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tv   Global 3000  Deutsche Welle  June 30, 2021 5:03pm-5:31pm CEST

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the across the channel, the english fans are in the state of ecstasy, despite elia doubts of catch goth southgate structure g. i say. so i thought i know on, on i thought, you know, 11 might be tight penalty down. we want to know, know if you minutes could not believe it. thank you. but before it comes, the english team has to go on the road and is now off to the dangerous moment for us with a warmth of success. and this feeling, you know, around the country that we've only got to turn up to when the thing,
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and we know it's going to be an immense challenge from here on well, police tried to disperse the cheering crowds. the magic is far from over. the last germany also marks the end of us lives can be as national team coach. he's been in charge of 2006, and when the 2014 world cup in brazil, for the 2018 world cup campaign in russia marked and low point, germany were knocked out in the group stage. as far as last night, if he goes live was clear about where the buck stops, district and mine off until i take full responsibility for and walton of course, i take responsibility as well for being one event this early without any if and, but also to the home and of course is going to take some time to process and digest this disappointment and us for instance, you're long
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a yaga. bob was 15 feet in this for very long years. wonderful moment. well, but with a fresh disappointment when to be looking at him and some of the players need be with us in the germany national seem for the come. some of them have a very bright future or decent forget right. and hopefully they will. but they are all hoping for, and we certainly wish that. and i, i wish this times the flick my success all the very best and on many successes mine had slipped by him and my heart was continues to beat black red gold . let's get more on the end of you. i came the rain of we're joined now by fallon, still in the munich and not to the former goalkeeper. he's currently supporting director of us team. st. louis and pundits are all things german football welcome to dw. so we see that yogi live something of a fixture, german football. how big
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a deal is it that he's now going? i think it's best if it's the end of an era, you know, 15 years in charge of the german national team, it's don't like an eternity. and overall, i think, yeah, i mean, people will look positive at the 15 years and you will live and always be a legend. that's what you're saying. you start, people will positively tell you what, what would you pick out as the highlights of is a time i think you really need to split that. i mean, when he took over, you know, it was like a very young team, very successful. and that you're able to talk was obviously very the bulk of 2014. in brazil, he always managed to put the german d always in the semi finals, but, and i think these are the big but when i look at the woke up 2018 and also now is this euro somehow the shine has gone and it didn't really work out anymore and i
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think it is now the day when you have to make the cut when you have to look forward for fresh blood for, for something new. and overall, i think you always remember being a great manager and being a loyal company manager. right. and that fresh blood comes in the form of hands, the flake who you know from your time together. oftentimes, what do you think of the best challenges of the biggest challenges facing him? yeah, no, honey, very well. it's a good friend of mine and i think he's the perfect match. really forward position. i think the big challenges that he comes into a team though, which is quite settled. there is plenty of older players. there is plenty of players which probably will retire or maybe should retire and for him to make the call very early. so it's quite a difficult challenge. i think for him it's important that he 1st analyzes looks what he wants to do. do they make a very big cut to make
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a smaller cut step by step? i think that the biggest challenge, yes, but i'm saying he again, i think he's the perfect match because he knows. busy the german football very well as a manager by really but older as louis assistant during the welcome grading 2040. ok. so what would you like to see your love do next? well, i think he makes a nice holiday. no, i think you deserve that. i really don't know, but for some feeling he told me that he will take over gonna national team having been 15 years, not in club football and only coaching a national team. it's something which is pretty pretty thing you get used to. so i see him taking over another national team, whatever that will be. i don't know, definitely not immediately. i think he will take a certain time off to, to really get his thoughts down to, to reflect the last 15 years. and then he will be ready for a new challenge. well, isn't it? thank you for joining us. it looks looks fine, and she'll the last german soldiers stationed in
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afghanistan have arrived home, the latest step in the faith international withdrawal from the war to nation. the medicine mission has been germany's most expensive and deadliest since world war 2 was 150000 german soldiers of surfing gun. he's done over 20 years and 59 of them lost their lives. many afghans and i worried about the return of the taliban, and tara group happens next in their home like it should stay under patches. mon heads d, w that research and investigation team she's reported from afghanistan and knows the country well. welcome xandra. this true withdrawal came earlier than expected. what prompted the decision? frankly, it was joe biden, the youth president announcing the unconditional withdrawal of all nature troops on april 14th. and then everything went so fast. i mean, us to have nearly all pulled out and that put
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a lot of pressure on all other nato forces including germany, which had to accelerate their own withdrawal pro. so because they simply rely on american fire power as much as on american app. oh, and if that's not there, then they can't see them. so as the international truth withdraw then the presumption, i suppose to be that they're leaving behind the better than a better, better situation than when they arrived on the african government and the afghan army, are they strong enough to hold off the the taliban without nato troops? at the moment i find that hard to believe because at the moment what we see is the tally bon being and then nearly country wide, offensive, rapidly advancing on provincial capital like condos and the north, which for 10 years was city where germany had its 2nd block of space and gone is done. and if you look at the situation at the moment, there's just more bloodshed, more taro, more fighting, more civilian casualties. so,
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and increasing insight within the, within the african government as well. so it's not like they are all united in the fight against the taliban. so the picture at the moment is rather bleak, i would say. and what is the picture for those afghans who works with nature forces who work with german forces? is there any that, is there any coverage support from germany for them? i mean, today the german foreign office set that they have issue about 2400 ethos for local stuff and immediate family. but of course, there are many more people who worked for the german forces and the past 2 decades . and it's a bureaucratic castle because they have to prove that they are threatened. and if they can prove that and get a visa, they will have to pay for all expenses themselves, which is road travel, travel. so it's not as simple. and the taliban are issuing ensure assurances like
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we won't attack you. but we have seen in the past that they have court this locust off in fidel hirelings of the invaders, and have committed atrocities including murder. ok, so there's a real fear. all right, well what we'll do now is we'll look back at the 20 year gym and deployment in afghanistan and see, look at the progress that has been made and bringing democracy and stability to the country. for peter's feedback, as again, as dan is a home away from home for more than 30 years, he and his wife and a marine have been 8 workers. they're teaching children how to read and write and do math. both are disappointed with the international community's achievements. the events, it's in 1000000000 reconstruction short has begun street level fungus and they should have put an administration in place and kept
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a close eye on what they did with all the funding. none of that was checked. they just kept throwing money at it. and when things didn't work out, they just threw me warm. ms. gordon vincent closed clocked in mine for now was an operation, isn't the, should it say children still don't learn enough in school? partly because international partners made mistakes on an organizational level to be home figure ball. they built a lot sure. they built lots of schools that no one cared what was happening inside them. it was all very rudimentary punched into despite debate about whether the intervention of the international community was worthwhile. there have been marked improvements, especially in education unesco, say the number of kids enrolling in schools has risen clearly. but the education gap between rural and urban areas remains to be. there has been considerable progress at primary school level. estimated that half of all afghans
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can now read and write down with different 20 years ago. once again, the same goes for educating girls in the 1900 ninety's under the taliban, they got no education at all. when women were completely oppressed under the taliban, their situation remains precarious, but they have gained some rights. they can vote, joined political movements and go into business law, but state level corruption remains endemic. transparency, international ranks afghanistan as one of the world, most corrupt countries. one reason why aid money doesn't always reach its intended destination. we have to acknowledge that the international community was not capable of laying down rules on how the money was to be spent. often, if you all could give him the income never got around to introducing good governance or tackling corruption. you think you will to answer him hope, jones,
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mackenzie. the security situation remains dramatic. now the taliban is pushing to get back into power. already has has the country under his control. that's why on a marie and peters critic expect the situation in afghanistan to stay just as it's always been extremely unstable, was under peasants min. so still with a sandra. what was your assessment? what i have nato achieved over the last 20 years? it's really a very black and white picture, so there's a lot of black but also shades of gray and some white in terms of reconstruction. there are more hospitals, more ro, it's more school with more universities. i mean cobb will used to be a pile of rubble, you know,
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before the us troops and it's nato allies moved in today. it's rather modern city reconnected to the world. but the biggest achievement, which would have been peace, security less tara, and stay the government stable country. none of that has been achieved. and frankly, we don't know right now if the constitution a democratic constitution with inch rind rights like press freedom and equality. if that will survive the onslaught, which is happening at the moment, alongside the withdrawal of international troops. ok, good to talk to you. thank you for joining us. sandra is under pettus. an extreme heat wave sweeping across west and canada is causing dozens of death and breaking records. as temperatures hit 49 degrees celsius. cooling centers have been set up to give people some rest bite, but the sweltering heat is forecast to continue. prolonged, dangerous, and historic heat wave engulfing western canada has already caused dozens of death
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. people are being encouraged to go to cooling centers to combat the extreme heat. it's just so bearable. it's impossible to be out. so never seen anything like this . i hope it never becomes like this. her again, it's not really pleasant. this is too much too much summer for us here. but some are enjoying being outdoors like think hoover but it's an interesting experience. yeah. the nice kidding outside, but basically been consuming gallons of water the whole time. not surprising with temperature is exceeding 45 degrees in some places and feeling close to 50 degrees in others because of the human conditions. some are taking to the water to cool down, while others are helping the vulnerable by distributing food and drink to provide relief. officials point to this being part of a wider problem. in this instance, i think the, the big lesson coming out of the past number of days is that the climate crisis is
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not a fiction. that is absolutely real. and if you look, i had a briefing from the wildfire service yesterday and again today the entire west coast of north america from baja to alaska is red hot. this is not a british columbia problem. it's not a candidate problem. it is a global challenge and we all need to have citizens of the world coming together. school and college classes have been cancelled in british columbia, which means more playtime. perhaps. that extreme heat and the search, the relief looks like a climate emergency problem that just isn't going away. okay, hear some of the stories making news around the world. at least 7 migrants, including of pregnant woman, have drowned off the coast of italy after their boat capsized. because got this 46 people were brought to shore, but around kind of still missing goods believe who has set often to museum of
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korean leader kim jong own. has criticized his own party for failures in dealing with the corona virus. pandemic state media is reporting a grave incident that has given no further detail. north korea has no officially confirmed cases of covered 90 by the more russian president vladimir putin is confirmed that he has had the subordinate v corona virus vaccine. he got his 1st shot in march and the 2nd a month later, incredibly, i didn't disclose at the time which vaccine i've been to use to you. but it's a to the nation of madagascar which is paying a high price for climate change for which it has done little to cause the worst droughts in 40 years of thousands in the indian ocean state. on the brink of starvation, aid organizations say more has to be done to prevent a humanitarian disaster from becoming even worse. the. this was one spare time farmland, but now it's
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a desert. years of drought have destroyed nearly all of a crops here. strong wind sweeping away the soul of n sandstorms covering what's left entire communities. on the brink of starvation, people here have resorted to eating whatever they can find. it took me out in the morning. i prepared this plate of insects and if i clean them the best i can without any water damage for 8 months, my children and i have been eating the land every day that we have nothing else to eat. and no rain to grow cropped on the cellphone. the people here on the front line of the global climate crisis, madagascar hardly any greenhouse gases, but it's one of the worst victims of climate change. 2 we're facing the worst drought in over 40 years. this is an area where people depend on their own agriculture, home grown, sho, meals, small holder farmers. this is how they lived down here,
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but with drought back to back to back. people can't survive. it's like, love, drought is tearing families apart. these 2 boys orphaned after their mother died of hunger. they've been taken in by another family, but severely mound tuition and they're still not getting enough to is alpha. when we have nothing left, not that their mother is dead, not and my husband said, what do you want me to say? our life centers around looking or can just leave us survive? this is linda. somebody had nearly a 1000000 people in of, in madagascar, depend on food aid. some people he walked out was to get help. but not everyone is healthy enough to make a long journey. have organizations that more be done to help my task or food to feed the hungry mouth and finally action on climate change.
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let's take a look at this river. we know man goni whose deputy country director of the human world food program. so madagascar, it joins us from the capital and to another brief of a welcome to the w, and tell us about the sort of aid that you're providing to these desperate people. there was a program jointly with the government, with the major actors. we have been assisting people in need in the south of the country since october, november last year. as mentioned, what we have done so far has not managed to reverse the food security and attrition trends. the situation keeps deteriorating, especially live all once again. and last harvest in 2021. right. so does that mean that you, you, you need more aid in order to get on top of this? or is this just a situation that is so bad? you count we have been reaching people when attrition
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programs with general. so distributions. imagine people who are in left with nothing, we're talking about 100 a 1000 people. so ford is absolutely necessary looking ahead because of the last part of the season, which is behind the corner. we need additional farther contributions. now, because madagascar being and not and i'm the lead times for contributions, resources to translate into fraud on the ground correspond to wrong 3 to 4 months. the reason why looking at the lean season, starting in september each year, we need contributions. now if we are to step up our programs and reach more people, especially between september and march of 2020 to at the end of the season. understood. so what you're doing is essentially this is a sticking plaster on
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a to her refill situation. climate change, of course has now happened, and even if urgent action is taken, it's hard to escape the idea that these droughts will happen next year, the year after that and continue for generations. madagascar now is stuck in that cycle, isn't it? it is, it is that this part of the country, the southern part of the country, is chronically affected by by droughts, sometimes by slots as well. this is the consequence of climate change. so we need to save lives. we need to support the people at the same time in power. no with the government, with the after actors, we need to look at longer term solution. probably the key one being providing people communities with access to walter. this is probably the most important intervention is sort of a game changer at our efforts in depth,
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st. ready. but we have to scale up and bring them to scale for them to be able to make a difference. a real difference. i wonder if the problem isn't even bigger than that. i wonder if we are not reaching a point where so too much damage has been done. so much damage that perhaps some places have become simply uninhabitable for humans. it might be the case, but this is probably not the question that the people live in the south are asking themselves. so they are expecting, you know, and they are looking for ways to survive and also ways to keep leaving where they're, where they were born. so we have a sort of at the executive director has said we have a sort of more obligation to support those people who have done nothing to contribute to climate change. but they are however, being the highest consequence of that phenomenon. understood. thank you so much for
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joining us. so we know man governing from the wilson program. pleasure. thank you. the i was not a sports section with tennis. 3 williams dreams of equaling margaret courts. grand slam record of 24 ended in tears as she retired. injured from wimbledon, williams was waiting in the opening round notch against alexandra bitch of banners . when she fell and hurt and leading her to, you can see that the american waves to the center court crowd in another dramatic minutes a time limit. and when roger federer qualified for the 2nd round, after his opponent, also suffered an injury. the swiss, at the top of the screen, survived a major school when the address and manner reno pushed him own away. the match
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would have gone to a decisive effect, but not arena, slipped openly. and it's a did you up to date more world news at the top of the next here on the remaining journaling, looking at the future of the green economy. ah, the the the news, the news
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the, the the green, sustainable and trending the many companies are rushing for green solutions because they're popular with the customers. but just how green are these solutions made in
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germany. oh yeah. yeah, yes, we can handle them and we bring you to a mac or and you've never had to have before the price just so what, what is it going to is medical really what rooms and walk back to people who follow along the way. admirers and critics alike, and how is the world's most powerful woman shaking her leg is showing us the macros . last no, it feels jewish like that's what from producer owner and journalist cuban money are
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exploring, building into history and the present. nice. it's. i would never have thought that judaism could be lives. i believe it's jewish in europe. the 2 port documentary starts july 5th on d w. i ah, ah me. if there is one color that's the embodiment of today's zeitgeist, it is green. green stands for lush, chemical, free grasslands, for emissions, free mobility, and for a future in a healthy climate. it is no wonder sustainability has become
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a top issue for companies. but are these projects profit.

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