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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  July 1, 2022 8:00am-8:16am CEST

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$6000000.00 jews, like microbes to be annihilated, even 77 years after the holocaust hatred towards juice is still pervasive. the history of anti semitism starts july 2nd on d w. ah ah, this is dw, do is coming to you live from berlin. miss l strike near ukraine's port city of odessa. ukraine says 17 people are dead after russian aircraft buyer missiles that hit a multi story apartment building and other targets. the attack comes a day after russia abandons
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a black sea island seized early in the war. also coming up, china celebrates 25 years since the united kingdom handed back hong kong president . she jing ping praises china's administration of the territory. during his 1st visit, since his sweeping national security law silenced political opposition and the u. s . supreme court deals a blow to the by the administration's fight against climate change. a new ruling curbs, the environment, the agency's power to regulate carbon emissions. ah . hello, i'm terry martin. good to have you with us. russian missiles have hit the ukrainian region of odessa officials there said at least 17 people died in the series of overnight strikes, fired from russian aircraft missiles hit, apartment building,
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killing residents and sparking of fire rescuers. we're searching for people buried in the rubble. another missile had a nearby recreation center where the dead include children. though russia has intensified attacks on ukraine in the last 2 weeks, it has just withdrawn from snake island just south of odessa. that may be, that may make it possible to restore c access to odessa as port well, our corresponding to manuel shars is in odessa and joins us now. emma, what more can you tell us about these missile strikes? well, this sir missa. he turned a residential area, i would say, once again or in ukraine. this is near odessa and at the time we're speaking this already, 17 people which have been found dead as over 30 people injured among, to dare to have one child among the people injured. you have 4 children and
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a pregnant women, d emergency services, the 1st responders, they're still on the scene, they're still searching to rebel or to find more or survivors. this is just another day, was just another attack on a civilian sit in what seems to be indiscriminate. shelling in spite of russia are continuing to say that it does targets that it does a much military targets. how vulnerable emma is. the odessa region is ukraine in a good position to defend it. well, 1st off, terry, are you know, a death art city? it is a port city, there's those. so it's by the see bite of black. see where a lot of miss eyes are being fired. you know, to reason why you don't see to see behind me right now is that we don't have the authorization to fill may. it's because ukraine and also it is, are so worried that, or, you know, it, these might lead to russians are finding targets. it just shows you how larissa,
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about any attack that will come this way and because we directly by the black sea, well, odessa is more vulnerable because it's a shorter, you know, a range between the me size and the target. so it leaves all the sauce a part of your credit, southern part of ukraine, pretty vulnerable, and the past few weeks and last night as well have don't have shown just thought that civilians are very much vulnerable last night. it was in odessa a few days ago. it was in michel, i if there's really nowhere that feels safe in ukraine, especially in that area. this attack came soon after russian troops withdrew from snake island just to south of odessa in the black sea there. tell us more about that. well, it's interesting because of course, ukraine, an armed forces are, you know, this was very important for them. this was an island that was taken on to very onset of the war, and it was a huge blow to the moral of ukrainian or tubes. then there was, you know,
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dose border guards, ukrainian border guards, who are told a russian war ship, where to go and it had become quite lenders are legendary here and quite a symbol of ukraine and resistance to the fact that ukraine has a hold of snake island is very important symbolically so, so very important strategically because it gives them back control of parts of the black sea which day, hard before the start of the war. but of course, this is a really a defeat and resounding defeat for russia. so maybe those strikes came out of retaliation, but we cannot really tell because every day there's more shedding, you know, upon civilians here in ukraine. manuel, thank you very much. that was our correspondent model, was charles there in odessa, ukraine. nato has wrapped up its summit with a tougher line on russia and a promise to increase its true presence in europe. at the gathering in madrid. nato also officially invited 2 countries, finland and sweden to become members of the military alliance. pomp and pageantry
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in madrid. the does of the 30 native member states have tightened ranks against russia and the 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. we do it prudent, invaded it hats, our forest posture, and your nature agreed on a new strategy, ending any pretence of partnership with russia. then 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. for these. it is not a threat to any one in its own neighbourhood, i know, but in fact, it is pooty and who has made imperialism the goal and the object of his policy is on up for the ticket mark titled some game, stones unapologetic, while some members have announced new deliveries of weapons to ukraine and
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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 happening now, you're going to be next. this is gonna 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 is wanting, he'll consider sending ballistic and even nuclear weapons to russia's border with finland, once it joins nato's ranks. treachery, the unusual. everything was going fine between us. but now there will be tensions there certainly will is in this is obvious and inevitable. i repeat that though, if there is a threat to us in that area the most though us in the mobile nature also drop plans against what it sees as coercive tactics by china. the leaders will meet again next summer in the lithuanian capital vilnius
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u. s. supreme court has ruled that america's environmental protection agency does not have the authority to limit greenhouse gas gas emissions from coal fired power plants. the ruling by the courts. conservative majority marks a setback in the biden administration's fight against climate change. it means the white house will now have to work through a deeply divided congress in its battle to curb emissions another week, another u. s. supreme court ruling with far reaching consequences. this one concerns coal fired power plants and the extent to which the u. s. environmental protection agency can force them to cut emissions. the court ruled that the agency is not authorized to make decisions with such economic and political implications. today the court put the fossil fuel industries
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and interests over the over their own people. and that is, that's actually horrible. there is so much consensus right now that the climate crisis is our number one issue and the fact that we're already not doing enough. u . s. president joe biden wants to make the u. s. a leader on climate change. the plan was to make electricity generation carbon neutral by 2035, but that depended on having the environmental protection agency behind it. instead, the court says it's now up to congress to pass climate laws, but support for biden. there is far from assured. st. luke's mother stories making headlines around the world, starting with another development at americas highest gord content. g brown, jackson has made history becoming the 1st black woman sworn in as a u. s. supreme court justice. the 51 year old replaces stephen bryer, who's retiring. justice is remain on the bench for life for until they choose to step down. the ecuadorian government has signed
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a deal with indigenous leaders bringing an end to protests that paralyzed the country for almost 3 weeks. the agreement cuts fuel prices to address protesters anger over the rising cost of living. 5 civilians and one soldier had been killed in the unrest. john is present, she gen paying has visited hong kong to mark the 25th anniversary of the united kingdom, handing the territory back to the mainland. she oversaw the swearing in of their cities, new chief executive, john lee, replace as terry lamb, who led the crackdown on political descent in hong kong before the hand over in 1997, china agreed to maintain a one country to systems policy to protect basic democratic rights. beijing, however, has recently tightened his grip on the city, including a national security law that restricts dissention to deepen. d, w correspondent, p v. kong is in hong kong, fame. it tell us what she's been paying has been saying about hong kong on this
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anniversary. what a key of his address is about the future of one country to systems principal of hong kong. that is the policy which guarantees homes autonomy and freedoms for at least 50 years since hong kong hanover. but now there's a big question mark on whether it's still working or not. so she's being set today . he says that there is no reason to, to stop implementing one country to a system given him that he's set. this is such a great system and it has to be insisted in the long run, but by changing pews definition that he set in his key address today that he gave he instructions on how to implement the wine country to systems principal in the coming future that he says, safeguarding sovereign interest and national security is the supreme principle off
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of one country to systems policy. and that's b. james comprehensive choice section on hong kong, despite a certain degree of autonomy must be insisted. and by doing so, only patriots allowed to run hong kong, and those are the people who can only be holding the powers on paul co. so. so those are the conditions that can never be shaken or compromised in any circumstances. the critics and observers say this is a pretty help stand on hong kong political future. phoebe, before the pandemic began, there were massive protests in hong kong against beijing, tightening its group on the territory. what's the state of the opposition in hong kong? no. the hong kong has changed a lot that many citizen saying that they can't even recognize any more compared to that the 525 years ago. so just 5 years ago when shooting peeing last visit hong
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kong, there was few protest a massive while with hundreds of thousands of people tech industries on the same day as he federated to any battery all handled by hong kong. but not any more. this is not allowed anymore, is the implementation of the national security at all, many activists, and shall protest group and now and even the individual, the more gal actions the bent according to the active as i talked to. they are confined to their own apartment today. and yesterday that and not only that, don't allow to go out and any kind of protests. so there's a drastic change in atmosphere. and so people really feel this kind of change in the client in political freedom and expression. maybe thank you very much. correspond p because they're in hong kong. out of portugal where scientists are sounding the alarm about the dwindling population of sea horses off the country's
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coast. and just 20 years. their numbers in one s where i have fallen by some 96 percent a re population effort. cold projects see horses underway in hopes of halting the decline. the ria formosa lagoon in southeastern portugal used to have one of the largest populations of sea horses in the world. but these tiny creatures are disappearing. viola meal haven't seen any sea horses here for a monster or rather years, locally, nothing. and they used to be everywhere foot good. the sea level is rising. salt is coming into the fresh water lagoon. a sea horses are leaving, but that's not the only threat of weak motion. so if they go to the main reason for the decline of the c horse population is man who has destroyed their habitats. would all we'd walk to live at the university of algarve researches, the reasons for their dwindling numbers. it also breed see horses in the lagoons at special protection zones until they are 2 years old.
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well, anyway, the number of see horses in the new protection zones is much greater than outside of area. boats are not allowed in the protected areas, and fishing is prohibited yet. park rangers still find squid cages like this one. you're watching dw news from berlin, businesses next with rob watts. i'm terry martin from me and all of us here at dw, thanks for watching. people in trucks injured when trying to flee the city center more and more refugees are being turned away and the water families played on the tags in syria.

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