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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  July 29, 2022 7:00pm-7:16pm CEST

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anita brown proposing from across the continent. all the french doesn't matter to you. tito whose africa every friday, only w ah ah, this is dw news lie from berlin, dozens of ukrainian prisoners of war, killed in a missile strike, russia and ukraine buying each other for the attack on the jail. many of those killed boy betprince of the siege of money on for the president floated mister lansky, says ukraine is ready to help feed the world again. ships loaded with grain are
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ready to set sail from blacks. the ports, as soon as the united nations keeps the go ahead and alaska is on fire. the nolan you way states season unusual state of forest blazes. we meet the crews struggling to save heart. oh, lou. i'm painful and nice to have you. along here on d w use. we begin with the deaths of dozens of ukrainian prisoners of war. russia and ukraine are accusing each other of shelling the prison where troops captured after the full of mary also were being held. russia claims ukraine used, you were supplied. rocket launches to strike the jail in the front line. town of allan beka ukrainian military is blaming russian. shelling me the claim has been independently verified. russian officials say the attack killed, 53 ukrainian p o w's in the days other main development,
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ukraine says it's ready to restart. rain exports shipments could get moving again from to black sea ports today or tomorrow. under an agreement with russia drawn up by the united nations officials a waiting for the u. n. to confirm shipping lanes at the mind and safe to navigate . president of ms. lensky, his inspect it loaded bit vessels. in the odessa region, he says ukraine wants to boost global food security by dispatching millions of tons of weight gave claims a rational locate is hold it exports for 5 months. t w's martinez. building a is at the port of odessa and gave me this update. yeah, there was that hope you originally that maybe the 1st ships could already leave today. it doesn't look like it now, but it's maybe still possible. we're nearing the end of the day and ukrainian and russian media are saying that the 1st ships might now leave tomorrow. the ports,
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the ships are ready, they have been loaded. and today, there was quite a big delegation, visiting these pores that was the lensky and there were also the ambassadors of the g 7 countries emphasizing how important this was. we also were there, we could get a glimpse and it was the 1st time that media was allowed to film in the sports. so it seems like they're really trying to create a to, to, to, to put pressure on russia, which everybody in the west fears might stop these shipments. at the last moment. ukraine is trying to act as a guarantor of global food supplies at the same time as fighting off a russian invasion. as far as this huge backlog goes, how big is, is task for keith? it's a, it's a huge task. it, so your grain is one of the main grain suppliers, it's not the biggest, it's not the only one, but it's one of the main grain suppliers. and this share of, for,
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we're talking about 20000000 tons of grain that are still in ukrainian stock as, as to stockpiled in ukraine, of course, lacking on the world market. on the other hand, we have the russian fleet in the, in the, in the black sea we, how ukraine has also mind. it's the entrances to its boards fearing a russian attack. so this had to be mitigated very carefully. and now the, the 2 side, the 2 sides haven't agreed on it, but the mediators have agreed with each side that ukraine will allow for a g mind corridor, whether ships can pass and that russia will not attack. that's what's written on paper. and we'll see what's going to happen whether it will be really possible to ship out these $20000000.00 tons plus an additional $20000000.00 that are expected from this year's harvest. mathias overshadowing this story, dozens of ukrainian prisoners of war reported. they been killed in a missile strike moscow and keep blame each other here. tell us more.
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you know, what we know is that a facility where these prisoners were held, a prison was hit, the barracks where these prisoners lived. it seems that many of them were members of the ass, off regiment and defenders of mer you paul, who have been taken prisoners in may when they surrendered from them as of style as of steel plant. in maria poll, we do not really know what happened there. both sides are accusing of each other. russia is saying ukraine has fired the high mass rocket on the facility. ukraine is saying, this is ridiculous. we would never do that, and they're accusing russia of having intentionally fired on this facility to kill these prisoners of war. so it's accusation against accusation. so far, none of none of the sides has presented any proof for their version with
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a spring in odessa. thank you. for the update, when russia invaded ukraine, western nations started up in their sanctions on the russian economy almost 6 months into the war. which punitive measures are in place. where the waste announced an immediate ban on russian oil imports. and the european union said it would phase out russian oil by the end of the year. you also announced plans to phase out rush and gas. the u. s. as opposed to ban on exporting high tech components to russia. and several russian banks have been cut off from the international payment system. despite the strict, the sanctions, the war continues. i asked joseph rel, european union representative on foreign policy if e u countries refusal to kind of rush and gas and oil altogether. mean, the block is financing roches war. we will be cutting brush shannon gas soon as possible, but we are not going to cut all night because it's impossible. due to the high
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dependency on some member state. now have a blue the plan in order to reduce dependency and nobody short time was 40 percent before the war. it's now 20 percent of all in birch divided by 2 now couple of months. but nobody can ask you to be in economies to got all but it got overnight, a gas replies you said to rubble. they say that a hi, this is a mechanic effect. this is a mechanic of faith in russia and not in board because we cut exports to russia on the prices over energy is increasing equity, where certainly it's a in economy reserve extern. no surplus under brother goes up, but the trouble is, is no longer convertible currency. so it's not very useful to have
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a high rate. you are current and on convertible note, the sanctions are eating betty hard to russian economy as after hours, sanctions deprived of gall has been decreasing. what do you mean that we continue paying for the gas? we buy yes, certainly we continue paying for the gas we buy, but we have reduced to half the more amount dewayne porch. so yes, we can not do my locals. the war machine is going to read. not only working with money is working with technology, have a look at a deck. carter carter what destroyed russian tank. and you will see how many western companies electronic components is inside there. they will no longer, no longer have it. they can have the money, but they cannot buy it for they will not be able to build another dangly days. so don't, don't look just like the money because the money dos in bite and knology if this a blaze of technology don't sell it to present economy is decreasing by 10 percent
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of the g. b is going to suffer the bigger recession on their last year. and, and where they will war, condemn with so the shot be a junior, and yet you continue saying, guess what? you continue paying for the guy who can do pay for the guy do use in the russian. we provide those guys for free, but the board to reduce that and, and say, and we are reducing it very quickly from 40 to 20 percent in a couple months as comments from joseph or a european union representative on foreign policy. now let's get you up to speed on some of the stories making headlines around the world. ministers from algeria, nigeria, and j. i have signed a preliminary deal to build a 4000 kilometer long gas pipeline. connecting this howard, is it with europe. the project will cost about $14000000000.00 euros and could supply europe with 30000000000 cubic meters of natural gas every year. but
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palestinian authorities say a teenager has been shot dead by is when the troops in the occupied west bank palestinians had been marching against settlement expansion outside a village near romanella. when clashes broke out between them and settlers, israel's army says if responded with life, i am. whitehouse says destruction from wild fire in the u. s. 6, exceeding the 10 year average. scientists won't, climate change is responsible. president joe biden has declared a major disaster for the state of alaska, where unusually fierce forest fires a raging dw comedy in a joy reports from the town of anderson, where she met emergency crews battling the fires as well as residents fleeing from them. alaska is the largest u. s. teat. it is also the least densely populated among its great treasures, the untouched wilderness. but much of that is now being destroyed. wildfires are not a new phenomenon here,
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but they are changing. they are becoming more frequent and more intense. so much so that this year no co fire fighters here in anderson were unable to get them when a fire happens and they get bigger than the local unit can handle like so. here in anderson they have some local volunteer firefighters. they but, but they're very small. so when the fire gets bigger than what they can control, they will call for outside help. and tell pass come from old. over at the u. s. kate earhart from montana has been battling places country white for more than 20 years. this is her 5th time in alaska. she's now supervising a team of 500 fire fighters deployed to help control one wildfire. sadly, this property couldn't be saved. it's really when fires like this one. start
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in and around populated areas, even a lightly populated area like this that it becomes a problem. era. here you hear that i've never seen fire behavior like this before. and so i would say this abnormal weather is the new normal. it's getting harder to fight fires, resources they're getting scarcer, and we're dealing with women like this, this summer. more than 264 individual fires have destroyed 1250000 hectares of land across the state. the blaze in anderson is now under control, that the damage is extensive, and the strong winds post a risk to this used to be a for is you can still see smoke up there. the fire fighters are still trying to get that high under control and we can strongly smell it. local people have had to evacuate their homes. among them,
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don and dorothy winks are a cellar aid and the place. when they returned, the fire was under control. it was like kind of like the real, there was smoke and fires were still burning in the trees out here. and the firemen were with us and i think they were with us because they, uh, maybe, you know, it would be traumatic to go and see. but we, he, they said right away, your house is safe. this time they were lucky, but there will certainly be wild fires. here again, an expert say global warming may make them more severe. now what's the 1st thing you think of when you hear the word vaccine? most of us imagine rolling up our sleeves for a shot a me arm. but many researches believed there's a better way to protect against covered 19 and it doesn't involve a needle. billions of doses of vaccines have been injected throughout the world over the course of the pandemic. and although the series of shots doesn't prevent
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people from getting coven 19 entirely, it does make the course of the disease generally much less severe. and that experts say has saved millions of lives. some researchers have set their sights higher. their goal is to prevent infections before they can take hold at the place where the virus 1st enters the body, the nose around a dozen trials with different nasal spray vaccine candidates are currently ongoing in different countries. a few are in what's called phase 3 testing, which means they're being checked for effectiveness in larger groups of test subjects. they could help change the course of the pandemic because if sars coby too is blocked from docking on to the cells in the upper respiratory tract, it can't invade them. so even after exposure, it's unable to replicate in the massive way that leads to full blown illness. that means blocking the virus with this kind of vaccine might also help break infection
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chains. the concept isn't a novel one. nasal vaccines for influenza have been around for a couple of decades now. there have been a few problems with them over the years, but for lots of people, especially younger recipients, they have one major advantage. the boost to immunity doesn't involved getting jabbed with a needle. stick around for d, w 's asia with bearish manager. after a quick break. i'm been fizzle and thanks for watching you next out. one more time this week. i how about taking a few risks? you could even take a chance on la rearing to we don't expect to happy ending literature list.

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