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tv   Der Neandertaler  Deutsche Welle  June 3, 2021 10:30pm-11:15pm CEST

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way the other way. after all, the environment isn't recyclable. the make up your own mind. d, w, made for mines. the israel is on cause for a new government centrist g i n. a page has somehow managed to weave together a coalition of extremes. that includes an arab israeli contingent for the 1st time and the proposed ultra nationalist prime minister. that's tommy bennett. all they have to do now is get israel's parliament to ratify the deal before benjamin netanyahu can record. i'm fil gail in berlin and this is the day the the
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i think that the political situation been did last long. we have to try something new. i think the, the should be the ones who run this country because it is a jewish day and we need to have a religious jewish leader. what the best interest of the jewish people at heart, they seem to have been able to get rid of the business. and that's not enough reason to make a government is not entering a new era. there is because even the philippines and bennett will manage to form a new government, it will be very fragile. the game was not over yet. the also on the day troops and tanks opened firemen student protests in chinese gentlemen square on this day in 198930 years. the only place able to commemorate them said deadly events within china was hong kong. but that vigil was band last year and this as basing cracked down on descent continues. today you may meet someone who is bad as the tanks rolled and we hear from disappointed voices within
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hong kong. we are in the darkness we are like in a tunnel, but if everyone still come up with a candle, that the spirit that we are looking for, i believe in the people home call, we live in truth. make sure that the hong kong people know that we never give up, even though maybe we have to go to jail the, the welcome to the day. so israel is starting at a starting a period that could be marking the end, or indeed the start of a new era, one in which the country will no longer be led by prime minister benjamin netanyahu, whose 12 year rule looks like ending. after he failed to form a government after the countries for him actually 2 years, the job fell to centrist jala pete. and the paid has put together an anti ness and yahoo coalition of 8 political parties and factions that will include israeli arabs in government for the 1st time. and will be led by
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a man even more whole cation further to the right. but nathan, yahoo! so who is natalie bennett? this is the man who might meet israel for the next 2 years. natalie bennett has made his political career with provocative statements that established himself to the right of outgoing pm benjamin netanyahu. this is him last year. you have a whole lot of show we will not allow the israeli government to recognize a palestinian state under any circumstances. we will not allow israel to hand over even a centimeter of land to the arabs. this is what we are here for him to guard the land of israel, who will ship them either of them. but bennet is also a generation younger than yahoo has broken with allies on the religious right on the role of religion in public life. he's also comparatively liberal and gay rights and other issues. bennett is the son of american immigrants to israel. he made
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a fortune in high tech before jumping into politics in 2013, revamping the right wing subtler party jewish home model. he served as secretary of defense and secretary of education under netanyahu. bennett would bring very little public support to the role in 2019 elections has the amino party received no mandates. and in the most recent round in one just 7 out of the $120.00 seats in the connected. i think it's a bit of a disgrace that someone who was elected with only 7 mandate is the person who decides the fate of the country. i think that is good for israel, although i'm from the left side. i believe that the new prime minister will unite israel because it is now divided into many pieces. and we need to change. bennett has promised to work for all israelis, not just his supporters and then shallow because of the government like this will
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succeed only if we work together as a group, not i, we are not, we will bring back. so we was his real secret weapon. the day of its foundation, call on the floor, got with them or not leak. on this lemon, shallow bennett would have his hands for guiding a coalition that spends the entire political spectrum. and israel would have its 1st taste of the post netanyahu era, for as long as it lasts, were not quite that yet. so let's take a closer look at how all the pieces might change with that d, w. b, least commentator shani resigned as welcome shani. again, some specifics of the coalition and it's digging into india in effect 1st, i think it's important to establish that even though you paid has got his 8 parties lined up. benjamin netanyahu still has time to wreck the steel true. he's got now 1011 days before the new coalition is being presented to the parliament of the
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israeli class. and they need to give their vote of confidence in this new makes it over coalition. in the 1011 days, we will spin and now we already see that pushing very strong to find any defectors push any, you know, and splinters tried to speed. because what happened is that we've seen people from the right on the map for the 1st time breaking to the left, joining the central and left all parties. and by that being able to unseat him. and he's trying to use their public, their vote against them saying you are right. when people you can at the fact and make you feel push strong enough for the next 1011 days he'll manage. okay. and this, this fish news has been out of that, not for about 24 hours. is it too early to, to form a view on how people are looking at this, this grouping, but haven't really got a mandates to do anything? well, it's very clear and it falls along the divides of the same lines of the divide,
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these really side for the last 2 years, at least. if not longer, are you prone to tell you, how are you against that? and yeah, this is also what brings all these parties together. if you are a person who voted to any of these, a parties who wanted to seen it out, you happy, you see there's a political miracle creative. may you know, you know, talking about the highest level of political craft and, you know, that's the one side and if you are, and it's any person, of course, do you see it as the biggest betrayal ever, you know, made in the history of political makeshift and israel, so here we have a propos government led by nestali bennett, and we heard and the report he's, he's hobb line view on the palestinian homeland and israeli settlements. he's going to lead a government with arabs in it right for the 1st time. so does this mean that these big existential issues get pocked, or are we going to see sparks to keep it short guess they're not going to deal with any of these issues? nothing concerning the political international arena and what happens to the
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palestinians? what even happens? even even many issues concerning the, our population in the, in israel, what they're trying to focus on is a civil socialist, economic, you know, focus, this is what they want to work on, you know, the post corona recovery. also the past, you know, we've seen israel just recovering from, from the gods operation that, that tore apart the society and the connections with the outside. so there are folk with the civil anything else it's going to be frozen for the next couple of years. yes. so with all my jobs in the economy, i'm just keeping the whole thing all the people in the most, you know, the simplest common denominator that can bring all these 8 parties together. so that will be the focus, all the divisive issues. anybody is looking for a long term solution in we're talking about the peace process and so on, not coming anytime soon. it's worth replacing. and i think i've mentioned a couple of times in passing the fact that this is a government that will include arabs. right. this is,
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this is melissa. shoot hughes. and you know, the 1st person to thank for this historic moment is nathan. yeah. himself. because he was trying to strap scrambling last year and you know, to find himself the majority and last 4 sessions of election. he but while fighting to get the majority was the 1st one to initiate turning to the era parties, he legitimated me, you know, make, gave them the, the kusha sign that they are legitimate partners in israeli coalition building. and he's actually been talking to them up until a few hours ago as they confessed to say. so once he made them legitimate partners, been less than the center was always very afraid to become too lefty if they join forces with the arabs. they realize, okay, then we can do that too. so. so tell us about this, this are a party rum who are they, what are they done? already? slum is party to very conservative their religious party. and this is actually very interesting combination we have here because right next to them on the left we have a party headed by a it gave men and this party,
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the party which is really would normally pair up. the arabs with the left is but in this case, this is an extreme, some extreme within islam, a conservative party, it's a religious party. they are very much one of the most important things for them was making sure status quo remains when it comes to the algebra to q. community in israel, no changes, no writes, that are officially given to them for example. so any way this also connects a bennett who comes from a conservative background or religious background. so we find different parties within this coalition that match on different levels on many different issues. it's a very interesting combination and configuration that might lead to a complete causal disaster or an unbelievable success because this is the thing about the whole thing is if everything is so finding the balance is not that a disaster or, or it's a miracle. when you look at rom itself, on the one hand, it's a miracle. they are now in government. so other heroes to palestinians,
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or are they sell outs? what we need to make sure that we make a differentiation can palestinians outside of these really territories. and the israeli arab palestinians, which they are, you know, in which are represented in the and our citizens for citizens is right. and what they are thing themselves rom. these issues, the palestinian issue, the national issues, we are not dealing with that we were talking about some of the things that we need to go into deep freeze. that is one of that we're not dealing with that our goal as we've seen now, when the in the clash is within israeli mix, it is used to, you know, give contribution to the israeli, our community to make sure they get resources, make sure they get support and only then may be in whenever the government will finish its term, god knows when that will happen. we will re emerge as the national palestinian. we will be aligned, they basically with national policy movement. but for now that's not our top priority. people outside the israel are going to be hugely intrigued by the man who
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has done this, who has brought this desperate political entity into, into being paid. yes. and having achieved this remarkable fate, he's agreed to wait 2 years to become prime minister. so what role really play until then? well, especially he's going to be the foreign minister, the deputy prime minister. but there's no doubt in the way they're building this coalition, that there is a veto up, you know, option for him. there's not going to be any major changes made about him agreeing him as a representative of the whole central left you know, block. so i think it's going to be very dominant, very prominent, definitely behind the scenes, if not in the front. and he's done an amazing transformation. he, when he made it into politics, it was jealous for an actor. never mind, nobody took him so seriously. and what he's done very consistently in the last 2 or 3 years is building himself up to that and showing for many voters as you can see
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that he has what it takes to become a prime minister against almost alarms. thank you so much for joining us. and explaining all that to to be released commentator shawnee resolves i pleasure. the around 40 years ago, the world received 1st reports in a deadly condition that would become known as aids. decades of knowledge gathered by age researches helped create some of the vaccines currently find can be corona virus, not with covered 900 vaccination, gaining speed as a renewed post to beat aids and the deadly h i. v virus that causes it scientists were able to develop effective vaccines within months of the outbreak of the corona virus pandemic. for 2 reasons. firstly developed countries poured billions into vaccine development in record time. and secondly, scientists were able to build on decades of aids and cancer research,
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the m r n. a vaccines developed by madonna. and by and take a proof of that. the idea behind these genetic vaccines is that people are injected with a blueprint for a particular element of the virus. in the case of the corona virus, this is known as the spike protein. the process means the body starts producing these proteins itself. the immune system then recognizes that it's coming under attack and starts to fight back. no vaccine has been found against aids, which weakens the immune system because h i, viruses mutate so quickly. they also attack the immune system directly, which means the body is unable to fight back. but the doctor and experimental results gained during research into corona virus. vaccines have also given the search for an aids vaccine. terrific boost scientists have been able to obtain a lot of new data in a short time. the 1st positive results are already being seen. madana is planning
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to begin to clinical trials of its m r n a. h. i v vaccines by the end of this year i've been speaking with one of the world's leading h. i v researches and i asked professor william sheaf how m r and a technology has helped his quest for an h i. v vaccine. we've been collaborating with madonna for several years, testing our strategies with r n a. and you can see from the coven vaccines that the are in a, the vaccines are very mutagenic, and they can induce very strong anybody responses from the perspective of an h i. v vaccine. that's important, but also an h i. v vaccine we believe will be much more complicated than cobra vaccine. it's going to require multiple shopped in a sequence and learning how to give those and optimizing that vaccine sequence will require doing multiple human clinical trials and m r. and they will make that much more allow that to be done much more quickly. so we think it will greatly
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accelerate our ability to develop a, an h i v vaccine. because we look at the speed with which the covey that same was developed. and we've, we've been looking for vaccine for h, i v for 2030 years now. and it's, and it's not just that sheer complexity, as you said, a millions of, of little viruses. this is why it's taking so long. that is exactly right. so, you know, basically coded is essentially an easy vaccine to make its viruses easy to protect against, even with the variance that are circulating compared to age i. v, which is a monster, relatively speaking, right? it's going to take longer. the 30 years people in hong kong have been allowed to commemorate the 1989 gentlemen square student movement and killings in china. but this year and last officials of band,
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the vigil. and yet another move to curtail civil liberties in the territory several weeks leading up to june. the 4th, the square had become a focal point for protests against economic hardship and corruption. students also gathered to demand democratic rights and freedoms from the communist government. but as the crisis continued, chinese lead a sent in change to crush the demonstrations. footage of alone, man, confronting line of tanks has become one of the most enduring symbols at the crack . then no one knows exactly how many people were killed. some say hundreds, others, thousands, many of the 1400000000 people in china today, especially those under 30 and raised on propaganda unpatriotic education. i've no idea that any of this happened. it had been up to hong kong to preserve the memory of the event and prevent beijing's complete erasure of history. but those who chose to do so now face danger. for over 3, that case,
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a sea of candle lights in hong kong, half kept the events of 1989 a life, the cities, elio vigil, a symbol of defiance, unthinkable on mainland china. now even heading out candles is heavily police weeks ahead of the 32nd anniversary. the organization, hong kong alliance head up by jo, home home began promoting the new commemoration will be the same spacing of the national institution law. here people are even more support to our se, but the support is last express that is actually going beyond just the remembrance of cameron is also goes to the heart of what hong kong, where do we still have the fight? twice in the hot weather we are still missing where we can still to serve our pre freedom by our own action. also, we share the screen with the people who are already arrest custody for the hens. and last, the time police have been visual for the 2nd year in a row setting code,
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the safety restructure. although all the mosse gatherings, like 2 days before the end of february, the alliance as june, salt museum, i museum, commemorating the events of $989.00, was close down due to a licensing investigation by the authorities. many of the organizations leading members, i didn't, joe, for protesting, including chairman. again, we spoke to the bathroom activist, shortly before he was sentenced to 18 months in prison. we are in the darkness we are like in a tunnel. but if everyone could still come up with a candle, that this spirit that we are looking for, i believe in the people hong kong we live in truth, make sure that the hong kong people know that we never give up. even though maybe we have to go to jail, i for the alliance. it's not just about commemorating the protests of
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1989, but of i'd be able to be sent to be able to call one and to one party rule. for democracy protest now labeled as version 5. they say it could be a reason to outlaw the assistance and the alliance itself. we are not south, no question, not the government one is not insisting on some slogan awesome. from principle, the risk is what we are doing. sincerely fighting for the end of one talk dictatorship say we always do that, which is really kind of why just like i one of the slogan whether this happened. sure. now or as it's a long way away, it depends on how hot recent resists, right. work is at the alliance. as june, the soft museum has begun to serving the tenement square experts in digital formats . if china continues to close out all avenues or physical protests in hong kong, moving historical evidence to an online museum may end at one of the last remaining ways of showing resistance. let's consider those events with dr. shah
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zhang. he was actively involved in student protests from 985 to 1909. when he was the student that beijing university was also among one of the last groups to leave gentlemen square after the troops and tanks. 5 at demonstrate is trying to block the messages advance. he joins us now from exxon in london. welcome to d, w. take us back then. to 30 years, would you, when, when students in, in china were protesting, what were you processing about? what did you want? basically li, bunk democracy and freedom of speech and the freedom of assembly of freedom association. that is a very important that because i was on light life expiring and my parents, i want parents generation, the sampler,
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so much 1000000 people were murdered, killed doing. the chinese comes rule that's very clear use one mission. so i was in the reason we want to change the china during that time. if you want to turn the system, they must treat them on the ration and pre pre and also pre i sign the special organize, right? then you will see the hyphen and just looking at the way that china is run. now it seems extraordinary that it 1st be authorities seemed to tolerate the protests that they began in april lasted until june. oh, that is a different meal from the different people and some
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color in the sea. but the actually, during that time the china is inside the twenty's comes hockey. they have know that the size of a rule that what the along the gold, off the steel then the movement done that you mask the movement, the more people involved. the moment return is, comes part, he actually surprised the 2 groups, one group way, the conservative group of the bomb the whole day is up. can you come to the party? funky mandel ideology? jeff craig, i niecy. but as our group way is a monday, the group they think about it shouldn't be tend to time china, they should be tolerant. but the find the be the, the conservative you and the honda line group, the they occupy on the thumbnail right with the chinese
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companies party. and there you are that in chatham and square with your student friends. and then you see the troops and the time starting to, to open fire. what goes through your mind about point? so during that time, around the shirt, june, 3rd, 10 o'clock in the evening i, i heard the show shuttle team and i heard the shooting, the army, you try to trying to push to the tennis square. so i just ran to the basement menu and try to look but happen. and the night i, i saw the soldier shoot suit, citizens in move around the same kind of meet her
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can. so that i know is the even you are your people 3 times this, feel the use these the why is the brutal crack it down? so i just tried to run bike just missed the battle. i pretend to know what happened during that time i, my classmate actually and also the new she, d p. p was the focal fake photo one. it was shot at the app, right. like he was appealed to the right in the early morning in june. false, false. yeah. well, thank you so much for joining us and telling us about your experiences dr. a show, john and that was the day as
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the news, the who's date of the news life i'm burning. there's many prime minister benjamin netanyahu. stacy office appears to be numbered after the great coalition that caused him. he's not going without fight. also on the program, denmark passes a new migration lawsuit deter refugees. the controversial plan would defy existing structures of a cooperation instead of refugee processing centers in countries outside europe. hundreds of thousands of volcano evacuees and the democratic republic of congo,
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and many still face a don't think the future that homes have been wiped away or buried. the volcanic rock. so why wouldn't they give us the me i'm feel galle welcome to the program. after 12 years as israel's prime minister, benjamin netanyahu is not fighting for his political life. this by calling on right when lawmakers to block a new coalition from taking office, he could be seated within days, former opposition liter. yeah. and the kids from the future party assembled the coalition of from across the political spectrum in the hope of forming a new government. initially, it would be led by hotline villages nationalists. natalie bennet, this is the man who might lead israel for the next 2 years. natalie bennett has
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made his political career with provocative statements that established himself to the right of outgoing pm benjamin netanyahu. this is him last year. he a bowl long enough show. we will not allow the israeli government to recognize that palestinian state under any circumstances. we will not allow israel to hand over even a centimeter of land to the arabs. this is what we are here for, to guard the land of israel, who will ship them either. but bennet is also a generation younger than that. yahoo has broken with allies on the religious right on the role of religion in public life. he's also comparatively liberal and gay rights and other issues. bennett is the son of american immigrants to israel. he made a fortune in high tech before jumping into politics in 2013, revamping the right wing subtler party jewish home model. he served as secretary of defense, and secretary of education under netanyahu. bennett would bring very little public
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support to the role in 2019 elections. jemina party received no mandates. and in the most recent round, that one just 7 out of the $120.00 seats in the connected. i think it's a bit of a disgrace that someone who is elected with only 7 mandate is the person who decides the fate of the country. i think that is good for is although i'm from the left side. i believe that the new prime minister will unite israel because it is now divided into many pieces. and we need the change. bennett has promised to work for all israelis, not just his supporters and then shallow because of the lucky government like this will succeed only if we work together as a group, not i, we are not, we will bring back. so we was his real secret weapon, the day of its foundation, call on the floor, got with them or not. the candidates, lemon,
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shallow bennett would have his hands for guiding a coalition that spanned the entire political spectrum. and israel would have its 1st taste of the post yahoo era for as long as it left. earlier i spoke with michael coupler, who's policy director at the israeli policy institute. he told me the new coalition still faces hurdles as it seeks to oust benjamin netanyahu. this whole weekend and the government are not quite yet a done deal that a party got assigned the coalition agreements have agreed to form a government, but that government has to be sworn in by the captain. and they can. i think it currently controlled by a speaker from the liquid party who is what a prime minister in yahoo. and what that means is that he will be somewhere between $1.00 and $2.00 weeks before the government is sworn in and out of a lot of time for prime minister netanyahu to try and ticket some of the loose threads and drive practically to television. particularly among the 2 writing
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parties, nicole nations who are not in television because they agree with the other party body logically. and so even if it happens, so benjamin netanyahu chips away before he gets installed, if it gets installed, he remains, he is likely to remain a later of the opposition. and he's a big figure who is not going to allow them an easy time. that is correct. there are a lot of people living riding over the past few days. this is the downfall of being, i mean, you know, and i'm not sure. i don't know that even a week from now we'll be short term people downfall. but even if we do, you determined to stick around and he certainly want to become a prime minister again, unless there is an internal revoke revolt within his own party to replace the party leader. very,
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very strong possibility that it will fall well before the end of the 4 year term. and then there'll be new elections and yahoo will be sitting there, had a good and still getting more votes than any other party or any other feature. so i don't think that this is the end of the young era by any means. it may be simply a short term effort to replace him. and he may be gone from power temporarily. does not mean that we have seen the end of our ministers in any way. very interesting, thank you so much for showing us your insights that a michael coupling from the israel policy for him extract. let's take a look now at some of the other stories making news around the world. shanker, it's pricing for the possibility of an oil spells and burn town cargo ship made and with chemicals, things off its western coast. hundreds of containers filled with nitric acid. another toxic substances have fallen into the sea. plastic daybreak covered nearby
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coastal it's july because worst ever marine disaster. whitehouse has announced applied to give away millions of does the corona, virus backseat. most of the initial $25000000.00 doses will go to south america, africa, and asia ivy global vaccine sharing initiative co that it's part of the plan to eventually share $80000000.00 doses by the end of june health benefits and have a group of industrialized economies that meeting in the english oxford where researches at oxford university developed jacoby 1900 vaccine with a pharmaceutical company astrazeneca discussing the prospect of joint protection measures against future pandemic ways of sharing vaccines with poor countries. greece has begun amass vaccination campaign for asylum seekers. they begin refugee camps on its iris is, comes months after 1st jobs were offered to the general public. great government has been criticized for being slow to be not going to migrate to the rest in the
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crowded comes with poor country conditions that denmark has passed a law allowing it to process the asylum seekers outside europe. refugees arriving in the country would be moved to asylum centers in pon countries probably in africa to have the applications reviewed. and mark's anti immigration government says the plan aims to deter migrants, united nations and the you have criticized legislation. we share the concerns expressed by the un high commissioner for refugees. both about the compatibility of this text with denmark international obligations and about the risk of undermining the foundations on the international protection system for the world refugees. the commission will now cut the analyze the data pending they're entering the 4th before deciding on any next or dr. nicholas' faith, thomas senior research, the danish institute for human rights, welcome
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d w. as well as what people would look at this, and i'm things with themselves, well, as long as the 5 and see, because the treaties you may be within the law, does it matter where their claims are processed? i think the question is good in the sense that you're right, this is technically possible. ready to arrange for us to receive protection elsewhere in denmark. this is because the country has opted out of matches us on law. so while it would be unlawful to other countries, such as germany, to create specialization, did not, can lawfully create these legal mechanism to transfer on speakers to a 3rd country outside europe. but i really want to emphasize here that even though my plans trends outside your remains bound by international european human rosabelle standards. so denmark remained legally responsible for what happens
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to sound seekers transferred to these. okay. do you have any problem with these, with these proposals and look way the donation sheet to iraq has highlighted. there are some really significant human rights risks here. the legislation is, is legal. it's technically fine. but we will be very, will be looking very closely at the implementation in size because the government will need to ensure that not only speakers receive a fair and efficient procedure that the country. but also the plan is for those speakers to refugees to remain in the 3rd country and be integrated there. so there is a real question whether the, you know, true refugee protection can be realized in these countries. so and we just heard from, from brussels and we have from the, they, from the united nations that better concerns about this. but i look at this and i think there's as well, hasn't brussels. ultimately,
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europe in union done similar things in turkey and in and in libya and i think slightly hyper chris, hypocritical here there's no doubt that any government inspired by the you turkey arrangement that's, that's for sure. i would, i don't think this is the same as a libby, a cooperation i'm in the days. government is essentially promising to find a suitable country that can leave up to at least the basic asylum, refugee and human rock standards and not just for the processing is putting data. so the long term protection i was making time from the tennessee state for human rights africa, most anti volcano. we were up to the week ago in the east of the democratic republic of congo. the city of goma was flooded with lava and thousands of people forced to flee. now they're starting to return, looking for the remains of therefore, the homes and livelihoods. the w correspondent,
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mario miller ripples. the masika, francoise lost everything. her house where she lived with her children and her family business, the entire life she had carefully built up over the years, consumed by flames in a matter of seconds. so good, we decided to flee, hoping that lava would not affect our house. but on sunday, when he came back, everything was gone and we were left with nothing. she had no time to take any belongings with her. now she's living with friends that could only take 2 of her 10 children, the others. i was neighbors. one here, one moment. okay, i'm going a little. it's making me very sad. there's nothing i can do about it like must be got over $4000.00 people have lost their homes and the entire livelihood. some of them contrast you at friends, houses, or in nearby towns,
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but now that depends on the communitarian assistance in order to survive me. why was there no warning for goma? about 2000000 people live in the area. the director of the coma volcano observatory, assess the world bank, did not renew the funding for the work with no funds that were unable to monitor the volcano properly. in october, the internet was cut off that caused problems. we have stations that 150 kilometers away, but then we didn't have enough fuel to get there. but because you know, from when the internet is working, the observatory receives data from sensors on the volcano every 4 minutes for 7 months. that was not the case that everyone knew that we didn't have the means that we worked with difficulties. but some vulcan ologist say there were a clear signs that they will cain or could erupt in the next few years. civil
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society activists say the aimless, squarely with the government and the good mobile can observatory itself. those of the wedding corrupted. if they didn't spend money or food you founded by bank the, we could prevent the dead. my right now, my father who is responsible. all she cares about is trying to rebuild her life. so when i 1st thing in the z, what there is nowhere else i can go. there's only one goma. there's only here for me to stay with my children, get to know what the run like my speaker, the people of coma lives under the shadow of one of the world's most dangerous volcanoes. they can only hope the city will be better prepared by the next time erupt. and american football the nfl has agreed to end racial discrimination when settling concussion law suits with players. yet if i had been using a formula that assumes black players have lower cognitive function before being
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injured, a practice known as race norming. it's been used to calculate the compensation of players receive for brain injuries suffered while playing football. fell. pledge follows a law suit, a civil rights law suit from to black form a place. what size your business update next? ah, we got some hot tips for your bucket. the magic corner check hot spot for food and some great cultural memorials to boot w travels off. we go.

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