tv DW News Deutsche Welle June 7, 2022 3:00am-3:16am CEST
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ah, the rise of a global company, $175.00 size starts june 19th on d w. ah ah, this is dw news live from berlin forest johnson survives a confident stores. the british prime minister to queue was enough support from his fellow conservative to remain in office, but with a sizable number, refusing to back him exactly for how long. also on the program, president zalinski says ukraine's troops are out numbered, bought,
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holding out in severe donetta. it's one of the most fiercely ford battle grounds as russia tries to take control of the easton don bass region. ah, i am jared rate. welcome to the program. british prime minister boris johnson has seen off a threat to his leadership and survived a confidence vote. johnson's own conservative triggered divide because of scandals over lockdown parties that he attended during the pandemic. even though he did when the support of a majority. 40 percent of conservative lawmakers voted against to boris johnson, leaving doubts about his leadership. a dramatic opening to the week in westminster, conservative lawmakers castor ballads to decide whether prime minister boris johnson would remain party leader. vote in favor
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of having confidence embarrass. johnson's leader was 211 folks, and a vote against was a 148 votes. and therefore, i cam announced parliamentary policy does have, ah, the result was met with relieve among johnson supporters and unmasked anger. among the opposition. this evening, the conservative party had a decision to make, to show some backbone or to back boris johnson. the british public off fed up fed up with a prime minister who promised his big but never delivers fed up with a prime minister who's presided over a culture of lies a law breaking the heart of government. johnson has so far been able to shrug off several scandals. but he has struggled to turn the page on revelations that he and
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his staff repeatedly held alcohol fuelled parties, but flouted the cove at 19 restrictions they had imposed on others. with no clear frontrunner to succeed, johnson, most political observers had predicted he would defeat the challenge. so i think this is a, a very good result for, for politics and for a, for the country just in it. just so i do just in this says i think it's a convincing result, a decisive result of what it, what it means is that as a, as a government we can move on and focus on the stuff i think really matters to people . but the rebellion represents a watershed moment and as a sign of deep conservative divisions to break all this down now is d w's. katie stephen c with me in the studio, cody, hi, is this really as convincing decisive are result is, boris johnson is saying it is well, frankly, no. in fact,
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i'd go as far to say the opposite. 41 percent of his m p. 's voted against him. and that's worse than many expected, and for all his talk of wanting to move on. now, he is going to be significantly weakened by this. this is the man who has long been seen as a teflon leader who could shake off gas and scandals. but party gates seems to be the one that's really sticking and boisterous and just can't seem to shake this image of being the room maker was breaking his own rules in those cove locked eyes holding boozy parties, while ordinary members of the public weren't even allowed to visit their dying relatives in hospital. now a civil service investigation found that johnson had to take responsibility for failures of leadership and judgment. he was even find by the police. and now it seems that a growing number of his own m. p. 's have lost confidence and see him more as a liability rather than the electoral asset that he once was. now let's remember his predecessor to resume a few years ago. she survived the confidence boat with
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a much higher margin than this, and even then she was still forced to step down within 6 months. yeah. it's, it's just so interesting, particularly when you look bracket tourism, as you say. now, boris johnson, katy says he says the conservative party needs to come together for the british people. so can he get the public behind him? know, well, that's definitely going to be an uphill battle. there's a huge amount of public anger over party gate, and i think a large portion of the public really nice is us government is one role for them. and another role for us and just this weekend, morris johnson, when he was attending jubilee celebrations for the queen, he was booed and jeered by the crowd as he arrived. and the pose aren't looking good for him, either a snap survey that was carried out just before this confidence vote. found that 60 percent of people thought the conservatives should vote for shots and out of the party leadership. now let's remember, this is a man who just 3 years ago, let the conservatives to their strongest biggest majority in decades. so it's really a big fall from grace for the prime minister. it is
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a very big fall from grace keeping in mind though, that he has won this confidence vote what's, what's likely to happen. no. well, he's technically safe from another confidence vote for a year. of course he could just choose to resign, but we're seeing no signs of that and his allies are insisting that he's going to stay in office. another option would be to hold a snap election. barstow and hasn't rolled that out but he said he's not interested in doing so so, so not a great time for an election as well as this high public hang over party gate. there's also a very dire cost of living crisis in the u. k. with soaring food and fuel prices, and many families struggling to make ends meet. so parsons may just choose to hold on until the next scheduled general election at the moment in 2024. even if he does choose to do that, he is likely to find it increasingly difficult to govern with so much anger among his m. p. 's not only as a party game, but also other issues like post breaks and trading roles in northern ireland. so whatever bar something decides to do next, it looks like probably more storm plays ahead. yeah. we'll have to really wait and see what his next move is. that t w's katie stevens,
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talking about burst. johnson's survival of confidence for casey, thank you very much. we'll turn now to the latest developments in the war in ukraine president loaded me. zalinski says he's countries. troops are out numbered by russian forces in the battle for severe a dot net according to zalinski. the ukrainians are holding our part. the city is being fought for street by street. russia has concentrated its resources into capturing severe donnette as it seeks to seize control of the eastern don bus region. a village near the front line and don bertha russian missile strike. an elderly woman was killed the latest victim in a war that has lost it over a 100 days and continues to inflict misery on the people of ukraine. cookie i see, how am i supposed to feel or might be lifted peacefully?
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normally what that is to it was peaceful to nothing. he, oh, well you're nothing to. and yet they bombed us darker burden in the battle. city of 7 was on that guy. ukraine claims to be pushing back russian troops and moscow. i have confirmed that yet another of his generals was killed during your visit to the front. ukraine's president vladimir lansky has also been to the frontlines and don buses, a risky move teresa morale of soldiers subjected to her relentless rushing to re barrage the u. s. d, u k, and germany have moved to count her russian fire power by pledging descent ukraine rocket launchers with a range of up to 80 kilometers russian foreign minister double down and the criminal defiant response to the boot. jim can only add the longer the
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range of weapons. yes, a lie. the further we will move the front line away from our territory daily, on which neo, nazis couldn't threatening the russian federation. in a war marked by russian set back ukraine resistance. it will be easy to back such words with action. the w nick connelly's in the black sea port city of a death. earlier he told us more about the difficulties ukrainian forces are now up against i think more than being out, man, they've been outgunned and that's in large part because those western weapons deliveries that ukraine's been asking for with ever greater intensity in recent weeks and months are just not getting there as fast as ukraine needs them to be there, obviously. but there's been an announcement recent days that britain would follow america's lead in sending those rocket launchers. but before they actually are trained, the ukrainian military is able to use those and they actually reached on bass. that still going to be a question of a few further weeks. so definitely
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a very difficult situation there. and we're getting reports of ukrainian commanders having to basically think twice before they use any shilling any basically ammunition, because even they have the equipment, they have the manpower, they just don't have that depth. and ammunition that the russians have, where the russians can use $5.00 to $10.00 or even more shells, the grains we think about every single shot. that's very difficult situation there . as for the actual situation, several minutes, we don't quite know how much of the city you crystal controls reports night. that the only control one industrial area on the edge of town. and this has been, some, has been predicted basic weeks now. the ukraine would lose control the city, but for now ukrainian still holding on to a bridge. evidence of it of live nick connelly, their survivors of a deadly shooting at a catholic church in nigeria been describing what they experienced dozens of worship as were killed over the weekend when a group of gunmen opened fire during a service mocking the christian holiday of pentecost a religious celebration turned into
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a massacre. no one was spared. not even the children. the assault at saint francis catholic church unfolded during the morning pentecost service. only a few lucky parishioners managed to escape unharmed. i wrong was before that side fought down. as old man, i can look you were good bro. group. he's wound up this i see in the wall. so i put one of my leg. good. i fall over to the other side. that is, how is it these 2 children were killed in the attack? thankfully the other injured youngsters were able to receive medical attention and time. i'm back to the judge. i saw my 2 children and we brought them down here to fedramp gas. and,
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and i saw also so many people who are wounded handy debt with in any way. and i'm of them are good. awesome. so so you don't so we're, we're just on a to help us with the attack was in our city in the state of ando. it's a relatively peaceful region that's rarely targeted by gangs in islamist extremists with nigeria battling a prolonged answer. see in the north, many are asking why the south was targeted. ah, but with the onto attackers still free churchgoers fear the terror could be taking a new direction. oh, well, it's been 2 weeks now since the texas school massacre in which and in which an 18
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year old armed with an assault rifle gun down 19 children and 2 teachers, people in the town of u. valley are grieving and still bearing the victims of the shooting that changed their community forever. our correspondent carleen a cheap boy, went there and filed this report unless if well, in this little town, like we all lost our kids. each one of them is our personal loss. for one death is already to manual. yeah, they must go. yeah, i was like, oh so the teachers live. it doesn't matter if it's not my own black boy, it's a loss for all of us. a tragic shooting that has changed this little town forever and shaken people across the country. some have driven several hours to pay their respects to the victims and grieve with the community. here we came from crystal city. ah, it was just my plan to come here because i'm
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a mom and so i don't know what they're feeling, but it hits the little kid and i don't know any of the children, but i want to pay my respects to them. it is that the tragedy putting a report in the life others who grew up here are coming back home. jack, he left you vitality one day before the shooting. now she's back at least once a week to visit her parents and friends. hardly in a small town with the reason we live in the small community is so the kids have freedom from a free that's not gonna maybe be the case with you all day as a town that once time to mourn their loss. 19 children have been killed and to teachers. this community wants to grieve. the main quick turn remain. how can this faith, how can this country prevent tragedies like this one from happening again?
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a question this country still can't answer. in the mean time, everyone here is doing what they can to show solidarity with the people off evolving hopefully something to get done because we don't, we don't need this kind of stuff happening to any kids will perform like we always do. but of course, today is a little bit different. we're morning. oh, that's all for now. doc film is up next. ah, it is a secret war unless one axis of the conflict between yvonne on the one hand and israel in the united states on the other for more than 40 years, the adversaries have been irreconcilable.
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