tv World Stories Deutsche Welle March 28, 2022 5:15am-5:30am CEST
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more refugees are being turned away, order families play involvement tags in syria for the credit on its way lower than the straight people fleeing extreme drought. ross getting 200 people around the world. more than 300000000 people are seeking refuge as to why? because no one should have to flee. make up your own mind. d. w. made for mines. ah, this week in world stories, we're looking at the effects of the ukraine war help
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a polish borders. israel offers support for ukrainian refugees. we begin with a nato maneuver in norway, soldiers from several nations, a conducting defensive readiness training in a joint routine exercise for ya. and maneuver. $2500.00 french polish, spanish and portuguese soldiers. taking part in this nato exercise cold, brilliant jump. the soldiers told us, the invasion of ukraine has bolster their determination to defend their country. this exercise we are, we actually, i can see that we are a solid group. ah, it's, we are what we are working a like are one organism. and if we are together,
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we will, i find a way these drills have been in planning for 2 years. they're using the cold conditions in norway to train artillery, infantry and specialist. you can deal with chemical and biological attacks, checking interoperability between countries. these troops are on a 5 day notice to deploy, but currently only within nato's borders. attending the drills, general vollmer once the 2nd highest officer in the german army, and now a top nato commander told dw news exclusively. he's greatly in favor of the recent move by the german government to increase annual military spending to 2 percent of g d p, with an additional one off injection of a 100000000000 euros. our neighboring countries are counting on germany and with this announcement and with the will now to, to rebuild forces, re enforce them again, that is a strong statement. and of course, from
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a military perspective. and as a nato commander, i'm counting on germany that they brew rebuild capabilities they gave away many years ago. the exercises here at camp runner a rule, so aimed at reassuring people living in norway, in the nearby town of hummer. people told us they're fully aware of the drills a norway has a border we do with russia and we never know what can happen. so i think it's also a lot of fear in norway. what can happen? we don't know. nato will protect us. and i think ukraine would then have it better if they, very natal know, i'm afraid of that. and because i think we have to work and, and people to people in peace process and, and the military, many of the soldiers present here will now participate in a 355 increase, strong drill,
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cold response conducted by norway's own armed forces with nato involvement. the commanders say these exercises aren't designed as warnings for russia, only to prepare defensively. ah, according to the un refugee agency, more than 3600000 people have fled ukraine since the beginning of the war. mostly women and children, neighboring poland has taken in most of the refugees after escaping the war zone, their trained finally arrived in poland. hundreds of women and children is a back to safety. at platform number 5, employee michelle station. either and her 2 children have been travelling for 3 days and freezing nights. they exhausted but relief to be getting help. the house in hockey was destroyed in a russian arid. r thing awesome husband,
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they kept bombing, i said, yeah, it didn't stop martha. we had to take shelter in the bunker and we were trapped there for days. most of em, that's when we decided to fly, or the marina will you call is that all over at the ball jaw. it was horrific. the children didn't stop crying, but we tried to comfort them and try to stay calm. but inside we were also shaken up ours. they show as blurry photos of hockey, their city in ruins. their husbands are still there because they are not allowed to leave the country for year old vanya doesn't understand why. i call the gate. i miss my daddy. we went on the train and we were going and going and going clean village go. oh god! in the entrance hall, hundreds of wanted to provide the new arrivals was food, water, clothes, free, sim cards and advice like olga many don't know where to go from here. know what to
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do next. the city's mayor watch it by coon, is coordinating the humanitarian relief effort since the worn ukraine began. he says he hasn't had more than 4 hours sleep a day. he's proud that his city has managed to provide help, but his worried he does now how long they can keep it up. we are, we are the city whole not, you know, humanity, organization. so we will be not do this for a, for a long time, or for forever. you know, just which i talk with someone transition to her boss for a long period of time. he, he tells us, is to quickly relocate the refugees to other cities. all guy has finally decided to continue her journey to war. so once it was, oh, are there plans to call her husband and her parents? she doesn't have the strength yet because she is afraid they might not answer.
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jewish ukrainian refugees can move to israel under a law created as a response to the horrors of the holocaust. it could help many ukrainians find a new home including nuff haggling. they are safe at last just a week ago neatly miss. gov. his wife and sister arrived in israel from odessa, fleeing the war in ukraine, stuck a face of the gig and a door. our cities are being bombed out for many have been destroyed. and there are many casualties among the civilian population. alina, that's what russian aggression looks like. so i see skag their associates someplace good. for now. they are living in the hotel in the small city of norfolk eileen, along with many other refugees. every one here is waiting for the entry documents to be processed. ne tree is entitled to israel is citizenship because his jewish,
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that's the law, he feels welcome already the garage, but yet we're getting lots of support here from uglies were being fed and given clothes and everything that we need. thus, by jesuit max miner, good mom. and that's exactly how it should be, according to the male, once an immigrant himself from all dover, and now encourage his refugees to come to his city. yo network with your mother, one selling point he mentions cheaper rent than in telephone is brenwood, another bottle from with one yesterday, with mostly abruptly, he also uses facebook to invite refugees to nov, haggling, which has already taken in 200 people fleet and the war where israel government still arguing about how much immigration the country can handle, the mayor ceased their arrival as a positive on the rock. mister keller, earlier should i look at other immigration waves in the past? the 1000000 and i see what it did to his realize your score more. it definitely did
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a lot and mostly my english, the migrant from back then all have high ranking talks english them. they've benefited the concrete for good. and i believe that will happen again. my gum ali, a lot shabbily for the city is no stranger to immigration, half the residence he has big russian. and unlike in other parts of israel, street signs are not only written in hebrew, arabic and english, but russian too. and those who were once immigrants themselves are lending a helping hand to the more around the new israeli and needed more than one other than we we have. we have too much and we can give meet. he says, see, now one's to find an apartment job and run hebrew. he says he has no plans to return to ukraine except to visit his parents who stayed behind in odessa.
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ah, ukrainians, living in berlin are following the developments in their home country. for them, it has been an emotional state of emergency since the war broke out. one young woman expresses her fears, sorrows and hopes through art. victoria sorta chin ski strolls through a berlin park, but her thoughts are in ukraine where she was born and still has family and friends . her father has made it out of keith, but she still hasn't heard from her relatives and mario paul and days. they don't know if they're still alive and sir. yeah, it says that, i mean, we just hope that somehow they managed to survive in this incredibly horrible situation. and because they have no electricity, no water, no food. victoria sorta chince key has been living and working in berlin as
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a successful photographer, since 2013 her family left. what was then still the soviet union when she was 11 years old. she lived in israel, canada, and the u. s. but her work often recalls memories of ukraine. her long running project lands of no return presents one example. for almost 10 years, she chronicled the gradual disappearance of traditional ukrainian villages and their people. her grandparents lived in one such village near keith. she remembers her many happy visits as a little girl. ah. some of her photos were on display and berlin's art east gallery until late february. the gallery specializes in art from ukraine. galleries. cornelius schmidt meyer is planning. the next exhibition to include works by victoria sorta chikavsky schmidt, maya herself spent a few years in ukraine right after the war broke out. she and her business partner
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started a foundation to support ukrainian artists and bring artworks out of the country and run against unfunded. we wanted to start working right away to help the artist is that they could go on expressing themselves and working if they can visit us. there are some artists who say they're no longer able to right now at they simply don't have the energy or the strength of tom. victoria sorta chikavsky is also doing what she can to help with her art to. she's planning her next photo project for ukraine . i would like to photograph how the consumer will come out from this crisis. how it will be rebuilt again. and i would like to focus on the younger generation. my hope is to capture her this periods of the ukrainian people who are very strong in my mind and before capable of bringing this country back to life.
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she's already got a title for her project, ukraine's the afterlife. mm ah ah. oh no. oh martin. 2016 ukrainian artist jamal our wins, the eurovision song contest with a song about her great grandmother, who was expelled from crimea in 1944. and now jamal law has been forced to psyche of herself and her song is frighteningly relevant, 0 max min boy. yes, so on d, w extremism in my with increasingly content like this can be found on young people. cellphones ah,
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