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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  September 6, 2022 2:00pm-2:31pm CEST

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for 3 years that would change the world forever. but jillions journey around the world starts september 7th. oh d w ah ah ah, this is d, w. news live from berlin. cave reports, another 3 civilians, a dead in east and you crime. a city center apartment building is among the targets in hot cave is russian shelling shakes of rage and a new crime. climes progress in itself and her son counter offensive,
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and regional officials they had put on hold their plans for a referendum. also coming up the trust becomes britain's full prime minister in 6 years. that she formerly replaces forrest johnson. as she takes over a country in crisis, we ask what her plan plus thousands of homes and businesses are under water after monsoon, flooding and pakistan will hear about efforts to drain off the biggest freshwater like in the country and divert dangerous overflow away from populated areas and angry protests south, the indonesians government hikes fuel prices by 30 percent d w here from some who say the energy crisis means they can hardly afford to work. ah, i'm rebecca route is welcome to the program. cave says 3 civilians are among the latest spy,
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russian shelling in the east of the country. it's 2nd largest city hall cape has also come under fire. much of the fighting is currently focused on the east, but ukraine is reporting advances in its counter offensive in the south. it says it has reclaimed territory. their heat by rockets again and again. hockey is ukraine's 2nd largest city. its position in the east near the russian border, has made it a target throughout the wall. there was an explosion on dar apartment shook pieces of tile, hit my child's back on the seat and collapsed on my head. very thick smoke immediately filled the room. we wanted to get ice, but our door was blocked. it was blown into the corridor. ha, ha ha, keeps governor said rescue as a still searching through the rubble for survivors of the attack on this apartment
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building in the city center. several people were killed in all the strikes in the region and air raid sirens rang throughout ukraine on tuesday morning. but in the countries south cave says it's successfully pushing back. ukrainian troops launched a counter offensive last week and said, have already regain tarrot tree. this video appears to show soldiers raising a ukrainian flag in a small town in the house on region that had been held by russia since early on in the wall as brigand nick connelly, n date of new cars on it in cave. nick, what's the latest on your crank count? her offensive in the south. becca, reporting on this story is very, very difficult. we've had her countless ukraine officials coming and telling us that they needed quietly. businesses, the press and the population here in ukraine to basically not demand much no data from them until they achieve their goals. but what we can tell from people who
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still on the ground locals who stayed on the rush occupation from pro russian bloggers who sometimes go bit further than the rush of his line. this is definitely an intensification of the ukrainian campaign or france, whereas previously it had sonya his shooting mainly at night. now it's all day long . we've seen reports of attacks on russian weapons depos on logistics hubs, on the bridges across from her center. so the new pro river, because you have to remember here, this space here, a russian outpost on the western bank, the deeper river, those russian troops are very dependent on supplies coming across the river in terms of food, in terms of ammunition. so ukraine's kind of short term goal now is to push them back from that part of the river, the most vulnerable russian position in the south ukraine. and it seems like they're doing quite a good job at really making. those are 6 more difficult. we've seen time time again, the bridge is being hit, pontoons being destroyed and the russian force would have to pull out all the stops to be able to function at all. now one of the other really urgent concerns there at
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the moment is of course, what's happening around the separation nuclear power plant. president zalinski has said it's on the verge of disaster and the i a, a inspectors are due to give their findings soon. what do we know about the situation at the plant right now? or just in the last few hours we've heard from ukrainian officials in the region that the city of and that had that which surrounds the power plant. that there was a big explosion there that the city is without power and water. and we'd had reports of attacks near by the plant over the last few weeks. that's what reduce the cost. so much concern estimates of about half a 1000000 people would be the conservative estimate who would be affected by any release of radiation, the power station there, the ukrainian company that manage the power plant, even though it's under defect. russian control now says that only one of the 6 records is carry operational and that it's basically not connected to ukraine grid right now. that power is just being used to maintain the cooling and maintain the functioning of the power station that had been speculation that it might be totally
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run down, switched off to avoid these risks. but it is a very difficult, very dangerous situation. not only if this direct hit the station, but even a lack of power to keep the cooling going, could expert say, be very dangerous and cause events that would lead to severe danger to the civilians living around that power station solely on or predictable situation of a danger situation one which doesn't seem like the russians the ukrainians are in any state to negotiate or to get some kind of agree deal where hiccups can hear from those inspectors who are there recently. but as we understand it there only 2 representatives of the internal bodies currently still on site and able to manage that. so the idea that they would be there longer term trying to kind of make this turn this into a safe situation for now. pretty difficult to imagine how that would work and people here and give very worried i think thanks very much for that date, every correspondent nick connelly in cliff lives. trust has taken office as the u. k. a new prime minister. this follows the resignation of her
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predecessor boris johnson. in the past, our trust has been meeting with the queen, who formerly invited her to form a government. the new prime minister is immediately faced with the pressing task of strengthening the economy as the u. k. face is a cost of living crisis, labor unrest, and soaring energy prices. a little earlier i spoke to our correspondent barbara vessel in london. she outlined the biggest issues facing their new prime minister. one, a big issue may be of the outgoing prime minister bars. johnson who said, of course, everyone should says throw their support behind las trust. however, he left was a slight insinuation of a possible come back. now if that's not a threat for his successor, i don't know what is however, list trust finds the country in crisis. they are the energy prices, which are absolutely exploding people and no matter from british people and know that they simply cannot afford them. the coming went, the same holds true for small and medium business businesses,
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thousands of them might go out of business. actually, if these prices really come about. and then of course, there's the national health service. all was it big problem of this country, but now actually close to break down 7000000 people on waiting list to be treated. $50000.00 jobs for nurses and doctors unfilled and so on. this is really what they called here in omni crisis. something that is all income passing, endless trust, hardly knows where to start a huge domestic issues there by the sounds of things. what about relations between the u. k and brussels? and they've been tense or to say the least is that likely to change and a list trust as leadership if we're lucky, they might change to the worse actually because what las trust has announced during her campaign this summer is that the one of the 1st things she wanted to do or would be to scrap or suspend the northern irish, a protocol as part of the directive treaty. and that would mean that did the
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already tense relations to you. a good really go into the red area because brussels has already been warning and said, please don't do this. this is not the point in time where we need a trade war. however, the europeans are quite ready to start. one if written proceeds because everyone thinks this is totally unnecessary at the moment it's, it's an impediment it for all countries in it, within europe and for the united kingdom it to, to whether the crisis that is coming for everyone this winter. and so we don't know yet whether she will really go ahead with it, or whether it was just a lot of a lot of strong talk to sort of pacify the right ring is in her party. but she's supposed to be a very headstrong person, and someone who really is, speaks very starkly and does. she may as well have spoken her mind. we'll see how the storms out went have to wait very much long about reveal in london. thank you very much. and let's take
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a look now at some of the stories making headlines around the world. canadian police say one of the suspects in a series of fatal stabbings has been found dead. they are still searching for his brother who may be injured. the 2 are accused of killing 10 people and injuring 18 in the province of saskatoon. it's one of the deadliest attacks in canada's history . rescue workers are searching for hundreds of people, still stranded by a 6.8 magnitude earthquake that struck southwest in china. on monday at least 65 people are now confirmed dead. the quite a set of land slides in a mountainous area on the edge of the tibetan plateau. a powerful typhoon has hit south korea, forcing thousands to evacuate typhoon hit on more in an nol rather bat at the south of the country and left $66000.00 homes without electricity after it down the power lines. the storm has now moved back out to sea and is expected to pass north west of japan. israel and germany's presidents have laid remembrance raves at berlin's
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holocaust memorial. israel's isaac had saga and germany's frank vault, ashton, my may, the symbolic visit after hertzog address the parliament in both in he's in germany commemorating the 50th anniversary of the munich olympics massacre on monday, germany apologize for miss handling the motors in 1972, which left 11 is ready, team members dead at the hands of palestinian terrorists. speaking to the parliament in berlin. hertzog urged both countries to fight antisemitism together and not to forget the past. they observe a thought we love whether we want it or not. the memory of the show is a deep part of our identity as a nation. alicia, a people who carries in its historic memory such a dark, abysmal impossible experience, is not a people like all peoples called mother. and despite all of this, even if we cannot meet in the realms of memory,
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we must meet in the realms of meaning and mutual learning body damage. to give meaning to the memory classical, to treat memory as an obligatory imperative, as a moral imperative, as responsibility. and aid emily's chief political correspond. melinda crane is following president, hasn't visit to germany. she joins me in the studio, melinda high. and so the importance of remembrance really seems to be the through line. the central fort here, the central theme of hertzog visit. tell us a bit more about math. absolutely, but the importance of remembrance not simply as an end in itself, but as a path to responsibility. and the president hartzog gave a very moving tribute to his own father, who interestingly enough, was the 1st is rarely president to speak to the bonus tag in 1987. his father was also one of the british officers who fried the german concentration camp of bergen
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. belsen and he said that he remembers his father's words, describing the horror that he saw at bergen belsen when he went there and that his father said we in the present, we do not have the right to forgive our only the victims have the right to forgive but we have the duty to remember and have sold this person. it has, i went on to say that is the duty both to the victims, but also to future generations to ensure that this can never happen again. and if you remember the speech that we heard yesterday by the german president, frank rotter, stine, mar, in munich, at the commemoration ceremony for the victims of the 972 terror attack of the musical lympics are a come ration at which president herself also spoke president stein maya said in his each that this culture of remembrance also included a duty to protect those israeli athletes on german soil and that germany had
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violated that duty. so in both cases, essentially remembrance as also it creating obligations for germany. there was a powerful part of the speech and this trip seems to be strengthening. the german is ready relationship even further. tell us a little bit about where the relationship stand at the moment it faces some challenges or one of them are rising. incidence of anti semitism in germany and the president of the german parliament spoke about that in her own speech this morning saying that anti semitism unfortunately is not simply a marginal occurrence on the extremes. but in fact, it is in some ways at the very heart of germany's culture and must be countered at all times. and in fact, a new study recently shows that for many germans, this obligation are toward israel is something that they say almost half of
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them. actually, the align should be drawn under the past that this obligation at some point runs out. that is not how most is rarely see it. it's not how the german political class seizes as we could here in the speeches. and with the president of the bonus tag, in fact, reminded her listeners that at the time that german israeli relations were being re established in germany agreed to pay reparations to israel. many, many germans disagree with that course and it was the leadership of the chancellor at that time that made that possible. so again, responsibility also on the part of political leaders or i, melinda, thank you very much for that. we'll have to leave it their date of it's melinda crime. pakistan he authored his in the south of the country are trying everything they can to prevent pakistan's largest lake from overflowing and swamping nearby towns, water levels on like man, char,
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i said to be dangerously high following record monsoon flooding. satellite images show the scale of disaster following a severe drought. monsoon rains and melting places have submerged a 3rd of pakistan. millions have lost their homes. alabama visited a carpenter and his son in sid province. and heard how their lives have been turned upside down by the floods. rashana lea and his son, the mom, have lost everything. they put their savings into building a house, which they finished only 2 months ago and the southern province of sinned. the floods have wiped out their home and all their hopes. listen, merry woman, good to me. i work my whole life to build this house. i've never owned a home before. we were so happy when we finally managed to save enough to build it a miracle, your god to hey, i don't know whether that will ever happen again. i love your heart. megan ali
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and his son are both carpenters. a mom bought some materials and started building a workshop, but his hopes were quickly dashed. it re non stop for 17 days, and the walls were overcome by flood waters. ameritas did that in america. luckily we have relatives near by them and we are living with my cousin anyway. i miami. well, there are 4 or 5 other families here that bunch them down there. just simple labor as emma good, but they help us because their family up and i am a d. m a that have been had on the way into the village with the families now staying. the scale of the destruction is clear with the water here is also waste, deep 8 people normally live in their temporary accommodation. now, more than 30 crammed in law, he,
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my kids are sick. the can't get any medicine. we can't even leave the house. i remember that i'm in the family needs medicine, food and clean drinking water, but there's little prospect of any improvement char, her son is the agricultural minister in a region which is 90 percent flooded. that many residents of farmers who depend on their harvest, that the food means that's likely to fail this year. yeah. but it, that also didn't, didn't fit funny or the what are some houses is a me to do or yeah. com, but the weight harvest will be devastating this year and next year i got a year bonnie: the water in the fields has to drain away. stop your body. got of it's lucky they'll be no harvest for 2 years like on the valley. war is sorry. don't get ugly albany looks at me, but i'm glad that it with many here she'll the floods will main shrewd
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shortages. although it's one of the countries with the lowest greenhouse gas emissions. pakistan is a victim of climate change. but able to get anxious or sad. wish that last was the village older, so it hasn't rained this hard in a 100 years. i think glamour can. of course, it's linked to global warming, lavonne and climate change radical use pearson and ours was a clear the government says more than 30000000 people are reflected by the flooding . the authorities a promising financial help for those in need. but they have not received anything. so far, rashana lee doesn't know how he and his family will cope. image him up, brochures. yes, me mila. but please don't ask me whether i'll ever be able to build another house. yeah, me too. i feel helpless and completely overwhelmed. her. to me, i'd like to have never cried before in my life. oh, i'm just trying to stay strong and be grateful for what god has given me. you may
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mirrored joe, unless he may hair may. was he because you'll rashana alleys. big hope now is that for his son, at least the dream of owning his own home will one day come true. and of course i have and now to correspond and oliver mayor, he sent that report in stucco pakistan. sh oliver authorities trying to stop pakistan. biggest like from overflowing, how is that process going so far? well, people of the reach and tell us that it's going pretty well actually, or the dam was pretty high. the water in the dam was pretty high, but they built a even higher wall than the damn water still came over the dam. but the good news is that that went into a close by canal the canal earlier into the river. and 3rd, the good news for the people to hear is, sir, since 10 days it hasn't really rain. so the water level in the river is not bad
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high anymore. so the water from the dam will not go over the river, at least for now. and people think that there might be slight rain expected in the nate, nate in the next days, but not so much so, and it could be good news for the people here. the 1st good news and quite a while. as we've been saying this, the floods have been extreme this year, 33000000 people affected across the country, tens of thousands losing their homes. how are people they're coping it's very, very tough and her. we were here in the last few days and we saw many, many people struggling for example. i mean, we just saw it in the report rate, the family who put all their savings in building a house that was their biggest dream in their life. and they are just living there for 2 months or so only for a few weeks. and now this whole house got destroyed, or we saw other people and being really sick, who cannot afford the medicine, who cannot afford even water, who cannot afford any food being cut away pretty much from everything. so what we
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saw here in the last 30 days, it's a big, big human humanitarian catastrophe. and, and hell really needs to get here soon. and that has been the biggest problem in the last weeks that not too many 8 is arriving in the regions. now the sheer scale is certainly alarming as we had in your port to their concerns over the wheat harvest and of course, food shortages. what help does pakistan need from the international community? well, it needs a lot of help from not only from the national, international community, but also from the country itself. the country itself is trying to help, but there are lots of help is going to the big relief cams actually there's where food and water and medicine is going. people here live for pretty scattered and villagers and these people really need to get help. and that's where the european union might come in. they are going to coordinate and the eights and they need like
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water pumps. they need water or they need to medicine. so they need all kinds of suffer stuff and they need structured aid. and that needs to come soon to pakistan . people are desperately waiting for it here. yep. all right, thanks very much for that update. all of them are for us in pakistan and thousands of people are taking the strength of indonesia as largest cities in anger at rate and fuel price hikes. president, yoga widow announced at the weekend that he had to raise the cost of fuel by around 30 percent as inflation in the southeastern asian country. sores unions that say the most disadvantage workers and the urban poor, the most feel price hikes make ice cream. that's the message students here in the province of ha, one to send to their government all across indonesia, labor unions, and student states protests against higher fuel prices, even occupying the regional parliament in archer is
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a huge burden. it will normally cost $1.00 your a 40 to use public transport for the whole day mobile. now it's only good for one way trip to school. many of our parents catch fish for a living and depend on cheap fuel price and collapsed is what i can to margin. but if the fuel prices stay high, the price of groceries will go up to people's income is still very low, shall we demand the government to reverse the decision of the money? the indonesian government has artificially kept fuel prices low for decades. the recent hike, the 1st in 8 years raised the price of gasoline by about 30 percent. the government argues it had no choice. they say the cost of states subsidies has already tripled this year, driven by soaring global energy prices. now, ordinary people will have to deal with the consequences. this is though, worse moment to increase their fuel price. because as we see that there's
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a purchasing powers still the copper from the panama of the 2 years. and the impact of the fuel price is not only affecting transport, is not only affecting manufacturing for them, but also african, $64000000.00 small medium and the price to fuel brands receives state subsidies. initially, they were only intended for the poor, but everybody uses that. the government now acknowledges that develop subsidies was not well targeted. apparently 70 percent of the cheap fuel has benefited middle and upper classes rather than low income indonesians. a cash handout equivalent to 10 euros is now supposed to cushion the impact of the price hike on millions of poor families. the question is, will this be enough to quell the anger in southeast asia, us largest economy? some tennis news now from the us open 20 to time grand slam champion wrap. and
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a dow has been defeated by american tennis player francis t. r. for the 24 year old american became the 1st player to defeat needle in a major tournament this year in what has become a very emotion, what became a very emotional victory round the t alpha down the down in full sits. he also snapped an adult street of 17 straight majors when he reached the quarter finals. better after what has been called the biggest shock of us open. he is raphael, no doubt post match. yeah. going with him. wish him all the very best. i had to go back, i mid to fix things life and i don't know when i gonna, when i'm gonna come back i, i gonna try to be i really mentally. when i feel that i, i will be ready to compete. again, i will, i will be there. thank you for watching date of the news. as a reminder of the top stories were following, foil cave says, 3 civilians have been killed by russian shelling in east and you've trained
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a city center apartment building was among the targets in hockey as rush and shelling shakes the region. and the queen has formally invited less trust to form and government. after pointing out britain's new prime minister cross takes over following the resignation of her predecessor maurice johnson. on that chinese vis our, our next our documentary series close up and the internal debate within finland over its way to join nato. get is always more news on our website. that's d w dot com. i'm rebecca rita's in voting for me and my entire team here. thanks for watching with with ah,
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[000:00:00;00] with you good by a neutrality. hello nato. finland wants to join the western military alliance.
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the association of reservists is in favor of the move, conscientious objectors, reject it. what are their reasons? and how does the rest of the population view the end of neutrality? close up next on d, w ah, the landscape, a reflection of a turbulent history. the cities, the mosaic of different people and languages. the ron's mountains reveal unparalleled beauty. ah, a special look at a special country he learned from above. start september 16th on d, w. oh, vibrant habitat,
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ended glistening place of longing. the mediterranean sea, its waters connect people of many cultures seen of almost rock and to far abdul karim drift along with exploring modern lifestyles and mediterranean. where has history left its traces, meeting people, hearing their dreams of mediterranean during this week on d, w. the die is ca finland has applied to join nato. 20 year old. really no me and his fellow pacifists believe this is a mistake and a dangerous one of that know me is

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