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tv   DW News - News  Deutsche Welle  March 12, 2022 8:00pm-8:30pm CET

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ah, ah ah, this is dw news live up from berlin. russia widens its aerial attacks on ukraine. i keep braces as ground forces edge closer to the city center. and new satellite images appear to show arcs hillary firing on residential areas on their way to the capitol. as russian forces close in on cave more and more people are fleeing ukraine, united nations says over 2 and a half 1000000 have found refuge abroad since the invasion began. and germany,
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chancellor, all laughed schultz and french president and my new micron demand an immediate cease fire in ukraine during a phone call with vladimir putin. but they say the russian leader is not ready to end the war. ah. hello, i'm claire richardson, thanks so much for joining us. and it's 3rd week rushes war on ukraine has seen more fighting, more suffering, and more attempts to find a diplomatic way out of the violence. authorities in ukraine's a rocket attacks have destroyed an air base near the town of basil kiff in the cave region. a president zalinski has also accused russia of kidnapping the mayor of the occupied city of maley topple. officials released this footage which they say shows him being abducted, his whereabouts remain unknown. and meanwhile, russian forces appear to be closing in on the ukrainian capital. shelling has
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already reached the outskirts of keith. fire crews rushed to the scene. after a mortar struck an apartment building on the outskirts of cave. lib, lib liberal is the all the artillery shelling started at around 6 30 in the morning with oh, she's 3 thick around. there are people living in these apartment buildings, the civilians. lou, this is a suburban area here, right in the g. what's a good movie? with russia stepping up, it's bombardment of ukrainian cities, including the capitol. it's feared more and more civilians will be caught in the crossfire satellite images show. russian forces just 25 kilometers from central cave. president volota mears, the lensky has promised ukrainians will put up us to fight in what he's calling a war for the countries independence. my name my am. we're proud we have no right to lead up in the intensity of our defense governance. no matter how difficult it
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is. we have no right to lead up in the force of our resistance. the enemy is bringing more columns into ukrainian territory, vehicle law, and then the besieged port city of marsupial continues to bear the full brunt of rushes bombardment. the humanitarian situation is worsening by the hour for hundreds of thousands, trapped without power running water or fresh food. in the nearby southern city of melita, pole which has already been taken by russian forces residents turned out to protest against the alleged kidnapping of their mayor. and to demand his release as plating rages, people in and around keith will be hoping and praying that last minute diplomacy could still spare them the worst of what has happened to other ukrainian cities. let's get straight across to kevin's be today he is correspondent,
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but he hasn't. ballinger mathias and britain's defense ministry saying russian a ground forces are advancing on it. keeps the city center i'm. can you tell us your assessment of the situation? so about 252025 kilometers from where i am standing russian troops. i seem to be enhancing their positions. however, they have been there for almost since the beginning of the war. so for weeks, so it's absolutely unclear or why the british are saying that they are and closing in on key of what has happened is that russia has brought more troops inside this into these positions. and it seems to have a hold some ground there and have taken firmer control of these areas. but it doesn't look like they are closer to the city center than they have been yesterday the day before yesterday or a week ago. um, what we have seen is while the sky was just a shouting slurs at,
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put in people here, of course are, i'm very angry out what's happening. so then there somebody is passing by and he's shouting, glory to ukraine. so you can see it's very emotional. these troops are that are there are, they have been standing there for some time and go and erm her. there was a column if you remember that was 60 kilometers long or look, looked like rolling to was give but didn't move. this column has dispersed and this has led some analysts to say that russia's troops are regrouping now. they're trying a different strategy. thanks for that mathias and we see the anger there on the streets from those people who are walking past you. i want to ask about the situation in a keep itself, especially with regard to supplies. where do things stand? will people be able to hold out against a possible ration on slot?
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no, the question is what this rational onslaught will look like. so there are different scenarios that are um, probable, and that are feared here. one of them would be that russia would be able to close the ringer on the capital. and then we would see something similar to where you were poor people not being able to leave supplies, not coming in. i believe that the city has, of course, docked up with supplies, but you only get that far with these supplies. and we're also seeing that a lot of places inside the city have been fortified there a lot of road blocks, et cetera. and the other scenario is a mass bombardment, like in hoc of where the used parts of the city of the residential areas of the city are constantly being shelled. and this a humanitarian traces is, is, is brought upon the city. this is another thing. of course, people would be very, it would be very hard for people to, to, to, to live under the circumstances and to cope with them. but for now,
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what we're seeing when seeing also is that despite all efforts, russian troops had not have not managed to get any closer to the city than they have been. there have been a few advances. other others have been ford back. so basically it stays where it is, but with a lot more, a fire power and troops. c is seemingly coming in. let's talk about the diplomatic efforts. ukrainian president zalinski has adjusted talks with russia in jerusalem. and what else can you tell us about our proposal? to solemn has taken the initiative to talk to both leaders. joseph has very good relations. the actual israeli government has very good relations to put into government under. there was an effort to to, to, to negotiate between the 2. however, so far what we're hearing is that nothing of this has really worked or that out there haven't been any results. there has been the news,
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or that israel was pressuring ukraine to surrender. this has been reject or this, this has been falsified by the ukranian government saying that the had not been such a pressure. and as a reaction to these news and and scarce suggested that israel might invite the 2 parties to negotiate in jerusalem. but it's only one possible way where people could be negotiating. the problem is, what could they been negotiating against when there is the maximum demand from russia's that russia is still upholding, that ukraine basically give up its army and its sovereignty and ukraine, demanding russian troops out of the country. so there is not much to negotiate about except, and that's the hope that this might be advancing to have in attempts to negotiate a smaller or problems like humanitarian corridors, to release the pressure on the population to repeat release to relieve the humanitarian crisis. this is probably something that's much more likely to
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negotiate upon earth than any outcome of the war. okay, our correspondent matches buying a reporting for us from keith. thank you so much and please stay safe. now when i get across now to maria search ankle, i've been speaking to her on d. w. news over the past week. have a share to free her home in mario paul for the relative safety of the western ukrainian city of v. a. hi maria. welcome back. and thanks again for taking the time and are these terrible circumstances. at 1st, some of our viewers may remember, but your grandmother is still in my old full. and the last time we spoke, you'd been unable to contact her for more than a week. and have you had any update on her situation now? hi, and thanks for having me again. yes, i haven't heard anything from her for 11 days already. so still no connection with her or with the other relatives back leaving mary pal. weather yesterday we managed to get some updates from the neighbor who escaped the city 2
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days ago, and they didn't see my grandmother personally. however, they share they that to, while they are, they, are they so the jordan's in my grandma house raised, you know, every morning. so at least this basic information gave me and my family some hope that she's there, she's alive. so this is the only use that i get from someone in variable during the last few days. i was a terrible to have just that piece of information, but also encouraging to see that time of life. you said you've had no communication with others in mario paul. are you hearing anything about the situation there from others? yeah, i did a madge to reach any of my close people. however, my friends parents called sure yesterday they managed to find some pole in the
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center of the city where there was some weak bio network and they shared that to the city is being shout every hour, every minutes. and i heard from telegram channel, you know, there are some groups, so when people communicate and to exchange some information with them. so i heard that my neighborhood where my parents leave, it was really damaged to yesterday day. and the bomb have my house, where my parents have an apartment, and i have no idea why them. my apartment is still they oh or completely destroy. so this is terrifying. and maria, you are in levine now. what is your plan from there? well, i'm still here, i still have no plans to leave the country within the nearest future,
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and they held that dissertation at least here, will remain a base table as it is now. and we continue helping our people raise them, said today was or again on the railway station trying to get some humidity baron's tab to to p if and there are a lot of people here and everyone wants to take part in some volunteering, initiated and help each other, maria, we're going to leave it there. thank you again for joining us on the w news and please take care. thank and the un says more than 2500000 refugees have fled to other countries since the invasion of ukraine began. the majority of those people, 1500000 according to polish border authorities, have headed to poland. others have made their way to hungary, slovakia, moldova, and romania, more than a 100000 have also entered russia. and now joined by dw correspondent
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brigitte to show, cuz she joins me from a poland near the border with ukraine. hi, welcome to the show. thanks for joining us. you've just been speaking to these ukrainian refugees arriving. can you tell us a little bit about what their journeys have been like? we heard a lot of harry county today because the people who were arriving here, the women and children actually fled a war zone. they experienced heavy shelving that had been trapped in bunkers for 4 days during their escape. they had often to sleep in the freezing nights. why waiting at the border as some were even shot it. so they are very relieved that they are here now, but they are still so worried about those who they had to leave behind. so their husbands, that other family parts like parents. so they, they really need some time to adapt to the new situation. they suddenly and then we
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recorded some of their accounts and maybe we can just listen in food along with all our forces threw themselves against putin. one beat, he is a criminal duncan in limbo, the she's the problem, his army used tanks to attack my grandmother's house. we prayed to god to grant her safe passage. my child was crying all the time because people were dying. can you do to woods? lumnick would you like to do you like i like watching, we didn't want to go away with the ones we didn't want to leave our houses. we only went away to save ourselves. let's get that up as a whole. what the home shed, or just the last one was it was very scary when the bombs hit our town directly. we lost light, electricity, and water miss was the and at 5 in the morning, the bombs were falling down again, right in the center of the city hill and put them in your bed can load warm but,
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but don't you want to think help people, the bombs killed 21. people including 3 children. i have nightmares when i'm thinking about it. it was hard to wrap your head around just how much these people have left behind and forget. i want to ask you from where you stand, how well poland has been able to accommodate these people arriving. i think they are really doing a very, very good job here compared to the 1st day of the help is much better organized now . we just came back from the border crossing and, and there are a lot of volunteers there who are providing food and clothes and the people who are arriving. they are immediately registered, so they don't have to wait anymore in the cold. and they are placed on bosses to be relocated to other cities. but still, i mean it's, it's a huge challenge for everybody here. just to give you an example. we are here now
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at the city of jerusalem. and this city has only 60000 citizens, but they are welcoming between 30000 at 50000 refugees every day. so that lee, that leads a lot of resources that we've heard polish authorities saying 1500000 people have already arrived. and if they continue arriving in poland at this pace will the authorities, their be able to manage this will depend on how, how much help poland is getting from other european countries, especially if it comes to relocating the refugees. but from what we hear from the people, there's a strong commitment to, to further, well, come the refugees. the only problem is right now the whole relief effort is heavily depending on volunteers and the small communities library to where we are now. and,
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and we in a way, we sense a growing frustration amongst those groups because and the polish government hasn't provided any additional help yet. so there is a little bit of frustration they are really waiting to get some more funding brett's head. to be clear, this frustration is directed towards their own government rather than the refugees d, w here, get a shock or thank you so much for your reporting. let's bring up to speed now. on some other developments in the conflict. ukrainian woman evacuated from a mario poll maternity hospital after a rush. an air strike has had her baby. little veronica was born in another hospital on the cities outskirts rushes attack on the children's and maternity hospital on wednesday, led to widespread international condemnation. the international atomic energy agency says power has been a partially restored to chernobyl nuclear power station. the site of the 1986
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nuclear disaster, ukrainian technicians to say they are repairing the plant, which was seized by russian forces early in the war. the power cut lead to fears over the safety of the spent reactor rods stored at the plant. u. s. troops continued to be deployed to europe, adding to thousands have already been sent to support nato allies following russia . invasion of ukraine. about $130.00 soldiers left the us state of georgia. the pentagon has ordered roughly 12000 surface members from u. s. basis to europe, france says russian president vladimir putin shows no willingness to end the war with ukraine, french president and manual, not quite. and german chancellor, olaf schultz held joint telephone talks with putin on saturday afternoon. and during the 19 mit a 90 minute call. the 2 western leaders urged putin to agree to an immediate cease fire in ukraine. schwartz is office said he and mac, ron called on putin to begin the process of finding a diplomatic solution. who did brief, mccoy and shorts on recent talks between russian and ukrainian negotiating teams.
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and let's dive into this with our political correspondence, thomas barrow. he joins me now in the studio at thomas. you tell us more about what has come out of this round of diplomacy. so france and germany have placed their hopes for a long time already. but now more than ever on trying to find a diplomatic solution, what that specifically means is that they want 1st and foremost a ceasefire. an immediate cease fire that something that did come out of that, of that talk, that they asked vladimir putin for that specific ceasefire. that has to be the pre condition for what was been described as structured talks to try and find a political solution to this war. now that is the goal. but if you judge by what french officials have been saying after that, coal, turning those goals into concrete action will be particularly difficult with french officials. stressing that from that call, it was clear that that in you put in did not show any willingness to end the war in
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ukraine. so at least we have here the concrete goal. the german and french leaders now have turning that into action will be another matter altogether. and they're of course not the 1st leaders who've attempted to mediate between russia and ukraine. how successful do you think my crime shows are likely to be? well, they have already played an important role even before this war. let's not forget that france and germany in various circumstances in various crises, have worked hand in hand to try and find solutions. and in particular, the ukranian context after the 2014 crisis, france and germany did play a very important role mediating in trying to find a political solution to the situation. in the eastern part of a ukraine, you may know the, the normandy format, which then also led to the so called minced agreements, france and germany did play an important role there in a such. they still believe now that they can play a very important role when he comes to finding a diplomatic, a political solution to the war. but it's important to see this from
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a wider active. it's not only germany and france, we see, for example, leaders in israel, also willing to play an important role in turkey, trying to play an important diplomatic role. but all this tells us is that the international communities, particularly interested in trying to find diplomatic solutions to this war. even though it is particularly difficult at the moment. in fact, is not just a heads of state trying to find a solution. we have this rather unusual case where the former german chancellor, gerhard schroeder, i had actually attempted to get involved in negotiations even flying to moscow this week. he's, of course, been strongly criticized for connections to the kremlin. and let's call it these freelance mediation attempts. i do think his involvement is the reason why chancellor schultz has decided to get involved now. no, i don't think it's the reason why chancellor shows is getting involved. now. i think that is something that the german government had wanted to do already in the past to try and find a diplomatic solution to this situation. but it does make diplomatic efforts.
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official diplomatic efforts more and more difficult, especially from a german perspective because it gives the impression to the outside world that germany is not only one position that is not working or not united front that you have on the one hand, the german government and the on the other hand, gerhard schroeder, the, for my german chancellor between 19982005 who has been indeed very criticized by his closeness to the kremlin and by his job as a gas lobbyist for russian energy giants. and it's important to stress that this visit by god sorta was not coordinated with the current german government. from his perspective, from gearhart showed us perspective, i understand, or at least i believe this would be an attempt on his side to try and polish his image. a little betron clean up that image that has been very criticized because he has refused so far to drop to cancel those appointments that he has with those energy giant from russia. so a very difficult situation altogether from the government perspective,
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because it makes official negotiations much more difficult than expected or political correspondent, thomas ferrell. thanks so much for joining me in the studio with that update. as an update from the world of sports team, ukraine has surpassed its best ever performance at a paralympics after more metal success in beijing. on saturday, alexandra corner nova won gold in the standing cross country events with her teammate in a week taking the bronze. despite the trauma of events, back home, ukraine has now 110 gold medals and 28 over all the country is 2nd. in the metals table behind hosts, china and teenage wrestler deanna light, is among the hundreds of thousands of people who have fled the war in ukraine. now, she is in berlin, after a german coach welcomed her family. for now, she is safe and training with his club. the war in ukraine has turned deanna lots, life upside down. the wrestler had to flee our home town in live. if
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we up person, i say i woke up to another air raid siren, and we were supposed to hide in an air raid shelter john e. so i got out all over the place. i looked at my phone and saw a message from marco, the former, a good one. i read it was going up and it was completely unexpected. yet you thought i was so happy you cool, i'm in your book. those are good for yellow, german coach malcolm and so picked up diana and her family at the ukrainian border . he brought them to berlin and let them stay in his office. one won't meet that. oh, my dad couldn't come with us, but the was because he went to war to defend ukraine autism shadow cream. i'm really worried about my dad. yeah, i'm scared. who died yesterday and
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2019 diana, one bronze at the under 15 european championship. she hopes to compete at the olympic sunday. hortshoi, i want an olympic gold medal and to be an olympic champion and to go down in history so that everyone will know me what i want the war to and soon, and that ukraine will defeat russia. russia should give battle, every thing it took from us you would annoy this is abroad. i really want to return home to ukraine. hort to live if to see all my dear people, the coach, us wise to see me. bliss can a day than that here. ah, her coaches in ukraine have enlisted in the army. deanna doesn't know how long chastain berlin for now. training is the only thing she has left. let's take a look now at some other stories for falling for you to day. saudi arabia says it
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has executed $81.00 men convicted on charges, including terrorism, and holding so called deviant beliefs. 7 your menus, and one syrian national were among those killed. the men included $37.00, saudi nationals who are found guilty of attempting to assassinate security officers . and targeting police and the head of the international committee of the red cross in yemen has asked the world not to forget the plight of people living through it's longest civil through its long civil war. excuse me. she's urged for it continued aid to alleviate. what is one of the world worst humanitarian crises since 2014, the war has killed. more than 150000 people. to watching the news before we go, let's get a recap of the main story from the crisis. russian forces appear to be regrouping for a possible assault on key authorities in ukraine's a rocket attacks have destroyed an air base near the town of fashion kiff in the key region. it's oil depot was also had rushes defense ministry says its army is
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continuing its attacks on a broader front that you news update at the sour. don't forget there's always more on our website, d, w dot com or i'll be back when we're headlines at the top of the hour. ah ah, with
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