tv DW News Deutsche Welle May 25, 2022 5:00pm-5:31pm CEST
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i see the site's down postpartum psychosis is an awful illness. mothers nightmare starts june 4th on d w. ah ah, this is d w live from by lead russia steps up. it's offensive on the cranes dumbass region. automated lansky accusers. moscow wanting to destroy everything. and hales, the courage of ukrainians resisting also on the program. another u. s. community devastated by gun violence as a shooter kills 19 children,
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and 2 teachers at texas primary school has been biden, asks american politicians when they will stand up to the gun lobby at the summit in berlin. considers our major events like the pandemic. and the more in ukraine impact women ah, i'm from gail. welcome to the program. russia is stepping over its attacks on ukraine's eastern dumbass region. heavy fi, things being reported in and around the industrial city of severe net square. the regional governor says at least 12 people have been killed in shelling. moscow says it will continue, it's offensive until it achieve its goals. when the battle, 1st of arrow donetta it's capture would allow russia to advance into the other half
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of the don bass region. with the shelling is constant. some 15000 people are believed to be hiding in shelters. to help, you know, is her 1st edition, 2nd, a 3rd minute area problems. the russians have reportedly surrounded. silverado nets on 3 sides. the governor of lou hans province has warned that evacuations are now too risky. still some are seizing what could be their last opportunity to escape while you're on the leg. now it seems like the front is all around it for i think he's around the death that we can see trucks from the all maybe be the feelings around the senior. so it seems like the that to me is about
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to for elsewhere. and don bass trains are filling up as people seek the relative safety of western ukraine. since the war broke out, ukraine has become a country synonymous with defiance. but russia's latest offensive is testing its limits. my country is dying, says this man. i am worried. but we will win each one. what would you, what correspondent term at his brother j as in they don bass region. he is in chrome at tours and i asked him about the situation there. yeah, it's indeed intense firepower, that's everybody who are. we've spoken to has said they've basically brought everything there have here. and in order to capture this, one, city of sierra the nets ought to be more precise, the better the next. and then city that is next to it, separated only by
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a river listed chance. these 2 places, which are each of them had, once 100000 inhabitants, are, are surrounded, but from 3 sides of it, of the nest, from the sides and the other side, las chance is open. but the road there has become under huge pressure. russian troops are very close and keep shelling this road and that is what makes it so dangerous to travel there. so russia has made constant advances in this direction. all of these advances were not very big. the ukranian army is holding the lines as much as they can, but every small game brings them closer to the goal of surrounding in and the region is now extremely dangerous and weak that the rest of us can only imagine what it must be like to live under the constant threat of that constant shelling and firepower our people. they're coping what are they telling you? yeah, shelling is happening all over the region even year in chrome at all,
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which is quite far from the line a plane today, dropped bombs on a, on a residential area. but of course, these places that are closer to the front line, they are under, under constant shelling, it's very difficult for people to live there. we've been to list a chance for 2 days ago, and it's a really, it's really, really, really dire situation. people here, this shelling, they live in the basement. you never know where it hits and this is even this place is less. her has be showed less than 0 or net, where shelling is more constant and you see you can watch across. you can see across the river and you see 7 is always a few points that are burning. so life has become very dangerous there, plus the problems with a, with the, with supplies drinking water has to be brought in by trucks. now this, when the axes getting more difficult, there's also
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a problem with drinking water. no electricity, no, a mobile phone network, no internet. so people there feel really abandoned. they are, some of them are saying that the power, like the people empower the administration has abandoned them. and i've met the governor of this region and i've asked him what he says or what he has to say to words these people. so if we continue to evacuate them, if doctors are still working there, if we continue to supply them with drinking water, who can say that we have given up and then no more because they remaining in these places that are under russian fire. they expose everybody to danger. let's stick to the fact he's got 1st. the authorities are present in these places are we don't stay there overnight because it is not safe. well, will be the use of staying in a place where there is no connection and no possibility to organize any help. none at all. if sharon's alicia says mister bizarre school wasn't sure,
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walking across the central square and telling people, look younger, i'm here with you into the court that does not help these people because of the short, the people who are staying there, exposing everybody to danger themselves. and the people who keep bringing than water medicine and food usa bear with the hopes that we keep or was it 15 inch of order to leak it to you? it is pulling, it almost sounds like the governor is blaming people for staying. he was definitely angry at this, so i had this confrontational, he was not happy with this position. of course, he has a point though, because the authorities have been telling people to leave since the beginning of april, so that more than 6 weeks already. and they have organized a lot of evacuations, and many people have evacuated if you, if you look, if you behind me they are very few people on the street hearing from at horse. and
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it's the same in many places. the tragedy is that those people who remain down from people who are really afraid of going some way because they're very poor and they are afraid that nobody will help them. these are people who are old, who feel it's too much for them to go. it's also people who are saying, well, in the end we've seen a lot in our life and it might not, and that badly. and then often when they realize it's worse, this time, it is bad. there's already these opportunities to evacuate aid, they're already closing and they remain trapped there. um, so it's a, it's a very tragic situation. but the one thing you can not blame the authorities for is that they have not told people to do. thank you for that. a matuse of bullying in common task the united states and nato allies have stated publicly that they are providing you credit with satellite images, intercepting russian communications and helping to defend ukraine from russian
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cyber attacks. but leaks and statements from within the u. s. intelligence community and now claiming even closer involvement, like with the sinking of the russian missile cruise, moscow, the ship was struck by ukrainian missiles, but there are reports. the u. s. provided information about its location, and this month the new york times reported the u. s. a. provided intelligence that helps you cry and kill several russian generals on the front lines. will dmitri al, part of it is a cyber policy and security expert silverado policy accelerator in washington, d. c. and he explained to me the role that western intelligence is playing in this war. while this assistance right now is very crucial. in fact, as we're speaking right now, there is a boeing e 3 a century aircraft, or a wax airborne warning aircraft, or is flying in romania and nato aircraft from a german air base watching what is going on in ukraine, on the battlefield. collecting signals, intelligence,
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and likely providing that close to real time to bring in troops. so being able to provide targeting information to finance about the position of russian troops. providing information as has been report about the mass quite cruiser. without that, the koreans would be in a much, much harder fight. ok, so clear. this is important. is there any danger of perhaps the russian military taking, taking aim at some of these, these recognizance flights, perhaps bring him that is, is there a danger that the west might become dragged into this in some way? i don't think so. as long as they stay out of ukraine itself, so they're flying in nato countries. in slovakia, in poland and romania watching what's going on from afar, the russians aren't going to take the step to escalate it with nato to fight with nato because they know that they're not capable of executing that fight. they're having a hard time as it is fighting ukraine by itself. so as long as nato stays out of ukraine, i think they're fairly safe. we hear from intelligence chiefs,
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the intelligence is being passed on an unprecedented right and scale. and why is that? well, clearly the united states and our nato and european allies want russia to be defeated and ukraine. they want ukraine to preserve its sovereignty, preserve as much territory as it can. and they know that without the intelligence help, certainly without the weapons assistance of it's been provided. ukraine stands very little chance of doing so. so the flood gates have opened since february 24th. and more and more is being provided to gain every day. i took. so long as these are because flights stay so to say that they seem safe, all that dangerous though to providing this sort of intelligence. well, there's always a risk that the russians will decide to escalate. but we're now in the 3rd month of the war, and the russians are clearly aware that this is going on. they're watching these aircraft, as, as anyone can just go by going online. so they know that this information has been
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provided, but they haven't taken the steps to escalate, despite their rhetoric that they're not really finding ukraine, that they're finding nato. they have not taking any actions to try to take kinetic actions against any native party. and i think it's going to stay that way. ok, thanks for julio. so to me to, i'll petrovich from the silverado policy examination. thank you. that you, quick look at some stories away from the war. will start in burkina faso, where authorities say rescuers have found the bodies of 4 of the 8 minus who've been missing since the middle of april. contact with the men was lost after their mind flooded. a rescue. teams have been pumping water out for weeks in the search for the others is continuing. or the 70 people are missing. after a boat carrying migrant sank off the coast of 2 near 24 have been rescued. the events migration agency says the boat set off from neighboring libya before sinking near the tunisian city of facts. south korea's military says north korea has 53
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ballistic missiles. without his insults it appears to be in preparation for p on young's 7th nuclear test. u. s. president joe biden has just ended a trip to asia, during which he agreed new measures to deter the north. 19 children and 2 adults have been killed in a school shooting in the u. s. state of texas. it had took place as an elementary school in the town of o vada. near the mexican border, the 18 year old shooter barricaded himself and his victims into a classroom where he was killed by police. for many americans, the tragedy once again raises the question, what can be done to stop gun violence, grieving family members, waiting to know if their kid survived. we can get anything we can get any or anything as little as they're okay. they're not okay. or we're still waiting or you know, no, no information has been really see any of the parents or they have alyssa for her
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name in here. so she not here. so real it on down and awnings antonio, to work we find her at least 19 children and 2 teachers were killed in this texas elementary school. the death whole is expected to rise, residence in the small town of val, they are still trying to process the tragedy. break my heart. i didn't ever expect anything like that with men. person that did. it was wonderful. here it was a student here with more than 200 mass shootings in the u. s. so far this year. many americans asking themselves the same question over and over again, including and be a coach steve kerr. when are we gotta do something? i'm tired i'm. i'm so tired of getting up here and offering condolences to to the
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devastated families that are out there. i'm so tired of, excuse me, i'm sorry, i'm tired of moments of silence enough. his gun control is back in the political debate. the people who valdez gather 2 more in after the deadly mass shooting something far too many families and friends have to go through in the u. s. will they w correspondent, eras pole in washington gave me this update. i still don't know any motors fill of the shooter only that he posted some days ago. a sentence on his tick tock account . he rode kits be scared. what we do now is that all victims got killed in one classroom and that the children have been between 9 and 10 years olds. networks here in the states now show pictures and caught parents who describe their children's as little angels and light of my life. and so, you know, feel,
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we have to be aware that this little town of we via is very close to the mexican border and all of the children who had killed our latinos or hispanics so many of their parents or grandparents sacrifice a lot to came to the states so that their children could have a better life. and now these dreams are dead killed by a night 18 year old. and it does seem verted every couple of months. we seem to hear about more of the shootings than, than the argument start about gun control. but the dial doesn't seem to be shifting any, any, any, any closer towards controlling the number of guns on the street. right. i mean, the question about gun laws is one of the most divisive question here in the united states. you know, the, the right to bear weapons is so deeply ingrained in the identity of this country. and, and on top of that is a very powerful gun lobby n r a,
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which is protecting this multi 1000000000 dollar business. you know, the owner is actually so powerful here in this country that they are able to prevent the cdc from doing studies on the effects of gun violence. they literally shut down scientific research. i mean, that tells you everything. all right, so, so what is, what is their argument when people say, take these guns off the streets control their supply? what is, what is the argument that says know that we shouldn't do that despite all of each massachusetts. we keep saying, well, the texas senator, ted cruz is a good voice for that. immediately after the shooting. it says it's his state and it's the largest school shooting ever in texas. he didn't speak out for better background checks or other gun restriction. what he says is that we need more guns that people need to be able to defend himself if someone shoot them. he is asking
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for arm policeman in front of schools or to prevent shootings from that and to happen. and i'm in fill, you know, that the shooter in this little town was able to be more than 30 minutes in the school. and i'm sure this will be water on the mills for those who ask exactly for that, that even maybe teachers should be armed to protect themselves in their pupils and not to have less guns on the streets in his pole in washington. thank you. an association of women civil society groups is holding talks in germany to discuss a major events like the pandemic in the war in ukraine, impact women and policy making. women 7th dialog opened in berlin today as part of germany's presidency of the g 7 group of advanced economies. over the next few days, delegates will come up with proposals on gender related violence,
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women's economic participation, and feminist orientated foreign policy. so what is the feminist foreign policy? i asked that there are gay and delay and she's the director of the center for women, peace and security in london. so also founder and ceo of the international civil society action network. it's a very good question. thank you for having me. we're getting there. i think that there is a dimension of it, which is very basic, which is to say, this is about making sure that we have equality for women and girls alongside men and boys. that said, there is a debt. there's an element i think, which is emerging in the german discussions today. and as part of the work that we've all been doing internationally, which is to say we're actually looking for transformational equality. we're not suggesting that we want you know, equality in the status quo. we're saying that if you have women present in the discussions, for example, on foreign policy piece in security, if you have
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a gender, it lands in how you do humanitarian assistance or development assistance or, or education policies and so forth. it is good for women, but it's also good for men and part of the eminence lens. and it was very strong today was we're talking about the fact that we should be putting more effort into piece making and piece bill ling and, and demilitarization. and that certainly, as i say, of course the benefits are for women, but it's also about saying we don't want our boys and men having to experience war and trauma and be in killed or maimed or, or having to kill and maim. and, and that's part of the conversation that doesn't often come out in these writing these discussions, but it's very much central to go to the discussions on famine. and i'd like to come to that. but 1st, i think it's important to do it for you to expand beside the of that. a looking at politics, looking at policy making through agenda lens is good for everyone rather than just for women. so, for instance, with the pandemic, the presumption is that,
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but science and policy makers are looking at everyone's interests. how would pandemic policy have been better had there been a gen, did the aspect to policy making? well, so 1st of all, if we take a feminist lens and aj and a and had the voices of women in the discussions broadly speaking, the 1st thing you would have heard from us from all of us is that we need our national security policy. these to have a human security lens. and if we bring it to the pandemic, that would have meant having more in terms of health care, in terms of masks and so forth. i lived in the united states to that process and you know, there was, there was weaponry, there was money for the weapons and for drones and for nuclear had drones. but we didn't have money for masks and, and p v, you know, the protective gear for our doctors, our nurses and, and, and patients. so our city is an interesting time. it is time. but just on that point, because it was interesting the united states example how mass became,
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is such a divisive issue where not so much for the rest of the world. you believe vaccines because of a lack of women in the, the decision making of the policy making rather than just red and blue choosing aside? no, i think i, what i'm saying is, is that it, if you think about security and you said security is having weapon versus security is having safety for people, men and women in our society. and then you think about, what did we need during the pandemic? we needed protective gear, we needed food, we needed, we needed to end gender based violence. if you think about why was there so much violence in the homes across the world, there's a huge gender dimension to that was what was going on with men and society being stuck a home alongside, you know, women and, and, and kids. but it was, there was a lot of vile and lens by men perpetrated against women and children. why did that happen? what are the factors that led to that? and so there's a need for the protection of women. but there's also question,
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i'm trying to understand what goes on with men in our society. what are the frustrations, what, what are the life skills they may need to learn to be able to cope with with, you know, with crisis basically. and so did take the brief look at the women in a policy making and pace. again, this is if, if this is because of a lack of women in the room. so i'll give you a good example of that. if afghan women had been in the discussions in doha with the taliban, do we think that the question of protection of civilians and communities, minorities, protection of women, would have been a major part of the discussions or not? i would guess that yes it was because because we heard women saying that the fact that the discussions than afghan off canister were heavily male dominated and women were actually stone. walden kept out meant that the taliban got away with a lot of things, and we resulted in the crisis that we have now,
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which again has an impact on men and boys alongside women or girls. so it, it's really about perspectives that we bring and, and it's very much around thinking about the needs of people. oh, i'm having a future if you a lens on the future. what do we want for our children and our societies for our boys on our girls, as opposed to thinking about it? you know, in many ways around power for me and a competition so. so i think there's a very different piece of conceptual framing when, when you have women in the space in there and, and, and bringing in the different perspectives for how many months are clearly america, angelina from the center for women pace and security in sport, the sale of chelsea football club to consort him like by u. s. billionaire todd to boley has been approved by the english premier league and the u. k. government. the decision follows weeks of negotiations to ensure that current owner russian oligarchy, roman brockovich does not benefit from the sale. chelsea football club was
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put up for sale by owner roman abram avila just days after rushes invasion of ukraine in march. the war made his ownership of the club untenable. the russian oligarch was then sanctioned by the u. k. government over his linked to russian president vladimir putin and the club swords daily operations severely restricted by sanctions, which complicated the sale process. the club agreed to a sale of $5200000000.00 to a consortium led by tide boley, an american businessman who owns percentages of major league, baseball's alley dodgers and a w m. b a l. a sparks the completion. the sale will allow chelsea to resume normal business and transfer activity which was prohibited as part of the sanctions imposed. the proceeds of the sale will not go to abram village but will be used for humanitarian causes in ukraine. the u. k. government's decision to approve the sale
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. the club marks the end of one of the most dramatic periods in the history of chelsea and brings down the curtain on roman a brand, which is 19 year tenure as owner under a brand which is ownership. chelsea so unprecedented success. winning $21.00 trophies, including 5 premier league titles, 2 champions, leagues, and the club world cup are dead of old tightrope. walker has claimed a new world record for the longest slack line. crossing frenchman and nano paulin inched his way across a 2200 meter wire, suspended about a 100 meters in the air. and just 2 centimeters wide. took 2 hours to make the journey between a crane and an abbey of moss and michelle, a feat that might make even those of us weren't scared of heights. more than a little nervous is a recap of our top stores. this. our rush is stepping up. it's a tax on ukraine's eastern dumbass region with heavy fighting reported in and
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around. industrial city of savannah don't. yes. the regional government has at least 12 people have been killed by shami. bosco says it will continue, it's offensive until it achieves it's next on d, w. made in germany, thanks to look at who is benefiting from the global war and climate change. i'll be back at the top of the other day with with
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where intelligence agencies are pulling the strings, were organized, cry, rules, where conglomerates make their own laws? we shed light on the opaque worlds. who's behind, who benefits and why are they a threat to us? all opaque worlds starts june, 2nd on d w ah ah ah ah, in times of crisis there are many people who struggle to hold on to that live.
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