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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  June 19, 2022 10:00am-10:16am CEST

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$6000000.00 jews, like microbes to be annihilated, even 77 years after the holocaust hatred towards jews is still pervasive. the history of anti semitism starts july 2nd on d w. ah ah, this is dw news live from berlin, ukrainian president visits troops on the front line in southern ukraine village. amir zalinski towards michel, i of war. soldiers are fighting to prevent a russian advance along the black sea coast. also coming up the world experiences
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more extreme weather as a heat wave hits europe, flooding devastates northeast to india and bangladesh. heavy monsoon rains, inundate the region, leaving dozens of people dead and millions helps. ah, i'm pablo foliage. welcome to the program. ukrainian president volunteered zalinski has visited troops on the southern front line, while his army battled a russian onslaught that don boss, region, ukrainian forces have also been fighting off attempts by russia to seize more territory near the southern cities of mc alive and odessa. with a little changed the front line positions in recent days, the head of nato, jens stalled him berg says the war could go on for years. ah, inspecting the devastation with his own eyes. ukraine's president followed amid
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zalinski on his 1st tour of the southern front. in the strategic port of odessa and the embattled city of mc alive, the president awarded medals to the soldiers and doctors defending the front lines . his visit comes only a day after a russian strike killed 2 people, an injured 20 in mc alive. despite constant rush and shelling in ukraine south, the main conflict remains focused on the don best in the east through age where the focus of the evade is is now on the cities of scale dynamics combat moody shop to improve the tactical position. the enemy tried to conduct assault operations outside the city grant, but was unsuccessful before them all. over the past few months, russia has taken control of almost all of the east, in lieu hans province largely due to an overwhelming artillery advantage. outnumbered and outgunned, ukraine has repeatedly urged the west to send heavy
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a weapons to the front blinds was blowing a diet as though you have good weapons, but we need much better once we need artillery the shoots farther. our technology dates back to the eighty's. we take care of it often, but it still gets broken out of gear vision feather who the rec, you? western deliveries of heavy artillery have taken time. but some including these u. s. made how it says already having an impact on the battlefield. you actually have somebody isn't, it's a mutual difference between the weapons we had before and the new ones seldom but. so this canon is much more precise which nisha it shoots faster. and a simple to operate your some i because it's low to the ground, it's easier to camouflage. at least just lead to somebody'll actually, you must go out as the war increasingly becomes a battle of artillery. western military supplies are ever more critical. but for the ukrainian troops holding on in the don bus, the aren't coming fast enough. he
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w corresponding to minute shows his in keys and she told me why president lan skis visit was so important. ah, well, i will not amuse a man's care. is the president of all of the ukrainian is not just people based in here for people who have had to feed a country following to school. and he is very much proving its ad by dis, visits on the southern france, which has been under nearly constant shirley which has suffered a heavy fighting. and of course heavy losses for the ukrainian army. you have to keep in mind is at least a 100 ukrainians. sold is it may be much more dying on a daily basis. so i think it's quite important that the president is coming to visit the troops for a to boost their morale. and also he was handing out some meadows to add to some soldiers who had been injured, but also for civilians. it's important that they don't only see their presidents or
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giving addresses from the presidential palace posts and posting his addresses of social media. it's important for ukrainians to see that their president is very much hands on and it is pretty, pretty much on their side because you notice a huge difference in this war about what is happening in the eastern frans and on the southern front compared to at places that feel relatively safer, like human key if life is not normal because everybody is very much aware, it is a war going on, but we not under constant shedding just out, just like in other parts of the country. so very significant visit today. no. nato general secretary at yen stilton bird told the german newspaper today that the war in ukraine could last a years. how much of a blow is this for ukrainians? and is there much discussion on what that might look like for you cry? what really
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a struck me when i was talking to people here is that they are determined to not stop fighting until the last russians. so the we have it, we have left a country that's what's at mayo beat. any clinical key of may of it please call was saying yesterday he was saying, well, you can, we'll only go back at the negotiation table when the fights defy saying will have emptied. and when all the russian soldiers will have, would have left ukrainian saw, these just shows you just how determined people are. you have to keep in mind that ukraine didn't, you know, a didn't, isn't the aggressor in that conflict. it's defending its land is defending its culture so death, incredible sentiments of resilience, of determination to fight, no matter the cost. unfortunately, the cost is very, very high. not just for sold. used is also countless civilians who are dying on the databases here in ukraine. emanuel shies in keith, thank you. here is
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a round up of their stories making use this error. french voters are casting their ballots in the final round of parliamentary elections. opinion polls suggest president emmanuel mac homes allies will emerge as the biggest party in the new national assembly. but it's not clear if he will get the absolute majority, he needs to push through his business friendly reform, a trend. thousands of supporters of north macedonia as main opposition party rallied in the capital skokie on the weekend. the protesters demanded early elections and accused the left us government of corruption and weakening the public health and education systems. elections are due to be held in 2 years time and international monetary fung delegation is headed to sri lanka as the country seat a loan program to deal with. it's ongoing economic crisis. trolanda has run out of foreign exchange to import essential items including food, fuel, and medicines. experts believe that immediate relief from the i m f is unlike
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northeast india and neighboring bangladesh have been hit by heavier than usual monsoon rains, causing widespread flooding. at least 9 people have been killed and 2000000 left homeless in the indian state of sam, expert se floods following seasonal rains are increasing due to climate change. devastating floods unleashed by monsoon storms. millions of people in bangladesh and india saw their homes submerged under water. the floods have killed dozens in both countries. families are mourning the death of their loved ones. this man lost 2 of his grandchildren. no, don't let them over. as wit, relentless dream is making it harder for people to reach shadow in does not eastern state of us. um is also particularly hit by flooding and landslides. rescue teams
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have been raising blue, evacuated stranded villages. i want to give that a citizen had been a little of him because though there had been heavy it involved in the past few days. and the whole of us army in under and the quantum depends of it if it varies from place to place. but extreme weather has become increasingly frequent in recent years. in many areas have had little time to recover before being hit again. at 51 will, is it the car? this is the 3rd time that we're facing floods or i this time the flood has completely swamped the streets of the canal. whatever was repaired after the 2nd floor and it is now again in ruins. north, you didn't obviously, not even all it why low lying years in bangladesh and india are more brought to such disasters. many believe climate change is making. the situation was
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i'm now joined by hossein a deep, the acting director of water aid in bangladesh is based in dhaka. welcome to d, w. and what's the biggest risk now for the people affect it? well, thank you very much. and currently the situation as it is, it's quite intense. and the biggest smith is actually life livelihood security altogether because the places have got inundated in a magnitude, which has been unprecedented over at the age of last 120 for years. so the police a speech and have never seen on the water level rising to that extent are now actually been updated. so there have been a bit of delay in dumps off of it, but we did. and one beatrice is that if we are still actually unaccounted or yet to be rescued, desperate indeed. now tell us what is most needed to am,
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help the situation right, well of course there are some urgent response needed. first of all rescue because as they just mentioned that a good number of people still unaccounted or, and the flat shelters, which are quite inadequate given the magnitude of the crisis at the moment on, mentioned elite are most of the school buildings are used as the large shelter other than the typical flat shelters. now in ceiling district, 51st and 4th schools are in and needed, so they're not being able to use that flat shelter. so the immediate need is of course lou, food or shelter there has been archived. so in many of the facts black shelters, people are actually living in the dark and security and basic healthcare facilities and baby importantly, clean water and sanitation. now floods of dumps of the medium gardens. no. go ahead
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in down to the median town because we expect after a few days, even if the situation will remain green or the water will start to receive an receive. and we will start to see the real extent of that disaster and the damage, or it's those. and the infrastructure which are all due to damaged wraps at been watched over the great we'd have been harvested a light stock life dude altogether. and the water points, the additional facilities being watched. oh, it saw a massive air rehabilitation would require an immediately after, after the flood, as for me, jumped on hossein a deep thank you. thank you. climate change has impacted australia in many ways, including along its shores. a country famous for its beautiful ocean reefs, has seen the phenomenon known as carl bleaching. essentially,
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that's the destruction of reefs true to rising water. temperatures and scientists have been working hard to see if they can ever bring the reefs back to life. when see temperature rises, coral stress, ult and expel the lp that gives them the vibrant color. a process called coral bleaching, disrupting ecosystems across the world. now scientists say they might have found a way to mitigate it by bolstering soft corals, the lesson known and under studied cousin of the hot reefs. they provide tons of food and shelter for other species. they grow really quickly, so they're good at re colonizing after a major disturbance such as like a big cyclone or a bleaching event. and honestly, they're just beautiful and they deserve all the research to hartwell's, yet they also appear to be more resilient to coral bleaching. marine science is rosy steinbeck's, as some of the soft corals ought to chorus,
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didn't respond physically to marine heat waves. that means there's a chance that the already loss reese can recover through those species. but it doesn't mean up to chorus a less endangered, even though they did in general better than the heart quarrels when they finally did bleach, it was catastrophic. i mean, they were literally peeling off the rocks. so even though they do better at 1st, when things start going wrong, they go wrong very, very quickly. across the world, south asia, the pacific and australia have lost the largest proportions of both soft and hot coral reefs due to climate change. in addition to pollution and overfishing, specialist and soft corals, steinberg and other scientists have developed a way to monitor to health of to corals. but she says to problem leads to be tackled from its root, restoring reefs, and regenerating reefs is not gonna be the way we save them the way we save them is
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producing carbon dioxide emissions. and then when those emissions are gone and we have all these techniques for restoration that we'll be able to bring and back. so the vibrance under the sea can as well be preserved. are i well up next, a dock film at looking at the long rivalry between iran and the united states. and don't forget, you can keep up to date with all the latest news on our website, d, w dot com, and you can follow on our social media accounts. i'm pablo foliage from me on the team here in berlin. thanks for watching. take care and see again at the top for next time. ah, leonardo da vinci's, mysterious masterpiece. it is perhaps the greatest leonardo masterpiece of the collection of the louvre. it is the virgin of the rocks.

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