tv DW News Deutsche Welle August 25, 2022 10:00am-10:30am CEST
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ah, ah ah ah, this is dw news live from berlin, the dental mouth, the new cranes fight against russia's invasion. more than 20 people are killed in a rush and strike on a train station in central ukraine. the attack came as the country marked its independence day, and 6 months of work also and to show people unwonted back home, yet unwelcome by their host. 5 years after fleeing a violent crack down at me and mar refugees urged the world not to forget their
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plight. and women in afghanistan have been pushed to the margins under taliban rule . but now some hope to turn a new page. they've opened a library just for women. ah, a married evans team. it's good to have you with us. calls from around the world for russia to and it's war went unanswered on ukraine's independence day. at least 22 people were killed and dozens of others were injured in a rush, an attack on a central ukrainian town. ukrainian officials say russia launch shells that hit homes and that a passenger train on fire in chop lina. the attack came 6 months to the day since russia invaded its neighbour. ukrainian president vladimir zalinski warned the un security council that the world's future was being decided by this war,
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which has no end in sight. you will go more. the small town of chap lena in the east of ukraine, who this man found his son's body. after the blast his id, do you believe he was in the house when he was thrown out of there? we looked for him and he was lying here. nobody knew that he was here. local authorities say more than 20 others have been killed in 2 strikes here, which also he had a passenger train for residence. it was a difficult day to celebrate 31 years of ukraine's independence, which coincided with 6 months of war. as the un security council met to mark the day ukraine's president valadez lensky, cited the attack as another example of the costs of war on my cell. at one of the
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rescuers are working on book it is, unfortunately, the death tone could increase. docile. russia prepared for this session thing out of those all even as independence day celebrations and t remain muted, residents were defiant. we had as a precise and i should green, and that is i'm very proud of our country usually could i, you know, i'm glad that we came back from europe some where we had fled to, to celebrate here. now on this day with our fellow citizens. some of the i believe victory will come dates if it's a special day for me today. if you're unsure, i feel nothing. no fear. i traveled almost a 100 kilometers here from near keith. nothing scares me. he doing for you just have to do it. with the toll of war rising daily,
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the day of celebration and defiance was also one of remembrance. d w correspondent, roman gunshot ankle is in care of, and i asked him earlier about that missile strike on the town of chuck lena. well, it's been the deadliest attack on that independence day and we know of 22 persons were killed. 2 children, 11 and 6 year olds, 2 boy years old, 2 boys and they were playing in their house according to your fresh ukrainian officials near that railway station. 5 persons or persons were killed in their car, which was parked somewhere nearby. and, but the number of casualties could still rise and there were several strikes. and as far as i understand on houses near that village and on the passenger train from the leader to independence day trainings had been warned to be prepared for particularly brutal attacks from russia on independence day. so how did you crane
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then marked as holiday? well, um the warnings were actually a good thing to do because ukraine had a lot of much more attacks on the day on its charity in all regions, including the cave region or we know of at least 2 on the last night or in the in region of cliff at around the ukrainian capital am in the air raid sirens are heard here in the capitol of key of 3 or 4 times more than the usual day. but still people were walking the streets here in the city center. they were and they came to a look at those destroyed russian tanks that are on display on the central boulevard static a just in the center of cliff. a dozens of them. and there were thousands of ukrainians were came from clear from surrounding towns and villages to be here. and it looks, it looked really strange because i heard sirens or every couple of hours,
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but people just ignored them. they are so used to those sirens. and some people said we as we are cautious, but we trust the ukrainian army, we trust the army crenan antimissile a systems. so there was also the science and that wish to be here in the city center on this very special day for ukraine. the day of independence. we also saw president the lensky commemorating falling ukrainian soldiers yesterday. roman. how much support as the lansky have 6 miles into this world? history of it still has a lot of support and he was criticized or at the beginning of the war of or not i may be taking more precautions and, and, and a criticizing the western leaders, the united states, the okay. for warning of this war he, he, he was at that time his opinion was that maybe this will not happen. but on
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general, he's still very respected for staying and keith in those 1st days and weeks. and according to the reasons morrison poles we saw yesterday, ah, he still enjoys support of about 90 percent, which is very, extremely high. and a people like the way he handles this is the way he stays in care of his videos. his messages here he has his made a very, very impressive video on the day of independence, or shot just a few meters from here where i'm standing now on the my don, appealing to ukrainians or to fight on to continue. and he so said, well, ukrainians would never surrender, and this is, this is also the feeling when you talk to people he on the streets. he deadly is roman, considering how in came from. and thanks for your reporting, we appreciate it. all russia's invasion has had ripple effects across the globe
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far beyond the death and destruction in ukraine itself. more than 8000 kilometers away, people in taiwan are watching the world's reaction to russia's aggression with particular concern. many taiwan, c worrying parallels between ukraine and their own. autonomous island, which is off the coast of china. beijing considers taiwan to be part of china much as russian president vladimir putin says. ukrainians and russians are one people. and for many other countries across asia, the war has triggered higher prices for fuel and commodities such as grain and fertilizer, which has hit the most vulnerable people. the hardest. t w's cheese international editor richard walker is in the taiwanese capital tie pane. and earlier i asked him whether rushes invasion of ukraine has boosted fears in taiwan. that war with china was inevitable. but i wouldn't use the word inevitable marianna, but i think you couldn't put a clear, assign of it on it than the announcement today from the government here in taiwan
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that they want to increase defense spending next year by well over 10 percent. now it should be stressed that is not merely a responsibility the russian invasion of ukraine. also, the recent chinese exercises which have been taking place military exercise is taking place around, tie one very much feeding into that decision by the government. here, the president, sighing when has been drawing a direct connection between what's been going on with the russian invasion of ukraine and their situation here. saying that what we see in ukraine is evidence, or all of global authoritarianism on an expansion is cause. and that the experience of the ukrainian people is a lesson to the taiwanese people about the importance of standing up for their democracy. will taiwan has seen a string of high level visits from american officials recently. so has this war in
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ukraine, in fact, strengthened international support for taiwan as well? yeah, well, i think you are seeing a lot more sort of signs of solidarity from people around the world, particularly liberal democracies, of course, for taiwan. and this is partly a response to the invasion of ukraine. nancy pelosi, of course, the speaker of the house of representatives in the united states. the strongest example of this she came here to taipei just at the beginning of this month, talking a lot about the needs 1st to stand up for democracies in the face of authoritarian so much the same sort of language that we're hearing from the taiwanese president here and you've had further american delegations coming since said there's been a japanese delegation here just this week. germans expect you to come during the course of the autumn. we've just been had reported today that might compare the former us secretary of state is also planned to come here in late september,
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so welter of parliamentarians, politicians from across the co liberal democratic world coming here to taiwan to show that solidarity. the question though will be, what about more concrete questions? not just of solidarity, but what would the world actually do if china, what her married some kind of military action against taiwan? that's a massive question, not just countries like the united states, but for countries across here in asia and around the world. and that question is a very far from being answered a lot of question marks there. that he, you can expect to heighten debate about that in the next few months. dw richard walker reporting for us from taipei. thank you. let's turn our attention now to some of the other stories making headlines. this our election officials in angola, se early results from the general election put the ruling ampio lay party in a strong lead with 33 percent of the ballads counted,
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the party has more than 60 percent of the vote. but and goal main opposition party alleges that the initial count is unreliable. the school police chief of you all day taxes has been fired for his mishandling of a mass shooting in may. security forces were heavily criticized for a standing by for more than an hour. as 19 children and 2 teachers were shot dead inside the elementary school. the widow of basketball stark will be. bryant has been awarded $16000000.00 over a graphic photos taken at the site of the helicopter crash which killed her husband and daughter. vanessa bryant sued los angeles county after deputies and firefighters share the images in unofficial settings. severe drought conditions in the us state of texas have drawn up a river and revealed a clear set of dinosaur tracks made by a 5 meter tall, 7 tongue creature. the footprints may be the longest set of tracks found in north america and deep back. more than 100000000 years
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to south asia now where the mostly muslim ethnic ro hang a population is marking 5 years after a cramped enemy in mar. that pushed many of them to flee. on august 25th, 2017. the min more military launched fears, offences that left villages burning and thousands dead. more than 700000 bro hanger escaped over the border into bangladesh. many ended up in a sprawling refugee camp near the town of cox's bazaar. it now holds about a 1000000 people and bangladesh is hoping they will all eventually return to their home country. most in the camp still see me and mar as home dw reporters of iraq that visited with a family in concert bazaar to hear their story. that children learning mia mas national anthem, even though their home country does not want them in miss bungler, does she come?
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the refugees are trying to hold on to their identity. but children also learn subjects such as english, math, and life skills. many fled here after the me on my military started a brutal campaign against her anger and 2017 me shower across the border with her family 5 years ago. oh we now do i, how do i like life skills the most i i wake up in the morning and go to school. after school. i go home and in the afternoon i go play, man, i would when i grow up, i want to teach alicia bloody. masha lives of her parents and 5 siblings in a hot inside by lou carly camp. her mother does me. darby groom is concerned about her children's future. she recalls what she had to leave behind when she fled that
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on live lines and would all now that they are growing up. i'm stressed when i think about their future. nobody. when i think about my homeland, i get emotional levered we were well off. we did not have her own land, but we had a cow, 3 goats and a house on what i hear enough all. i see her husband mohammed sharpie used to work in the farmlands back and me, emma. but here he has hardly any work. the couple each, yas, family members, when the military went on a rampage, liliana that a glad 1st we did not want to leave london. they open fire and people were killed without batting we left, they burned our houses to the ground. really still, there is no point staying here. we should try to bangladesh at am. lynette, i ye, all of a little mother motherland. they barged into the area and shot my brother to death on bomb up. then we laughed and they burned our houses while we were fleeing toward the border i. they killed my brother in law and a more than in the last year,
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up all the megawatt of a layer. there are countless stories like these among camp residents. people here living in limbo and limbo that never seems to end anthem, but they're being told that this is not your country that you should go back and we'll get them sharpie and test meta, say they know this very well. they long for their motherland. but returning home will require much more than a patriotic song. earlier i spoke to the author of that report to w correspondence about your augment who is in cox's bazaar in bangladesh. and i asked him, what struck him the most about the people he met in the refugee camps? well, boons are still fresh. here i go like i was walking down the alleys inside the camps . i was talking to the people around there. and a dad told me that lake got they can't forget what happened about 5 years ago. like,
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well i, i met this woman. i 23 year old are called ha sienna begum. she told me that she was hit with a rod and she was drenched with blood a 5 years ago until now. she has the pain. she comes and she can't work. so she, this is, this is this kind of stories are url inside the camps lake a lot of cases. and also like i was talking to this guy, a young fellow who is in the 10th grade. and he said that after this year he will not have any opportunity to study further. so and, and there are a lot of people who told me that they don't have any work. but if, if the get so they told me that 5 years back, it was herbs a day they fled their country because they have one dead to survive. they wanted to have saved their lives, but after 5 years now, they want to rebuild their lives. what, what they did on good and today are inside the camps. there was a procession like civilizations. i was inside one of them and i was, i was talking,
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i was listening to the people who was to, who were talking from the, from the procession. they said that they, they want justice, they want there are citizenship with all their rights back a bangladesh has said that the rowing and will eventually have to go home. but near mar doesn't want them back. but how long is bangladesh prepared to support these refugees? but i was also talking to the bank, the she officials soft that they told me that like they are giving the senior to humanitarian support. and they will keep doing that until these people are go back to their country and they did, they did, they didn't say that half until how long they will provide it, but they say that they're one ah, business battery ation process that has been on the table shall there between these countries are buying this and me and my, and also the different you and bodies are involved in that, in that dog up or did they want this
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a petition process to the saluted and is that they want this people to go back and out, but so far there are some couple of do set up fuel ruined. go back to their home, but that didn't work. and up this time also like january this year, her the deficient or doc resumed again, there is a task force which is now of laker listing up the other done the names of the underway and get that a living in the scans are. but the, the minister foreign minister abandoned that he said recently that he holds that end of this year. there might be some progress. but the rowing of people and their, their leaders that told me that day a day, they are not it because they have already, they have been deceived to day this things didn't work. so they don't know that if, if this works at this time as well. d, w the by your office and reporting from bangladesh. we appreciate it. thank you. you're watching the double you news still to come have
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a goal keeping granny turned to footfall to find strength in the face of tragedy. that story coming up. but 1st, women in afghanistan are facing an aggressive campaign by the taliban to restrict their public lives says taking power. the islamists rulers have placed limits on girls education. and women can only go outside with the male guardian. but some afghan women have taken a step to counter their isolation. they've opened a library for a women, only an opening for mines. this brand new couple library tends to the education of a female only clientele. the founder say it's on noises inside a society that is increasingly hostile to universal education. the taliban rule of afghanistan has brought severe restrictions on women's participation in public life . these women are hoping that the library can act against that trend
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as steady. thank you. johnny, with all by opening this slide, rudy, we want to show women civil resistance to doors that are against women against women's presence and against women's activities. not only think i got to show more that of all the higher my book a bit of an if the taliban clause the gates of schools and ignored the education of a generation. they should know that have gone. women are women who have become literate, who gnawed themselves and have the ability to define themselves in society, only as you know. and he does your miano for the show that if we're gonna thousands of women have been excluded from work life since the taliban took power a year ago, secondary schools for girls remain mostly closed, even though the islamist rulers promised earlier this year to reopen them. many african women say they are frustrated over their current restrictions to women and
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girls rights are taught of of the time when it gets done on the darla bon should understand that women are half off the society and that is an urgent need for of gone women. to study and to walk, john, that about venable littered women will make us have a better and more peaceful society. the higher the o van s, the law of the levels of violence. that's why we created this like judy. get off on it. only justin. the new library includes more than a 1000 books, including novels, as well as nonfiction titles on politics, economics, and science. the founders hope the works can be read here by many sharp mines, and that the libraries walls offer a safe space for reading and literary explorations. and also pushing the limits for a women 57 year old ama salazar still plays as the goal keeper for a football team in her hometown in western guatemala,
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known as the flying granny footfall has helped her get through tragedies. she has an ever growing collection of amateur and professional trophies at home and she has no intention of ever retiring. alma salazar saving a shot at 57 years of age. the fly and granny i see is known is still guarding. the goal for her team in guatemala, salazar says age is no impediment to skilful goal. keeping. today she's the custodian for a team in a foot saw league in her hometown of l. t. a hard in the west of the country, i'll must spur as on her teammates and the fans applaud every save the unusual goalkeeper makes. in football, she found a refuge from multiple tragedies, such as the early death of her only 2 children. you mikaela thumped and it brought to woodland. i really devoted myself to sports and because it helped me to move
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past a lot of things that were going through my mind with lawyer football really helps you to clear your mind a lot. her passion for the sport was born when she was 19. she started training with the men's team and found her calling as a goalkeeper. since then, she's played for several clubs in professional and amateur competitions, including in the national women's league for her family, the fly. and granny has become an example of strength and perseverance. go immediately and i'll get that and look at her age and she is still fighting. and the truth is that it has not been easy. the list on herself, none of this has been easy. it has been a process of pain because she has suffered a lot in life. and football has helped her to move forward, but us and to be able to deal with every sorrow in her life in gala levy. they have, with alma keeps all her trophies on
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a table at home. she still dreams of one day playing at the vanderbilt stadium. the home of rail madrid get up. but she also hopes to meet her goal, keeping idols, e care casias and john luigi before. but there's one things he never plans to do. hang up her gloves. they gave her lucas ailing. it's something that you carry in your heart and you don't easily give it up. and i told them, i'll stop playing football. when i'm in a casket away, i heard the what, it'll kill multiplan football while like the flying granny, a teenager in europe, has found his calling in life as well. although he said his science a bit higher, mac rutherford has become the youngest person to fly solo around the world. the 17 year old completed his 5 month journey in bulgaria, with his proud family there to welcome him. mac, who's a dual national of britain in belgium, broke to guinness world records on his flight,
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including one that was sent by his sister. and before we go, a quick reminder of our top story. ukraine's president what america lensky says. at least 22 people have died and a russian attack on the central ukrainian town of jumping up. and another 15 have been injured. this came as ukraine marked its independence day, as well as 6 months since russia invaded that the latest on the w news. this hour off next is conflict with sebastian american. i haven't seen, i'll have more headlines for you at the top of the hour. thanks for watching. ah ah, with
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guess was weak from thomas david from a writer and columnist for the atlantic magazine. he says, mistakes. i'm still ha, frighteningly ha, completely zone. next on d, w. blue red alert for oh, for just route is a red if occasion we're going to have some epic. moreover, water over the world or it's becoming a scarce commodity, isn't worth dying of thirst. but global struggle for water in 45 minutes on d w. o.
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did in the right wing extremists, i suggested again world might be in coping late in burned in south africa. people with disabilities more likely to lose their jobs. independent, make black lives matter. shine a spotlight on racially motivated police violence, same sex marriage is being legalized in more and more countries, discrimination and inequality, or part of everyday life. for many, we ask why? because life is diversity. to make up your own mind. d. w. need for minds 18 months after the violence on capitol hill. it's clear that us democracy was in greater danger than previously believed. testimony to the january 6th committee described the craze. donald trump grappling with his own secret service, determined to lead his arm, supporters to congress,
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