tv DW News Deutsche Welle June 27, 2022 1:00pm-1:31pm CEST
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ah ah ah, this is dw news live from berlin, a plea for help from the, from the west by vladimir zalinski, ukrainian president joyce, the g 7 summit in germany by video court to ask for tougher sanctions against russia. for more web. later, there was a place at the table for emerging economies like india,
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as the group looks to pile more pressure on moscow. and off the russian missiles rock t for the 1st time in weeks low to miss zalinski. as a warning for moscow's pilots, those responsible will be found flocks, mysterious tragedy in a south african township authority saw investigating after $21.00 teenagers are found dead in a tavern where there was celebrated the end of school exam. oh, cause has yet been found. ah, hello, i'm go ahead of us. welcome to the program. ukrainian president vladimir zalinski has addressed the g seven's annual summit that's currently on the way in germany. he joined the leaders of the world's richest democracies, as well as the european commission president via video elect,
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soleski called for tougher sanctions against russia and the delivery of air defense systems to fight moscow's aggression. he also said he wanted the war ended before the winter sets during their 3 day summit. g 7 leaders are seeking to signal unity as concerns a growing of the wes long term commitment to ukraine. i'm our joint in the studio by melinda cranky, w as chief political correspondent, and in el monte w. brussels bureau chief of us are for norman joy and thought joins us from the site of the g 7 summit. let's not, let's start with your g 7. just released a statement on ukraine tell us more while it is a strong statement, as we expect certain the statement that the 7 leaders are showing that there are united and committed to continuing to help ukraine to uphold ed serenity and
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territorial integrity. and they're also saying in the statement, they are ready to support ukraine as long as it takes, which is a strong statement. i would say there also are speaking about to plan for reconstruction and rebuilding their country. so there are committed to helping ukraine in their long term. and of course, you can also find a very strong condemnation of rash as brutal war on ukraine are. in the statement, melinda just mentioned reconstruction of ukraine. all of shawls has suggested that ukraine should get something like the marshall plan. so what does he mean with that? and is it likely to come out of this summit? the marshall plan was the plan that of a enormous financial and, and economic support that the u. s provided for europe and especially for
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germany, although in fact it was the defeated enemy of the u. s. at the time following the 2nd world war. and it was that aid that basically stabilized an economy that otherwise would have been in freefall, thereby enabling germany to get on its feet not only economically, but also politically as a democracy. and essentially, when left schultz promises a martial plan for ukraine. he has the same twin goals in mind, both economic stabilization, in the face of the enormous tragic destruction of urban urban centers, of infrastructure, of residential housing. and of course also the death of many, many ukrainians. so economic stabilization, but also political stabilization to ensure that ukraine can be a vibrant democracy and ultimately a member of the you. and if a finance ministers from the g 7 countries in fact,
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met prior to this summit of the leaders and said that they would commit 19000000000 in reconstruction aid, the you taking also a very significant portion of that and ongoing macro economic support for ukraine's budget because obviously it is also enormously strained by this war. economic help is wanting to reconstruction aid, but also zalinski asked for more sanctions today. what can you tell us about those sanctions? there's been a good deal of disruption discussion about a cap on the price of russian oil and gas. and this because essentially we've seen something of an unintended consequence as the effect of western countries trying to win themselves off of russian oil and gas has not put depressed prices for those fossil fuels for coming from russia, but actually sent them soaring,
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meaning that vladimir putin today, or is a great deal more for selling his exports of energy, although they are now being diverted to other countries, no longer to, to the west, but he's earning more than he did initially. and that of course, is helping finance his war. so the idea of this price cap is that it would essentially target the main insurer of russian oil tankers, telling that insurer, if you don't sell at the price that we demand, we will sanction you. and that essentially would theoretically prevent prevent sales at higher prices. it's a very complex mechanism. the details still have to be worked out by g 7, finance ministers. and they would very much like to have other countries on board because in fact, russian exports are being diverted to countries like china, like india. india is present in this meeting today, and certainly that will be a topic on the agenda, whether it could be persuaded to put some distance between itself and vladimir
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putin when it comes to purchases of energy use, especially belinda india is one of the countries that have been invited as guests to the g. 7, a meeting that in bavaria, the other coverage and tina indonesia, synagogue on a south africa alex of the these leaders were invited to join a why is that so important? the german shall so all of shoulds made it repeatedly to clear that from this a point of view, it is important not only to focus on the west, but also to pay more attention to the large democracies in their latin america and africa in an asian of course are inviting those leaders a he invited key swing states that are important in very many ways. when we speak about russia and holding the russian president vladimir putin accountable. it
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is important for their g 7 nations to convinced indonesia and india argentinean. of course, south africa and senegal, that it's important to join the west to condemn russia's war on ukraine, on, of course, to join the international campaign to impose sanctions on their regime in moscow. and sir, in addition, when we talk about other challenges that the world is facing, for instance, climate change, of course, you need those countries to be on board to have for am bold term and targets to have ambitious commitments when it comes to tackling climate change. and of course, there are other problems when we look at the state of the global economy and those countries invited to you. i also impacted by the economic follow of the war in ukraine and it was clear that is what the german chancellor made clear that he
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wanted them to be here. he wanted to discuss those issues with them. and he wanted to make clear that that g 7 leaders didn't want to discussed the issues about or what's going on about those countries without having them here in person. i some of them out there reporting from al ma from the g 7 some. thank you very much and also thank you very much, melinda crane, our chief political correspondent, here in the studio. before speaking of the g 7 summit, ukraine's president born russian pilots that he would find those responsible for multiple explosions that rock the capital key over the weekend officials, they're say more than a dozen russian cruise missiles hit the city, the strikes damaged residential buildings and a nearby school on sunday, killing one and hooting several others. meanwhile,
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authorities on monday have worn civilians to urgently evacuate the eastern city of lucy. chance kinda don't boss region. as russian forces push to capture it, d w is a nic. kimberly, as our correspondent in the ukrainian capital keith and earlier i asked him if russia is actually winning the battle in the don bus. i think on the local level, 17 yesterday chance. yes, this is going in the way that the russians had hoped will be much more slowly and with much greater losses than they had expected. but i think if you kind of zoom out and look at the bigger picture, dumbass, they still only control about half of the done yet region. yes, they control most the lo hunter region that makes up the dumbass. but they took most of that in the 1st few weeks when ukraine basically was fighting a war on several fronts the same time. so they've not made much progress in the best part of a few months. you remember mario pl fell to the russians in may. so basically, the 1st big city, 70 it's that has fallen russian hands now in. yeah,
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a month in terms of least a chance. guess there is a, with the risk that people leave it too late, that they don't follow those warnings until they can hear the fighting, basically around the houses and then either can't get out or get out in a very dangerous way. and we've seen people lose their lives trying to get out. and i think the hope from the ukraine's had been, they would be able to hold on to this a chance. but it has quite a good strategic locations as a river. and some hills that are quite easy to defend. so if they were just fighting against russians trying to get to list a chance from 70000 yet than they would have quite good chances. but the russians do seem to have outflanked them. and now coming to the other side, but there's no sense that this is a kind of celtic withdrawal and this is going to fall any time soon. this is painful street to st. artillery battles of the kind you're basically hadn't seen since the 2nd world war. and yet all of this is going very slow with lots of lives lost among soldiers and increasingly, cities that have just been destroyed, wiped off the map. it is that basically no one's gonna be able to go back to what this war ends the just gone. now, keith has a long time. been so bad and the attacks now serve sunday rockets hit the city hard
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people. the key of coping i think it's definitely a very painful reminder that anywhere in ukraine is vulnerable to russian attack. however far away you are from those front lines. the russian cruise missiles, the hit key of a we understand were released were fired from the caspian sea. thousands of clumps away says busy no core of this country. that is protected business have been talk that ukraine's air defenses are good enough in terms of protecting from planes ahead and that's why we haven't seen a russian planes flying above ukraine or most of it keeps certainly, but against cruise missiles, that's a much harder task. and without western cruise, missile systems of air defense that can deal with this kind of results, that risk is going to stay. i think there is a certain sense for lots of winkie, if they're not gonna let themselves be distracted or frightened, that this kind of intimidation isn't gonna work. you still see people out in the cafes on the streets trying to go about their lives. the people who have come back
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have made that choice, that they're gonna go back some kind of normality and here one strike of this isn't gonna change them. ok, responded nick, calmly. they're reporting from keith. thank you, nick. russian. shelly earlier in the war house, particularly devastating consequences for one man in the town of ur pin that's near keith. he lost his wife and 2 children in a mortar attack. now he is seeking justice for what he believes was a deliberate targeting of civilians. said he pity been as always spring flowers for 3 for his wife, for his son and for his daughter. they were all killed while trying to escape the russian occupation of their town therapy. said he was elsewhere with his sick mother at the time. that's where he heard what had happened. the boy, the lawyer i just shouted. though i stood on the balcony and just shouted at the animal. it wasn't an accident. they were in the only humanitarian car door for
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people to leave the city. they did so that all the russians knew about it, but that little skill sold other becomes another. the world was watching a new york times photographer took this picture just after said his family. he was hit. many of the other killings in the area well only discovered after the russians left hundreds of people died during rush and bombardment. and the occupation keith's regional prosecutor has opened more than 4000 war crimes investigations. he's grateful for any help he can git. where's the secretaries look for doubtful? i have to thank the media, know it a little more on his and also the whole on the civil society might see a key. but some of their work has already helped to identify many russian soldiers who ought to that have been committing crimes more equal both. but it is part of the operational. sometimes even a crucial part of the evidence that we collect. and oh, it's a snowball e,
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just they not. they look as if it is what i selina said he pity venus is deep in his own war crime investigation. he is an i t expert and these pre war skills help . he has spent weeks collecting photos, videos of the scene and comparing them with maps on school. it's all to try to find out who killed his family. of his no, fuck the less. yeah, a new year inch than way. well, i'm not sure if we'll find him yet, the renewal of it, and i'm not even sure the man is still alive, nor was more law. but perhaps with the help of some musicians we will least find out what kind of brigade it was from. who was the leader gabriella, who gave the order would star shriek? the army is not just a collection of random people. there is always a commander who gives the order. yes. come when you look at the revealed, as elaine said, he is working with a lawyer, they're hoping to take the case to the european court of human rights. we
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have sufficient evidence of what happened. it's all recorded on cambra. my task as a lawyer. it would be to demonstrate that it was done by the russian military to hold the russian federation accountable for violation. they european convention and human rights. and in particular, the right to life was the work itself. he focus for days and nights at a time, but sometimes his loss is even stronger than his purpose. is a young him with a cushion. i can't describe it exactly in more, it's not like it's nightmares process, it's may be just a situation. do you hear a song or you have some other associations or think you could keep and that feeling of emptiness can come very quickly to some why trust one he says he's not going to stop though. lujan, and they're not the issue. i will put it simply if people are remembered and
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someone is working for them, they're still alive. is that the deal in linear? yes through. so anyway, let's have a look at some of the other stories making headlines today. turkish police have released around $400.00 people that were detained during an outlawed pride. march and central is tumbled turkeys. largest city has banned the l. g. b t q. march since 2015. but large crowds nonetheless gather every year to mark the end of pride week. local residents, band pots and pans in support of the marshals. rescuers have saved more than 80010160 passengers and crew from the philippine ferry that had caught fire. authorities say at least one person died and another is missing. the fire broke out as the fairy traveled in waters off the central island of ball. nearby boats helped in the rescue operation authorities in columbia m say at
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least 4 people were killed when a grandstand collapsed during a bull fight while than 300 others were injured in the incident that came during the traditional corolenko event. when members of public enter the ring to engage the bulls, activists from the ocean rebellion group half states to protest to the month at world leaders act faster to save life than our marine waters protest comes as a long delayed un conference on rejuvenated the world's oceans. kicks off in lisbon . human rights organizations have called on spain and rocco, to investigate the death of 23 people, tried to scale a bought offense between the north african country and this spanish enclave of malea. the incident happened when some 2000 migrants mostly from sub saharan africa, stormed the border spanish prime minister pedro sanchez says,
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his country is not to blame o several 100 people gathering for a spontaneous demonstration in downtown madrid. their morning. the victims venting their anger at the moroccan and spanish authorities following friday's gruesome events. this foot, it shows the extent of the drama that took place on the moroccan side of the border fence. scores of injured people lie on the ground, many injured seriously. almost all hail from sub saharan africa are rights organization. post the footage on the web. it shows moroccan border guards, seemingly overwhelmed by the situation, resorting to violence. but spain's prime minister is praised the security forces. he says, the blame lies elsewhere with the adult bill into it. i believe this violent attack was organized by the human trafficking mafia yet i think it's an attack on
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a city and spouse soil if you have an attack on the territorial integrity of our country. i think the report ellen was obeys. let me know that i feel spain is largely delegated border protection duties to morocco. upon taking office 4 years ago, spain's new administration seemed more migration friendly. they welcomed the migrant ship aquarius and the port of valencia. there was also talk of removing the barbed wire from the border fences in north africa. you, helen, a lovely la dameion. now they've arrived in the harsh reality. you and they've come to the conclusion as have other european countries feel that migration from africa to europe will increase over the next month, sentiment that was brought your message after 2 and a half years of the corona virus pandemic. many african economies are desolate shape. and now, thanks to russia's invasion of ukraine, food prices are soaring. like here in tunisia, demonstrators, madrid,
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fear what's yet to come easier than in the less well, because me, if this migration policy continues, will likely see more seems like this and more deaths is as much as it will be done . the exact death toll remains unknown. it's also unclear whether mass panic caused the fatalities as authorities claim for the time being many questions remain unanswered. south african authorities are investigating after 21. the young people were found dead at the tavern, the teenagers were celebrating the end of school exams at the venue in the southern coastal town of east london. inside this unassuming venue, a tragedy off to locals raised the alarm and the early hours of sunday police arrived to discover multiple dead bodies among the dead teenagers. as young as 13. the bars owner who wasn't on the premises at the time,
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said that young people had come to mount the end of school tests. i am in my place, closed at the right time, that it's expected to close. what happened is that this function started after midnight with the arrival of more kids from other places. coming to celebrate the end of exams, living with forensic investigations or, and away. but authorities have ruled out a stampede, saying the dead weren't visibly injured. that's left grieving family members waiting for answers at local more trees. anthony than, oh ha. and slowly get high in the city. we have a child that was there who passed away at the scene. that's the information that we half received on that we didn't think if that child was going to die this way. and
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this was a humble child, respectful gang. and she listened. but as we now kiss will always be kitchen. for now, an angry and grieving community is left wondering exactly what happened to leave. so many of its children dead in ecuador, lawmakers are debating the fate of president the i'm a law. so after nationwide, protests overs handling of a political crisis driven by high food and fuel costs, lhasa has announced a cut and gasoline prices, but it's short of the reduction demanded by the powerful indigenous leaders. they undeterred and keep coming back for weeks. some 10000 people gather, he and the capital key to every day. the protest let by indigenous groups respond by rising fuel prices and leaving tusk. we've come with their heads held high with
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her hands up. i don't think we come to demand and declaim our rights because our economy is in deep crisis. that's why we come early in the week, the demonstrations turn violent. at least 6 people died and scores were injured with a 2nd pro president jim lasso has accused your position of plotting it to in an apparent sign of easing tensions. a state of emergency was lifted on sunday. and government officials and indigenous leaders held their 1st talks about the protest organized by the powerful confederation of indigenous nationalities, credited with bringing down 3 previous precedence. they say the protests, i'm not only about them. after a year of trying, we now denounced the government for their unwillingness to engage in
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a meaningful dialogue. our demands are not based on ethnic lines, but come from the white population, from low income neighborhoods, the women, the workers in the pharmacy. you know, kudos economy was just starting to recover from the corona, virus pandemic. but weeks nationwide, protest will now make that recovery even harder and some sports news. so how about this for a way to win a golf a golf tournament? china lee, how tong triumphed for the 1st time in 4 years in munich, after holding this huge pot to prevail in layoff was hugely emotional moment for lee, who almost quit the sport last year of the struggling to match his early promise. led the whole way through the munich event.
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congratulations to him. and finally, a video of a brave indonesian village a has gone viral after he dispatched a very large predator using just a flimsy rope. the man was filled, capturing a 4 and a half me the long crocodile that had been roaming his village for days. local conservation team helped returned to the terror back into the wild. went away that's it for be of the same for the moment. we'll have more for you at the top of the hour, of course, but i will leave you with some of the highs and lows from the klein, big welt cup, in austria, and along with the fear of heights like me. but i look away with
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hero show how their ideas can change the world. global 3000. next on d, w. eco, india new planting seeds of ho, strengthening force and creating new ones in impenetrable places. that is their mission. steve got back in these areas unbeatable. they definitely keith. but is this really the key in the fight against climate change? it to india? in 60 minutes on d, w. o. in leonor davinci is mysterious masterpiece.
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that is perhaps the greatest leonardo masterpiece in the collection of the louvre and no, it is not the mona lisa. it is the virgin of the rocks, 2 versions, multiple copies, and a hidden drawing. was there another symbolic meaning to this beautiful painting that perhaps we just don't understand? for search for answers starts july 7th on d, w ah, ah, welcome to global 3000. indigenous people in southern chile are combining old traditions and new ideas to save local.
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