tv World Stories Deutsche Welle April 10, 2022 1:15pm-1:31pm CEST
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it washing did up in use up next efforts to help ukrainian refugees and the neighboring republic, moldova, that's in weld stories the week in the reports. and remember, you can always get the latest news on our website. that is d, w dot com. i'm running a job for me and the team, thanks for watching and we'll be back with the latest at the top of the our event. her, i'm skim that i want. that's hard. and in the end this a me, you are not a lot of to you anymore. we will send you back. are you familiar with this with the smudges reliance beef. what's your story with. ready women, especially a victims of violence in our lives. take part and send us your story. we are trying
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always to understand this new culture. so you are not a visitor, not the guests. you want to become a citizen. in phil migrants, your platform for reliable information. ah this week on world stories, moldova, a poor country helps refugees, france exiled russians take a stand against booted. we begin and ukraine ana, a doctor, had to leave her devastated hometown and fled to leave like many others through
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almost 4 weeks of war and the most unspeakable conditions. anna, a neurologist worked and lived in the mary hugh paul city hospital. now in the relative safety of live, she tells me of her ordeal, but just natasha during the heaviest, bombardments we had around 50 patients an hour arriving a day. the hospital was so overcrowded and the windows doors and roof wall destroyed stead. not long after it got even worse, the russians cut the water supply as but alice knew we would gather snow. rain water, use the water from inside the boilers and disinfect it so many patients were dying . she tells me they were forced to put the corpses outside in bags as to her will. the worst thing was when the relatives would come to look for their loved ones on him, they had to open all the bags, the bitter cold. they're saving grace, as it prevented the worst of the stench. they show by chill out what i saw. i think
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that even the most perverted minds wouldn't be able to imagine. it's a knowledge. no bit of the night of the 20th of march. i named this night the genocide. yup. as wally this was the night when the bombings just wouldn't stop political, an issue hollow. every time we heard a bomb coming. mitchells i was lying and thinking i would cover my head like that and think this one will be the one that gets us lost. just a moment come, sickly, and it's hard to comprehend. a moment when you want it all to be over. in a good way that she survives a butter looking or in a bad way, don't you die to rosa and you don't care how you die. just as long as it's all over among us to both connect to motion and soon it would be she and a few of her colleagues took their chance to escape. were you hollow? we were driving and then in the distance we saw our flag of blue and yellow flag
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and ukrainian troops. public goodly proper tumble. one of them gave me a hug and it's weird, but i asked him, can i be a ukrainian here? is it safe? thought and he said yes, you're at home urged nevada dr. dormer sip alive but dead inside she tells me as she faces a life haunted by what she's witnessed. ah, moldova is one of the poorest countries in europe. here 2 people show great willingness to help and taken refugees from neighboring ukraine. it's humble homes like these in this village in all, hey, who's doors have opened to ukrainians, fleeing the war in their country? this is maryanne, his house. 10 people live here now,
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sharing the little her family has fill out anything. i earn a small salary, electricity is more expensive. groceries are more expensive. we can't afford everything we need. despite that, she's taken in 2 families from ukraine, including her sister in law, oksana, husky, nice. guy fled her home in odessa in february. she's here with her daughters latter, who wanted to show us that she can do this split 2nd goes latter. oh, okay. well, i miss our home, my husband was there a living room and i built our house with our hands, wasn't it broken? the only thing we have left is our home. i thought i thought no clue thought that we received from lab people in the blue sky was moved by the planks of ukrainian refugees and decided she had to help. she's using her hand making factory
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to store the donations she's collecting for women and children. it's not much, but you know, little and little we are collecting the help that we need. i am a mom that i have 2 boys and i cannot imagine what feels that mom does not live in their houses at this christian camp more help for ukrainians. here they can also get medical attention from volunteer nurses. we met an yes of it's guy here. she's longing to go back home. one dreamed that i have just come back to craig. i know is it i want to be stay in ukraine and to we have the plan just to rebuild our gone 3 of the full $100000.00 refugees that have passed through moldova since the war began in february, about 100000 are still in the country moldova authority said they need help looking after them. the 1st responder for the support was definitely the government of
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republic of milan. at the same time, i saw a b, g, a port from the population civilian population, without with the international support, we cannot face entire the there for geez to support them. that support is now slowly coming in. and it will go a long way in helping the ukrainian refugees and the older ones who helped them. ah, 8 con boys regularly travel from germany via poland to the ukrainian border organized by volunteers. not only do they bring 8 supplies to the region on the way back, they take refugees to safety, fear, transport, our fall omitted, scene, poor doctor, won't our vig so cognition grants. alice been of them looked vague, vines,
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merc least feeling afflicted to mit niemen. vilma pete us is at the wheel. she's from munich and normally works as a tool manager for musicians and bands. but since the war broke out, she's made it her mission to provide humanitarian aid vineyard up against when i see all the children, it definitely hits me it, but i'm not like, oh, this poor kid needs my sympathy or i'm thinking, let's get this kid out of here get off. the drivers are all volunteers from across germany. some knew each other before while others joined up to form the convoy. they can't just sit back and watch what's happening in ukraine. as isn't, is ours. i'm not afraid to like, given, given the space certainly have a degree of respectful situation. but my motivation to help is far greater than any fee or something like happened with program cuba and had to literally showerhead right next to us. we'd have to make a quick getaway than most,
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most near the con for their 1st stop there visiting canoe bowski, then berlin is renting a room in a hotel in southern poland. from here, he crosses the ukrainian border with private aid transports. once a day, his usual cargo consists of medicine, medical supplies, and devices. he urgently needs all the donations from vilma, peters, his convoy, or less complex law live. this will go to a children's hospital and believe this treating many children from the conflict areas and they absolutely need the supplies are good bowski and his crew immediately set off for ukraine to help us convoy from germany is continuing onwards to a refugee camp for new arrivals in spanish, they all have to register to journey onward. the same goes for dr. is coming here to pick up refugees. they must provide
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a personal data to help prevent human trafficking. these refugees, like most are women and children. they're from mia hockey and eastern ukraine. one of the hardest hit regions after over 2 days of traveling by bus and train, they want to mince germany, both they're at their wits end. or if not, slowly and 3rd box. oh, oh, okay. you know, with all, was the booms in the city center. our heart, our house is okay, but it's so scary. these refugees have a 10 hour drive ahead of them, but they won't be stopped at the border. they can stay in germany for 3 years and to work, and their children can go to school. they're over throwing putin is the goal of a group of russian intellectuals in france. their weapon is information. they
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publish the events of the ukraine, russia war, and have a growing readership also in russia, the ukrainian national anthem at the plaster, latter pu bleak in the center of paris. gallia ackerman is showing her solidarity. she was born in russia but as live in exile and france for more than 30 years. she was popular among ukrainians because they know she has been warning about putin for a very long time since long before the war. exec though, this is exactly the new attempt to stifle, not only to liquidate ukrainians, but also to extinguish the ukrainian culture. ok. n ackerman began her political activism from her paris exile. last year she found a desk who see an online publication by well known russian exiles and russia experts. their articles describe how potent has grown increasingly authoritarian
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over the years how he has extended his influence and how his toyed with his foreign counterparts. among all this, and there are some yell for years, both in france and germany. there has been a strong pro russian sentiment able good, jo, you, there have been many real agents of influence and many people who have simply acted in good faith. the 14 who have believed quite wanted to believe that russia would be a good partner survey on board, back to their adulthood ciboney. but all their well meaning words have made a slow to recognise the extreme danger represented by the russian regime. lendozy gurgle, puzzled nourishing with ruth. does ca see as attracted a large audience up to 150000 readers? click on the analyses and opinion pieces, some of them in russia. the fact that the ukraine invasion is turning out differently than putin imagined, gives ackerman hope corky looking men mud that i think he might even be overthrown
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. and because he has been a great military failure and calling to shake me to death. gallia ackerman fled the communist dictatorship of the soviet union for paris. she had hoped for a different future for russia, but potent has returned her former homeland to a dictatorship. she says, while ukraine has experienced a different development. ah, but that good kenyon, i am ukrainian by adoption. so i have always felt morally and intellectually more at home there than in russia and especially in pollutants. russia with ackerman and dust co. c are determined to work even harder and to be a voice of the russian opposition and of ukrainians in this war. ah,
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this event 70 percent is back in a row, be a we were told a 14000000 known accounts have been blacklisted. and for those people they're at risk of even not getting financial services at all as well. question today is, is it fair to look out, people from money knowing full well they might not have any other options. people have run away from the house. these people have done so many bought faith because of the course of was it will be given back to the 77 percent on dw, but ah, growing up in ruins. city children in besieged, sorry, portrayed by has to sunchase 25 years later, the spanish warmer call to return his name and to his photos. what's become of those children? swore alden, 25 minutes on
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d. w. ah, what people have to say to us. m, that's why we listen to their stories reporter every weekend on d. w. hello and welcome to another edition of the 77 percent. this is where we unpacked the issues that are important to young africans. my name is michael duty to this show is all about debt dwindling. revenues following the covet, 19 ponder, make up force many young people to take hard loans. the lem best range from banks to loan apps and the dreaded loan shocks while some i west indies lawns in babel businesses. i best used them.
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