Skip to main content

tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  May 27, 2022 12:02am-12:31am CEST

12:02 am
black comedy, something whilst this is dw news from berlin, you'll find much more on our website did up the last but not least. german chancellor o sholtes delivered the closing address today at the world economic forum in davos, switzerland. he focused on russia's invasion of ukraine warning that the war must be stopped and contained at the same time. the leader of europe's largest economy also delivered a pitch for staying on the path of prosperity paved with free trade and globalization. the alternative, germany, europe, and the rest of the world could face a fork in the road. one way china, the other way, america. i burned gulf in berlin. this is the day. ah, that's why our goal is very clear. hootin must not win his war. give it,
12:03 am
we need to ensure peace in leases in ukraine. what we cannot have is any lifting of sanctions, any appeasement still, no matter what the russian state does, there is always someone who says, let's take its interests into account. this whole line about ukraine, who has to make a concession to still the war, failed to make it to start on. it's a matter of making it clear to pertain that will be no dictated piece. it's either them or us. and everyone in the world has to make a choice whether they stand also coming up a new german connection to the u. s. school shooting in texas plus the old debate in america over who should and should not own a gun. 18 years old. buying any type of weapon. how is that if i'm 20 under 21 year old,
12:04 am
not able to go and buy alcohol or seger is another. ah, the doesn't meet with whoever he was watching on p b. s. in the united states, into all of you around the world, welcome, we begin the day with german schanzer, olaf schultz and white. today he may have felt white. the lonely leader in the west shows delivered the closing address at the world economic forum in davos, switzerland, a meeting where the globes economic and political leaders traditionally rub elbows meet and greet, but not this year. sholtes was the only leader of all the g 7 countries who traveled to dogs this year. and the jury is still out on what being the only one there means her symbolizes the world's leaders, especially in europe and the u. s. they're busy dealing with the ward, ukraine, broken global supply chains and soaring inflation. that's fair enough,
12:05 am
but that did not keep ukrainian president zalinski from zooming with the movers and shakers in davos, still among western leaders. schultz was the only what he bothered to show up. we have this report tonight. discussion of the worn ukraine and its effects dominated this year's world economic forum. participants examined solutions for the leading global threats, food insecurity, energy, and the range of economic crises. these topics were also central to german chancellor. olaf schultz is keynote address, which wrapped up thursday's event, depended. meanwhile, slots to the pandemic and rushes war against ukraine. and you are threatening to roll back progress made over the last decade from comforting got ambled most dramatic. the fight against hunger and poverty you can shuttle both on we are risking the world's biggest famine and decades. if we don't respond as nicely on video during the g 7 presidency we launched alliance for global food security with
12:06 am
the world bank door, germany has set aside nearly half a 1000000000 arrows. a jada oval broadcasted glove. it rings out the global to the crisis is a major risk for poor countries in asia. and africa says really difficult time for african countries because it's like it's a button offside conscious, a more debt because of it. countries are struggling with limited, and 100 to 5000000 people got hungry. the cause of good group globally, a little those 30 percent of those. i'm africa. another additional $100000000.00 people took that to go hungry. so this could be really serious. and now, as the world's most powerful players leave davos, the focus will turn to putting the plans and promises they've discussed into motion . with more now we wanna bring in a anastasia fedex. she is assistant professor of finance at the hospice school of
12:07 am
business in berkeley, california. and she is ukranian professor. it's good to have you on the program tonight. i want to talk about the, the global economic aspect of this in just a moment. but 1st, i want to ask you about what we saw in davos this week. you created president zalinski, criticized world leaders there for sitting on their hands while russia tries to cut off parts of ukraine yesterday, the former u. s. secretary of state, henry kissinger suggested that ukraine should basically compromise with russia, find peace by giving up part of its territory. do you get the sense there that the world, the international community is trying to pressure ukraine to hurry up and get this war out of our way? yes, so we see those kinds of perspective, some people like kissinger on for people like noam chomsky on the other end of the spectrum. i'm still up to this thing that those are fringe beliefs on, on both kind of the further right and the further left. because when we think
12:08 am
seriously about of statements like that, of course there's the obvious moral issue, but even leaving those sites and thinking about the pragmatic side on there are 2 problems with this. and i believe that somehow seed in some territory to russia. i'm is a legitimate and to the war. the 1st is that it's incorrect and that if you spend leads to last confused as not what you see historically. and the 2nd is that i'm advocating this perspective. i'm also undermines you prince position at negotiating table. i'm so i'm just even voicing it gives more negotiate power to russia, so that whatever kind of diplomatic solution we might be able to each will not be one that on leads to last piece. of course, from ukraine's perspective i was, i survey coming out on this past week. i'm gonna give the use of ukrainians in ukraine regarding the potential to seed some territory in exchange for peace. and the overwhelming majority of 82 percent of ukrainians are against that, including 78 percent of ukrainians who are actually in territories that are
12:09 am
currently occupied by russia. and of course the reason that ukrainians are so consistent on this is that they're aware of what they're defacto territorial. concessions in 2014 did. they did not prevent the war this year in let's talk about the sanctions that are in place right now. i'm wondering, are they enough to win the war for ukraine, and are they strict enough for me? we'd still have europe. i'm thinking of hungary through the back door, transferring huge sums of money to moscow for oil and gas. and we just saw, the russian rouble hit a 2 year high against the dollar in the euro last friday. i mean, this doesn't sound look like an economy that's about to collapse for sure. i'm and i think we should make a differential between sanctions that have been imposed properly. so some of the experts sanctions, i'm to russia of key components. i think those those are working. the issue is in sanctions that are not wholeheartedly imposed, including energy sanctions,
12:10 am
in the u. actually having a counterproductive effect from having these lengthy discussions and talks without any action and some financial economics. they have this concept of rational expectations in the market, expect something to happen tomorrow. it's going to price that intimate. that's what we're seeing with this protracted talk of an embargo without actually doing an embargo. we actually see a rise in energy prices. so effectively, citizens in europe are paying more for their oil and gas without, i'm having any adverse effect. and russians kind of with worst of both worlds. do you think professor, let's just take the case of germany, germany incredibly dependent on russian oil and gas. if germany were to go cold turkey this year, would it see the price that it pays for energy be higher than, than the inflation that you're talking about that's already being pumped into the market price. yes,
12:11 am
of course. and then when the market is already pricing that and it's not pricing and fully because there is some uncertainty, right? so the market is partially priced, pricing, it answered, it's going to be less dire than what we think when we assume that the market has been priced it and i. but the other thing that i think is really important for countries like germany to understand is that this kind of tie trade relationship with russia, it imposes constraints on both ends. of course, demand for russian, oil and gas is somewhat inelastic. it's difficult to and get out, but so as the supply, russia can not just easily divert all of its energy experts elsewhere. i'm so temporary measures like price caps instituting those while we work out the details of a full embargo would be very hold on. ask you before we run out of time, is it, is it too early to be talking about reconstruction of ukraine? i mean, is it realistic right now to be talking about a martial plan? you know, martial style plan for ukraine or is this just rhetoric on
12:12 am
a grand scale that we're hearing right now? i think it's absolutely realistic and necessary to be thinking about it for 2 reasons. first, because that actually inter place with what we just talked about now the price of say, russian energy that needs to be factored in some sense. europe is already paying huge tariff on the energy imports from russia. and because every dollar that russia uses for weapons is basically $10.00 of infrastructure destruction in ukraine. and so it's important to kind of be aware of that scale and then price it in when you're making other decisions. but also on a brighter side and hopefully and ukraine is able to extend this war and with, with a well design. marshall plan, i think, is going to be a fantastic investment opportunity for the world economy anastasia, public since the producer of finance at the hosses school of business in berkeley, california professor, we appreciate your time in your inside tonight. thank you. thank you.
12:13 am
with the united nations estimates that nearly 7000000 ukrainians have left their homeland since the invasion began. over half a 1000000 of them have come to germany tonight. we want you to meet a mother and her daughter who ornell staying with a host family. here in berlin. sidney if ne of key, if after month of heavy russians selling much of the city is destroyed, it is anna and such as hometown. in march, the mother and daughter fled to berlin. but their thoughts as though with their family and friends in ukraine. in mind that a yoke i thought i thought my friends stayed inch and niv that my classmates were. i can't bear the thought that they did not have the chance to escape, even though they wanted to. i think it's terrifying what between
12:14 am
thrush and even though i'm doing well here. it's hard because i can't help them back in ukraine and i was finishing up high school. sasha walked in a call center than the attack started. now they live with mountain and cornelia young english. he's an entrepreneur, she's a doctor. the couple drove to the polish ukrainian border to help any refugees and take them to germany, here. and there then systems. it's honestly, humans are social beings. if someone folds down next to you, you bent down and picked them up again. it's completely natural for who serves with him to day and an sasha at the social welfare office. like o ukrainian refugees in germany, they can apply for financial aid. to day they receive that fast monthly payment, $350.00 euros each. when when does nick only want to save up and send some money to grandmother so she can prepare her roof,
12:15 am
the skin which was destroyed in the wool. but needless anon such, i want to integrate quickly. they have signed up for a german language course. a charge congregation opened eyes. is it for free hub? when do you have children? we have been, i am 2 children. if the, if you go with, we want to started jill money to play at them. so this is joy a, that's why we moved into that also. you know, it's, you know, my new with the mother and daughter i slowly finding that bearings in berlin. and i could even imagine studying in germany, and also i wanted to come back to ukraine to see my family members.
12:16 am
but i think about leaving in german of my life. yeah. and you've been both of us, if the i'm too old to completely overtone my former life, all my relatives on ukraine and my house to do all i want. and that to decide for herself whether she wants to st. germany over 20 ukraine. little. but i want to go home sunday, you leave that most of the i ya could seal a book that most of them won't. but bullshit. but at the moment they have no idea how long that will take. ah. tonight, there is new information about the man who carried out that school shooting in texas on tuesday, and there's a german connection. the government apparently revealed his murderous plans just moments before carrying them out to a 15 year old teenage girl in frankfort. the 2 had become online chat part is at the beginning of may. on tuesday, the gunman reportedly told the german girl that he had bought bullets. when she
12:17 am
asked what he planned to do with them, his reply was just wait for while in texas and all across the united states, people are mourning. the 19 children and 2 teachers who were killed tuesday in the deadly of school shooting that the country have seen in a decade. we have this report tonight from the town of you've all the texas. the town of nevada is mourning the loss of their loved ones. 19 children to teach us 21 lives it were needlessly cut short. the tightly knit community is the latest in the u. s. to be devastated by gun violence. but texas governor greg abbott beliefs mental health and not access to guns is the real issue. we as a state, we as a society, neither do a better job with mental health. anybody who shoots somebody else has a mental health challenge period. we have, we, as a government need to find
12:18 am
a way to target that mental health challenge and do something about it. democrats veto wrote, was vying to be the next governor of texas in an upcoming election publicly confronted, correct. other during his press conference, he accused the republican of being responsible for the killings by liberalizing state gun knows the question. all you need to ask him is why does he want violent criminals to be able to carry guns on our streets? go go, ask him that he has not had to answer for any of this. and he gets by with this theater on calling it out. i came here to called out to stop this because if we don't stop it, it will continue to happen. the community is still trying to process what happened . i was at the school where it was so pre k and kate can every morning you have to open their doors for them to get out. can you see all
12:19 am
these bases to like new them? this is really sad, so we have to goes to do this. and i'm saddened by that on angry and our government for not really more about gun control. but even as people across the u. s. and around the world express grief and sympathy. few believe that this will be the last such tragedy, cause we want to go now to our correspondence, if on simon's he is covering the story floors, he joins us. yes, in front of that, rob elementary school, where the shooting took place earlier this week. if i knew, i know that there's been criticism to day that it took the police too long to respond, but talk us through this and we're talking about a town and what just 15000 people. this is a small town and they were dealing with a well equipped, well armed gunman. well, exactly, yeah. you're right so,
12:20 am
so small community police are in force has to be required from a surrounding counties here to rounding cities. are just that town of you all a said not able to deal with something of this magnitude, of course. so here's what happened. and that is new information from the regional director of the public. a safety commission or public safety department here in you've all the texas at 1128. the shooter leaves the house after shooting his grandmother into the face as gets in their car and the grandmother's grandfather's talk ditches the car into a ditch crashes into a dish. leaf the car with a long gun with a rifle and a back. turns out later the back was full of ammunition than he gets into the school. the school door is not locked. that is unusual. normally, a schools in the united states this, you know, as
12:21 am
a 1st line of defense and for security schools, doors are locked and you have to ring a bell or go with the little batch and to gain access. that wasn't the case. anyway, police in pursuit going in the school. just say 4 minutes after he, the gunman enters the school. the shooting takes place in those minutes. the police is taken. rounds means taken fire. the officers who follow into the school at 1144, take fire. take cover and call for back up technical team and that's the case here . this is important, the tactical team, who actually then went into the school into the classroom and eliminated the threat, killed the gun, men took 40 minutes to get here and to do with exec me then. and that is the criticism here that nobody really understands. and again, context, this is a small town, there is no swat or technical team on hand, which is here in like one or 2 minutes. that's not new york,
12:22 am
it's you've all day. yeah. texas. and you know, you mentioned that the, the front door was not locked in. a possible explanation could be because this is the last week of school summer vacation is going to start tomorrow. this is supposed to be a time when people are relax, excited. people are graduating, all of that now has been destroyed, has brandy nailed it. and this was supposed to be a really happy day in a, for the town here for everybody here. and i'll look across my shoulder. i mean, this is not a happy day anymore. this won't be a happy day at all. it won't be happy weeks to come here for this community. was trying to come to come to terms with what happened. yeah, and that is so you see, i'm struggling putting this actually in words because we're experiencing all day people coming here by next door all afternoon, dropping off flowers and i'm having
12:23 am
a minor breakdown by watching those crosses. so this was the beginning of summer vacation of the summer break the last day of school. i ya know, this is not a joy's time, not a joyous time for this whole community. and this will take weeks month. huh. what do i know? how long it takes to get through this and over this maybe never. and you add to that to morrow. the national rifle association is holding its annual convention, not so far away in houston, texas, that has got to be very hurtful. it has to sting the people there were your yeah, right. that's the topper. i'm the national rifle association. huge lobby. the pockets that didn't see apparently anything wrong with holding a huge convention in use and just in a 3 hour say, 3 hours away from here on this is at least it many think he insensitive and not the
12:24 am
right thing to do, but apparently on the national rifle association didn't think to alter their plants, so it is what it is. people are frustrated about this, but what can they do? yeah, that's what a lot of people are saying this week about many things in the us. what can they do or correspondence? stuff on simon's night joining us from texas. trip on think oh or today mark's a 125 years since the classic horror novel dracula was 1st published. of the author bram stoker got his inspiration for his vampire till while he was on vacation in whitby. on england's north eastern coast, the town is now a place of pilgrimage for dracula fans or reporter joined them there. there was a bright full moon. with heavy black driving clouds,
12:25 am
bram stoker's dracula was published on may 26, 18. 97 would be bay as were in the novel count dracula lands in the western world. twice a year the town celebrates whitby gulf weekend. the visitors have plenty of theories about our fascination with the count. very good story. it's spooky. i suppose this, this the, the fight. i haven't got over evil. professor katherine, when has studied the elements that i wish right up bram stoker took from whitby. he also did his research in whitby library, and it was there, of course, that he discovered the name dracula. and he changes the name of his vampire from count one pier, which would never have worked strictly. it's very melodramatic to contract. la stoker was also inspired by the 1885 shipwreck of a russian schooner in whitby. he just changed the name of the both from the
12:26 am
demetrius, the diameter, the only living thing that bangs off this bose is a black dog. a huge how this huge hound is class. the 1st film version was f. w man aus nurse for our to the german classic has just celebrated. it's 100th birthday. i am that you live in 1931 hungary and born bella lagossi, created the template for a more suave incarnation. but for many christopher lee who played dracula in 7 classic hammer horror movies is the benchmark, bram stoker died before the 1st film came out. what would he have made of the enduring success of his creation? he was a theater manager in his full time job. and i think every theory manager in the right for mind would love a long run of a 125 years. he's inspired thousands of writers and stage directors. when night
12:27 am
falls we meet some dracula devotees who take the whole thing a little too seriously. on i'm to carry on notice. em lucifer! lucifer truck. you! yeah, we believe that van toys all room. there's lots of empires in whitby while we're not sure about that, but 125 years on bram stoker's dracula has millions of fans around the world. the american actor really over his dom d, reportedly died in his sleep in the dominican republic where he was shooting a movie. he became a star with roles as a mobster and martin scorsese's gangster classic good fellows. and as baseball player shoeless joe jackson, in field of dreams leo was 60 so the day is almost done. the conversation continues online. you'll find us on twitter. the w news. you can probably be of britain golf tv. we'll see you tomorrow
12:28 am
with a is the end of the pandemic in sight. we show what he can look like will return to normal. and we visit those who are finding it difficult with success in our weekly
12:29 am
coping 19 special. next on d, w. into the conflict zone with sebastian little is known about the inner workings of the kremlin, especially with vladimir putin in power of my guest this week from a prime minister because castiano in the early 2000. and he knows what for me behind the closed door with 60 minutes on the w, with . welcome to the dark side. where intelligence agencies are pulling the strings,
12:30 am
were organized crime rules. where conglomerates make their own laws? we shed light on the opaque worlds. who's behind them? who benefits and why are they a threat to us all opaque worlds start to june, 2nd on d w. ah ah. the matcher masika rap is gone to angry far from chile speak out about violence against women, which is so doing the panic. welcome to another edition about it 19 special this week. i love all it is around the world responded to.

60 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on