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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  June 30, 2022 10:00pm-10:31pm CEST

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$6000000.00 juicy like microbes to be annihilated because even 77 years after the holocaust hatred towards jews is still pervasive. the history of anti semitism starts july, 2nd on t w. o . this is g w. news live from berlin to night. promises from g southern and nato leaders to support ukraine as long as it takes in madrid. the nato summit ended today with the alliance moving forward to expand in size, and the number of troops stationed in eastern europe. also coming up tonight,
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russia abandoned a strategic island, but it took from ukraine at the start of the war, ending back snake island, the waxy after months of heavy fight. and the son of a dictator takes office in the philippines, ferdinand marcos. jude is sworn in as the new president, after winning a landslide election victory at his inauguration. today he praised his disgraced father for getting things done. ah, i break off to our viewers watching on p b. s in the united states and to all of you around the world. welcome. we begin tonight with changes at nato and changing global security landscape. today, nato ended it summit with a tougher stance on russia and with the promise to is true presence here in europe
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. the meeting in spain also ended with 2 countries, finland and sweden, being officially invited to become nato members, pomp and pageantry in madrid. leaders of the 30 nato member states have tightened ranks against russia as an attack on one is attack at all, and we will defend every edge of nato territory. every edge of nato territory for our part, united states is doing exactly what i said. who do it, food invaded it hats, our forest posture, and your ne, to agreed on a new strategy ending any pretence of partnership with russia than that's actually history. in fact, nato is a defense of alliance. it does not attack other countries and has no intention of doing so, was it? it is not a threat to any one in its own neighborhood. i know, but in fact, it is pooty and who has made imperialism the goal and the object of his policy is
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on up politic gemacht from kingston's unapologetic. while some members have announced new deliveries of weapons to ukraine and additional military funding of more than 2000000000, yuri's chief says it's simply not enough to catch co brothers who represented ukraine here in person in madrid. one that ukraine's fight is a fight for europe. wake up, guys. this is happening now. you're going to be next. this is going to be knocking on you door. just in the blink of an eye, nato is also sent to grow with the turkish veto against finland and sweden joining having been ironed out, vladimir putin, his warning heel can sit ascending, ballistic, and even nuclear weapons, to russia's border with finland. once it joins nato's ranks, treachery, nature, unusual. if everything was going fine between us, true. but now there will be tensions there certainly will is in it that this is obvious and inevitable. i repeat that though. if there is a threat to us and federalists of the most though us animal group, nature also drop plans against what it sees as coercive tactics by china. the
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leaders will meet again next summer in the lithuanian capital. vilnius will turkeys president richard toys. the air to one shows that he could still block sweden and finland from joining nato or corresponded terry schultz. she is in madrid, she has more. yes, this is a cliffhanger. one of the last press conferences here at the summit, many people were already packing up to go home. but it is important that we point out that president air to one was talking about what he called their promises. and that is this a, in a, in a memo, signed by the 3 leaders 2 days ago, finland and sweden vowed to continue fighting terrorism to continue a lack of support for organizations that turkey considers terrorist organizations like the p k k which is also considered a terrorist entity by the european union. but what, what air to one did just the late this afternoon was that he came out in a press conference and said that sweden had agreed to extradite 73 terrace in his
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view. now this is certainly not something that we've heard from the swedish government. they said that they hadn't made any changes to i'd, decisions made by their judiciary, for example. and heir to one said further that if sweden did not keep this promise, that he wouldn't send the ratification, he would, he wouldn't send the membership ratification to his parliament, which is required for sweden to join the alliance. so we don't know exactly what's going to happen with this. i talked to nato officials after this, who said, we're just going to presume that turkey keeps it's word along with finland and sweden and that on tuesday the 3 will be signing an agreement, which formally starts filling in sweden's membership process in, in nato. there was dw of jerry schultz reporting from the native summit in madrid. earlier i spoke with dr. alliance. ned cough, a rush, an expert, and electra at university college london. here's her take on native's announcement that it will support ukraine as long as it takes. so i think we have definitely,
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and you know, i think is now accepted by all sides that this will, will carry on for months and that there is no and insight, i think, has been accepted by nato by president by then prime minister abra johnson. because i think in practice we have now war of attrition and on the ground we simply don't know how long it's gonna take and that's why it has a timeline. so we've been hearing this week from a g 7, a nato. you know, this is until the end of this year. so this is actually going into sort of the autumn and winter if we're talking about this is being a matter of months and not necessarily being a matter of years. is that, in your opinion, is that more realistic? is that also more feasible? considering that western leaders, they have voters that they have to answer to voters who, you know, may not be able to wait for as long as it takes when it comes to supporting ukraine . so i think it was interesting to see that already they've expanded
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a timelines to let say the end of the year. and actually in practice, i think they would say that this is ongoing and we simply don't know. so be too soon to think it as of months rather than years or to have that time frame. but the shift is from weeks to months. right? that's been the sort of the change of the documents. but i think and definitely there's increasing concern in ukraine. but also from acts that, that you know, the potentially a weston decisive focus on ukraine is waving as other issues coming up to the table . and i think that the summit was crucial in focusing nato's interests and focusing nature's attention on what's going on on the ground in ukraine. by, for example, making russia is like the number one threat tonight. question is, do you think that message has arrived where it supposed to in that, of course, being the kremlin and at the desk of vladimir brewington? do you think you got the message?
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so i think that message has been heard loud and clear over the last few months and i think sense, i think that it's been the change of emphasis for nater. it's been crucial in sort of redrafting sort of their own for the institution itself. i think the russians are well aware and have been talking about this, having to say that nate is focused on rushes. a threat for the last few years in a says, actually, domestically from put his point to be it, this is kind of paying it to his hand, because now he can turn to the russian public and say, look, we always told you that nature was us. he said imperialistic, that they will, it's against russia. no one believed us, but now they've actually, you know, written it sort of into the agreements. and so i think, you know, we have to see how he's also plays out into for different audience. it's yeah, i mean, and it remains to be seen if time is on the russian side, or if it's on the west side, we will see dr. alliance net cove of university college london. we appreciate your time and your insights tonight. thank you. thank. thank you. thank you. russia says
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that it has withdrawn its forces from ukraine's snake island in the black sea. while scale calls it a good will gesture that shows that it is not blocking ukrainian grain exports. no snake island became a symbol of resistance at the start of the war when ukrainian soldiers rejected a russian warships demand that the surrender w's nick connelly. he is in cave and i asked him what the russian withdraw from snake island means for ukraine's grain exports. or 1st of all, i think, hearing you correctly, no one really believes that russian claim that they were this was a good will gesture. it simply was feeling the heat from lots of western weapons, anti air, and to ship missiles that were preventing russians for re supplies. they carland and those rocket launchers high miles from the u. s that were enabling the cranes to hit the island from its own coasts. as for the grain exports on foot, and he does a lot because the main problem are still the mines, which there are lots in the northwestern part of black sea. and basically,
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as it is no private ship own is going to send their ships anywhere near ukrainian ports, even if the ukrainians began taking those mines away. and they're not gonna do that because they just don't trust russia to not take advantage that situation and sending lots of ships trying take those cities on ukraine's go. so it basically means russia has fewer shots of trying to take even more of ukraine surgery on the black sea. but as for people struggling with high grain price around the world, they're gonna have to wait and forcing. and nick, what about the latest in terms of the battle for the don birds? we know that russian missile strikes continue. do we know what the situation is in the city of this is chance to night? it is dire. people that have for the most part, been without basic services for weeks and hopefully most have now left after plead pleading basically from ukraine, given figures to get out while they still can, before you know, their evacuation might cause someone else's life trying to help them to get out, i think there is an expectation here that there's a chance will fall to the russian at some point,
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but that is ukraine strategy right now to make russia pay for every street that it takes to maximize russian losses and to hope that they can get russia bogged down, they're slow that advance until those western weapons come on. we've seen what a difference those western my weapons have made a snake on. and now we heard from joe biden, madrid, that of us has got 50 countries together, that they are planning to send potentially $500.00 at tanks and $600.00 other systems and it's the other around. so those are basically just a whole new level of support. i mean, previously we're talking about dozens of tanks at a time, dozens of artillery pieces, but never on such a scale if that really turns out to be possible, if you can't end up getting that, that could be the qualitative difference that would really enable ukraine to go in to counterattack and to return the tables in the east for now the playing for time . and this chest of which is probably going to be the next city that you know, given up to the russians in the hope that you crank and minimize its losses. it abuse nicolai with a late tonight from key as always. next, thank you. a court in eastern ukraine, controlled by pro russian forces,
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has sentenced 3 and 4 in men who volunteered for the ukrainian military to death. they're being held by russian back shepherdess to are accusing them of being mercenaries or reporter emmanuel shaws. met with the friends and families of one of the prisoners who happens to be from morocco. people who are rally support for his release. brain fat june left for the front lines with his childhood teddy bears trapped to his military kid when he came to ukraine from morocco to study error, spatial sciences. but last november swapped his student visa for a military one and joined the army, match to the surprise of his friend who i was against that. and one of the main arguments he gave me was the fact that he's kind of feeling useless. so he wants to do something useful and find himself, but he didn't serve long. he 40 more,
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you pull and surrender to rush and forces along with over a 1000 fellow servicemen mid april. but a separatist authorities didn't treat him like a ukrainian prisoner form. they argued he was a foreign mercenary and put him on trial. along with 2 britons go down the 1st foreign fighters to be tried since the beginning of the war. at the beginning of june, all 3 was sentenced to death, ukrainian authorities and, and yours, those we checked is read it as a parent is caught in, dumbass is not recognized by keith or by the international community. it sir, propaganda her show and her in this case, 1st of all, the or, ah, issue on the institution. so called court, ah, that pro provide the this where do the desk sentence is sir,
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not so applicable and available on ukrainian territory. we are an ukranian territory, so we consider it like the action of terrorist organization and it's pure terrorist act that should be condemned. and her a severally punished the on international and national level. we are dealing with the big diaries group supported by terry state for brian's family. the trial and death sentence came as a shock, and they say they haven't received any help from the american authorities so far. the moment when i seen the video of his structure today, i tried to contact the american embassy and where i am right now and they literally were like, what do you expect us to do? i tried to reach many other authorities and sell it. origin was silent. i feel like there's like scared to talk about maybe like little into trying to keep it down like he doesn't exist at all. just like his family, friends, friends,
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feel very alone in trying to help him out of the situation. they have lost a social media campaign and kind of asked all around the city really so that these are very effective and re record on them. because fever started texting. ross owned social media campaign that we started say for him like 3. so those costs are on the city and what can we do to help the incentive family fit? what hope to having to support they get from the public while the separate is remaining charging dumbass? that's about the only thing they can do. here are some of the other stories now that are making headlines around the world is really lawmakers have voted to dissolve parliament. the move triggers the 5th election safe in less than 4 years of the foreign minister. mister, he becomes the inner m prime minister and he's taking over from of tale bennett. he says that he will not run for reelection in november. chinese president,
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she's in ping is in hong kong for celebrations, marking the 25th anniversary of the former british colonies, hand over it's. she's 1st trip outside of mainland china since the start of the corona virus. bend up, cont, anji brown, jackson has made history becoming the 1st black woman to be sworn in as a u. s. supreme court justice, a 51 year old, replaces stephen bryer. who is retiring. justice is remained on the court for a life or until they choose to step down. i have been a judge, a ruling today by the u. s. supreme court limits the powers of the us environmental protection agency. the court saying that the agency does not have the authority to cap greenhouse gas emissions from coal fired power plants. the ruling by the majority, conservative court is a big blow to the by did ministrations fight against climate change. the president
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is valid to remove carbon from america's energy mix by the mid 20 thirty's. the supreme court decision means that the government will now depend on a divided congress to set legislation to lower harmful emissions. or let's going out to washington or correspondence to meet misconduct. she is following this story for it's going to be to you so me how will this affect the by did ministrations overall plans for fighting climate change in protecting the garden? brent the impact is huge. share, i mean, what this ruling does is it severely limits the environmental protection agency, the e p, a from regulating emissions from power plants. and if you look at what the supreme court is saying here, it's saying that congress didn't give a federal agency the right to regulate on what is called major question. so that's any big issue like climate change, and that, that power needs to rest with congress. but as you just mentioned,
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climate legislation isn't getting anywhere in congress. and one of the very 1st things president biden did when he entered office was to rejoin the paras climate agreement. as administration has set out ambitious targets of reducing emissions by at least 50 percent. this decade and making power plants carbon neutral by 2035. and that is a big task because the u. s. still relies on fossil fuel power plants and those plans make up about a 4th of us greenhouse gas emission. so the ability to rein in that production is pretty important to president biden's climate plants. and his ability to use executive power has been key to that so severely restricting the e p a here is a big blow to president biden. and his attempts to make progress on a curbing global warming. is there been international reaction to this rule? there has, i should say, 1st of all, the president biden has been on his way back to the u. s. t after those g 7 and nato summits. but a white house spokesman did release a statement calling this
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a devastating decision that quote, aims to take our country backwards, adding that president biden will not stop using the tools at his disposal to attack the tackle. the climate change crisis. i hear in the us, of course, our republican lead states are welcoming this decision, saying there's long been federal overreach on climate change. but if you look at the international community here, we know that climate change has a big impact everywhere as well with the u. s. being we're in the world's biggest polluters and brent the united nations weighing in today saying, although it doesn't provide commentary on these issues on individual member states, quote, we can say that this is a set back in our fight against climate change when we're already far off track in meeting the goals of the paras agreement, so a lot of disappointment, there are from the u. n as well. today, at the end of the native summit in madrid, president biden condemned the behavior of the u. s. supreme court for its decision last week to reverse roe vs wade taking away that constitutional right to an
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abortion for women in america. when you add that to what we also saw, that the day before, the ruling on gun control being able to carry a gun in public. when you add that to today's ruling on the environment of people looking from outside could easily get a picture that the court is rolling back. what has been considered? progressive legislation in the united states. what churchy friend, that's a picture inside here too. those are the voices that we're hearing here in washington, certainly from democrats, and a lot of, of, of observers as well. i mean, we have to say that this is a conservative dominated court. the ruling that we saw today has been a long term goal of conservative to rein in the power of the federal government and to hamper its ability to legislate to give states more power and congress more power. you mentioned roe v wade, that has also been a long term goal of conservatives to overturn the constitutional right to an abortion. the reason we're seeing this, that rollback, as you called it,
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is quite frankly, the makeup of the court president trump, was able to appoint those 3 conservative justices during his term. that is fundamentally shifted the balance of the court. and many observers here brent are very worried about the direction that this court has taken and about the independence of the court in being able to make his massive decisions that affect every day american life. yeah, it's very good point in with the new justice of taking off his should day. some commentators are saying the makeup of the court as we see it now could stay that way for a good generation and a half w's to me. some has gone to in washington to me as always. thank it. is the remarkable return of a disgrace to political dynasty. ferdinand. marcos junior has been sworn in as president of the philippines more than 3 decades after his father was ousted as the country's dictator. marcus junior, who was also known as a bomb bomb. he got took the oath of office after winning for england the election
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in a landslide. now he was joined on stage and his inauguration take a look at this by his mother. imelda. marcos arcos junior praised his father who ruled by martial law for nearly a decade in the philippines, saying that he was a leader who got things done give a big, he has pledged to unite the country to create were jobs and to tame inflation. he said, you pick me to be your servant, to enable changes to benefit all i fully understand the gravity of the responsibility that you put on my shoulders. i do not take it lightly, but i am ready for the us. g w's corresponding jermanti, as he attended the inauguration of said, an un marco's junior in manila, where thousands of people came out to show their support for the new president. it's the very moment that thousands of supporters afforded on marcus junior here at
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the national museum. in the heart of manila f. been waiting for 36 years after being ousted from the philippines. the marcos dynasty is back in the seat of power, ferdinand marcus junior. now faces an uphill battle to keep his election promises, like cutting the price of rice in half as inflation in the country. it's rising sharply. you will also have to balance relations between 2 superpowers. the united states on the one hand and china that has sent its vice president to the inauguration ceremony. here in manila, on the other hand, the most difficult task of all however, will be uniting a nation that is deeply split over its past. the opponents of ferdinand marcus junior, but in particular, the victims of the martial law period under his father are deeply concerned that the son could bring back the dark days of the dictatorship. a period that fred, an marcus junior,
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himself referred to as the golden era of the philippines. and if you talk to supporters of macos here at the national museum, that is exactly what they hope that marcus will bring back to the philippines. and that was geared montes reporting from manila, one of germany's biggest contemporary art shirts as opened in the city of castle documentary displays works by artists from all around the world. but a controversial mural has been removed this year because it contained anti semitic images. ah, it was a full house for the 1st real debate about the anti semitism scandal. at document of 15, there were experts on stage and in the audience, a member of the indonesian curatorial collective ruin. grouper who greeted the crowd in conciliatory tones. this is sir, very good location too, too little, also that we are here, ah,
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and her to learn to listen. yet the contentious work in question is no longer there. for 2 days, a sprawling banner hung in the middle of casa, among its many images were 2 figures criticized as clearly anti semitic. a more sad soldier with the head of a pig and a man with side locks, often associated with orthodox jews, fangs, and an ss insignia on his hat. it's the work of the indonesian art group toddling party, which enjoys cult status in its home country in castle. the rest of their work is currently staged at a former indoor swimming pool, cardboard figures with strong political messages, large format banners and a tank made of pappy machine on which visitors can write their own messages. the artists of tiling paddy were shocked by the intensity of the protests. they felt that they were left completely on their own by the document management. ah bugging man, as well as any man. how does it feel for artists working collectively to have their
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work removed? obama, the last that there was no announcement massey, no dialogue, no discussion about what we wanted to express with this artwork or govern rosario marin mendel, a german israeli historian, an educator, organized the panel to facilitate that dialogue. he criticizes the fact that no one is taking responsibility man with the off the perspective of the and then you have to accept value. that's and listen to the perspective of others synchron in. when this won't work with people from indonesia come and say, this is how it is like it or leave it as rhythm. but it also won't work if you just point the finger at them and say, do this or you're out, mocked or the, the idea of it in the muddle debate. hortensia focused responses. many cultural projects, fears that there will now be calls for more curatorial control. darby solutions, why i have serious doubts about this, any kind of a fuel. and i'm a supporter of
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a culture in germany that gives the institutions autonomy but also great responsibility. i think also found fraud. nobody really took on this responsibility at the documentary and at present they're releasing no statements. but perhaps now the controversy also offers the chance for a genuine dialog. you're watching w news. after a short break, i'll be back to take you through the day to night. the nobel peace laureate berea restaurant. she's going to join me to talk about the philippines. a country that is battling itself, it's past and is future will be right back with
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ah, with ah ah, often it is just to raise a blade that destroys women's lives who although genital mutilation is forbidden in france. many women are affected. what can be done about it?
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the gynecologist to hi, tim and her women's shelter fight against this brutal ritual focus in 60 minutes on d. w. o. oh, she w's crime fighters are back in africa. most successful radio drama series continues them all episodes are available online. and of course you can share and discuss on d. w, africa's facebook page and other social media platforms. crime fighters, tune in now. mm hm. then does the bab and say the 20, her women in asia season 2 starts july 6th.
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ah ah. this week at both the g sub un and nato summit world leaders repeated their message, almost like a mantra. we will support ukraine against russia as long as it takes. there was applause in kiva, followed by yet more requests for more weapons. no, lee.

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