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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  August 27, 2022 9:00pm-9:16pm CEST

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all we can be the generation that ends it for good malaria must die, or millions can live ah, ah, ah, ah, this is dw news live from berlin. pakistan asks the world for help with devastating flooding. flash floods kill nearly a 1000 people. hundreds of thousands more are homeless and a state of emergency is in force zap a regia at the center of nuclear safety fears as russia and ukraine. again,
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blame each other for showing the power plant international inspectors hope to get in next week and in the buddhist lee and labor crews. and finally get their 1st points of the season with a 3 mill win over minds, goals and more coming up in sport. ah, i'm nick spicer. thanks for joining us. pakistan is appealing for international assistance as authorities deal with a devastating it sees no flooding. nearly a 1000 people have been killed since monsoon rains began earlier than usual in june . hundreds of thousands more have had to leave their homes. a state of national emergency is enforced now. surveying the damage, prime minister chabad sharif, gets a 1st hand impression of some of the west affected areas. this his mom seen was
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exceptionally ferocious washing away roads, destroying bridges and damaging hundreds of thousands of homes. this is the moment a hotel collapses into the flood waters. another angle says people fleeing and panic. thousands of people are in need of immediate help. the government has been delivering 8 parcels to those have been cut off and promised financial aid to affected families. but it's a mammoth task. some 30000000 people are set to be affected. ah, if you hadn't, if the flood of 2010 was one of the biggest in a history, but i feel that this flood has caused even great to havoc. ha! there is extreme devastation all around. also more than 900 people are dead. that you, again this is the seen and rural baluchistan villages here a living and makeshift tents. others sleep under the open sky along with the
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animals. them with the arms of the hands are a biggest need. yes, we have a shortage of food items too, but tense are the top priority that the united nations has allocated $3000000.00 us dollars to enable 8 agencies to respond to the floods in pakistan. but the government says a lot more waste needed to get 8 to all day. so need it. ukraine's energy operator is warning. there's a risk of radioactive leaks at this apparition, nuclear power station. the agency says repeated russian shelling has damaged the plat. russia, in turn, has accused ukraine of bombarding the facility which it took over in march. the power station was temporarily knocked off the grid this week causing regional blackouts. the u. s. nuclear watchdog is hoping to send in inspectors next week. moscow and keep accusing each other of shelling around the nuclear power plant. i
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asked our correspondent, mathias brinninger in keith. we should believe we don't have evidence for any of the versions. we can not for sure say what happened there. the only thing we can say is that shelling has happened there. now whom should we believe it's a good question because we have to assign them to communicate very differently. we have russia that has a track record of misinformation. the systematic lies and misinformation ukraine doesn't have that track record, but we can also assume that there might not disclose everything. so we shouldn't believe anything at face value that either of this, i'd say, would we should of course take this information with the background to that i've just mentioned. and just to get to the people in the region and how their lives are affected. imagine a, a nuclear catastrophe taking place. authorities are already distributing iodine tablets to residents near the plant, which i guess helps deal with radioactive,
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an infection. how dangerous is the situation really? unfortunately, we have to assume it's very dangerous. again, we lack reliable information, but what we're hearing from the plan through channels here in ukraine, that means that people who work there or who are at, on communicate with the authorities here on the ukrainian side, what we get from the ukrainian energy authority points to very chaotic situations at this plant, we know that a lot of russian, a military equipment is stationed there, that russia has used this plan as a shield to fire from there on ukrainian positions. and that's, of course, a very dangerous situation. we would need somebody to go there and to
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check what the situation is on the ground. somebody from, for example, the international energy authority, atomic energy authority, emission that has been planned, that would give us more clarity on how dangerous the situation really is. for now, we have to assume it's critical that was mathias bellinger reporting for us from keith. let's take a look now at some of the other stories making headlines. thousands of anti racism . demonstrators have commemorated riots in the northern city of roster and 990. 2 crowds cheered neo nazis as they attacked a center housing asylum seekers and a hostile for vietnamese workers. campaigners criticize the authorities response at the time as 2 week serbia and kosovo has settled a dispute over the movement of citizens across their borders. id holders from both sides will be able to travel freely between the 2, west balkan states. european union foreign policy chief. you're set burrell
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announced the deal in a tweet. the netherlands is moving hundreds of asylum seekers from a makeshift camp. inspectors have condemned the site near the german border as a health hazard. the agency doctors without borders says conditions are so inhumane that they violate you law. at least 12 people were killed as rival groups exchanged gunfire in the libyan capital, tripoli. tensions between 2 organizations vying for control of libya have been rising for months. there are fears they could escalate into an all out nationwide conflict. the party that has ruled the west african nation of angola for nearly half a century is claiming victory in a closely fought election. official say the m p l a 151 percent of the vote. the opposition or disputing account, a low voter turnout and accusations of fraud mart at the pool. did abuse adrian case reports from the angolan capital. luanda is
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a strong police present fear luanda with years of protests by the opposition riot. police can be seen at several places in town, trying to nip any form of protest in the body. several people were already arrested . when did it? did that? i think went back to that we have the right to demonstrate, but we're not allowed to. that's clear what that, that's what these are as people live on what floor plan they thought i was clear over the em lpa. we were born under them and grew up under them and they can still be in power when we die. that's not fair. we need change to make the country democratic more here is getting increasingly tense. the electoral commission published 97 percent of the results. 24 hours after the votes, but up until now, there no final results without any explanation for the delay. the critics of the government are saying that they're still very much under control of the electoral commission. and this is the reason why the major opposition party, the biggest one,
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starts their own votes count saying, according to their numbers they have won. the opposition is now calling for an independent body to see why there is a difference in numbers of both different vote counting processes. ah, labor cruising have finally won their 1st points of the new bonus league a season after beating minds away from home. a shot from execute palazzios was deflected in, my mind says unit 10. burkhart to give labor choosing the lead. 10 minutes later mussa de abby tore through the month's defense before setting up jeremy friend pong . and the dutchman then secured the when rounding the keeper to make it 3 mill labor accusing with a convincing when to put their horror start to the season behind them. so let's take a look at the bonus,
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the results so far. union berlin destroyed newly promoted shaka. 61, there's labor cushions when against mice. darkman kept her to berlin, windless off at han, down to outs berg and arby leipzig deep voice berg too. no leipzig mean, we'll got a penalty early on after handball. my max on slack quad, christopher and slotted home to make it one nil and with time taking away and pounced on a deflection to make it to neil. it's leipzig 1st when the campaign coming after 2 drawers and a defeat and let's check out some other sports stores making headlines. american sprinter lay a hobbs has ended jamaican track dominance at the diamond league meet in switzerland. hobbs one the women's 100 meters sprint in 10.87 seconds. she becomes only the 2nd non jamaican to win a women's 100 meter title in the diamond league this year. former us
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basketball star shaquille o'neal has agreed to help australia's new government implement reforms aimed at improving the lives of indigenous people for time and be a champion. o'neill greeted a prime minister anthony alba neese pledging whatever help is needed. and in tennis, us open defending champion, emma read, who can, who says she feels no pressure in the run up to the tournament. but the 19 year old hasn't had a win this year. the british player seated 11th will take on france's at least corner in the opening round on tuesday. staying with us open practice sessions have begun in new york ahead of the last tennis grand slam of the year. and this year's tournament will be a special one. it will be the last act of serena williams. trophy lading career. she's announced she'll retire after the turn that the american has won 23 grand
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slam singles titles. a record of the open era of tennis that includes 6 championship winds at flushing meadows with the last coming back in 2000 towards more than half a century after the apollo moon landings plans to carry humans back. there again are running way behind schedule. much of the necessary hardware is still on the drawing board, but the u. s. is hoping to take another giant leap next week by launching it's next generation of mega rockets. this museum is a shrine to u. s. space travel and these men are part of its history. they were among the engineers who helped fly the 1st people to the moon. more than 50 years ago. their memories are still fresh, their pride is still palpable. great. i don't know what else you can say. i was able to participate in every launch the moon man as ever made
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with the saturn 5 oil. did they agree or especially began with cause i resolved by ahead of us. and so we had a problem. it was up to us saw that. ready now americans want to return to the moon as part of what's dubbed the art in this mission. a specially designed rocket and capsule are scheduled to take off from cape canaveral on monday. it'll be an unmanned flight astronauts won't be joining until 2025. for now, they're training in houston for the historic mission, which will see the 1st woman and 1st person of color travel to the moon. oh, no matter who we put in that seat right now. some of us had launched into earth orbit, but that's it. none of us have actually lit an engine and burned away from earth beyond 400 kilometers or so. to then go to the moon. that'll be far than
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a human being has gone to very long time. and i don't care how, how many simulations you've done that moment. it's going to be a thing. a returned to the moon is only part of the u. s. ambition. together with europeans and other partners, nasa wants to build a space station that orbits the moon. the project would allow space crews to travel to the moon and back more easily. but for now, the focus is on cape canaveral and getting the orient crew capsule to the moon and back safely. better and engineers will be watching. i try pitcher what they'll be doing in a fine room. green. it's a whole new fine room. but i can think back to polynesians and more recently shuttle days and i can, i can, i had distress. i know what that's like. so i'm just thinking backwards. they're going through the entire agency is feeling the pressure the artemus program is
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several years behind schedule and billions over budget nass is counting on this test flight to be successful. and that's all from us for now. up next, a documentary looks at the plight of the homeless in istanbul. stage in for that, and i forget you can always get up to date on our website, d, w dot com. i'm nick spicer. thanks for watch. with the green and then you feel worried about the planning me too. i'm neil. host of the on the green fence podcast and to me it's clear we need to change. join me for deep dive into the green.

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