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tv   DW News - Asia  Deutsche Welle  March 16, 2022 5:30pm-5:45pm CET

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and the poison spreads. bear with me, the great documentary series destruction of a nation this week. on d. w. this is d w. news. a shack coming up today, separated by a continent, foot connected by support. how you premiums in the expense of barley are doing what they can to help loved ones facing wall back home. but it's a wall with a cause. in the past, i look at the parallels between the soviet invasion of afghanistan and the vision of you, great. ah,
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i british energy welcome to d, w and news asia. glad you could join us with flights home cancelled, and russian bombs falling on their country. ukrainians. living in indonesia have felt helpless and hopeless. deed up there was a girl motus went to be ex pat hub of bali as the war enters. it's todd week. he took a look at efforts ukrainians have started to support the war effort back home. oh, a simple message from body to the world. this multi religious group is holding a prayer, mitchell in front of a peace monument. and right next to a statue of former soviet leader mikhail gorbachev. this is where we meet alyssa from ukraine. alyssa, it's not about any political cause right on the plan to suffer some 3000 ukrainians, live in indonesia, the majority in body. dmitri is one of them together with his wife or you,
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nanda. he's attending a football match to raise funds for ukraine. the clubs, head coach feel strongly about the invasion. i mean, we could draw care all day long. and now we got babies. the children being killed. our club as a 129 kids in our club van watching a new grade kids, their age guy. what dmitri, you know, you nanda own the tennis club and our parents of a 5 year old. they've started their own charity, like many businesses, and by the unfortunately stay away are from the water. they just ignore it. so i wanna step forward and i want to, ah, show example that we're not against russian people. so we're not buying the weapons sort of guns. we help children. i know how hard it was with 1st time. i mean 1st
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name was destiny. i mean like i see i'm and she and i feel like, oh, surprise oh, disappointed our lives. and i feel like i need to do something is on my i think these are a few of the private initiatives in bali expressing support for ukraine. but across indonesia, people are hesitating to publicly take such few people here no about ukraine. and although the government has officially condemned the russian invasion, it is not considering sanctions fixing the economy. independent make is a much bigger priority, says ukraine's honorary council tourism suffering so much. and now, when, well, in his have to do to do farming our for dear life, daily life. i thing they are focused there. they were not at the moment go beyond it, demetrius or, you know, under hope this will change. they say people need to understand the damage this conflict causes to human life's empty economic recovery. even on an island. far
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away from the horror of war. the invasion of ukraine has a cause of one launched 43 years back. the soviet invasion of afghanistan, one that led to war lasting more than 9 years. it ended only 1989 with the withdrawal of soviet troops from the country launched ostensibly to support a communist government in kabul. the invasion eventually floundered, beaten back by determined of gun opposition. but the war left the country shattered and conditions ripe for the emergence of the taliban. which last year eventually went on to rule the country for a 2nd time. and jeremy, now for more is a doctor, tracy, german from king's college dunden. she's an expert in russian foreign policy, and particularly the country's military interventions. doctor john, welcome. i do want to talk to you about the soviet invasion of afghanistan and how
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that connects to the present situation in the country. but i have to ask you at the outset, are you surprised that russia decided to invade ukraine? hi um. i was surprised that they eventually logs to intervention an invasion possibly. but it had been the build up have been going on so long. it almost like purging had act the number of troops they had on the border. but i think like everybody, we hoped that it could be avoided just purely in a military toms. do you see any parallels between how the russian invasion of ukraine is currently progressing and the early days of the soviet invasion of afghanistan and how that progressed? i think you can see a few parallels, i think with the soviet invasion of afghanistan, we had a much smaller invading force coming in from the soviet union. but there was
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an expectation that force would essentially frighten the off guns into submission. and that there would be a quick capitulation. i think we saw the same with the russian invasion ukraine. a few weeks ago. i think there was perhaps a calculation in moscow that the mass forces on the border. and then once the invasion had been launched, would be enough to force the ukrainian government into a quick surrender. and of course, it hasn't worked out like that. and i think the parallels all this failure to fully understand the depth or willingness of both the ask on ambia craniums to resist. just help us understand this believe, why do russian commanders or russian strategists believe that people will not
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defend their territory against an invading force? i. i don't know if it's that the russian commanders don't believe it. it's perhaps that the intelligence that they had that were sent to the criminal was wrong. and that they, you know, i know that there were a lot of reports out at the moment that the russian invading troops were led to believe that they would be welcomed with open arms by the ukrainians. that they were going to be seen as liberators. and of course, that's pretty proven, completely incorrect. and again, we saw the same, i think, and i've gone a stone and you saw soviet conscripts being sent in and thought that they would be welcomed as liberators when it was absolutely the opposite. i mean, you have this template from of gone, it's on that is there in front of russian military strategists and also intelligence agencies. my simple question is,
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why are lessons not learned or perhaps the wrong lessons are lance, an idea with regards to what's going on. now in ukraine, and it will be very interesting to see in future, he is exactly what happened and what the basis was for the russian decision. i'm to go and i'm, i'm whether it was poor intelligence with regards to afghanistan, the lessons when even lent, when they went back in to chechnya in 1994. so here, only 5 years after the soviet withdrawal from afghanistan, we saw a similar intervention by the russians against part of russia that were seeking to succeed down in chechnya. and the lessons that they had learned from nearly a decade in afghanistan were not applied even then. and i, i, i think it's almost this on this confidence that overwhelming military force or
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a show of military might, will persuade your adversary to surrender. i am. and that, that is confidence still seems to be that. what i'd like to talk about present have brought us on, which is now ruled by the taliban. miracles fighters did fight the soviets, as well as on which i had been. or do you think the soviet actions in afghanistan innocence set up the conditions for the creation of the taliban and their subsequent? when a darcy, quick question. obviously the, the soviet invasion led to a lot of support for merger, dean and then obviously splitting out into the taliban. so e, i suppose it could be argued that yes, only it created the conditions for, for decades or of conflict, ongoing conflict. what we leave,
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we leave it there for the time being dr. tracy. german from king's college in london. thank you so much. good to talk to and since assuming power last august, the taliban have proceeded to almost entirely ban women from the workplace. curtail their access to education and launch revenge killings against former members of the afghan army. now they have added house searches to that list. the taliban, caesar searches in kabul and some other cities are to track down criminal suspects . but some residents told us as we accompanied the balaban on one of their rounds, the group are also looking for people connected with the former regime novella her cobble. an early morning this taliban unit has a special mission. they are about to search this residential area house by house floor by floor above them. when i run no one of my id is we are searching the
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houses in a systematic way. but in the search, as our aim is not to find money or weapons reading him or they have had a minute, it's about the safety of the residents. he says, urging residents to help him. in fact, the taliban government has called for people to voluntarily hand over weapons and military equipment or property belonging to the former government. he also calls for respect for the koran and says the prophets words should become law for every muslim. here i and the commander listened closely to what this tenant says about the sandwiches, amid the mythical armina bahama hiram. and they would finally be peace if the guns were collected everywhere was only the government should still have gone. so void should finally arrest all thieves and kidnappers all over the country, the marble murphy, without grown crib romero accessible. ah. the
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commander says the house rates were previously agreed with the elders and m arms of the neighbourhood. it appears residents cannot refuse. according to afghan media reports the search squads are not only in cobble but in several parts of the country. this woman's nephew was arrested during a house search. she still doesn't know why he was taken away. the family eventually found him with the taliban and ransomed him. she says her nephew was tortured, including with electric shocks. her lawyer, the of kristen, they are much is miss robin are looking for government vehicles for clothes with for anything like that belong to or came from the former government or if they find even a single document bullet as though they will touch you. luckily, ogden a will up either, sir. the squad moves on to such the next house. another step toward what they claim
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is more security for every one in afghanistan. and that's it for to david the force more now website about the situation in afghanistan, rebec to morrow at the same time with you then bye. what secrets lie behind these walls? discover new adventures in 360 degrees and explore fascinating world heritage sites. d, w, world heritage, 360, get the out. now sometimes a seed is of all you need to allow big ideas to grow. we're bringing environmental conservation to life with learning pass like global ideas. we will show you
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how climate change and environmental conservation is taking shape around the world and how we can all make a difference. knowledge grows through sharing. download it now, feel free. ah, what of china's largest manufacturing hubs all but closed for business? change and is the latest chinese city failed by a wave of coven 19 infections, and bay jeans hard locked down policies that sending ripples through global markets . also on the show, intel makes a major bet on the future of european tech. the u. s. chip maker, pledging billions for billed out across the continent, including manufacturing hub in germany. hello and welcome to the show. i'm seeing beardsley in berlin. for the past 2 years, have been
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a headache for global supply chains. businesses are now bracing for more russia's war against ukraine is already distorting markets. now cobit 19 cases in china are surging once again, and that's leading to key factory closures. box wire, separates neighborhoods, enchant chin a desperate attempt to keep a new wave of corona. virus infections in chic. china reported 5280 new cases on tuesday. more than doubled the previous day's tally. now entire city, sand are locked down with no weight in or out. as some travelers found out, oh, well i water for my thought on which i was going to go back by long distance bus, but now i can only take a train. i had to wait 48 hours for negative test result before i could leave. so this does affect me. papa will have a.

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