tv DW News Deutsche Welle September 6, 2022 3:00pm-3:31pm CEST
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3 civilians dead in east and new crime. a city center apartment building is among the targets in hot keith as the russian shouting shakes the region. a new crime plans progress in its counter offensive in the south famine is out the door. today we are receiving a final warning. chilling was from the he ran about water and food shortages in somalia went route and conflict have combined to leave half the population facing extreme hunger. ah, i'm rebecca writ as welcome to the program. is trust has taken office as the u. k. a new prime minister this follows the resignation of her predecessor bars. johnson troughs has met with the queen who formally invited her to form a government. the new prime minister is immediately asked with the pressing task of
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strengthening via economy as the u. k. faces or cost of living crisis, labor unrest, and soaring energy prices. and for more let's go straight to london where i'll correspond barbara visally standing by. barbara, these are some pretty big issues. what's the biggest issue facing the new prime minister? she takes office the biggest issue without question is the energy crisis and british households and businesses, i was being struck by a 2 fold of 5 fold. even 10 fold rises in energy bills and they can not support that. neither the private households, not the small and medium business. so she will have to do something work here is that already a big package is being prepared to help people out to get them is through this winter air by ways off. a price fries that will then have to be the beautiful that will then have to be footed by the taxpayer over the next years. the details are
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not quite clear, yet obviously, her team is still working on all this. even though during the torrey campaign or for this job, she is wor, no handouts at all, she wants to do as low a texas. she can't get away with it. she has to leave ideology by the side very quickly and really get the money out to help her citizens. otherwise, she would have a really hard winter off undressed on our ends and certainly themes that way. but normally the handover of power is a swift affair. in the u. k, but this time it's taking months. tell us more. yeah, it's taken 2 months and it was agony. people were saying, we have assume the government, we have no government at all. where in the rest of europe at governments, we're getting ready and talking about how to, whether the energy crisis is what matters to take against that barge. johnson was sort of having one vacation off to the other and he didn't really care about it said a doing his job and donnie, sweet. any more. so list for us is really under tremendous pressure now to sort of
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keep up and very quickly try to prepare the country. this is already september of october, a things we'll get a series and to people and households, he really will need help. 11000000 people are supposed to fall into energy poverty from the next months on if nothing is done to really help them. so yes is on for her and she will have really have to prove whether she's not to that extremely difficult job. pressure on in day barbara dental in london. thanks very much for that. oh, now let's get the german and european perspective by bringing harold via he's a member of the german parliament with the opposition alternative for germany. party is also a member of the parliament committee on european affairs mister vile. welcome to d. w. thanks your time today. and relations between the u. k. and the you were notoriously difficult under boris johnson's leadership. do you see that changing for better or for worse, under a government led by this trust?
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i think it will keep steady, more or less because she she clings to the goal of the jobs and government and she should not be inclined to make any new pyramids or roaches. she won't get on her knees. so you think she's going to carry on pretty much more or less as boris johnson has done and, and you know, really, there be a difficult relationship between the u. k. and the yes, i think she feels obliged to do so and she will do good to lose. and it won't be a disappointment for her voters. and she's certainly a brick set supporter at least these days. now your party has also lobbied for germany to leave you when you look at the difficulties facing great britain. now,
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dealing with the aftermath of that is that something that you're still interested in that your party still wants? well, it's not exactly about leaving you. it's re establishing or establishing a new, a new what is better than it has been ever before because it's twisted. the idea of european economic and other cooperation is twisted. it's turned into the opposite economy decline. it's coercion, it's high texas. it's less freedom for runners and for consumers and it's about climate change and so on. and i think the national. busy goal is to make easy living economy easier for your own as not to follow those orders coming from brussels. busy or you and new york, we thing in the u. k. in the u. k. rather, since it has left the a,
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you were sitting of the economy. what do you say to that? well, that was what was to be predicted and predictable. was that it should be at the beginning, 1st of all, 2 years or more sort of a band p, right? but which has only disadvantages, but which has its advantage. so the relationship with the united states, they actually got easier and more profitable than before because as you know, you did much sign any treaty and there was no teacher. is that what united kingdom can all right, mr. hi, thank you very much for your time today. harold vile, a member of the german parliament with the alternative. when ukraine says 3 civilians are among the latest victims of rush and shelling in the east of the country. it's 2nd largest city hockey has also come on to fire.
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much of the fighting is currently focused on the east, but ukraine is reporting advances in a counter offensive in the south. it says it's reclaimed territory, their heat by rockets again and again. hockey is ukraine's 2nd largest city. it's 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 ceiling 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 us still searching through the rubble for survivors of the attack on this apartment building in the city center. several people were killed in all the strikes in the region and air raid sirens rang
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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 regained territory. 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. and earlier i spoke to date of new cars on at nick connelly in cave. i asked him about the latest regarding a crowns counter 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 in ukraine to basically not demand much nor have data from them until they achieve their goals. but what we can tell from people who still on the ground locals who stayed on the rush occupation from pro russian bloggers who sometimes go bit further than the rush official line. this is
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definitely an intensification of the ukrainian campaign or france whereas previously in effect 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 hasanti us or 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 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 e,
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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 had oxy cause 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 defects. 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 rundown, switched off to avoid these risks, but it is a very difficult, very dangerous situation. not only if this derek hits the station, but even
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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 at living around that power station solely on their predictable situation of a danger situation, one to 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, a representatives of deemed special 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 give very word i make thanks very much for that day w correspondent, nick connelly in please let us take a look now at some other stories making headlines around the world. a powerful typhoon has hit south korea, leaving at least 2 people dead and 10. all those missing thousands have been forced to evacuate typhoon hin am nor batted the south of the country and has left
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thousands of homes without electricity. the storm has now moved back out to sea and is expected to pass north. west of japan was risky, work as a searching for hundreds of people still stand as stranded by a 6.8 magnitude of quake that struck southwest and china on monday. at least 65 people and now confirmed did the quake set of land slides in a mountainous area on the edge of the tibetan plateau. 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 were accused of killing 10 people and injuring 18 others in the province of saskatchewan. it's one of the deadliest attacks in canada's history. the un says more than $700.00 children died in somalia nutrition centers in the 1st half of this year and that figure could be higher as many cases go on, reported. the country is teetering on the brink of famine in somalia, which lives in the horn of africa,
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almost 8000000 people. that's half the country's population of facing crisis, hunger levels. more than 200000 people are already starving. the worst hit area is in the bay region in the south. the u. n says, barring a massive influx of assistance, that region is likely to say a full scale famine, incoming, mumps, southern somalia. this is what the worst drought in decades looks like. people displaced by climate change and conflict. their only source of water is this distribution center in a displaced persons camp. the united nations humanitarian agency has been sounding the alarm for some time. i've been shocked to my call this past few days. by the level of pain and suffering, we see so many somalis, enduring famine is up the door. and to day we are
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receiving a final warning. it's been for failed raimie seasons in a row. and now the u. n says a 5th one is on the way, but the problems in somalia run even deeper decades of civil conflict, mass displacement, and one of the lowest standards of living in the world. what's happening in the horn of africa is a threat to a way of life, which is sustained families and communities for generations. it's not just a lack of rain for full seasons, for many families that it's an end to the way they've lived. a search and food prices worldwide, and a grain shortage triggered by the war and ukraine have made the situation worse. this entire region is on the brink of extreme hunger, waiting in vain for the drought to end. nash, when mickey is in mogadishu full that un office at the coordination of humanitarian
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affairs, she tell me more about the people that a hottest hit find route and flood shortages in the country. it's always, there must be hon. it's always the youngest. it's always those who live in the most inaccessible areas. i'm here in mogadishu. as you said in the last couple of days, i've been to a couple of hospitals, one in bio, which is literally the at the center of this latest hungry crisis. and another one in been a deer on the street here and we're going to show and what you see there stays with your forever sheldon, who are so weak. and so my nourished and so skinny and so sick that the counting of my i do not see a single types mining in those 2 hospitals. you can barely hear them cry, they don't even cry, they whimper, they're so weak. that article heat is a little bit of a thing in the background. that's how sick they are. and the sad part is these are the luckiest ones. these are the ones who are able to come and see treatment and hospitals. the worst off are those who are in areas where they don't have medical
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care where they don't have health infrastructure, where their parents don't have the resources to even get them to the hospital so that they can get care. those are the ones who are always the worst. it is really, really heartbreaking to hear. what is the most needed to try and counter this problem? huge problem. and where does it need to come from? it needs to come. it's a collective responsibility kit needs to come from all of us and it needs to happen in different stages. first, the most urgent thing now is we need to save lives. we've done this before. we did it in 2017. we should be able to do it again for that to happen. we need extra support. we need the financial resources, and we need to access that somebody has not the safest country for aid. so we need to be able to get to where the needs are to where the most vulnerable women men and children, and provide them with the support they need. that's access. we also need the
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resources to do that longer term. and equally important is we need to put together systems in place to put the investments in making sure that this doesn't happen again. and the way to do that is to provide the services where people are, they don't need to travel long distances to come to get care. they should be able to seek medical care in their neighborhoods, in their communities. they should be able to access a safe water in the same neighborhood in those communities. and we need to find a way as you heard in your report, the whole lay of life is under threat. so that's not sustainable anymore to live by cultivating the land or by raising livestock. there needs to be other ways for people to sustain their families that are more adaptable to the sad reality that they go through. let's face it every other every other bit of time, but it's not the 1st time that i've seen this. it's one of the worst, and we worry that it's only going to get much worse. indeed. and on top of the drought, you also have the fact that at least 90 percent of somali is weight comes from
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russia and ukraine. that's something we've of course, reported on a lot that the war ukraine has been disastrous for that situation. that must be having a dire effect which is having a jeep effect, but it's not going to be the only solution to what somebody is experiencing. it's good to have seen an increase in the quantities of we'd be exposed to throw the black sea corridor. it's, it's increased by 1000000. we're confident we hope some of that would benefit somebody else. but this is not just about lack of food. we have to be very clear. this is about a combination of factors. if you're malnourished and you get sick, your chances of survival or even worse, so we need to provide the food. but also we need to prevent the diseases that make it even more dangerous for, for children in particular and mothers. i'm pregnant mothers when they get sick, so we need the food, we need the grains, we need the safe water. we need the vaccination because the kids who are dying from this are those suffering from malnutrition, pneumonia, diarrhea, and
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a combination of these different factors. now if we're making thank you very much your time today, not from any of the un office for the coordination of humanitarian affairs. israel and germany's presidents have laid remembrance rapes set berlin's holocaust memorial. israel's isaac hertzog and germany's frank welter. shine maya may the symbolic visit after had sunk, addressed the parliament in berlin. he's in germany commemorating the 50th anniversary of the munich olympics. massa kept on monday, germany apologize for miss handling the murders in 1972, which left 11 is righty. team members dead at the hands of palestinian terrors, even within monmouth, speaking to the parliament in berlin. hotel urge both countries to fight anti semitism together and not to forget the past. they observe before we love whether we want it or not. the memory of the show is a deep part of our identity as a nation. on a story shall a people who carries in its historic memory such a dark,
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abysmal impossible experience is not a people like all peoples calling them mother. and despite all of this, even if we cannot meet in the realms of memory, we must meet in the realms of meaning and mutual learning. 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 cars on a melinda kind of following president has on to visit to germany, and she joins me in the studio. melinda, hi, i said the importance of remembrance really seems to be the through line. the central thought here, the central theme of her talks 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,
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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 . 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 victims have the right to forgive. but we have the duty to remember and have sold this person. it hurts. i've 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 mike frank rata shine mar in munich. at the commemoration ceremony for the victims of the $972.00 terror attack of the musical lympics or a commemorate sion at which president herself also spoke. president stone maya said
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in his speech that this culture of remembrance also included a duty to protect those is really athletes on german soil and that germany had violated that duty. so in both cases, essentially remembrance as also it creating obligations for germany. it 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
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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 them actually align should be drawn under the past that this obligation at some point runs out. that is not how most his rarely see it. it's not how the german political class seizes as we could here in these features. and the, 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. i'm and in to thank you very much for that. we'll have to leave it their date of it's melinda crank. the tennis
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now and at the us open 24 year old american francis t afo ended rafael adults pursuit to a record extending 23rd grand slam title in new york. a young american pulled off what many, calling the upset of the tournament in outburst of emotions, followed frances t. r. foes, victory as his supporters gave their approval the 24 year old look to be in a state of disbelief. t r fo becomes only the 3rd american to eject the doll from a grand slave defeat by some on here look to be inevitable for the season grand slam champion while t afo heads wagging his step. so did his fan base d. r pose victory has been dubbed the biggest upset of the us open.
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ah yeah. that one of warnings applied. but really, i yeah, i get some eggs came out there. i believe i can do it. i may help circling mc oberon's, haven't played him in some years. and oh, how different i'm a different person now. different learn. i went out there trying to get a dub and that's where did the dolls exit in a 17 year run of reaching at least the quarter finals in a grand slam. congress took him wish him all the very best i had to go back. i need to fix it, things life. and then i the now when i gonna, when i gonna come back i, i gonna try to be ah, really mentally. when i feel that i i will be ready to compete again. i will. i will be good. all holds the all time record for grand slams in men's singles. his
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departure could lead to a young tele willing, his 1st ever grand slam in new york. you watching a d w news coming up next. indelibly news, asia fuel price hike, protest to rob interrupt, and indonesia could cutting subsidies back far on the government and putting a live savings into building a home honey to haven't washed away. pakistan's millions of homeless flood victims my story and will come out next in dw is asia with my colleague and persona. i'm rebecca, written in valiant thanks, very much watching ah ah
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all over the world can't go to school with them. we ask why? because education makes the world more just a, make up your own mind. d. w. made for minds i, when you work as an architect like go all in or not at all. women in architecture in why are they so invisible to the larger public? we decided to ask them and if women grow up with insufficient little models, they can't identify with certain professions about their guiding principles necessarily. what is the poetry, the secret of a house i'm house about their motivations. i think
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i'm texture does so much to you in the real goal of architecture is to create habitat for human about their stroke and dream. your responsibility, your future. they have so much to lose shattering the glass ceiling. women in architecture dismiss has to be really, really good. start september 30th on d, w. o . c, d, w, muse, asia, coming up to date, fuel price high protests to wrapped in indonesia, energy costs of searching around the world at the rise. for indonesians is huge, as the government cuts back subsidies alaskan economist if the move could backfire and to fulfill.
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