tv DW News Deutsche Welle June 8, 2021 9:00am-9:31am CEST
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the news, this is the w news coming to life from berlin, former boston, his sort of military commander, russia law. here's today whether he'll spend the rest of his life jailed for genesis. judges will rule on his appeal against this conviction for war crimes, which includes this repre nice. a mastercard that earns him the nickname, the butcher of balls. but even today, many serv say he was only protecting his people. also coming up. not come.
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do not come. us vice president, couple of harris has a lunch warning for would be migrating south of the red border on her 1st floor and trip it officer and marine stops window off the kenyan coast. we hear about a local initiative to change the fishing methods to make a more sustainable future. ah . hello, i'm terry martin. welcome to the program, former bosnian serb command director, luggage will here today a decision on his appeal against his genocide conviction for crimes committed during the 1990 s conflict in the former yugoslavia. not it was jailed for life in 2017 after un tribunal in the hague, among other atrocities. he was sentenced for his role in this rubber needs. a
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massacre is the only crime in europe since world war 2. to be declared a genocide, the victims relatives have traveled to the hag to hear the verdict. a few kilometers north of chevron, its the genocide memorial and cemetery. honor the victims of the $995.00 massacre. sure. so none of its last 23 members of her family, including her husband, his last words to her take care of our children. when you get flavio broke up in the early 900 ninety's ethnic coexistence rapidly dissolved into ethnic conflict. foggy and had for governor, became one of the most physically contested territories. a served crow at some bog . next vide for control. in july, 995 bosnian serb general radco melodic enter, trepner, and it's in the following days, at least 8000 pounds knack muslims were slaughtered. mostly men and boys.
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the remains are still being identified by forensic scientists today, using dna analysis. melodic twins on trial at the u. n. tribunal for the former yugoslavia and in 2017, he was found guilty of war crimes and genocide for having committed these crimes. the chamber census mister outcome luggage to life imprisonment from aladdin has challenged his genocide conviction. and the appeal verdict will be the last in the case against him. 60 kilometers from sarajevo in his home town of kalynne, vic, melodic still revered, the hero of you, held by many bosnian serbs important. he's an honest man and honest commander who only defended his people. nothing else. i think he
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deserves to be released because he's not guilty of anything. those who lost loved ones in the genocide hope the final ruling will confirm a lot of guilt for them. it's a question of justice, not just for their families, but for all human kind. let's bring in catalina listed here. she's a researcher with the global and european studies institute lights the university, thanks for being with us this morning. stuff to research. what are you expecting from the court today? do you think mr. melodic has a chance of winning his appeal and thank you. one cannot really predict the legal verdict, but i do not expect that. you know, the significantly alter the child chamber decision from 2017. as a matter of fact, it is widely expected that the appeal chamber will confirm the law that she was
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guilty on the charges of genocide in the plan itself, terrorizing severely and in, sorry, able during the 3 years long seas and uphold the lifetime. as we saw in our report, the most melodic is revered by some of his compatriots. they see him as a hero. what do you make of that? oh, well, it is true that the brand, its largest rolling strip, then it has remained contested memory in serbia. and in the region, despite all the number of verdicts detailing the atrocity and the responsibility of the law, judge, candidates for that matter. but the public in serbia has never given the fair presentation of what was happening there. and in july 1995, i lived in belgrade and then public was occupied,
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celebrating the 1st major 4th story. it was a peon basketball championship. and then you with the lobby, one in greece and the media report, the not detailed on bus, the own war on the trusted. this is that it was just another victory and think the war. and that is how is remaining as you say, you've lived in serbia when luggage committed the atrocities there in scrubber needs. in an earlier interview you told us that most people there including yourself didn't, didn't realize what was happening. you just explained what was on television or people there today aware of what happened. do they recognize this rubber needs a mask or as a war crime? generally, i think there is awareness. that trusty was committed, but the genocide charge is highly contested as a political charge. and mainly populations would say that it doesn't the amounts of genocide instead, when talking about genocide and serbia you would probably hear about, you know,
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what's in the 2nd world war atrocities. again, so rather than applying genocide to try to do it so the more in ninety's and just finally the conflicts surrounding the breakup of the former yugoslavia they involved ethno nationalist movements that linger on in the balkans today. how dangerous would you say those movements are nationalism and these movements have been dangerous and they flourish during the war, and they've been static part of the regional politics the last 3, the decades. nevertheless, there is a disturbing trend of rise radical right mainly connecting through social media where anonymous users are celebrating genocide in buffalo and certainly luggage and cut it into heroes inviting for acceleration of violence, terrorist and just bring it in, norway and brenton parents in new zealand were inspired by
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a radical rights and the one kind of just just come live it's and this rise, the practical right is by no means some damage to balkan. it is really connecting islam of big extra and is beyond europe. dr. rich rich, thank you very much. for talking with us, that was dr. cutter in a research of lights, the university sketch up on some of the stories making headlines around the world today. australian police say they've arrested more than 200 people as part of the world wide sting targeting, organized crime networks. officials say they identified the suspects after tricking them into using a messaging run by the f. b i in the u. s. or been arrest and 18 country says part of the operation. canadian police say that the driver of the pickup truck who killed 4 members of a muslim family, acted out of hatred. and 9 year old boy was the only survivor to the attacker drove
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his truck into the family in the city of london, ontario on sunday, peruse presidential election still too close to call. left us candidate petro castillo, has taken a slim lead with over 95 percent of the boat, counted his right wing rival k kofuji. murray is alleging voting at regularities. she has accused custio's supporters of stealing balance. custio's party rejects the allegations, couple of harris is on her 1st foreign trip as us vice president. her mission is to address undocumented migration to the us by tackling root causes, including poverty and political oppression. harris has now arrived in mexico city for talks with president andrea manuel over a door. he travelled from one mala where she offered a message of hope to the people of the country, but discouraged from trying to cross into the u. s. at the same time, i want to be clear to folks in this region who are thinking about making that
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dangerous track to the united states, mexico board or do not come me do not one of the disagreements, the president lopez open the door and us vice president come on, the harris we'll discuss on tuesday is how to resolve the migration crisis. mexico has been pressuring washing to increase investment in central america to curb the tide of migration from their w reporter. i tore size traveled to the city of top of tula. in southern mexico, near the border to guatemala is one of the keep a rival points for undocumented migrants from central america traveling north in the hope of reaching the us. the danny rios travelled from honduras to mexico with her 2 daughters and 2 nephews. they've just been detained at a checkpoint and have a jeweler and don't know where they will be taken as long as they arrive last
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monday. we've been hungry and slept in the park because we had nowhere to sleep. just trying to hold on. none. august. sanchez has been running a shelter for migraines and tap at schuler for 3 decades. she's noticed that since you, as president joe biden to power more and more women are arriving alone with their children. they tell you this. there's a button like in the north and a bottleneck here. we don't know what to do, but people are still coming in. a bite. migrants are forced to seek asylum 1st and mexico before they can continue their journey towards the us. the authorities estimate will receive about $100000.00 asylum applications this year. that's more than double the number of last year. the paperwork used to take about 20 days to process. now, it takes months. that's left thousands of migrants from haiti and central america
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stranded in top of chula struggling to survive several n g o say it's part of a deliberate political strategy to dissuade the migrants from leaving their countries. the u. n. refugee agency says governments need to do more as a one my, your we are calling for a greater effort from all countries. if worse, there's not just one country that has to deal with this situation by you get and we're seeing it across the region. remember in all the leaders have to be involved in custody of danny and her family spent all their savings to flee the violence in their neighborhood. and his father was recently killed by gang members. so what the people who killed the boy's father are threatening us to we don't want to go back to 100 know locked in this than in worried about deportation. they feared they've invested everything just to end up back where they started over
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more of a speak to liz. sure. cuz she's the u. s. policy analyst at the homeless foundation here in berlin. so liz, this is harris's 1st foreign trip as vice president. what do you make of it so far? well, this is a huge melody for her. she is a coming from the congress and set it background, and this is going to patch her foreign policy shop. and she needs to do it very wisely. so kind of what i'm hearing coming from your administration is my expectation, but a strong foundation. so they're not looking for her to migrate policy or our relationship with immigration. but just being in place that moving forward. they know the new ministration and taking that very seriously and by president harris, the right person to leave that come on, harris is telling would be migrant rather bluntly do not. com. that's quite
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a turnaround from the welcoming tone we heard from the by the administration initially, isn't it? i'm not sure i would phrase it like that. you can both be more welcoming than the previous administration. also more focused on human rights when they do arrive in the country. but as the last segment showed, there's been a massive uptake in migration. and not only is that a lot of days, but this is incredibly dangerous. you know, the lot of life and the danger that they're putting women and children and it's kind of uncomfort. we don't really even know the scope of it. i think it's prudence to kind of go to the source and say, this is both not an easy track and will not be an easy arrival. so don't just assume because it's the buy new ministration that much is going to be different than, than the past decade. but that change in ministration, indeed served as a, as a pull had a pulling effect on migration. if we could say that,
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but aside from telling would be migrant. you're not wanted in the us on this trip. what incentives is the vice president offering for them? stay at home. i think that with the rest of the, at the actual rest of the trip into lay the foundation not only met with government official, she met with local and g. o. she held a round table on women's empowerment, talked about 500000 vaccines, delivered to guatemala, from the u. s. so she's talking about these long lasting foundation she wants. she mentioned several times offering hope. so how can we go to the root cause and help with economic stability, reducing violence and helping people not even have to take the journey in the 1st place. or talk about those factors driving latin, american migration to the u. s. poverty, gang violence by governance. these are huge problems in central america. what's the
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by the ministrations policy approach lives to those issues? is there a robust policy in place? i think that's what's being rolled out, and i think they're taking it very seriously. as the chairman of the hispanic caucus in congress representative who has talked about, he's really pushing the administration to go to the root cause. and i think that's really necessary. they're going to be full from the internet that are very unhappy with what she said. and i think they know that they knew this as a risky thing to say, but they will be that a whole listed approach that targeting there has been stability, economic, political, and violent in the, in central america for decades now. so it's going to be a massive overhaul. so this is not a one trip land stop that will fix anything. but how do we build a sustainable future because they are neighbors? and so i think you're going to see a really strong lasting foundation of policies being rolled out. but it's thank you
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so much. that was live, show us policy analysts with the homo foundation bank. now italian authorities are still investigating what caused the people cable car accident near the resort town of straits. 2 weeks ago, 14 people were killed when they're gone. de la crashed to the ground. a technical supervisor is under house arrest. in connection with the incident. authorities are now looking into a german tv report. the suggest, the emergency breaks may have been deactivated for much longer than previously thought. cable cars are his passion for more than 20 years. media is meyer from switzerland, has been filming, and photographing, cabins large and small. when he heard about the accident in please the italy on pentecost sunday and what may have caused it. he looked through his personal photo archive and found some old pictures of the cable car. his imminent beer,
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you can see a picture from 2016. shortly after the opening of the renovated cable line, here you can see the 1st section, which is the cabin people and look over here on this platform. you can see these 2 for tony that we also saw in italian media footage. in the wreckage of the craft cable car, the same for ker tony, or forks can be observed, they prevented the emergency breaks from engaging before the cabin hurdled into the valley. normally the emergency breaks close automatically when the cable wheels move in the wrong direction over the suspension rope. but these forks blocks this mechanism. supposedly they were installed only a few weeks ago. but myers photographs are 5 and 7 years old respectively. the german tv channels e d f reported on this. now the public prosecutor's office in strays
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a is investigating gob or a blocker, a professor of rope way engineering is a guest that i am dismayed and i am outraged. and i have 0 understanding of obviously they've been doing this for a while. and so far they've been lucky. it's great because after all, train wrote damage is relatively rare. shaw y'all. a lot you said for cold. there's been speculation that the operating company deployed these forks after the emergency brick had been repeatedly triggered without reason, thus disrupting operations. but nothing has been clarified yet. in particular, it is still unclear why the trained cable broke, releasing the gondola and plunging 14 people to their depth. here in germany, the campaign to tackle the pandemic has stepped up
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a notch. in theory, at least, anyone who wants can now request a back station appointment. that's after authorities entered the priority group system aimed at immunizing the most vulnerable 1st. but a sluggish supply of vaccine doses means people will still have to wait their turn . monday morning in berlin's diverse crow expect district. patients outside the local clinic here for all sorts of reasons. but 90 percent want that cove at 1900 job. so did she and her team deal with up to $450.00 vaccinations per week. the demand on the clinic has been nonstop since early april when they gave up that 1st bio tech job benz comes closer and storm. it's been a huge on floats by both our own patients and those have never been here. they just drop by from all over the place on a woman who up comedy for by the germany. prioritize certain people at the start of the vaccination drive. last december,
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the idea was to get the jobs into the arms of people who needed them the most, including young people with special needs and the elderly. but since monday, anybody age 12 and older can get shot. some are ready warning of a shortage of vaccine supplies. but here at the prospect clinics, doctor say they've been vaccinating people rather flexibly anyway. and they think it's high time to end the priority system. given infection rates are low, almost 90, decide not to seize the moment and get lots of people vaccinated. it's right to lift the privatization because otherwise we won't get the number of fascinated people to the level we need them by, by the end of september. miss ended up to repeat it again after a slow start, the vaccine drive is finally on a role in germany. almost 50 percent of the germans have received the 1st shot, and one in 5 is fully vaccinated. and the general willingness still seems to be
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there on the streets of berlin. yes, i want my job because you need your freedom. i am a person if i wish, but i would like to get vaccinated, but i can't get an appointment. yes, i mean, i was waiting for the team here because i'm from t let to let all these pros was super quick. experts are cautioning people in germany against letting that got down to soon. but for now, with the holiday season ahead and some freedoms regains already. many, just want to enjoy a relatively kathy summer. marine biologists around the world are marking world oceans. de scientists say global warming and over fishing, or having an adverse impact on our seas and oceans. a new australian study has found some tropical waters already too warm for some species to survive and oceans around the equator, are much less rich in marine life than in previous decades. all these places include the waters off kenya, where coral reefs are dying, record rates,
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scientists, there are monitoring fish populations and have begun recruiting local fishermen to help conserve endangered species. the reef looks degraded, but at least there are still fishes here. jo ann coworker and her colleague pizza was to be visit the room some way in the coral reef every 2 years to check up on this fragile ecosystem that is where the life of the office so that is where you find the really loving like i love the feeding area for the defense letting life in the most of the by doesn't ladybug allied isn't to size concluded that we have up to for, for decline in fish garters in the last 2 or 3 the kids. and that is a problem. as local fisherman know all to well,
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my son was born and bred in some way. me fishing has been his main source of income for years. now i told him once i was on the pharmacy to get the cash was still good . when i started quoting, but over the past 4 years, the number of fish has been declining money before me. daddy clark, i'm on base. i'm like, if you want to find anyone apple watch. the marine biologists have enlisted the support of locals in their efforts to protect the coral reefs. they've got fishermen, how's the count, fish, and species in marine conservation zones and how to separate their findings. for example, high numbers of fish in the coral reef is a sign that the habitat is doing well. they've also taught them a simple method of keeping juvenile fish out of their net. the fisherman still use their traditional basket trap, but now use different mesh. we went into adding that kind of most valuable,
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that is being you, it's bigger and that is 3. and that's the thing that you get to ensure that the, the kind of fish that is being captured by the buckets up. i'm not given a my husband has been using the new kind of mesh in his traps for 2 years now. and that, that idea by day you guys are behind it. if i hope i will be able to catch more fish in the future. so take better care of my family, my parents need that idea, missouri veda, l m, o one. but they are considering the challenges we now face. i also wonder if this dream will ever come true. i figure the scientists estimates that it will take up to 20 years for fish stocks to recover completely. but at least my children, my benefit in football,
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germany beat left is 71 in the final warm up game before the european championship, which starts on friday among the pick of the goals robin goes. and that is the opener with his 1st international strike. the 3rd came from thomas miller as he made his return to the side. manuel noah was beaten once, but otherwise had little to do on his 100 appearance. germany start there. euro campaign against france on june 15. and finally, heard of wild elephants have been con, taking a nap on their migration journey through southwestern china, the serene scenes are in sharp contrast. the havoc caused by the animals since they were 1st spotted in april. officials have scrambled to ensure a public safety as they run through populated areas and gobble crops, leaving a trail of destruction. so unclear wise, they set out on their track, which has captivated the public in china. forget just
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a quick reminder, the top story we're following for you here today on d. w. a news, former bosnian serb command rec, on lot edge will here today, a decision on his appeal against his genocide conviction for crimes committed during the 1990 s balkan complex. he was, or his role in this rubber, the massive air coming up next week. got our football magazine kick off for you with review and the last one is legacies. i'm terry martin. thanks. watch. the news. news. the news. the news
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season. the dw trapped in the clutches of human traffickers, me countless children, india are working as in house slave. their only chance is to be rescued in a raid and handed over to aid organizations which offer them education instead. the indian child plays 60 minutes on dw, ah, was a nico germany too many german pinnacle. why not learn with him w e learning course? clinicals vague, future wars he
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