the international community doesn't you directly with him. so there was also what the secretary of state and i think and said again, they want to rebuild garza but without having this in an effect that it would aid actually hummer. so in 2014 after the war, then be so especially mechanism put in place when it comes to the reconstruction. because of a construction mechanism which was overseen by the united nations by the international community and the palestinian authority. and of course by israel, which controls everything in and out of causes. so we have to see what kind of
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solution they find this way. but again, you have to ask us, what is a political force? it's ruling gaza. so they have to come up with some solution how to deal with this situation. but at the moment, of course, it goes through indirect talks. as through egypt, for example, that has mediated also brokerage. the cease fire to host must be responsible and accountable for what is it doing and gaza. thank you for that time you came and jerusalem. gaza suffered heavy bombardment during those 11 days of fighting between the hamis militants and these railey army, living thousands of people homeless, many have been traumatized by the fighting. a don't know where to start rebuilding their lives. the man she family lives in. bate luckier in the northern gaza strip near the israeli border. they want to show us something. this area was
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heavily targeted by the israeli military, in its response to the volume of rockets fired at israel from gaza. come at, muncie and his wife common feared for their lives. they listened to their voices calling to god, expecting to die. how do we deserve this? asked simon. then she says to her daughters, come to me, we're all going to die. they were lucky yet the trauma remains. let us know. the israelis say we are terrorists, but we haven't done anything to anyone. we haven't fired any rockets. scenes of destruction also, and central garza city bombed out buildings and shattered lives. some people still camp out amid the ruins where their homes one stood, palestinian sources say some 2000 apartments were destroyed for israel. this was collateral damage caused by its attacks on the infrastructure of islamic thomas
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militants, which israel says use civilians as human shields. mohammed abu stuffy had his apartment here. now he doesn't know where to go. so far, no one is offered to help. i collected these things from wherever i could. now i sleep here. how much is calling the cease fire? a victory for them? which these motorists also insist but most people are simply exhausted. and one piece will hama mic dodd, is a dentist in gaza city where the building next to his was destroyed. he says, i must be event inside the organizations if elections were to be held here. how much would lose heavily the stats and then the bed and the dish failure due because the people have suffered so much, it didn't happen today. he's brought his children to the park, away from the destruction their volunteers try to take the kids mines off. what happened in bait,
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luckier had monster worry about his youngest daughter. if i hadn't noticed that she's suffering from some kind of shock when she does strange things. how can my neighbors said i should bring her to a psychologist? they can. ne, charla he adds, is only wishes for her to have a good and normal life. let's take a look at some of the stories and making headlines at this hour. a us president, joe, by all the summit, russian president vladimir putin on the 16th of june in geneva. the face to face meeting comes to me, the escalating tension between the us and russia. in the 1st months of the bible administration, it'll be the 1st meeting as heads of state. west africa nation of molly appears to be facing its 2nd military coup. inside a year, the vice president of members of the ministry said here in archive footage, a seat power arresting the president and the prime minister,
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promising to hold elections next year as scheduled to and arrested prompted an international family of george floyd in washington to market years since his murder by a white police officer, they met with how speak at nancy pelosi and that you should meet president by later . mister floyds killing, highlighted that police brutality and racism in the us by the administration is urging congress to pass police reform bill. bella luce is facing further isolation from the european union for forcing a via passage yet to divert to minsk in order to arrest the roman savage dissident journalist. the bellows in airlines have been banned from e u. s. space and airports and those involved in the action will face economic sanctions and travel restrictions. you leaders of also agree to fries a 3000000000 the early investment package. german chancellor, i'm going back or call mr. protest,
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savage is immediate release. that's all i can only describe it as and shocking, as u. k prime minister bores johnson said, makes our demands all the more urgent that he must be released. but everything must be done, especially when one hears what his parents have to say, and we will use all available means to do this. let's talk about this with 1000000 cars, man who is a senior expert on the eastern europe at the battles. my foundation here invalid, welcome to the wi fi you already had sanctions in place against batter. ruth, which appeared to have had little effect, are more likely to make any difference it is very complex situation and therefore difficult to, to respond to your question. in such general returns, it was needed to respond clearly to what is a very dangerous precedent. and so i underline what the luxemburg,
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when the minister said about the madness of what's happened. this madness, however, has been obvious for the, for the past, the months. so it's only news for those who haven't been able to to watch the action of the in the, just him a president the fellow who's and this is credited in the past month. and which is based on the bio dense on human rights violations toward its own citizen. so with the sanctions off to day to close the s face for avi. i'm worried that it hits above all bad near to. and why is this will of men, the pressure in the country you missing
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a pro active track top enormous challenge that the situation that i've just described, present, or not just what the, what would be the top of your list for a product if you strategy to deal with bruce you cannot look at better without looking at russia. the defense systems are in telling we can speculate, but i don't think what has happened was able to happen without moscow's knowledge, at least. so i, so i think we have to look at the whole picture and we have 2 of the you have to find a way to make it easier to with countries and to moscow above all that such actions will be met with consequences. but again, for now,
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also back to where we started having to process back to d, a proactive action against bella, ruth, and against russia. both of which are already under sanction from the e u. m. both of which are laughing at brussels and say, this means nothing was c sanctions. i'm not an all purpose instrument and my fear is that they are seen as such a they cannot replace a real strategy and areas strategy. what's the mind to look at these very complex relations to analyze dependencies and interdependencies, and then to act not only react to see if there is another incidence like this terrible incident today, but to react long term. and in that respect, i think there is
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a lot more strategically russert can do visa be it's immediate. neighborhoods. ok factor for acts met him cause man from the battles. my foundation. you're welcome. in football, going by munich boss. hands the flick side on this next coach of the german national team. i think we'll take over from the nerve who's leaving after the summons to reschedule the euro. 2020 tournament place been hugely successful in the short standard by him winning the champions league and 6 other trophies when he leaves under a cloud after problems with the clubs hierarchy that fits your up to date more world news at the top of the hour of next year on d, w will have the latest pandemic news in our covert special with the band physically have a good day. the
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news the fight against the corolla virus pandemic. how has the rate of infection in developing? what does the latest research thing information and contact the corona virus. 19 special next on d w. how does a 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 more information on the cronum virus or any other final topic,
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you should really check out our podcast. you can get it wherever you get your podcast. you can also find us at some t, w dot com, forward slash science me there are growing calls for a waving of covert vaccine payden's to increase deliveries to developing countries . but it's speed up production of the jap. oh, the us things that will be you believe easing, export rules would speed up supplies if you can give the ip labs that don't know how to produce it, they won't produce it over nice. the figures are telling 30 percent of people in rich nations have had at least one shot in low income countries. it's just point 35 percent. i think i would go one 3rd of that and say no just that. busy the what it
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is as the school bus died, the world is in, but i'm ben for all unwelcome as leaders around the world attempt to draw lessons from the cupboard 19 pandemic. one question remains notably unresolved how to handle vaccine payton's at present. it's only these companies and a select few, they have licensing agreements with that are allowed to make the jobs is a funded mental principle of intellectual property. though the one critic say is costing lives and slowing down efforts to end the pandemic. south africa and india have led coles to see patients wavered more than 100 countries, including the united states. great. germany is a notable exception with the government coming out strongly against the proposal. so what are the arguments for and against? proponent, se suspending would help economies reopen sooner. it would also save lives and point to the exceptional circumstances of the pandemic. and the fact that pharma
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companies have benefited from state help that's out taxpayer money. of course, those against say it would hamper innovation slow future responses to future pandemic. they also argue that wave is wooden, so boxing capacity issues and point out that some pharma companies are already selling their vaccines to poor countries at cost price. so is there a resolution? so all this incite, i'm joined by elizabeth, my daughter. she's an advocacy official with doctors without borders at also by sandy douglas. he's a research group leader at jenny institute at the university of oxford. welcome to both of you. hello, elizabeth. if we can start with you, we got this vaccine in record time. would that have been possible without payments? i would say yes, it would have been possible because the pace the rec scenes have not yet been protected by the parents in the past year. it takes about 18 months for this
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protection to start, and we saw that it wouldn't have been possible without the massive amount of public funding that has actually gone into the 16th. so yes, we say this could have been possible, and therefore it should be a global public good because of all the public funding that have had a gone introduce vaccines. we'll get to the funding in a moment. sandy, what do you think on payton's, the tool that the drives innovation? i think in the case of our back up to the universe agree with elizabeth. would it be possible to develop this when i hastens, although it may have been hauled, bring on board after seneca or another pharmaceutical company partner in a future products where they have some protection. what about all that state money, though? that visible, mentioned shouldn't the state and have a say in how this is all dealt with. yes, absolutely. and noble at the moment when boxes being developed, funded by government funded by not for profit by the gates foundation. or
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which the call to prep paradise. and all of these organizations will attach conditions to funding, which in many cases will prioritize access follow and middle income countries. so in the case of the, the doctors that you picked up on a very active site in what terms it was license dr. seneca, on the on that with know, just about protecting the interest was also a consideration of protecting access below middle income countries. in that process, elizabeth, why is the economic giant germany so against waving pain? well, as mentioned before, there are a lot of maxine produces and pharmaceutical companies in germany who have the interest of protecting their i. p rights. so they are patients, for example, and biotech and cubic for example, to m r n a produces, which have interest and patients name those. but i would say the strings attached
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to the public money. but for example, germany has also invested in biotech, for example, all the u. s. that invested nearly 1000000000 dollars in more durn or for the r n d . and the spec seems they were not enough strings attached to the 15th. we want to see the effect of conditions for affordability access, and also tech transfer attached to these to these fundings. because also in the case of separately, the sandy mentioned just now they were not strong enough. conditioned as additions attached to that separate could actually say that needs to be a tech transfer now from the different entities that actually receive their funding . so we would once in the future that this would be kept in mind. we're obviously talking about exceptional circumstances here, but let me check in with you if these peyton's wavered. would it not be setting a dangerous president for, for how all of this works in the development of life saving drugs and drugs in general? well, i think that is a really complicated loan,
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somewhat ideological debate about boss and elizabeth. and i might take different sites on that, but i think just put a different question which is much more immediate and practical which but what can be done now in the situation that we're in now to get as much as possible as many people as possible as as quickly as possible and personally out of the patients, all the problem that was mentioned, but donna tolbert last year, they wouldn't enforce that. but i haven't made any difference. availability is i'm a doing a light product in low and middle income countries. i haven't agrees on that one. no, because it's not for mixing, it's not early enough. i would agree. patients are not the only barrier, especially in the short term, but they are one of the barriers. and for vaccines, we need the waving of patients together with technology transfer and when we're
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there and says as a single company, they won't enforce the ip that is not the same as the need security that a global patient wave i would have about 1st year. secondly, if modern as being serious about making the technology and patients available, they would also do a technology transfer to low and middle income countries. we haven't seen this in the, in the pandemic enough far. and that's why we saying this is not, not going up, but i would agree that payments are not the only barrier that they're sandy. what, what else did you want to say that? i think that's the right folks on the technology transfer and having be involved in the licensing of the university of oxford boxing and the discussion about how we do that. one of the things really, really tricky to think about how you force a company to transfer technology really quickly, because it's a lot of hard work. it comes at the expense of other things that company might be doing is how do you force a company to answer an email today,
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rather than in the morning, for example, is things like that that make it move quickly. it's quite easy to say you will technology transfer, but you know, it's really hard to make it happen very efficiently and very fast. i think also it's important to think about whether transferring technology to loaners and come country manufacturers is the best way to increase supply the boxes on a case by case basis. i think some back thing that probably is on for others. perhaps it's not elizabeth, how much hope to have with you with getting behind this initiative. it's an historic move and it shows that ip is exactly, it's been recognized as a barrier to the scale up. so we need the patient waiving, we need the technology transfer and all technology, especially also m r. a should be taken into account because we need to end the pandemic. we need to have more vaccines available for more people to safe life and
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get out of this more quickly. so to from doctors without borders in sandy douglas from the gen institute. thanks to both of you. thanks very much. thank you. and he's our science correspondent, derek williams, answering your questions on the corona virus call. people keep saying we don't know about possible long term effects and vaccines which just sounds like soft vaccine skepticism. what are your views? oh, i think it's almost impossible to have a fruitful conversation about this topic because when someone says, yeah, but how do you know there won't be problems down the road? then that's sort of destined to turn into a pointless discussion as it's really any discussion that requires predicting the future. 100 percent. the problem is, in life and in the pandemic, we always have to make decisions about the future based on data that we've
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collected in the past. we have to choose our next moves based on what that data appears to tell us. it's not a perfect infallible system by any means, but it's the best one we have when it comes to decisions like whether or not to get vaccinated. so. so here's what the current data says about vaccines in general. and cobra. the vaccines, in particular, both the c d c and the w h o emphasize that the chances that vaccines could cause long term health problems are extremely low. because past experience with many, many different candidates for a wide range of diseases, overwhelmingly shows that when side effects do crop up and they do, they nearly always do so within a few days or weeks of vaccination. the biggest vaccine drive in history though,
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began many months ago, and at hundreds of millions are covered. 1900 doses have since been administered worldwide. the rollouts are being tracked with an eagle eye. authorities has detected a few possible serious vaccine side effects in some very rare cases, but nothing that indicates any wider trends. on the other hand, we have an absolute mountain of data on the potentially devastating long term side effects that getting covered 19 can cause. being able to prevent them effectively is a huge advantage. so with the evidence saying the advantage so massively out ways any known risk, why wouldn't i want to get vaccinated? i don't have to predict the future that's use that the data says,
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cover. some of us are wicker, breaking youtube also in book form. the basis of the news a show coming up today. battle ground water. madison is an indian prime minister, there are more of these handling of the corona virus fund. demik is playing out on twitter, and the social media giant is facing greater scrutiny from the government. but when freedom of expression, be the casualty. in this puzzled lockdown to tighten borders in thailand as the country faces its worst corona about a serge yet and it's the great hall. you've never heard of. neither lose.
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