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tv   Made in Germany  Deutsche Welle  March 2, 2022 4:30pm-5:00pm CET

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and on their free time to help people and to help them gets to another place and pull it away from, from, from the border town. there are many organizations here on site. well there we saw boy scouts hanging out, pizza, and some organizations even donating sim cards. for example, which is important because a lot of people come here with not really a place, not really a plan for their next steps. so convocation is really important for them. um, with that being said, this is also a place where some people get stranded because they have no idea what to do next. especially those who do not have any connections here in poland. we don't have any family or friends. so this place may be as good as any other for them. right. the opponent has previously been reluctant to taking refugees. affleck boys in syria and afghanistan for instance. so what's brought about there's a parent shift in policy and mindset. that's a very difficult question to answer on. i think this is the question i would have
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to ask the polish government tom a. but that being said, the polish prime minister mckesson gets he made an appearance today with the calipers and sha michelle. not far from here. at the america border crossing and he took the opportunity to address the polish people and said, quote, i thank you for opening your hearts and doors. and that is actually the case you. as i said already, a lot of polish people have tried to pitch and, and have offered transportation, had offered food donations, have often donating clothes and even taken in people here. right. but the situation in the past was very different. poland and hungary as another country. and a you were always very reluctant to take in people who are fleeing for more. this is a very different situation right now. but, but he was one of us. he said that would help to pull post government would now help anybody flee from ukraine without regardless of their background. all right,
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thank you for that mac state of the correspondent max and that near the polish ukrainian border all in russia invaded ukraine. it's 1st worried that cyber attack would wreak havoc, but that hasn't happened. and you cranes defense council says the number of cyber attacks has gone up significantly with hackers targeting critical infrastructure and the energy grid. but it's less than was expected. internet giant, like microsoft of also helped to repel attackers. meanwhile, hackers around the world, including the anonymous collective of declared cyber war on russia, undertaking aim at russian government networks that's bringing w's chief technology correspondent, janusz delco, welcome a yan or so how much of an impact have cyber operations? a had on this at warren ukraine. well, they have had an impact, but that impact has been much smaller than what many experts predicted. we have seen a number of coordinated attacks against ukrainian government websites,
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for example. and they have succeeded in sewing chaos to a certain degree. but when this war started about a week ago, many cyber experts warned that we would see major hacking attacks against critical infrastructure against the power grid. or that russia could disrupt internet access in ukraine, shut off all of ukraine on the internet. and you know, at least during the early days of this war, we have not seen that happening. but to be completely clear. that's the situation as of this hour. and it could change any minute. and what do you think that is or what, why haven't there been any major large scale cyber operations? it's a good question and the honest answer is, we don't know, but you know, there are some possible explanations. it could be that you know, that there were attacks that were thwarted by ukrainian authorities or by private companies which also play the really important role in this. and that we simply
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don't know about them. i mean, cyber operations are fought in the shadows. that's part of their nature. and when it comes to shutting down the internet in ukraine, i mean, the reality is that it's really not that easy to do that you would need actual physical access to certain infrastructure like intended exchange points. and we don't know if russia at this point has this kind of access, but at the end of the day, it's all speculation. we will hackers around the world have express solidarity with ukraine? so how is that playing out? it's true and actually the ukranian government itself has also called on people with cyber skills to launch cyber attacks against certain targets in russia. and we have seen a number of attacks against websites of the russian government over the last couple of days, for example. now, how much you know, could this help ukraine? these kind of cyber operations will not decide this war, but they do keep cyber experts in russia busy fighting bag. and there's also
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a certain psychological dimension, if you will. i mean, it's well known that russia has invested heavily in its cyber capacities over the last 1015 years as it was modernizing its military. and to see this kind of solidarity expressed by a cybersecurity experts by hackers around the world. also sends out a message to the people in ukraine who are in this field that well that they're not alone in this. thank you so much for that data of this chief technology correspondent, john ocean delco. the ukraine is home to thousands of international students, many of whom are trying to get out of the country. but some of them say they faced hostility from ukrainian border guards who blocked their exit. the w has been meeting some students from india who managed to make it her. these parents are waiting anxiously for flight, bringing their sons and daughters home from ukraine. it's been a tough week for them. brought that up in the past 3 or 4 days. we were very
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stressed, we couldn't eat properly when my wife was depressed. but now i am thanking the lord that my son is finally coming back home to his country lot by 21 year old plan. cheap. young mother is also here, excitedly waiting for her brother to return. she and her brother was separated at the ukrainian border and she made it back to india just the day before. she still shudders when she thinks of the time she spent at the border. there was no place to stand, no place to breathe. abby was suffocating, we were crying. we were fighting, we were shouting, we are doing everything. she describes the experience as hell as the flight land and passengers arrived grouchy spots. her brother those who have returned home consider themselves lucky. the situation is, what is it really, really bad? and like there are gun fighting's on jaws on people, nothing thing. they're losing their passports in that yours. those who arrived here
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to day have brought relief to their families. but thousands of fellow students are still stranded. like gentle folks who has not been able to get of light to india. he managed to cross the border into romania where he has been caught up in a sports complex. there's lots of the below. are you more than 200? 0 yeah. and there's lots of sensors here and he never says there's, there's like more than $200.00 plus i think this is and more slides on where the more sooner or more easier or more convenient. gentle also mentioned that the border guards are getting preferential treatment ukrainians from india. he is not the only one seen this. some students claim the what thresh at the border. some indian students have alleged hostility, harassment, and rates of them the boarded by the ukrainian security forces. they see that india decision to abstain from the u. n. war against russia could be the reason nursing
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that i turned it into the side. so between dish and your brain and your citizen. this is to us be opened the order. oh, to wonder do are 40 minister and on florida you're getting in folders. they're both still been older, but now their ordeal is over. they are glad to have each home safely. they are now hoping and praying for the safety of their friends, still stuck in ukraine or at the borders. the parents, meanwhile, are thrilled to have their children back, some welcoming them with hugs. others, videos. was the war in ukraine enters its 7th day. he is reminder of some of the latest developments russian forces are intensifying veritax on ukraine's main. cities and russian forces claim to have taken control of the port, city of harrison and ukraine's a south, a close to crimea, and ukrainian official disputes. the claim saying, fighting for the city is still ongoing. a father to the east,
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the port city of mario paul is under heavy attack of quoting the cities mer, the reuters news agency says russian forces are actively preventing civilians from leaving and that mario paused at water supply has been cut off ukraine. second city hockey is today being shelled again and kept men has warned that russia is gathering troops closer to the capitol. ukraine says dozens of civilians have been killed by russian ass writes over recent days. numb from shock. this woman sits just 2 meters away from a dead body. one of a number killed in russia, sustained attacks on hockey, ukraine, 2nd largest city, nazaburundi i to refill. we've been shown by russians. we are all scared me. why are you, why us regular people?
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russia has continued to bomb both residential areas and administrative buildings in the city. a local hospital has also been damaged, running late bloomer, brenda. we had injured people in the hospital. the basement served as a bomb shelter. people were hiding here from the shelling of the so called peacemakers. let's put it like that. ah, emergency services in the city of z? hi, tim year spent the early hours of wednesday morning trying to control raging fires . local authorities say a russian air strike hit the city, which is west of the capital cave. in care of itself, people are desperately trying to leave. they continue to flock to the central
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station as they try to escape the capital. on tuesday evening, a miss i'll hit the city's t v tower killing at least 5 people. it's our is close to bumping ya a memorial site to one of the biggest single massacres of jews during the holocaust . oh, this is a country under attack with no one really sure when or how it blend as 20 w correspondent, nick conley. who's in viv in weston ukraine. welcome, nick. let's start with his a 60 kilometer russian military, a convoy that was spotted yesterday advancing on cave. i was so lazy, sir. well, as with all these facts and figures, we're hearing this. we have to be quite careful because on the,
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on both sides there is a military attempt to kind of sell your respective line a successful. there are various kinds of government laws banning reporting on what's happening. but it is a big column of military hardware heading that way. it doesn't seem to make a whole lot of more progressive yesterday. actually in kind of hand to hand fighting the claims are doing very well. and there is an endless stream of images on social media or destroyed russian tanks. remember that the u. s. and the u. k. supplied and to check missiles, javelins and lowes more coming from other countries. now they are proving to be very, very successful in destroying that russian tanks and vehicles. so the russians seem to be moving over to a tactical, just aerial bombardment. the kinds of things where you can't, doesn't have much in the way of boxes to basically destroy civilian infrastructure, attack, heating facility and teaching plants, electricity, water, numerical, basically to make the military price so high that maybe that would then put
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pressure on you can government to capitulate, or at least to accommodate some of those pretty extraordinary aggressive demands that russia has made. that i'd like to talk about the possibility of further talks . next, we've had 6 hours a couple of days ago. the future looks in doubt so nick will hear from ukraine's foreign minister, dimitra cool labor, and then we'll come back to you. want to see i'm going to do size rushes, demands remain the same as putin announced in his address before the war started, where he basically declared the war on the new us. now we are ready for talks for diplomacy, but we are not ready to accept any russian ultimatums at all. when new talk will take place is on at the moment, lose in the, in the middle. ok, so next, commonly no one knows when these talks will resume, but people are bound to ask what can be achieved in good faith. if shells are still
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raining down on the country and indeed that's very hard to see what can be achieved . and i mean, just as a side note, it's kind of something that has gone down to under just but quite how it externally, this boy that those negotiations were happening in pre k, at the 50 next to the job on the power station that goes town. when no one is listen, 86, this is kind of fiction stuff and that's where on the border of ukraine and these totes going on. i think about the texas is about the side wanting to be accused of not being open for discussion. so the russians tend to be delegation to a better russian city, where the russian, where the remaining, sorry, i refuse to go, but others helping russia, ukraine. and they basically wanted to create senior pictures for the tv camera. the ukraine is open for debate. we are willing to negotiate, were willing to stop that, but the ukraine, the just being maximum amount and the other way around the ukraine. you have seen that engaging without much hope for progress, neither solid yet really willing to make major concessions. and you can put that
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kind of clear, why should ukraine now given to these pretty far reaching the month, it has to be room in russia to mon, the military. they should be great. you have to make pills totally vulnerable to russian attacks. and they do not cation whatever that means, the russians haven't made much attempt to explain that. basically, russia claiming that refrain democratically got injured. smith needs to be replaced without election by somebody about using as an a. can you give us an idea of what day to day life is like for people as this war rages? it really depends what part of the country you're in. so i'm hearing that even the far west, near the border with poland and the european. so europe, in union nato, so far they haven't been much in the way of attracts on places like leave and it is actually become a center for people fleeing from other parts of the country. transportation is filled with people arriving here, then trying to get into cause had to that polish border. 6 block. it's austin, operating some parts,
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daily life. but there you can see all of the menu and there is a few here before that we will play in it for the eastern, closer to the action and we were in and out of the cellar of aero star. and coming on a couple of hours the, you couldn't get a decent asleep because that will cause constantly, that anxiety and those foreign. but the re so much, much, much worse. get people from left without the trinity, with our people dying in the homes being, you know, coming, falling victim to bomb schooling on residential areas. now, a marable, basically, students surrounded both sides except the sea. people really wondering where they're going to get food, where they're going to get supplies. and as you, they're not report to meet the russians, not allowing your military court or not allowing civilian leave to think, getting extraordinary desperate that the people it isn't very big. i think the most important thing, but actually for now is that mobile phone networks also lots of people still have access to information and outside world is still able to check up on their family. their friends stuck down in the key of metro 100 meters below ground. they still
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have that sense of being able to see and find out what's going on around them. i think as soon as those mobile phone networks a blocked as is to be expected as everyone here expect stop. and i think that will really make people a lot more anxious, a lot more worried about their survival a day to day basis. ok, thank you for that. stay safe and nic conley and leave all the rest present. joe biden has vowed to make her russian president vladimir putin play a high price for what he has described as an unprovoked attack on ukraine. in his 1st state of the union address, mister bivens said western countries was standing united in the face of russian aggression and pledge the u. s. would defend its native allies. but he repeated his assertion that the us forces would not get involved in fighting in ukraine. which is not a nato member, is that he promised more sanctions against russia, targeting its oligarchy. and he closed u. s. s. base to rush aircraft. and here is some of what he had to say. put latest
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attack on ukraine was premeditated, and totally unprovoked. he rejected, repeated repeated efforts at diplomacy. he thought the worst of nato wouldn't respond. he thought i could divide it at home in this chamber in this nation. he thought he could divide us in europe as well, but put was wrong. we are ready, we are united and that's what we did. we stayed united. we prepared extensively and carefully. we spent months building coalitions of other freelance nations in europe . and the americans take for america to the asian and african continents to confront putin. like many of you, i spent countless hours unifying your european allies. we shared with the world in advance. what we knew put was planning and precisely how we would try to falsify and justify his aggression with tyson baka is from the german council on foreign
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relations. and we asked him about the messages u. s. president biden wanted to get across about russia's invasion. he talked about, 1st of all, spending countless hours, fortune unity within the alliance, which is true. you know, they have released call logs that show that there have been hundreds of calls at the top levels with european allies to build a trans atlantic unity around sanctions around cost around in, within nato. and he talked about this new a couple of new features of a u. s. policy. one being of the disclosure. deterrence through disclosure, you know, basically fighting russian disinformation and fall slag operations by releasing up what would have previously been classified intelligence. and the 2nd that he mentioned was a, you know, a broad array of sanctioned, specifically on russia. central bank, which has, as in his words, rendered this 650000000000 dollar war fund that russia has built over the past
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decade worthless. so he talked about a lot of these things that have happened in the past. now what can't didn't come and of course, those have all been quite remarkable. what didn't come with some major announcement about what comes next. he talked about closing russian aerospace that's already happened in europe. clearly, europe is a much more important space for air traffic from russia than, than the united states. he talked about going after oligarchy. again, most of their assets are in europe, and then he did talk about this effort to release a 60000000 barrels barrels of oil, 30000000 barrels of which will come from the united states. but it wasn't a hid. the kind of speech that you had from all of sholtes over the weekend that represented a c change in us policy. tyson barker from the german council on foreign relations . all german chancellor, olaf shoulds has been holding talks in israel, his 1st visit to the country since taking office. the trip, of course, has been overshadowed by the ukraine conflict, reeking alongside prime minister, left harvey bennett. mister shaw said germany and israel would attempt to bring
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russia and ukraine together for talks and ending the war. israel has been supporting ukrainian jews while also trying to maintain positive relations with the kremlin. some of what chance in a short sad to say let me call on every body once again to stop the fight immediately. attacks again, civil infrastructure and the civilian population need to lose stuff as did. and obviously, it is important to give diplomacy a great opportunity again and very grateful that both of us are going to do what we can and what is possible to make sure that talks between ukraine and russia will soon be long continued on the w trip. political editor, mckayla kirchner traveled with the, the german chancellor to israel, and sent us this assessment. of course, russia was at the top of the agenda during a visit, all sorts absolutely wanted to make. despite the crisis,
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he renewed that germany, any german government would stand at israel side, would guarantee it. security and security of jewish life. natalie bennett, the israeli prime minister, is still family sitting on the fence when it comes to taking sides, particularly to criticizing russia. he simply won't do that at this very point in time between germany and israel, there seems to be a new age of strategic thinking with both leaders announcing a strategic dialogue in the future that appears clearly connected to germany's turnaround on foreign and security policy. seeing a 100000000000 euro extra investment in germany's armed forces, we can't or ukrainians living abroad are watching with horror as war and gulf country. many have been involved in organizing peace rallies over recent days. d. w
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. as matter, one young ukraine who's helping to build support for their course and the german capital i 18 year old bladder is a ukranian living in berlin. she's a student and an actress. oh, some of lattice family remain trapped in a big ukrainian city. she does not want us to name to protect their safety. oh my god, because i did my father and sister, my whole family is still in ukraine. were very big family. so good to every one of my friends, my mother that hit on my my boyfriend. my current planner is part of a grassroots ukrainian initiative in berlin wisher walker. they have mobilized thousands of people for their course on sunday. hundreds of thousands turned out on
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to the streets of berlin, protesting the war. florida and her friends organized one of the rallies. oh, i, after their protests, the group meets in this bar to organize space. medusa is a hot spot for eastern europeans in berlin to a vehicle yates. your next rally needs to be planned, but it's also a place where everybody from the group can release their stress. eat good, that's good. oh. 6 together they follow the news and comfort each other. sometimes as i felt and maybe still feel guilty that i am not there. busy with them right now, sometimes i just want to crush everything in my home because if i can or do anything to save my save my parents and my friends, i'm just like i'm,
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we're doing this demonstrations, but still i feel so powerless. and yeah, i can do anything and i just want to be strong for them and i hope that would contribute and what they say. and what they do is the strong enough for them to feel it because of my strengths come from them. when i say that, i'm gonna come out and scream at the top of my lungs every day. and i'm going to stand until i know that the people i love are safe and i actually mean it. oh, okay. and so they sing for peace, for their friends, for their loved ones in ukraine. oh, and for that country, oh,
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d, w, 's, coverage of the russian invasion of ukraine continues around the clock here on d. w. i'll be back in a couple of minutes. of course, you can always check out the website that said the w dot comp, i've good ah, [000:00:00;00] with ah
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ah ah ah,
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. ah ah ah, this is dw line from bird lead more civilian casualties as russia steps of attacks on ukrainian cities, buildings in khaki bara blaze after renewed bombardment, and russia claims control of the port city of cason. so ukraine denies it saying that fighting that is continually also on the program as hundreds of thousands of flea some return to fight meter ukrainian wedding to risk everything to defend his

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