tv DW News Deutsche Welle June 9, 2022 3:00pm-3:31pm CEST
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ah ah this is d, w is live for 5 for you cranes don't. bass continues. constant shuttling pushes ukrainian troops to the outskirts of vera done yet for the cities defend the site. they will not give up. also on the program, the visitors, sharpoda and other residents of butcher who return to the ukrainian town has become
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known around the world for enduring some of the worst atrocities of this war. i'm searching for answers, africa smashes into i school group in a busy world in shopping area. even one person dead and 14 engine authorities believe the driver's suffers from mental health problems. ah, i'm from gale of welcome to the program. ukrainian troops fighting russian forces in the east of the country have retreated to the edge of severe dun yeske. the city could be key to gaining control of ukraine's eastern industrial heartland. president vladimir lansky has described the battle for the city as dreadful and difficult. despite the retreat cave says its troops are not about to concede.
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the shelling is relentless. in the dawn bath, ukrainian soldiers assess the damage available. it was an air bomb scan. the russians dropped an air bomb. you cleans industrial hot land is the current focus of russia's onslaught. it's defense, a heavy responsibility for these soldiers to lucia. first look of it is a very dreadful and difficult fighting homage on her hips is one of the most difficult battles during this war. in yes, i am thankful to each and every one who is defending this region coming up to a great extent, the fate of our dunbar is being decided. they are now naturally done. bus number of some soldiers don't, are frustrated by the presence of the civilians who refused to leave the english. we are to be able to do our job as fighters back up, but instead we're having to make sure civilians don't get killed. that's how we
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lose battles. for shy, leaving though, is not easy. in this city into natalie residents are tired of spending most of their days in basement shelters. but they say they don't have an option. but mean, where do they wait for me? tell me, how should i leave my 85 year old mother who do i leave her with that she would not move out of here. nobility we as though you were saying that we live here, we were born here. i've just been to see my garden and my home, and then is it going to end my live sugar? that of so good luck with rushes, brutal onslaught showing no signs of abating. that is a difficult question to answer date of the correspondent young philip shots, his name keith. he explained what the loss of the don bass region to russian forces
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would mean for you, cried yet severe dannetta has become a highly symbolic, better crown. so for the ukrainians, just like mario paul, our butcher before the russians have kept lowering their goals in ukraine from taking over g after taking over the east and the south of the country to now taking over the don by region. and they've thrown in for much of that fire power in the area rollin and just have arrow next generic. and they are rarely and a high pressure to perform. they are, they have massively increased their missile and air raid they are and they seem to control most of the city now on the other hand, the ukrainians are desperately waiting for the delivery of new long range or artillery systems to, to launch counter offensive. so i think we will still see long and so heavy battles
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in the region. yes. if this war does seem like you to go on for months, if not years and despite face many ukrainians are going home a why is that? yeah, this is probably one of the reasons already because many people have understood that this war could drag on for months if not for years. and a many families that had to flee were separated. of course, only the children and the mothers could lever men state behind, and they don't want to be separated for many years. and also as we discussed, the, a lot of the fighting has shifted to the east. so some areas a have returned to some feeling of nora normality, even though there is still constant air raids all over the country. but there is this feeling of normality and some people decide to return. let's have
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a look at. so what are some people in the town of which i have told me, boris of 1st people in his town of boucher in espresso and with it a little bit of normality. this is what his cafe looked like when he came back a few weeks ago. he said the russians stole every thing, even his st. nearly every thing is working again. now. he's just missing a few windows. i crossed leg broken bridge to go to the keel to get coffee to get milk to get. i like smoked some cookies after 1st guest come over here and they said like, oh my gosh, you are the best you all been renewed. i music coffee next door. the block of flats is still standing, but as badly damaged hit by several rockets or more chairs. some people are returning here to keen to try to re unite their families and rebuild their lives. heavier is one of them. she flat just after the war,
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started taking her 2 small children to safety and poland. she got back home just a few days ago, but i had to take as many people warned me saying we should stay abroad for longer . but it was my decision. yeah, i just realised that these conflict, this war could drag on fini jessica. sooner or later i had to come home on the chip is not say jasmine, the static. she and her husband michael are. we're lucky. they only lost a window upstairs. the people lost pretty much everything destroyed by a rocket. avira knows the rockets could also come back and sometimes questions her decision to bring her children home. so this is josh. it's frightening, delicious. when you hear about new bombings, you immediately think, where could i run to? how do i save the children? my bags are still packed. i haven't even unpacked them yet. and i with medical
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doubt, boris knows his wife and child are safe. they are still in switzerland, one element of certainty when everything still feels up in the air. i don't know what i'm going to expect to morrow because like yesterday we got a student in the queue, got bombed in p. o. i don't know. i'm not planning math in, i'm just leaving by one day right now. and yet as he makes his cocktails again, he is making plans. he wants to offer other returning drinks and seating outside on that terrace this summer. so young fellow, how difficult is it for people to pick up their lives again, made such destruction. it's extremely difficult. of course, there's the very concrete fear that there could still be minds or other unexploded devices in the area. so you definitely don't want your children to go out and play there. then there are the psychological scars, the trauma, especially of the people who had to stay behind and to had to witness all the
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horror. and of course, also many people have for some financial problems, there's this uncertainty that the war could return to the region, so nobody is willing to make it and he plans are bigger financial investments. so there is some feeling of a return true normality there. bob sir, it's a quite superficial feeling. if you have a closer look. ok. thank you for that yon phillip shuts in keith law in ukraine is willing to its force month with no sign of ending. so can russia keep up it's offensive? will be on the obvious death and destruction. war is expensive because of mounting . a military campaign are massive. think about tanks, missiles, fuel, not to mention feeding, an army. russia is believed to be spending $900000000.00 euros a day in ukraine, firing thousands of missiles, many estimated to cost more than
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a $1000000.00 euros each. then of course, as the loss of military hardware, analysts say ukrainian forces have destroyed hundreds of russian tanks, which are also set to cost at least a $1000000.00 euros each with an even greater price tag thing about ukraine thinking of the mosque far missile crews in the black sea that's estimated to of cost must go more than 700000000 euros. so even with staggering costs, surging oil price is a handing rush of the revenue to pay for its war. analysts say the cremeans ability to sell oil and gas will allow it to finance the fighting for some time. let's talk more then about the costs of war with william harton. he's a senior research fellow and the quincy institute for responsible state craft. his work focus is on the arms industry and u. s. military budgeting is books include profits of war about us arms sales are
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welcome to d w. you've described this war as a tragedy for the world, but a great benefit for us. arms contractors, just explain to us briefly why yes. well there's so many ways contractors are benefiting, make your heads. i mean there's of course transfer to brain. there's arms here. allies is increased military, but in europe it may involve equipments. there's a new lend leased program that could also benefit contractor. so probably on $27000000000.00 has been allocated for various ways of supporting your brain and dealing with the recommendation which is about 20 percent of what the pentagon spends every year. and it's quite a big instrument, right. and would you say that this money is being spent well on effective weaponry? i think many of the weapons have been effective, particularly the tank and you know, aircraft weapons of
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a small drones. i think the question will become more sophisticated. will there be an ability to operate more in the short term? we're going to take some months longer so it could be some problems on the rise and as the kind of weapons changes. right. so as, as a vacation increase, it's going to take longer to trade ukrainian troops to operate it effectively. yes, exactly. right. ok. this, this has been as you say, a bonanza for, for weapons manufacturers. and, and if he's likely to continue beyond this war, as we see countries around the world, germany, a primary amongst them, look at that military budgets and say ok, now in the face of this, this russian aggression, we must spend more. yes. you know, poland has bought american tanks. gary is going to buy at sixteen's book,
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lockheed martin. we've been some talk of jerry bank at 5. so what i don't know how far along that is a grass. so many sounds of that sort and also where the rain, you know, $50000000.00 in a la most the size of your state. and that's just in 4 months. so that will continue. is especially ukraine, fun in the n. okay, so i watching some say thank you for talking us through. it's ok. william hardy, a senior research fellow at the quincy institute for responsible stay craft will take a look at some of the store is making news around the world, the head of the international atomic energy agency. rafael grossi has accused iran av, removing 27 security cameras. monitoring it's nuclear program, runs nuclear agency, released
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a video show too. i a cameras being switched off. the grocer warned the move could be a fatal blow to a nuclear. the system. a wildfire has forced evacuation of residents from the spanish town of been a harvest near america, 100 firefighters and 15 aircraft have been deployed to contain the place which is being found by strong whims. us house of representatives has passed a rough of gun control measures, including raising the minimum age to buy certain weapons from $18.00 to $21.00 and batting high capacity, ammunition weapons. but the bill is unlikely to get the senate approval. it needs to become low. u. s. president joe biden has used to regional summit with latin american and caribbean countries to lay out plans to boost economic corporation and safe migration. us hopes to use the summit of the americas to counter china's
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growing influence in the region. there's been controversy over washington decision not to invite the leaders of venezuela cuba, and the corolla, or washington chose not to invite those countries because they are led by autocrats . but that decision has led mexico's present address. manuel lopez open a door and several others to boycott the meeting. underscoring one of the summit key issues of migrant caravan is now heading for the united states on a 3000 kilometer journey. the w reported a tor sayers met some of the people in guatemala and heard some harrowing stories. a border crossing between honduras and guatemala. a place that migrants want to avoid by going through the bush. some like kayla ochoa and her 4 year old son are from venezuela. they've already experienced a hellish journey through the jungle holloman and at least in the deeds i was there
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for people died including a girl and how baby. i don't know the reasons, but they died and i saw the corpses safe. i guess he had only the law at kayla said that police later extorted her and her fellow venezuelans twice on the road north to guatemala city in the capitol. some who are unable to afford a smuggler bank for money to buy their next ticket. the last stop in guatemala is tickled. oman, where migrants take a raft across into mexico. the 14 members of this honduran family left their country because they could not pay their rent and to keep their teenage children from being recruited by gangs in mexico, they have to again, had through the jungle to avoid immigration controls. several smugglers offer them a ride for $30.00 per person, but they don't have enough money. although failure he tried to swing the list. he wanted to take what leads that money we had, we on the i did enough to buy food. he told the van driver that there was
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a tech points caveat, and i think this group's luck ran out when police captured them and sent them to an immigration detention center. that can mean waiting for months in crowded conditions for paperwork to come through. if the biden administration lives immigration measures that were linked to the corona virus, some worry that people smugglers will be the ones to profit with little changing for people who want to cross into the us. blo one up where we just bought a, you're going to take advantage of this to impose new conditions for a new immigration policy audio. we think that it will be more restrictive because of the negotiate nothing taking place in the us needles of the chemist on a set of marisay here. it's a rough road north that may be about to get rougher. you're watching the dublin years life on berlin still to come by francis built of that because of an unless he came and he's making sure every nook and cranny is a precise copy of the origin for so india is facing international
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criticism and protests over derogatory comments. made by 2 members of its ruling party about the prophet mohammed, gulf states in the white muslim world have condemned india and some have demanded official apologies. india is distance itself from the 2 spokespeople, describing them as fringe elements who have been disciplined. but this hasn't come the anger o muslim activists taking to the streets of india and in neighboring pakistan, protesting what they see as the latest insults from india's ruling party against their religion. but this time, the outrage is coming from foreign governments to katara kuwait, indonesia and malaysia, have all summoned their indian ambassadors to protest and saudi arabia also lodged complaints anger to from the organisation of islamic co operation. the i o c. it
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said these cases of defamation are part of a growing spate of hatred and defamation of islam in india and systematic practices against indian muslims. the outcry is focused on no poor sharma who as a spokeswoman for prime minister in the hand, remedies b. j. p. party made remarks seen as insulting his lambs prophet muhammad and his wife, the b. j. p. took no action until the sudden chorus of diplomatic anger. the party has now suspended charm as membership and expelled another spokesman. but one observer has told dw news that baiting muslims is in the b j p's. dna. it's partly what bon bonded is. in part me, it's a part of the record ideology. and that's why since last 8 years it wins was the more the become the prime minister. this demon as ation of the, of the muslim, that the one additional bessler's immunization of minorities had become such and
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such a big issue in this country. the outcry has also taken on an economic dimension with shop owners and some muslim states boycotting indian goods. but it's doubtful that could impress and do nationalists. there might we look at the stream, but the chord will remain the same. i don't think the chord will change. physiology might change the language might change, but the targeting of the muslims will continue. still, the international outcry seems to have forced india's b. j. p on to a road. it was not expecting to take a police in germany. i continued to investigate yesterday, suspected car ramming on a busy shopping street. here in berlin. a 29 year old man plowed into a group of school children killing a teacher, an injuring 31 others. some of the victims are a critical condition. authorities believe the driver suffers from mental health problems and acted with intent when he drove on to the pavement. he w. anya, sharper north, sent us this update. the shoppers and tourists are back on what is one of valenze
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busiest shopping streets one day on from the terrible incident that took place. it's almost like life has gone back to normal. but there still signs of the incident that occurred here yesterday. everywhere you can see the markings here on the pavement where police have circled evidence and further down the street, people have laid flowers and candles and memory of those that were injured or killed. now this attack has raised memories of another, a terror attack here in berlin, just across the road on the square around the church. where in 2016, a man plowed into a busy christmas market, killing 12 people and injuring 7. now back then, and the attack was ideologically motivated. this time it seems to be quite different. it's been confirmed now that the man who drove his kind to the crowds here suffered from mental health issues. and he's been questioned by police and seem to be in korean and confused. police still trying to make sense of his
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statements with the help of an interpreter on his shelf, north reporting. in other news, a suspected as an attack in south korea has killed at least 7 people in a sudden city of day go. dozens were injured. if i started inside a lawyers office in a commercial building, police say they have identified a suspect through security footage and he was amongst those killed in the fire. heavy rainfall has caused flooding in the turkish capital anchor. the turkish weather service is one of the rain and thunderstorms in north and central regions could cause further flooding. european central bank or said it will take action to battle record high inflation. it will raise interest rates by quarter of one percent next month and suggest further hikes will follow prices for consumers. and i'm more than 8 percent higher than a year ago. germany is that top vaccine advisory body has advised vulnerably
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vulnerable people to get vaccinated against monkey pox. the risk group and comprises those with a higher risk of infection. and those in close contact with infected people of the european parliament has voted in support of banning the sale of new fossil fuel powered cars and vans in the u. from 2035. the proposal would require all new vehicle sold from much a year to be 0 emissions as part of a raft of measures in intended to help you to reach its emissions reduction targets . all 27, you governments. i still need to sign off on the proposal before it can become law . is lost in sports. paris is police chief, has told that, enquire, that police action during the champions league final was a failure. did a lot of mo, also admitted there was no evidence to support claims at $40000.00 livable fans. try to enter with fake tickets, initially flinch,
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fragile forces claim to hold fans to provoke the intervention of right police without unruly behavior. and invalid to women and children were immensely injured with tear gas. and one of frances greatest cultural sights has been almost inaccessible until now because it under the mediterranean sea, but after years of construction and millions of your rose visitors can now see it without wet suit. so oxygen tanks, or at least a replica ah, on frances mediterranean coast, just a few kilometers from our se, lies a cultural treasure hidden for thousands of years under water. when diver aniko scouts set out exploring in 1985, he had no idea what he was about to discover. he found an opening picture calanda. there was a passage, 175 meters long. a big flitted room held 2 thirds of it under water. yes,
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that was stalactites and static might select. it was like a greek tempo. a truly exceptional sites you measure exceptionally inside the cave, 500 images painted 20000 years ago. at a time when the entrance to the cave was well above water, it became known worldwide as the coast care cave, after all ecos game. but most people couldn't visit it until now. here in mar, say a 24000000 euro replica is finally complete. additionally, were lots of challenges phase one of them was how to get a prehistoric cave into an existing building. among the cape is very complex in terms of its geology to with this to lag tightens to lag might affect you said a new but the most challenging part was recreating the caves, paintings, and all their richness and variety. in total, there are around $500.00 of them, showing various animals such as bison and horses. and then
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a mystery, a sea of hands with seemingly shortened fingers. researchers can only guess why donna, when hunting, it can be easier to communicate with gestures, thus less danger of scaling of animal was than if you're using your voice on your whether to soon the real cave may be completely under water. already, some of its most significant paintings have been destroyed by rising sea levels. the new rapid kind mar, say is not just a special attraction. it's also an effort to preserve some of humanity's oldest cultural heritage. as reminder of our top stories, russian shelling of ukraine's don bass region has post ukrainian troops to the outskirts of savannah don. yet the cities defenders say they will not give up. i'm here in berlin. police are continuing their investigation of yesterday's suspected
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car roaming on the pavement of a busy shopping street and plowed into a school group, killing a teacher and injuring 14 others. some critically with ours is believe the driver was mentally in pad and acted with intent. coming up next, a news, asia ukraine war prompts time when he said since to prepare for a similar action by the labor china and a surprise decision on cannabis in thailand. but how many shearing vinny? finish manager will have those doors? the more in just a moment to layla, iraq will have more world news at the top of the i've been with
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dominance, get us to the head with d w. business beyond every day. for us and for our planet. a global ideas is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do we make cities green or how can we protect animals and their habitats? what to do with all our waste? we can make a difference by choosing reforestation over deforestation recycling over disposable smart new solutions over steam set in our ways. earth is truly unique and we know that that uniqueness is what allows us to live and survive. google ideas, the environmental series in global 3000 on d, w, and online a
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. ah ah, this is eat up the news aisha coming up today in the shadow of the ukraine walk. taiwan assesses its defenses against the threads of for chinese invasion when he citizens of volunteering for reference training. and the government is pushing from military reforms. we look at typeface plans to repel any potential chinese.
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