tv World Stories Deutsche Welle May 29, 2022 4:02am-4:16am CEST
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[000:00:00;00] ah, world stories also dedicated to the warn ukraine this week. reconstruction in butcher hope for orphans, but we start in northeastern ukraine in car keys. bombs are no longer falling on this large city, but many people are still so afraid. they don't want to give up their shelters. they came here to be the bombs and now they don't want to leave people who have been living in the subway station are petitioning the government to let them stay subway stations here. and hargrove, have been serving as bomb shelters since the beginning of the war. ve katerina top
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i and her husband have been living here since the very 1st day. yet do have a value ross that he there. i go home every 3 weeks. so i said i must, but i always need to prepare myself mentally before i can go down below the moist with them when i run home and take a bath so we can wash here, but the conditions are not ideal utils. so there's a lot of my life is dylan, others don't have a choice, they do not have a place to go back to any more. the shelling of hargrove has all but subsided, and the local government wants to get the subway system running again at once. the people to leave the metro and is offering to relocate them, but many here don't trust the peace. no. because on the she had a law yet on look, i do go out on the street sometimes. but the fear is always there that it for it is not that easy, but if we need time to overcome it,
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not done her own the subway station, many of the houses have been destroyed in some streets, barely a house has been untouched. olga has also spent the past months in a subway is the 1st time she's come back to see the apartment where she lived with her mother and her son. she was told that there was damage, but she didn't know how bad it was. all just, it's terrible all along with the shell hit a wall in one of the rooms as debris, everywhere she documents everything. people can report the damage on the government website,
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but nobody knows how long it will take to get any support group under a short cut, my knees are shaking. my knees are actually shaking. i still can't believe vegetable. i knew that the windows were broken when you were parked, if only that chow hadn't hasten. yeah, if there wasn't a hole in the wall, we might still somehow move back more. the house is still standing, but this is different fairly for now, the only thing to do is to collect some of their belongings. they will not move back to the subway, but to a relative's house. ah, butare, north of kia has become synonymous with the horrors of russia's war of aggression against ukraine. the mass graves discovered there have sent shock waves around the world. now reconstruction of the city is said to start
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long lines of this fuel station in butcher drivers are only allowed to buy 10 liters each. it's not enough to fill up your car even to get to keep around. 3000 residents have returned since russia withdrew from here and the front line shifted, but the impact of the war is everywhere. even the basics, like water and electricity are still lacking the priorities, restoring essential services. me galena scoring works for the city, coordinating the reconstruction. this ah, trade center was ah, completely robbed at the beginning. she wants people to come back and help rebuild what remains after the russian occupation. if russians will not do it 2nd attempt. oh, it's a cave witcher. ah though the calm, comfortable place leaving us,
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it was but for now the city depends on private donations like this to feed people, as most supermarkets way destroyed yet residence, optimistic wouldn't. and there was that guy above is peaceful. we are getting back to normal and i'm so everything is getting better, people are coming back. okay. so since this is right, but not everyone who wants to return has anywhere to live. nearly 3 quarters of all home see or have been damaged or destroyed. helene and nicholas house burned to the ground in a rocket attack. roy was in, oh my god, that was this was my living room. the couple flat to keith but wants to move back to butcher as soon as possible. jim aboard lewis, a butcher has been liberated. it's my home. i don't want to be anywhere else. i'm staying here a little in the ruins. they find 2 jars of pickles, that's a rush and troops left untouched. there probably at least we still have these to 8
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life goes on, they got barbosa. no one knows that are safe enough to return in the long term. but those brave enough to come back are sending a clear message to russia. they will not give up on their home that ah, boucher has also shown how important education and a free press are. but the war is extremely dangerous for journalists, some have died and many have made sacrifices. here's an example from live thought. this is where ukrainian journalist victor covalent go now lives. he has found refuge at the levin media forum. so local, squeaking sports workmans isabel. i put my whole life into this backpack and i fled together with my family. we just with his wife and children, left ukraine after the family fled to russian occupation in their country south.
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they all started off from their hometown bare dance and the sea of on solve victor . since the family had to pass 12 russian army checkpoints, as the journalist, he was in grave danger each time it she'll split shaft. at 1st, i tried to find reasons to state also, but 2 or 3 weeks into the war, i realised that for russians, journalists are of special interest. usually staple early on. bad yonce saw large daily protests against the russian occupiers. this is one film secretly. oh, but now hardly any independent information is available from the town. usual journalists like victor cobra lancaster should now be able to work safely from the mediate forum in live crate. the establishment is partly funded by foreign donations, as well as the aid organization reporters without borders. c. e o. all ha,
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middle vege received a new delivery from braun to day. ha, ha ha ha about hell miss and bulletproof vests. oh, yeah, absolutely. but i'm convinced that eliminating free speech was part of russia's plan for invading a crane. from the very start, it was a hawk linelle clay in levin, which is still relatively safe. victo coven ankle can finally take a deep breath. he's looking for a new job, which is difficult. russia's war is also an economic attack on press freedom. advertising revenue has plummeted. many are now trying to work for international media. a former brewery restaurant in live has been converted into an international media center, a meeting place for foreign and domestic journalists. victor coven, uncle must read, orient himself. sarcoma. i may be here physically at a boy,
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but my fonts are far off. you don't go back and bear danced on his alissa alissa bump. victor koval ankle hopes that the war will soon be over. that piece won't return and that he can soon go home to bed. yonce, the port city on the sea of ourself ah, thousands of ukrainian orphans have found shelter in poland. one of them kiera is now safe in lodge, and she has been dreams for her life after the war. sometimes curious, life looks almost normal. do i need to add oil? yes, ma'am. right now. mix it up a bit. she has baked many easter cakes with natalia, her guard young at the ukrainian orphanage this year though. she's doing it in auch
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poland. she's also trying to keep up with her schooling at long beach, mom, she said the galena, your vehicle was the managing director of the orphanage in koval, in the western ukraine. she decided to flee, not long after the war started a week of arrayed warnings and fear and 2 nights with all the children hiding in the center was enough that no, we left to rescue the children. no one thought about themselves. we only worried about the children and what would happen to them, but it's difficult to have the war behind a shot. i'm afraid that the war will go on here. one of the year that my brother is at warner fighting for our
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freedom and tell of others. this is jacqueline lang, the fatherland galena meets every day with her polish colleagues to discuss how best to help the children. they're allowed to do her little in a while. fleeing small children were told that we were on holiday, but the older ones knew what was happening was the problems shouldn't be hidden. because the children don't like being deceived. the polish and she all happy kids has been working with the ukrainian government to find shelter for ukrainian orphans so far. some 1500 children have been given new homes in poland. kira is one of $41.00 ukraine. children here in wood evacuation to poland has saved her from war, but her dreams have been put on hold. the emmys, canada. yeah. was a pity. i want to sing. i want to study to be a conductor. and i would like to conduct and charities and to have my own choir, me easy to let the said, but there's
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a warm hearted and i can start to study. after finishing the 9th grade, anamosa was to put the to the network was yahoo, kiera practices every day to keep her voice fit for when she hopes she can sing again at home. oh, c o n r c. o. imagine how many portion of land us heard out in the world right now? the climate change? the very hot story. this is wife leslie way pointers one week. how
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much was really get we still have time to go. i'm going on with his subscriber moldings like people in trucks injured when trying to flee the cities into more and more refugees are being turned away at the border. families, please see the reason for these correct only is with people seeing extreme dreams. rough getting 200 people in around the world. more than 300000000 people are seeking refuge. yes. why? because no one should have to flee. make up your own
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