tv DW News Deutsche Welle August 1, 2022 1:00pm-1:31pm CEST
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ah ah ah ah, this is the w news live from berlin victory for england in a major football tournament. its 1st 56 years celebrations are underway in london's trafalgar square. to honor the lion s's who beat germany to win the european championship. we will cross live to where the policies happening. also coming up,
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ukraine resumes, grain shipments to the world. cargo vessels set off across the black sea after turkey declares it safe to sail that the 1st to export ukrainian grain, icy. since the start of russia's will consented, goals routing coalition claims another victory. the policies behind the president say they for tain, power in parliamentary elections, but the opposition is disputing that claim ah my manuscript mckennan. welcome to the program. we stopped with an incredible wind for england and told them that has proven the popularity of women's football. the lionesses have been crowned european champions after defeating germany to one that the euro 2022 final at wembley stadium in london. england had the best of the 1st
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hour and a delightful finish from ela tune gave him the lead at 62 minutes. but germany hung in there and lena muggle equalized to send the game into extra time. england wants to be denied though, and chloe headless kelly pounced on a loose pool with 9 minutes left to send the home fans into raptures and clinch england's 1st ever european championship. and the result was greeted with delight by fans across england, which has been waiting since 1966 for any kind of football trophy period. i thought it was so much, you know, the young lady in the audience as well. and i said i was probably the 1st experience of more of our lawyers to share it together to single order is when the euro's unbelievable. i'll tell you all. 3 english girls, we're flushing show being like how it's done. i won't play, i do want to make you,
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let's just go outside because we can move or we approved your home. today. he's willing to take it over. you love it. when he had to break it all down for us is carl mckinnon from dw sports, i kyle, or, or the game where we start the tension and the rivalry between the 2 teams, the deciding goal so close to the end. it's a, it's fair to say, isn't it that it was a fitting finale for, for a tournament that really put women's football onto a totally different level altogether? it really was and it was important i think, was the change minds and to introduce people to women's sports and one football especially of course in this instance to help them understand people who have been fanatics and other sports looking at other sports, including men's football or they're changing their minds about women's football and this, this, this turn, it definitely did that. 87000 people streamed into wembley stadium last night
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before the game. this is a huge number of record for any european championships, men or women. they saw a tense, exciting game up and down the pitch, which is not always what happens in men's or women's finals in any tournament, because oftentimes they're very worried about making mistakes. and after chloe kelly scored the winning goal, scored the winning goal in extra time. she's behind us here and she, you know, she stripped down into her sports bra as a brand new chest pain. for example, 1999 of the us team winning the world cup. this was a spectacular moment for england. of course, a spectacular moment for the english fans. and england was in fact in bedlam. it was, it was so exciting. i mean, huge celebrations across england. can we say they are the english line is what the, when did they do that? they did, they had to overcome their own pressure on themselves, put on them because they were in their home stadium,
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basically in the most historic stadium in the world. perhaps they were also fortunate that alexandra pop the germany's top scorer and probably her best, clear their best player in the tournament. this far, she pulled herself out basically because of a nagging injury that she kid that brought herself by brought the came back. that is in the pre game a workout and she also, they were also fortunate about a video assistant referee call in which they maybe just didn't look closely enough . and what was considered a handball by the germans side in front of the english side. and for the english go on. so that was one concern. at the same time, the german german coach that the england deserved it and presented accolades to the english side. serena vig mine of course, is the english coach, who was the dutch coach over 5 years ago. and brought to the netherlands to the european championships. she brought in going to the european championships. she looked at the bigger picture of the tournament after the game in a press conference by you saw we did well and the whole country came stand behind
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us in the stadiums outside the stadiums. and i think we really made a change. i think this tournament and has done so much for the game, but also for society and women in society in england, not as also think across europe and across the world. and i hope that will make a change to serena wickman. they're saying the tournament has made a real change for society, for women in society degree. it certainly has and these are incremental steps. i remember, as i said, 1099 was when brandy chastine scored that winning goal for the world cup winner. and it took until just last year, before the women's team in the united states was on par with the men's team in the united states. men's team of never won a world cup, but the women's team took until then 20 years more than 20 years to, to even things up. i would say that there's worth talking about is the, at the lower tiers around the world. there are facilities managers that are club
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managers, their school managers who need to step up. they need to be embarrassed into the fact that many, many, many women's teams of all kinds of different sports are forced to plan inaccessible or, and bad pitches. they're forced, oh, participate in and shower afterwards and terrible, decrepit facilities, changing rooms that are just awful and they have to step up and as, as hey, they have to be shamed into changing their ways. come can and from the the least thoughts. thanks. i, mary. as to the war in the ukraine, now the 1st grain shipment to leave ukraine, since the start of russia's invasion has set sail. turkey which is overseeing a deal between the countries, said it was safe to resume exports. earlier today, the ship rezone, loaded with corn, headed into the black sea on its way to lebanon. convoys of ships are now free to
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follow. a russian blockade had sealed ukraine's ports while ukraine had laid mines in the sea to fort russian naval assaults. the head of the united nation has set the start of exports, would help bring relief to the world. many countries have experienced a shortage of grain to, to the months long for more on this where now joined by a martin slick who is director of the u. n's world food program here in germany. welcome to d, w. and how encouraged to you by today's news of the 1st ukrainian grange leaving odessa hello. yeah, well this is certainly a beacon hope to see you should leading the whole soft, almost 5 months. i think it's worthy to say crisis own insurance rates, for example, are still very high. the risk is considered high every leaving. i hope that
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normality will come back. could you give us a sense of what the last 5 months of war in ukraine have done to global food security both to southwards, we sort of this he already on exceptional difficult situation. the number of acutely hungry people were blowing up since 2019 from 150000000 to 279000000 people worldwide. now, when the war in ukraine started, this number was skyrocketing. and today, we are afraid that 345000000 people are acutely threatened by hunger. so the ship leaving odessa and this perspective for ukraine coming on line again as a major green exporters, very encouraging. of course, your organization, the world food program, delivers food assistance and more than ac countries. can you tell us how you,
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how your organization is dealing with this whole situation? well, it's 1st and foremost the question of money. ringback into census, many of the countries that we're working with are simply not in the condition to pay for the high prices on the world market. and for families will really spending 6780 percent of the incomes for food that current prize fight. it's just something they cannot showed on the other side, when we are looking after those who are angry, the money we have doesn't carry as far as it did before. because also we are suffering from high food prices, but also from exceptionally high prices for shipments. ukraine says that it may harvest only half of its usual amount this year due to the war. is that the wells next big problem right now?
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well we do have for climate change is impacting the harvest world, like i'm talking to you from the in germany and here the also experiencing reduce cause you to the heat waves, which are of course a function of climate change. so while the current, we have a crisis of the food prices with skyrocketing prices for future lies with the impact of climate change with high prices, fuel and transfer, you might well see the production prices. if you don't steer against martin frank from the united nations world food program, thanks so much for your time. thank you. no rush has war on ukraine has had a huge impact on many children about 2000 and schools and ukraine have been damaged during the war, and schools have been completely destroyed. our correspondent funding for char visited a village in the keep region in northern ukraine,
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where efforts are underway to help reopen the only school still standing. paulina has lots of time on her hands to draw but she would love to do other things to lose. and the reason i miss my friends, i love she and i miss my teacher. well, it's been 5 months now since the children were at school. the last time was in february, it was supposed to include an excursion, but it was a fateful day. oh so but alice, we were supposed to go to the river to see the ice melting. i love it, and we couldn't make it because it was the 24th lesson ability. las colinas mother says the lack of schooling makes her question the decision to stay in ukraine in the bona light. i regret that i did not leave the country when my friend left alone . she went to germany. it's not only about my kids, it's about all kids. they lack education. and that was i,
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and latino. russian forces attacked their village at the start of the war. their school was seriously damaged, leaving all the kids stuck at home. a wall has been fixed, but most of the windows are still broken and there's no heating. the classrooms will remain empty until basic facilities are restored. oksana is a literature teacher, but it said on the 1st day of the war get the children started to text me and say good bye. returning into her old classroom is difficult. she's concerned about her students. said those are bollicheck. well, it that it's very painful when you realize that our children, thank you. we don't know what to morrow will bring his name to it. will there be any future our kids don't deserve. this isn't as a slow ukrainian forces blew up this bridge to stop the russians coming. but people here are scared of in you rocket attacks. so scared,
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the mayor asked us not to use the name of the village in this report. the war has had a devastating effect on millions of people in ukraine, but especially on the countries children returning to school would bring some level of normality to the children here in this village. but live over all still remains very insecure. pauline andrew classmates don't want to wait for the war to end to go back to school. they sell what they have and what they make to try to fix things . ashes will be able to go back to school soon, raise money, and the school can be repaired. ukrainian children are growing up quickly. here they are fighting for the future with what ever they can find. russian president vladimir, to attend his declared his military plans to dominate the arctic and black c. that's under a new naval doctrine. the strategy names the united states as its main rival and
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sets global maritime ambitions. 13 signed the doctrine while overseeing the russian fleets. annual naval parade warships lead a huge show of force in russia's former imperial capital of st. petersburg, the parade of boats, submarines, personnel, and fighter jets is ostensibly to honor russia's naval forces. but with the absence of victory in ukraine and isolated by much of the world, it appears more a highly choreographed signal of defiance and persistence president vladimir putin who started the war now in its 6th month, came back to his home town to oversee the spectacle. the occasion was somewhat mod, though, by a drone attack on the crimean peninsula, russia forcibly annexed it from ukraine. in 2014, the attack happened in the port city officer vast to poll home to russia's black
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sea fleet. russia has accused ukraine of carrying out the attack, which injured a number of people. these pictures of the apparent damage were released by the city's governor. so it's just so full of the memo to approximately 2 minutes puzzled 6, an explosion was heard. a drone attack the fleets headquarters. the explosion went off in the courtyard. there were no casualties of 6 people were hurt. 2 of them have injuries of medium severity, although the rest suffered light injuries registered on the roster. nicholas gear, ukraine's navy has denied involvement sang. the drone attack was a quote, invented excuse for russia to cancel its navy day parade in savannah to paul's. back in saint petersburg, florida mi brewton used the occasion to sign a new doctrine setting out russia's naval strategy. it includes ambitions for russia to become a great maritime power, with the presence across the entire world. scale
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up to speed now and some of the other stories making headlines around the world. iran has the technical capability to produce an atomic bomb, but it has no intention of doing so. that's according to mohammed. as the law, me who runs iran's nuclear organisation. he was speaking as the eas top tip format . just burrell seeks to salvage a 2015 nuclear cord. as la mi said, he hoped for a swift conclusion to negotiations. ahead of me and mas ruling military hunter has announced a 6 month extension of the state of emergency. he army seized power from the elected government. among some fig she. last year a fledge to hold new elections in august 2023. that observers say that that's highly unlikely. good at a cost though has postponed, the introduction of tougher border controls to serbia. after a sharpening of tensions ethnic serbs blocked roads in the north of kosovo,
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an unknown gun and fired on police. although close to border crossings to serbia after 8 incidence in the west african country of senegal or president mack, his sal's ruling coalition has claimed a victory in parliamentary elections. a spokesman for the group says it has retained its majority in the national assembly, taking 30 of 46 administrative departments. your position has disputed the outcome . election observers say though to turn out was low and the final tally won't be in the several days. with president mack, his so got his vote in early though his party currently holds 75 percent of seats and parliament. his popularity has been waning. senegal is one of the regions most stable democracies, but its economy is struggling. the ukraine war has seen food and fuel prices
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skyrocket, leading ordinary senegalese to worry about their future by mid april that among our concerns, our education is the high cost of living and youth employment, the presumptuous vision all day long room, even with the grease young people still can't find jobs. in some families, the parents pensions are the only source of income, would allow mer, several leading opposition, politicians like whose man sancho have been disqualified from running. they say the president has misused his power to eliminate political opponents. the opposition also fear sol is planning to break the constitutional to term limit and try for a 3rd term and 2024. they're hoping senegalese voters will give them enough seats to prevent that from happening. was the early stars of the television and film series. star trek has died. acton, as shall nichols,
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he found fame playing. lieutenant thora has died at the age of 89. a family said a great light in the sun and no longer shines for us. come and competent. michelle nicole's as a horror, a star tricks, communications officer. she was clearly in control. i'm afraid you have it all wrong, mister spotted. in this episode from 1969. 0 horror and lightens her confused male colleagues about an alien religion. it's not the sun up in the sky. the sun, god worship, but after the 1st series, nichols had been subjected to racist insult and her character reduced to open communication channels to spoke and kirk willing, frustrated, she decided to quit and mentioned this at a chance meeting with black rights leader, martin luther king. he said her role had opened a door that must not be allowed to close. she withdrew her resignation. he meant
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a great deal to me. i knew him though well. and then he was a great man. hello, laura lanes freezing her character's name too was a clear reference to black power as spoke explains its meaning in swahili nichols made history when she kissed her co star william shatner in 1968, often credited as one of the 1st interracial kisses on u. s. t v. years later, she paid tribute to him and the show at one of the many star trek reunions. his light, it's like family, it's like family. alongside breaking down barriers to black women in hollywood nichols later worked with nasa to encourage more women and black americans to become astronauts. michelle nichols boldly going where no black woman had gone before fillmore in the story. w coaches. david levitz
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joins me here in the sky here. hey david. and it's hard really for many of us these days. isn't it? to imagine the impact a black woman commander on star trek made in the 1960 is. can you give us a sense of how her presence change things? yeah, i think to really understand how impactful that was how extraordinary that was at the time we kind of have to be mm ourselves, back into the 960 is really this was a time in the united states when black people were still fighting for some pretty basic rights, even the right to decide what neighborhoods they wanted to live in and on television, there were hardly any black actresses. when they were black actresses. they were playing domestic servants. so then comes along, michel nichols. you have a star trek which takes place in the 23rd century and it's, it's a vision of something completely different of a completely different life for african americans, she's competent, she's educated, she's respected, big, big one there. and for millions of years,
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this was something that they hadn't seen before on television. it was so groundbreaking, actually, the actress would be goldberg, is that it was the 1st time she saw a black actress on tv who wasn't playing a maid while. so an incredible role model, but of course then it goes a step further because we have this boundary breaking kiss between nichols and her and coastal william shatner, a white man. in 1968, we're in a little more context there. that was the year after the u. s. supreme court made it legal in all states in the united states for black and white people to inter mary. so this was really on the cutting edge. and when they were filming this episode, they weren't even sure if broadcasters in the southern us were going to show it, or if they were gonna pull it from the air. so these things that we take for granted. now really at the time we're groundbreaking, and michelle nichols was, was really at the center and at the forefront of it. he's got an extraordinary actress, an extraordinary role. and yet we heard in our piece,
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she'll nice quit and chain. right. i think with amazing about that now is looking back. she didn't realize at the time how important she wasn't, how important she was to so many people. she was actually a stage actress on the new york in chicago stages. she was a dancer and a singer, and she saw this role on star trek is just another line on her resume, you know, maybe it would improve her stage career. and it wasn't until that meeting with dr. martin luther king junior at a fan convention by the way, he was a fan that she realized when he told him you can't quit the show because you are so important to so many people you need to keep playing this role and inspiring people, right? i've just got to ask you and she also inspired some re like afternoon a she did, she teamed up with nasa in the 1970s after star trek's 1st run. and she helped them recruit some of their very 1st women astronauts and astronauts of color. she was responsible in part for their 1st class of new astronauts that wasn't just white men. so it's really, it's sort of
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a tale of the importance of representation here because we have what started off as science fiction, this black female commander in space. and it turned into a reality and she helped inspire astronauts who have inspired astronauts to come since then somebody here really changed the world d, w. 's. david levitz, thanks so much as kaylee just got time for a bit more sports news for you. and in formula one max fisch dathan has won the hungarian grand prix. a dutchman started the race at the back, up on the grid after engine trouble hampered his qualifying session. he also survived mid race sped, and he was still able to claim victory. things couldn't have looked much bleaker for red bills, max for stopping as he started 10 from the grid. but whole season, the dutchman has been there to parents when his rivals faltered. so it proved again in hungary. close his challenger, sharla clare spun off in france. last week,
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and he had another wretched time here for stopping overtook him after the 2nd round of pit stops. and la clerk had only temporarily take advantage of a spin by the dutchman eventually trailed in 6 elsewhere. louis hamilton passed carlos signs and pull, sitting, teammate george russell to repeat his 2nd place performance of last week as mercedes fortune's improve. but there was no catching pushed up and seemed rather pleased with his unlikely victory. the dutchman made and went and hungry is his. eat this season and one that boots yet more daylight between himself and the chasing pack. a quick
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reminder at the top story were falling for you as our celebrations are being held in london to honor england football team for their victory at the year. a 2022 tournament, the line s as beat germany in sundays final that the 1st english taking women's, all men's to win europe, european championship, and 56 years. that europe, today's r globalization shows level 3000 is up next for the look at the saline as a possible answer to water shortages. i'm on your campus in berlin for me and the entire team. thanks so much for watching. ah, ah, with
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start up shows us. it doesn't have to be this way, global 3000. next on t w e co, india, india. this i'm thinking and the heat is getting worse and worse. what can be done for the farming plants help to down the climate in low income families can grow their own true win win situation india. in 60 minutes on d w a let's be honest. summer break just doesn't really be
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