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tv   Strater  Deutsche Welle  June 16, 2021 10:30pm-11:16pm CEST

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not an option. peace ma, i'm on and they are stuck in the spanish border area. alongside other young people there waiting for a chance that will probably never come. shattered dreams starts june 18th on d. w. the job widen and let me put in shook hands in. geneva today spent 3 hours behind closed doors and when their talks were over, both president said there had been no scare tactics, no hospitality, and apparently no great meeting of the minds either on cyber attacks against the us food and still says it was an us biden's message to him, don't let it happen again. and if it does well, that is the question still on answered tonight. i'm bringing from berlin. this is the day the
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i told president boot my agenda is not against russia. this doesn't mean we have to look into each of his eyes and where we live in friendship, not at all. i don't think he's looking for a cold war or the united states. certainly said, did both sides show the willingness to understand one another and find ways to bring our positions close together. by the bottom line is i told president that we need to have some basic rules of the road. every call abide by. i did what i came to do also coming up one year ago, new york was a pandemic nightmare and the worst hit in america today. it's almost a different world as the governor announced corona by res, restrictions are now history. we're no longer just surviving. when i didn't
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r hayes afraid to go, wow, i didn't know everything that we can say. life is not about survival. life is about how you doing what our viewers on p b s in the united states into all of you around the world. welcome. we begin the day with the meeting of 2 presidents and the rest of us wishing that. we could have been a fly on the wall. today in geneva, switzerland, u. s. president joe biden and russian president vladimir putin came face to face on neutral territory in search of common ground. is that what they found? well, we really don't know. after 3 hours enclosed or discussions, both presidents in separate press conferences, reported there had been no ha, still of these, no threats beyond that. their accounts different than revealed to 2 presidents with many unresolved pensions, will go to geneva in just a moment. but 1st, this report on the most anticipated talks of the year a highly
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anticipated meeting against the backdrop of frosty relation kilobyte and vladimir putin succeeded in breaking the ice. the 2 leaders met for 3 hours in geneva, over several issues of contention and emerge with a hint at progress. we should be able to cooperate words in our mutual interest and where we have differences i want to president couldn't understand why i say what i say and why i do what i do and how will respond to specific kinds of actions that harm america's interest. among the issues by it and wanted russia to address what cyber attacks, something put in disagreed with. and when his american counterpart brought up human rights and the imprisonment of the russian opposition leader alexis of ami put and refused to mention the name of the man in question. i mean, he states, i think julia is now still a little shred,
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this person knew that he was violating russian law on that. but let me check so he should have recognized the whether twice convicted felon or the meeting. they did agree on nuclear arms control, and the 2 countries planned to hold further talks in future, put in suggested biden, with someone he could work with a step forward despite the huge gulf between them. i want to pull in our correspondent terry schultz. she is in geneva covering the summit for steven. can you, terry, you know, based on what the president said in their press conferences today, you get the impression that biden and who didn't agreed to disagree and then threw some red lines in. was this a successful some i think both sides will say it was successful summit because as we heard, both presidents came out saying that the other had been professional and, and cordial. and in fact that there, there were some, some more similarities besides the fact that they agreed to continue talking on
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nuclear weapons and further arms. of course, in fact, that's something that was already agreed earlier in the biden administration. but they also gave the impression that they will continue talking also on this very, very critical issue of cyber attacks. now, it will remain to be seen whether russia will stop funding these attacks, perpetrating them in different ways. but this is something that president biden made clear. he is not willing, willing to let why he said that, although he didn't threaten russia, he made clear that the president knew that the u. s. has some pretty significant cyber capability that the phone. we know what the, the complaints of the americans are. do we know tonight what the us plans to do to address them if russia does not cooperate? president biting was asked about that specifically by more than one journalist and he's not going to give away the tactics that the u. s. might use. but he did say
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that if he could, he could tell that in the room where they had the wider discussions where they each had 5 a there. he said he could see it dawning on people in that room, but they understood that this would come back to hurt moscow economically, even even if it's not about reputation. he said they realize that for example, if the u. s, your supply is shut down again by cyber attacks that russia, one of the world's major fuel suppliers would be harmed as well. i heard someone say today's, this will be the one and only time that bite and gives president food and a good talking to. so what happens next? are we in a wait and see mode now? i think we are, and president biden said that himself, he said, we'll only know in 3 to 6 months. if any good comes out of this meeting. i think that we'll see quite quickly if, if moscow were to call off the cyber attacks, those happen so frequently that it would be, it would be very clear, very early if that was going to stop. but it will take some time to see if the,
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the goodwill shown after these meetings does play out in a variety of topics that were talked about on human rights. so that would be another key one for the united states and see a difference. terry, you were in helsinki, finland back in 2018 to cover the summit between fujen and then you as president, donald trump, we all remember that. so i'm, and i want you to compare that one with today's media. tell me what strikes you the most as maybe the biggest difference or just what you, me, your thoughts there isn't any way to compare this meeting. and not only did these 2 presidents hold their own press conferences, of course, so they weren't standing by each other. there was just none of the sort of silliness that dominated that press conference. they, they were sort of laughing president trump. of course, we got got a ball as, as a gift from, from president putin and, and tossed it into the audience. and of course, his handlers were all completely,
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you know, concerned that there's a listening device in that ball and you know, it was just, it was just also, i'm serious in a way. and the things that president trump said about not trusting us intelligence over president putin. i mean, that would never happen with president biden. there's no way to compare these 2 experiences and journalist now we're talking about substance, then we were just all shaking our heads and saying that was a circus. yeah, we remember those days that is for sure. we know now that the you, as president, he's wrapping up this whirlwind tour of europe, going back to the united states. there was the g 7 summit. there was something that nato has. the u. s. president succeeded insuring up unity and solidarity in the western alliances. i think he has brent and i was there in person at the nato summit's and you know, the u. s. e u meetings and at every stop allies were so pleased to meet with with president biden. and, you know, we may,
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as journalists have gotten tired of hearing him say, america is back, america will be there for you. but i assure you that the, the european partners did not. in fact, he sort of made a joke as he was heading into the meeting with are still live underlying and sure. all, michelle hey, aren't you sick of seeing me? yes, because it's spent the weekend with them at the g 7. and they said, oh no, president biden, we're very happy to be working with you. so i think that it was, it was self on the wounds of the last 4 years of the trump administration. and people weren't tired of hearing that and they'll be there will be more trust now in the transit atlantic relationship. thanks for this week. long visit by president biden. w series of covering the summit forces geneva switzerland. excellent work is always terry. thank you. you are enjoying now by michelle gil link. he is a member of the german buddhist talk that driven parliament from the sep party. he's also deputy chairman of the german russian parliamentary friendship group. it's good to have you back on the program mr. link. let me ask you as well, you as a german, as an, as a european. was this
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a successful summit and for whom what i think it was, as we heard right now, it was a visa professional summit. it was a very important that we had no circus, but we had a professional summit with no takers with foreign ministers. well prepared, and i'm pretty sure it's president biden. he addressed all the critical things that need to be addressed in private, one to one. quite the contrary, his predecessor, donald trump in helsinki, which was to us, european, the nightmare. whatever. i want you to take a listen to what the foreign policy chief said today about what europe has to do concerning its relationship with russia take. unless it is a union must become more robust. and we also need to finally step up because it isn't foreigners, not recently, he says, eastern partners,
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he is referring to ukraine. they are, does supporting your eastern neighbors. does it now include supporting nato membership for ukraine? is that a step that germany is going to stand behind? i think on the long run, that's the right way to go. but what is more important that we have a clear perspective for ukraine and i at ga, for having a membership perspective for the european union made her membership can be controversial. and, and so therefore, we would prefer very much and also my party, free democrats. we prefer much more thinking about the long term perspective for you crane also to join the european union. i think that's much more important. and we should address that when the u. s. president, when he began his tour of europe last week, you posted this tweet here. we want to pull up and show our viewers. you tweeted that today by begins his 1st tour of europe as us president.
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and we go further to the increasingly dangerous activities of russia in china aimed at weakening democracies, necessitate close cooperation with the united states of america. me ask you have those transatlantic ties? have they been strengthened by jo biden's visit? very clearly. yes. in the, in an ideal world, what we would need to see would, would like to see is a structured covenant dialogue between the u. s. and the you a, you on the one side and russia on the other side of permanent structural dialect. we are not there yet there, but the very fact that the u. s. president is visiting the european union and really taking the european union serious as an extra layer. that is really a great pro with an enormous program. but know that you have to live up to the u. s . expectations,
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and that means we need to be stronger. we need to speak with one voice. we need to be faster in decision making. we cannot afford anymore to have our complicated decision making. we really need to live up to the investment to abide and also now mate in the you clearly expect from us to be stronger and to speak with one voice and only then we can be partners in leadership. you know, the u. s. depends on the u. s on germany a lots and especially german chancellor angle americans and we know that she will be stepping down in september and with her leaving the european union, washington are going to lose a window to the kremlin. and she's even been called the put in whisper. how can that that loss if you will be, or the gap be filled when she's gone? well that's, that's the huge question. we have to answering the german national elections or the front runner right now, mr. lash at the griffin democratic candidate for championship. in the past, he was
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a little bit unclear sometimes about his rational position with the free democrats . we think that he will be much clearer, but therefore we invest in the future coalition because we are the party of transatlantic partnership. we invest very much as we democrats, traditionally in partnership with the united states. so if we will be in accordance with him, with mr. ashlee, we will make sure better transatlantic cars will be really on the prom page of our relation and, but we also expect the course president biden to continue to his engagement with you. but in order to happen that to happen, we that you also need to have the coverage really need to speak with one voice. michelle gave link a member of the board to start with the f d p and deputy chairman of the german russian parliamentary friendship group. mister link. it was good talking with you. we appreciate your time and your insights tonight. thank you. thank you. have any
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the we go to peruse now where the socialist candidate pedro castillo, has claimed victory in the country's presidential election. he ended the lengthy vote count just 44000 ahead of his right. we rival kofuji more. that's a wafer thin margin of 50 point one percent to do g mores 49.9 percent. she has pledge to fight this outcome. election authorities had not yet formerly confirmed the result speaking 9 days after the poker studio called on authorities to declare him the winner. oh, i call upon the electoral authorities once and for all stopped dragging this and keeping the peruvian people in anxiety and respect the popular will of his country. but custio's rightly rival clinicals. would you, maurice, as the election has not been called yet. and once tens of thousands of ballads
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a know i know today, one result has come out. yes, the result from the very tally. but the most important thing is the evaluation of the ballot boxes. the evaluation of the balance by the national jury of election. the appeal valid let's bring in sydney and take note of british journalists based in lima. it's good to have you on the program cargo for more. there she's calling for votes to be a no. has she provided any evidence? and is there any likelihood likelihood of the national jury of elections doing what she wants so she provided. busy any credible evidence that been barriers, she cited that it's post on social media, things like that. in one case, she claimed that there must have been fraud because 3 people walk, you know,
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one of the violence stations in the, at the same name, which somehow she suggest it made them relatives. and therefore they went together carrying out fraud. they're actually not that it's, it's, it's a very common name. those. the indigenous community did not follow the and it's also important to understand the international election of including from the organization of american states. so said they found no significant irregularities and appraise the transparency of the way the lectures were being held regarding whether or not claims who are tempered throughout these phones to be successful. this is uncharted territory for peru in the last election 2016. the maury also mary laws and she also refused to accept the results. but she didn't launch this blizzard of legal challenges to some of the folks that she is doing now various election next boats. and lawyers say the challenges without marriage will have to
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have all the little already to saw him. because do you is definitely a different kind of present presidential candidate compared to those who have come before him. his critics more that his governing will be a leftist disaster. but others say that he's signally that he will hug the center more and more. what do you see? so he ran on a loan that was explicitly openly marxist. and he's seems to think that way is, is a democracy that gives you an idea where he's coming from. however, in the 1st round. and then during the 2nd round, he's been trying to moderate his positions. i think so govern. he will need to move towards the setting. so i don't think you'll ever be a centrist, but he may be a more, more random. okay,
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to me and people joining us tonight from lima for me. we appreciate your time in your insights tonight. thank you. i do, the life is about seeing people life is about loving life is about celebrating life is about enjoying life is about interacting. and now we get back to living in life the state mandates that have proven right and correct. and brought us through this pandemic all relaxed as of today effective immediately. that was the governor in 3 cor mode there. and now seeing the easy, many of its remaining social distances rules as the state passed, a significant milestone 70 percent of adults in new york. and received at least one dose of a corner binders vaccine across the state. fireworks lit up the sky and celebration
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and to honor essential workers. but summer urging caution. only 50 percent have had 2 shots and epidemiologist say that new more infectious variance could still lead to super spreading events. for more on the opening up, i'm going to welcome back to the show the to me, i'll just jennifer warner. she's a professor at the university of delaware just for it's good to see you again. how do you feel as an epidemiologist? we've got new york, california both reopening. is this the right thing to do, or is it too early? they make a very good point in the introduction. we're in a race against delta in the us because there's a reduction in the vaccine effectiveness. it's only about 15 to 20 percent effective after the 1st dose. so we need people to be fully vaccinated. so that's the 2nd dose of an m r and a vaccine. and that 2 week additional period to get the advocacy back up where we
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expected it and where is the efficacy if people are completely vaccinated and then they come into contact with a delta very, it looks like it's somewhere between 70 and 95 percent for hospitalization. very effective and so, but the reason that we're seeing about 60 percent of the virus circulating in the u . k. and a growing percentage in the us is that large group of people who've only gotten one vaccine, or haven't made the period of the 2 weeks. because frankly younger people haven't been eligible for that long in the us. the delta v areas, it has forced the british to postpone their opening up for another month. now they're going to be waiting until mid july to lift all the restrictions. and they're going to take that time to get more people vaccinated. that's really not an option right now in the united states. is it,
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does it make the united states actually more fertile ground, if you will, for this variant than the u. k? because the u. s. can't shut down again or it won't shut down again. yeah, i think the genie is out of the bottle. 7 on that we have taken too many actions that will be difficult to walk back. and we actually have relatively high rates of infection among the unvaccinated in the us, with surges along unvaccinated and several states that are equivalent to the rate that we were seeing in the winter surge among the population. so if you're an on vaccinated american, this is particularly probably the most carry time for you. but it's difficult for people to see that because we're relaxing. a lot of the restriction will do is they're being communicated. you know, i was just in the united states the last 2 weeks and i was struck by the fact that once you leave the airport,
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you almost see no one wearing face mask anymore. are people being told that if you're not vaccinated, the virus is still there waiting to infect you? i think that they are, but we have a problem in the way that we're reporting the data. again, we're, we're not reporting the rate of cases only among the on vaccinated, which is what we should be doing. and we're also clean coming into summer with a lot of fatigue from toby. and so people. 7 are seeing the opportunity to change their behavior without considering that we're still very much in the, in the numbers that we have to say in the united states are very good when we're talking about the number of people who have had both shots. when you add that to the number of people who recovered from code 19, can we say adding those 2 together gives us a good shot at her community. are we at that level yet?
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so we've talked about an inflection point which would be a calculation that would add those 2 together. and that's another risk with the delta variance. we don't have a good understanding how much a fire inspection will protect someone from infection with adults variance. we really only understand how much they can be protected with a full vaccination, and that's why we've got to push hard to continue to get people vaccinated in the us and get them to complete that vaccination schedule so that they will have that good level of protection that's also a point that has to be communicated. if you have hand curb in 1900 and recovered, you may have antibodies, you may have protection, but we don't know what you're protected against the delta variance. is that correct? exactly. yeah, we're, you know, we've lived it. we've had studies in lab, but we haven't, don't have enough evidence from real world population to know about that yet. all right, jennifer horny as always,
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we appreciate your time and your insights. thank you and stay safe for the day is almost done. the conversation continues online. you'll find us on twitter either w news. you can follow me at brent golf t v. and remember whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day. i'll leave you now and some images of the fireworks display in new york. we'll see tomorrow. the screens and the here. do you know
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the me. ah, excuse me. this is the w news line from berlin after 3 hours a face to face, talk to the u. s. and russian president agree to disagree and then stop by and why do we approach and say there longer weighted summit was positive and they fledged to work together. but the tensions the divisions, they remain also coming up tonight. israel launches airstrikes in garza, in retaliation for cross border incendiary balloon, attacked by palestinians is the ceasefire. now endanger and germany's match against france's european football championships. 2 people are injured when
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a greenpeace goes frighteningly wrong. the i bring golf, it's good to have you with us. the president of the united states and russia emerged today from their summit with the messaging and obvious difference is joe biden called the nearly 4 hours and talked good and positive. vladimir putin said that they were fruitful with no ha, still the beyond that their accounts differed and revealed in 2 leaders with many unresolved attentions. a highly anticipated meeting against a backdrop of frosty relations. joe biden and vladimir putin succeeded in breaking the ice. the 2 leaders met for 3 hours in geneva, over several issues of contention and emerge with
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a hint at progress. we should be able to cooperate words in our mutual interest and where we have differences. i want to president put and understand why i say what i say, and why i do what i do. and how will respond, especially to specific kinds of actions that harm america's interest. among the issues bite in one said, russia to address with cyber attacks, something putin disagreed with. and when his american counterpart brought up human rights and the imprisonment of russian opposition leader, alexia vonnie, put and refused to mention the name of the man in question. i mean, we are julia that this person, he was violating russian law. you should have recognized base as a twice convicted felon with me. they did agree on nuclear arms control and plan to hold future talks. putin suggested bite and with someone he could work with a step forward despite the huge gulf between them. let's take the story corps
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monetary shows she is in geneva, switzerland, and that some 4th night going to be to you carry. i'm just listening to the russian president there, read these were very positive, almost flattering words for joe biden, and joe biden also read what he said was overwhelmingly positive about the russian president. what do we make of this positive spin that both presidents gave today after their talk? i would agree with you. brandt. i think actually president putin was even more complimentary of jo bite and then the other way around. and i think that what came out of the meeting is that both men were eager to show that they were professional and not emotional about the situation, and that they wanted some productive results. now, neither of them got into much detail about the subjects on which they agreed to discuss further, but simply the fact that they came out of the meeting thing. there was some room to work on issues that are so contentious like cyber, for example,
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that is considered progress in itself. and we know that the presidents of the u. s . wanted to sit there being called red lines in terms of things such as cyber attacks. do we know though it has the president, has he articulate what the united states will do if the cyber attacks continue to happen? and if they are, if they continue to come from russia, not in any specific way. and of course, any strategists would tell you that no one is going to give their adversary in advance any clues about how they would respond. but what president biden did say, in very clear words, was that russia knows that the u. s. itself has significant cyber capability, and that he made clear the u. s. would respond if these attacks continued. of course, president putin denied any responsibility for the attacks that have been traced back to russia. time and again, but president biden gave
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a very interesting description. he said that it was clear to him that some of the people in the room on the russian side, soon during this discussion, were understanding that this could come back to hurt moscow as well. if for example, you triple the fuel supply in the united states who's a major fuel supplier in the world, russia. so he said that that, that was dawning on people as they sat in the room today. i was wondering the fact that this summer has taken place, the fact that the boards have been so positive coming from you as president biden, is this an attempt by the us to give the russian president the respects that we hear so many times that let me put in what he wants to be treated like a global power and respected like when it was this today. by doing that, you remember that that president putin said early in the press conference. well, how often do you get 2 hours with someone like this?
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and he was referring to the very rapt attention that president biden was paid to him. so i think he did feel treated with respect. and president biden is a foreign policy professional. he knows these issues himself. he doesn't need aids to tell them. so i think that president putin who is himself a shrewd, a shrewd negotiator, probably felt that, you know, this was a worthy match for him in discussion and in policy. and i think that, yeah, he, he appreciated that. all righty w series shields there in geneva will be checking in with you on the day as our coverage continues. jerry, thank you or let's take a look now on some of the other stories that are making headlines around the world . these socialists candidate petro castillo, has claimed victory and peruse presidential election. he ended the least, the vote count 44000 headed his right wing rival, because the more she has pledged to fight that result, lation authorities have not yet formerly announced the when at least 60 police have
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been injured in wyoming, at one of berlin's last remaining squats authorities as a squatter's live barricades and fire and rain stones and fire crackers on police ahead of a disputed safety check of the building that you see there on reagan straw here in berlin is among the many that were occupied after the fall of the berlin wall north korean leader kim jong and has more into possible food shortages at a meeting at his ruling workers. pardon? he blamed what he called the tense food situation on the corona virus pandemic. and on last year's ty, foods, him urged party officials to try and find ways of boosting farm production. india iconic. taj mahal has reopened after 2 months of being close to the public. the top tourist attraction was shut down when a 2nd way. the corona virus infection swept the country. infections had declined the country in recent weeks. the u. s. carrier self with airline has been trying to restore normal operations after a computer problem led to the cancellation of more than 500 flights and delayed
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1300 others. the disruptions affected about half of southwest flights on tuesday, and airlines spokesman said a cyber attack was not suspected as the call is really as already say palestinian militants in gaza are still launching. incendiary balloons at israel a day after israel. the airstrikes hit gaza in retaliation for those attacks. the continuing violence is raising fears of a relapse into the mass rocket attacks and air strikes of last month. a ceasefire has been in place since may 21st. there strikes in gather less than a month after a cease fire and the latest round of conflict here tension was in the air in jerusalem throughout the day leading up to the air strikes in east jerusalem. police cleared the streets and arrested palestinians, while ultra nationalists and right wingers gathered near the damascus gate to mark
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the anniversary of what israel called the unification of the city. in 1967. protestors felt provoked by the marchers. the we came here to protect our lands and to show them its ours and they will not take it, no matter what happens. god willing palestine will be free. in gather militants prepared their response to the right wing israeli rally the well, not that hot. we have been launching fire balloons toward the gaza border all day as a response to the marches that the settlers intend to carry out. near the locks the mosque and the damascus gate all over the moon. the balloon attacks triggered as swift response from israel's military. who bomb sites in to cities in the gaza strip? no casualties were reported from the strikes. later on wednesday,
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a palestinian woman was shot dead in the west bank after 2 tried to attack a group of israeli soldiers. it's been a testing 24 hours, but the next day it will show how committed both sides are to avoiding another war . was it a reckless p r, stunt or a climate awareness campaign? on the front and the wrong, greenpeace per jester came within inches of crashing his propelled paragliding craft into the ground shortly before kickoff that tuesdays game between germany and france. watch this video, you'll see what almost half the german activist was gliding into the open room stadium in unit. when his craft collided with wire supporting an overhead camera, he then lost control sitting players and spectators running for cover before crash landing on the pitch at least 2 people were injured. next merrill d w sports. he shot that mobile phone video inside the stadium. it has since been viewed 4 and a half 1000000 times max talked to us earlier about what he saw. well,
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it was real. i've never seen anything quite like it anywhere. really. especially a football match. i was just making my way to my seat, sat down, saw this, this man flying overhead and dropping a bowl, which we now know had the v w logo with oil covered on it and the words kick out oil on it onto the pitch. i initially thought this was some sort of you a for stunt to bring the match ball onto the pitch until he got very close to those wires. now i was there recently with a camera man who was flying a drone there and we noticed the wise and actually thought this quite dangerous. we need to be clear of that. he obviously either didn't know they were there or thought he could dodge them. we have heard the plan wasn't to land on the page, but he came about 10 meters in front of me, clipping some equipment, and also some people there, as he ripped his propeller off his back. and it was very surreal. a very dangerous and a real scary moment. but until a little while later, i still thought it was some sort of a stunt gone wrong. next mail, the report from unique on the page of the european championships. italy are looking
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like a team to reckon with after a convincing whenever switzerland at least 2nd victory. now in the group stage in rome, one will look at tele, scored twice for the home team. and it'll be a short themselves of advancing to the round of 6 tea fans round enforce on the streets and p. offices of rome to cheer on italy during that match with switzerland, their reactions to the, to go from manuel until he tell the whole story. just look at that. italy did even qualify for the last one. cups of expectations are huge for these euros. and so far so good with the zurich, looking like one of the best teams in the turn. well, as if at themselves in position to advance to the euro, spinal 16 thanks to win over turkey, garrett bell was instrumental despite badly missing on the penalty. he assisted on aaron ramsey's 1st half goal, and then on another with seconds left in the match, as well as claimed the victory. the 1st of today's matches all surprising qualify
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or finland up against russia in st. petersburg rushes, alexa marin, to manage the memorable go leap in the 1st half russia held onto when you see the score right there. one mill, tennis in roger federer cars crushed out of the hollow open here in germany in the quarter finals for the 1st time. swiss legend one the 1st set against felix. oh yea allah has seen. but then as you see, the young canadian rallied back to stuns that over by winning the next 2 sets. 39 year old federal as one a record 10 tivitz in hop. and don't forget, you can always get the w news on the go to download from our app from google play or from the app store that gives you access to all the latest news from around the world as well as push notifications for any breaking news and if you're a part of the store, you can also use that e w app. it's in this photos and videos to show us what's happening. you want you
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to w news, her berlin w business is up next with steven beardsley. but 1st, i think we're going to show you some pictures of new york where today they lifted all of their corona virus restrictions, no more social distancing. rules. take a look. the thing to do with the tape is like, how do you hear
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me? i'm agreeing. do you feel worried about the planet? i'm the host of the on the green fence. to me it's clear. we need to join me for the size of the green transformations for me, for you, for the plan. imagine how many portion of her now in the world.

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