tv DW News - News Deutsche Welle March 5, 2022 7:00pm-7:16pm CET
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ah, ah ah, this is debbie news live from berlin evacuations if 2 ukrainian frontline cities are postponed, as russian forces resumed the offensive, after violating a temporary cease fire. and the bombing continues elsewhere with russian forces attempting to surround the capital, keith and its 2nd largest city parties. also coming up, we hear from some of the many ukrainian children fleeing the war. they bring with them trauma and fear, plus families torn apart with all ukrainian men between the ages of $18.60 required to stay and fight at their side, teenagers under 18,
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choosing to join the struggle. ah, i'm when bluecross welcome to the program, plans to evacuate civilians from 2 besieged cities in ukraine have been dealt a blow with russian troops continuing their shelling despite a temporary cease fire agreement. earlier moscow had announced a 5 hour halt. 2 attacks on bone of korea and the strategic port city of maria pulled residence there had been left without water and power after being surrounded by russian forces. meanwhile, protests have broken out in russian health. hassan ah, cosen is ukraine protests as gather in the 1st major city to full to russian forces, shouting in defiance of the soldiers occupying the city. many others on the
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move, an endless line of cars outside the capitol cave. as civilians attempts to escape the russian advance. for thousands more of forced to flee through the wreckage on foot, carrying only what they can throughout at all, a battle of narratives is being waged as both sides release images, claiming military victories. the russian ministry of defense shows what it coals destroyed ukrainian tanks, and russian arma advancing nick cave. while the ukraine released this video, apparently from a drone, allegedly showing a russian helicopter being shot down. this battle of claim and counter claim has seen both sides blame each other for the collapse of promised humanitarian corridors. after days of relentless shelling in the key port city of
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mario polled, russia said on saturday morning, it would stop firing and allow civilians to flee from the area to the nearby city of val enough go. but just hours later, ukraine's deputy prime minister complained that russia wasn't respecting the partial cease file. it was neither did that. they did, you know, from 9 o'clock in the morning on march 5th, we had a preliminary agreement that we will create to shipping italian corridors. long a vaca and mario full uncle. so i note the fact that russia has violated its agreements even with the red cross and has not complied with its commitments and shelling the city along the back. europe stillia. mr. val navarra, the russian foreign minister, instead accused ukrainian authorities of refusing to open humanitarian corridors out of mario uh, last year for those civilians still trapped in the city. the war of words is
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irrelevant compared to the real human cost of the ongoing conflict. a boy just 18 months old. hit by shilling. doctors could not save his money. oh, maria sarah jenko is one of the residents of the seed city of mary pole, and she managed to get out. she's now in the village in ukraine's west. maria, thank you so much for joining us in this very difficult time. can you tell us a little bit more about your journey across the country? yes, sure. so i left my grand my and relative scenario po and they are right now they are, we can't get to them with no internet connection or they don't have any mobile network as me. i left here because i wasn't here when the war started. i was there for 2 days tonight under attacks on their fire,
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and finally managed to leave the city. and right now i'm in leaf, in the western part of ukraine. finally safe. what was the last you've heard from your family and friends back and maria paul. it was 4 days ago i heard from my grand mar, one made of the call 4 days ago in the morning. and since then nothing. and i'm desperately trying to reach out to them every, every day, like every hour. and it's still nothing it's. it's really that's great. i can only imagine. can you tell us whole bit more about your everyday life? what, what was life like in maria? pull for you. what did you leave behind? sure. like mary believe a huge cd actually is 500000 people. and during the last 8 are
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8 years, ukraine invested a lot in mer. you fall. they were meaning you parks, boulevard, and you houses built in the city. and since the war started by russia, ah, 10 days ago, many people already died. my grandma has a lack of food, lack of water, and they have no power, no electricity, and no heat at all. so it's a huge contrast between the seats that we've used to have for all these years. and what is happening right now. and do you know what's next for you? will you stay in the wave? will you try to leave the country? what's what, what happens now? yes, sure. my plan is now to stain levine and help as much as they can here, at least for the near future. because we try to volunteer here which right to find
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and buy some medicine. because there is a lack of medicine in western part of ukraine as while and also by some equipment for our army and some humanitarian how foods and get that to key of to higher kids . because they said the seed is where we can actually reach the people, otherwise they won't have any, any help from us. but unfortunately, we can't get a new humanitarian help the menu. all right? now, because of the it because of the lack of possibility to get there be any mean, any sense how this war is going to end. i'm sure that we will win. i don't know when the war will and, and how, but i see the atmosphere here in the to police to and in all the country, people have the sense of determination. who people have 100 percent of
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you know of the confidence that they will win and will win and the terrible stop. i'm sure. maria search ankle. thank you so much for your time. please stay safe and all the best to your family. thank you. israel's prime minister, enough tale bennett is in moscow to day for talk with russian president vladimir putin about the war. let's go right now to our correspond atanya kramer, who's in tel aviv, tanya, what more do you know about this meeting? yes, the news broke can really, as a surprise some time ago that the ready prime minister enough tell you, bennett, actually left this morning to travel to moscow to meet with the russian president vladimir putin. now this is in itself, already unused because it's so bad and you see mr. bennett this, if you wouldn't travel on it's about to been told unless this is to preserve life.
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so that in itself user, we've been told that he's meeting mr. fukin, and that this meeting has been coordinated also with the u. s. and other rest and allies. he's also 12 being there with one of his advisors and ministers, ukrainian born minister, who knows mister putin very well. now i'm standing here actually in, in television. that's a demonstration of protest against the russian president vladimir putin. yeah. tonight it's now it's one house in the past. we go. so offered to basically mediate between both sides because it keeps relatively good relations with russia and with ukraine. it let's get into a little bit more cuz israel is in a delicate position with close relations to both countries and jewish populations in both countries. so what exactly is israel's role here?
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well is what has trying to keep somehow a balance between keeping a good relations or relations in itself. 6 with russia, as well as with ukraine. ah, we know that a prime minister, enough tardy bennett has to admit several phone calls already with the ukranian president, mr. zalinski and also with, ah, the russian president, putin as last time that was on wednesday. now this, you know, keeping the balance has also come yonder criticism in israel because, you know, people say maybe as well should be more, virtually on the side of ukraine. now is where the house of support supports ukraine with humanitarian aid and has also on a cold it support with them. but at the same time, prime minister ben, if you haven't heard him really speaking out against the russian invasion, where as i have to say the israeli foreign minister yet you la pete has more. 1 harshly condemned the russian invasion last week. now this comes all you have to
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understand because of its own security interest. it has to keep a military military corporation with russia, which is active in syria. and israel has to keep this alive somehow, because it's rather, it's actually are conducting airstrikes in syria. so, you know, is on says on the one hand is keeping good relations with both. that acts enables that also now to travel to russia. and we have to wait and see, or what we will hear from this visit or later on. tanya kramer there with the latest from tel aviv, thanks very much. the un refugee agencies has more than one point. 2000000 people have now fled ukraine to neighboring countries. many of them are children, and they're flying with their mothers, while ukrainian men have to stay and fight. volunteers in neighboring country say children are arriving traumatized. g w correspondent,
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monica raska reports from near the polish border with ukraine. around 40000 people are arriving here each day. one refugee from we'll korean told me, or is something for adults not for children. the children of ukraine are freeing war and are arriving here at this railway station near the border. they bring with them the trauma of upheaval, fear, and sometimes wars. liam of william. if there had been no war, our houses would have stood. my grandfather now sleeps with a gun or one yet. so when i think we can do it, that it will get better in ukraine and that we will win. ah, see just that it's, i cannot say anything. i waited so long. i cried so much. i have nothing to say. we spend a very long time on the train and
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a very long time standing. i'm grateful to poland that it welcomes our compatriots in this way. like singular mercer only. what do you feel now as joy at his joy? that each him willy city and i wish sometimes there were sirens in the evening. the people hid all day in sellers and bunkers, knew it won't get them when. yeah, bob, bob, will korea coming at them? well, my father's in ukraine. a lot of my relatives also stayed usa doors. oh, i'm afraid that many people will die because of this war. nobody again will go to buy given a dessert they linger, who is prepared to talk to day children about war. the parents are in shock themselves. their country suddenly and got up in war. the big picture is overwhelming. the focus for now is on their children. well,
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not as upper was at them, obviously at me another than marines. a delusion do not need to explain anything to the lawyer. does it have on, you know, the children there have seen everything with their own eyes, all the situation. there's difficult mendoza. but they felt it all around them. every day they sat in sellers without light water or heating people on it with live. not oh janet, should i am stylus in north city when our region came under heavy fire, when tanks were visible, the children were afraid. they said mom were scared. can we leave? the children understood that there was a war. they didn't understand why. why were people shooting at each other? i don't explain it to them because i believe they're too young and general. they know that there is a war that they are explosions and that someone wants to take our homeland away from us. that even to what it now showed that his job was abroad, that the war in ukraine is changing everything. here
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a new generation of european refugees carried the baggage off trauma into day new life's for more on this situation. let's go over to debbie reporter tessa walter. she is in sham shell, in poland, near the border with ukraine. ta see you've been there. you've been meeting with aid workers in refugees who are arriving. how has a situation where you are developed for those since the war began. it is interesting. i talked to an aide worker just just a few hours ago and he told me that the refugees, he's welcoming now a bit different to those that arrived about a week ago. the ones that left when the war broke out, they, they left, they took everything together, pack their bags, and just ran out of the country. and they really haven't seen much of the war. the ones that arrived now, they've seen the destruction. they've seen the bombs.
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