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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  September 6, 2022 9:00pm-9:31pm CEST

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ah, ah ah ah ah, business dw is lying from berlin, the un nuclear watchdog calls for a safe zone around ukraine's upper regia, nuclear plant. at warrants that ongoing showing poses a constant threat to nuclear safety as russian and ukrainian forces battle nearby. also coming up with his up the door on today, we are receiving
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a final warning telling worth from the you when about water and food shortages. and so while you were drought and conflict have combined to leave half the population facing extreme hunger. and then the u. k less trust begins naming her cabinet after being appointed. as britons new prime minister. she's promised a bold plan to rebuild the economy and address soaring an energy cost. ah, i'm to call for like, it's good to have you with us. the united nations nuclear watchdog is calling for a security zone to be established around ukraine's embattled upper regia, nuclear power plant b. i a says the current situation is quote, untenable,
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this after a team of was experts visited the site last week to assess the damage and conditions for the workers there. since russian troops took control of the facility early in the war, keith and moscow have accused each other of risking a radiation disaster by shelling near the site and t w's and montana. shes joins me from keith. now, emma, good to see you. the u. n. is gravely concerned about the state of the plan to what exactly did the report reveal? well, this report actually was expected to hear that doesn't really come of a surprise with the international energy agency saying that the situation is no longer sustainable. dave observed, very grave violations of the safety on site, and there was an incident, a nuclear incident could happen at any time due to military operations. so really
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and sustainable situation there. they've also observed something that had already been actually warned against here by key. if the military presence of russian soldiers, so not only sold you, but also equipment and munitions in a very sensitive. so i'm thinking about the, the holes where the turbines are located. also they will send some damages to buildings where nuclear are fresh nuclear fuel. and so radioactive waste is being stored damages also against a building where we find a central alarm system of operation power plants. so many, many violation of security is of course they call for a safety, a security zone. these don't already existed a prior to the war being a nuclear power plant, but repeatedly since february 24th,
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it has been violated by the russian occupants. there is concern about the plan, of course, but also about the people who live around what's the situation like for the people who inhabit this area around the upper egypt plant. i would say i would say the primary concern, ease for people who lived nearby and also in the region because we read no doubt in case of a nuclear or catastrophe, not just the immediate vicinity will be affected by people who are at residence in the area you know, most of them, they are families of people working in the power plants. they are very, very well read and also hearing ukraine, people know that all of a nuclear are incident day. hard to leave true to china, bill incident in the eighty's. this is very much present in a people's mind with many a residents leaving the area when they come when they have haven't already done so . but oh, so that the international atomic energy or energy agency. oh,
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so i was saying that people, workers are we're working with in the power plant. well, they're at risk as well, directly to commit human errors because of the amount of stress they have to work under their and a very high pressure. they work under constant observation of the russian military troops. they are so out really a very, a gloom situation there in separate jo. am i, i want us to take a quick look at the developments and other parts of ukraine stay with us and we'll talk more after this report, which starts and car keith in the east heat by rockets again and again. how keith is ukraine's 2nd largest city? it's position in the east, near the russian border. has made it a target throughout the war. there was an explosion on dar apartment shook pieces of tile,
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hit my child's back on the seat and collapsed on my head. very take smoke immediately fill 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 other 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 say they 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 our correspondent machine is still with us. emma looks like that
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counter offensive in the south is gaining traction, isn't it? exactly. in fact, a counter offensive in the south started early july, so it's nothing new. what is new though? is that it has been a week or so that he has, it has made significant a games in this house. i would love to tell you more about those gains had, but the situation being so critical as so sensitive. there is no regular updates as to which village is exactly have been liberated as to where exactly the army is, are fighting against the russian occupants. so it's all very, very sensitive topic here. there are pictures or are, there are some videos on a social media, despite the request of a de ukrainian army itself, a to a, not a talk about is on public media. so as to not give clues or to the russian army about what you know about the situation are despite that we can see some videos day
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show destructions of ammunition. they pose russia nomination, they pose. they also see a show, a lot of at russian tanks or russian equipment are being destroyed on the side of the road and it looks like it's going oh, well that is gaining traction on the ukrainian side with ukraine. and president, milady may zaleski even saying, are talking about the liberation of 2 villages near have sun, and that finally, ukrainian flags are floating where they should be again. and perhaps the biggest gave away that a dis counter offensive is going well for ukraine. is the fact that russia has paused it's prospect of a wanting to hold a referendum in occupied her son. it wanted to do the same as it did in crimea in 2014, holding a referendum to official eyes, the annexation of the region. it cannot do doubt at the moment because of the counter offensive. a lot of movement in ukraine and manual shes with the latest
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from there. thank you. so much. synagogue buys half of its wheat from russia and 6 percent from ukraine, but the ongoing war has hampered those imports and cent price is rising in response . the west african country is pushing for more locally source serials, giving farmers and local business owners a boost in this region of western senegal, most farmers cultivate millet, a local high protein grain eaten for breakfast and supper. traditionally, farmers have kept the grain for domestic use, but now there is a push to expand production in a way that will benefit local economies and reduce reliance on wheat, regional agricultural associations and a local n g o are providing training and equipment to farmers like the gong may, sorry, they have also encouraged him to switch to organic farming mancha new younger. i'm seeing all the advantages before we were using chemical fertilizers,
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but it's expensive. and now i also know that it's toxic. and with the new method, there are higher yields and fewer expenses than organic fertilizers last longer in the ground and got, and even when you have 2 types of crops, it's efficient for both the improved yield has enabled the gung me to better provide for his family the mill it sold by farmers like him, is bought by bakeries and other businesses in the community, including buy entrepreneurs such as our di up. she is now using locally sourced millet and may is to make her fritters rather than imported wheat movement in mccormick for her from i couldn't go back. wrinkled clients have started to appreciate the 1000000 fritters ovens of our lives will time known for melodic to the will. with our tradition on women, millison mays are irreplaceable. had a lot to miss, also easy to digest than wheat flour. but one big question is whether people in cities and other parts of senegal would also be happy to switch from wheat to
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cereals such as millet. many single leaves prefer wheat, baguettes of the type sold in this bakery. the government is encouraging bakers to use local cereals because as the price of wheat rises, so to do the subsidies that they pay, this bakery is making gradual changes. but convincing customers here remains a challenge the font size among the informa. i think there's still a lack of information. we're trying to sensitize people to say it's good for them. is it? and every time we explain this, it could be on the consumption increase the climate mover. some one. when i started a mock on it represented only 2 to 3 percent of the total sales would be, for example, today it's a 20 percent. my objective is to reach 50 percent of sales for bread made with local serial work. we're not going where i think i'm proper because we'll of brembo theorem. look on shifting away from weed to decrease food dependency is something bakers are determined to do even beyond synagogue representatives from 8 other
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countries in west africa recently came to dakar for the launch of a confederation of west african bakeries of hbo luxuries. because with the crisis in ukraine, we thought there's a need to find alternative solutions to day bringing bakers from west africa as a 1st here, and decor fairly new globally. when is a need for synergy? we want west africa to wake up of what we want to make commercial exchanges. luckily, if i want banana flower for synagogue off it, i can import it from the ivory coast and if an ivory and wants milk flower, he will import it from niger or synagogue. and that's the purpose, anybody, and he will, i find the many will end with the new new shields. and they go off is either whether the use of local serials will reach its full potential, remains to be seen. eating habits are slow to change. the hope is that at some point the country will be able to reduce its reliance on imported wheat. and let's get you up to speed on some of the other stories making headlines around the world
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today. nasa has released new pictures of the ran sheila nebula, captured by the james web space telescope. these images show young stars distant background galaxies as well as detailed structure and composition of the nebulous gas and dust. the nebula lies in the large mike atlantic cloud galaxy some 161000 light years away. rescue workers are searching for hundreds of people still stranded by a 6.8 magnitude earthquake that struck southwestern china on monday. at least 65 people are confirmed to have died. the quake set off landslides in a mountainous area. on the edge of the tibetan plateau, a powerful typhoon has hit south korea, leaving at least 2 people dead and 10, missing. thousands have been forced to evacuate typhoon hen, numb nor batter at the south of the country and left thousands of homes without
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electricity. a storm has now moved back out to sea and is expected to pass north west of japan. the united nation says that in the 1st half of this year alone, more than 700 children have died, an emergency nutrition centers across somalia. the country is now on the brink of famine, almost 8000000 people. that's about half the population are facing crisis hunger levels. the worst hit area is the by region. in the south, the u. n says barring a massive influx of assistance, that region is likely to see a full scale famine in coming months, 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 with the united nations. humanitarian agency has been
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sounding the alarm for some time. i been shocked to my call these 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 receiving a final warning. it's been for failed rainy 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,
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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. earlier we spoke to petro wilton with the united nations wild food program in nairobi, who was just back from neighboring somalia. and we asked him, which groups would be most affected by full scale famine. it's going to affect the most vulnerable 1st and that is young children. it is the elderly, it is those living with disabilities. it is those who been internally displaced by conflict, but also by the terrible right across 4 consecutive season. wsp we've been saying for months we cannot wait for a declaration of famine because we know from the past, by then i'll be too late in 2011. the last major famine in somalia that claimed
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more than a quarter 1000000 lives. half of the people who passed away had done it before the official declaration. and we haven't been waiting. we've scaled up our system or food and nutrition assistance in somalia to the highest levels ever. we more than doubled the number of people we've, we've reached from april true to july, but it's imperative right now that we are able, that we get the funding, the resources to maintain and further increase that scale up. because as we heard martin griffith say, just yesterday, we are in the last minutes of the 11th hour. we have to stop this, right. my petro wilkins, speaking to us earlier. you're wanting to double, you know, still to come putting your life savings into building a home only to haven't washed away. that's the fate of many of pakistan flood
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victim. first we go to the u. k, where the new prime minister less trust, has begun announcing her cabinet earlier today, she gave her 1st speech as p. m pledging to boost the economy, tackle the energy crisis and improve the country's national health service trust, promise, tax cuts and security at home and abroad. britain's orth, conservative prime minister in 6 years, she's facing a raft of challenges, including a cost of living crisis, labor unrest, and soaring energy prices. so we called and left listening to some of what she had to say earlier. we will transform britson into an aspiration nation with high paying jobs, safe streets, and what everyone. everyone has the opportunities they deserve. i will take action this day and action every day to make it happen. i will take action this week to deal with energy bills and to secure all future energy supply. are
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corresponding bigot, mass joints is lying from london now big at the new prime minister has been announcing her cabinet picks. what kind of people is she surrounding herself with or the many difficult task ahead was really striking is that the top many of the top positions are held by ethnic minority and he's, so it's not a cabinet full of white man, the pm, and also the deputy prime minister are both female, so that is something that, that's very, very striking. the other thing that, that you can say is that it's, it's, it's a cabinet that's mostly consisting of supporters of list trust. so she had been urged by by members of her own party by a conservative observance, to build a cabinet of all talent and also reach out to people who haven't previously supported her. but she hasn't on that. so it's mostly allies,
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mostly from the right wing of to party and also mostly breaks a tears. so it looks like a like a cabinet that almost that she's a, she's, she's build in her image when it comes to their, their, their political convictions. let's talk about support a little more because she was elected by 80000 conservative party members. that's hardly representative of the population. how does the rest of the country feel about her? well, yes, that's the thing. i mean, she's been just her just elected by the conservative party and the rest of the country needs to be convinced that indeed she is the right person to lead the country out of the many crisis that the britain is facing at the moment. will really, wages are falling, inflation is, is skyrocketing up to almost 20 percent forecasted in the next month. so on top of that, the country is facing a cost of living crisis, which is exacerbated by really high energy bills. and this draws as somebody who
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has been, are in the cabinet for quite a while, but she's not that well known to a lot of british people. her profile is not very high with faders and the conservative party, as such, is also trailing behind the opposition. labor party and distrust is also trailing behind when she's being compared to kiss darma, who's the leader of the opposition. so she's not doing too well in the polls at the moment, however, now is her time to shine. she is the p. m, so she can really set the agenda and she can make herself known to the british people. all right, she's off to a difficult start. forget math in london. many thanks. authorities in the south of pakistan are trying every thing they can to prevent pakistan's largest lake from overflowing and swamping nearby towns, water levels on lake one shar earth said to be dangerously high following record
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monsoon flooding satellites show the scale of the disaster following a severe drought monsoon rains and melting glaciers have submerged a 3rd of pakistan. millions have lost homes and other vermaia visited a carpenter and his son and send province and heard how their lives have been upended by the floods. rashana lee and his son, the mom, have lost everything. they put their savings into building a house which they finished only 2 months ago. in the sudden province of sind, the floods have wiped at their home, and all their hopes. less than maybe one might have good, they gave me, i work my whole life to build this house and i've never owned a home before. we were so happy when we finally managed to save enough to build it in medical. your bad the hey, i don't know whether that will ever happen again. i love you hugs. megan ali
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and his son are both carpenters. he 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. mad at us did that in america. luckily we have relatives near by them and we're living with my cousin anyway. i'm at amier when there are 4 or 5 other families here that branch them down. they're just simple labor as emma good, but they help us because their family up and i am a d. m. that happened here 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.
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now more than 30 crammed in law, he, my kids are sick. the can't get any medicine. we can't even leave the house. i know 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. but the food means that's likely to fail this year. yeah, but that also didn't, didn't fit funny or the what are some houses is a me to do or jaga, but the weight harvest will be devastated this year and next year i got to keep on the water in the fields has to drain away. stop your body. got of it's lucky there'll be no harvest for 2 years. like on a valley war is saw. don't get alice albany. looks at me by that it
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with many, here she'll the floods will main shoot shortages. although it's one of the countries with the lowest greenhouse gas emissions. pakistan is a victim of climate change. what able to get anxious o sod wish that last was the village elders say it hasn't rained this hard in a 100 years. i think i'm a can give it. of course it's linked to global warming, lavonne and climate change categories. pearson, and as opposed to create 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. yet moves him up. wish rose? yes. me mila both. please don't ask me whether i'll ever be able to build another house. yeah, me too. i feel helpless and completely overwhelmed out to me, i'd like to have never cried before my life. oh,
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i'm just trying to stay strong and be grateful for what god has given me. you may emitted joy unless you may, hair may was said because you'll rashana alleys. big hard now is that for his son, at least the dream of owning his own home will one day come true. some tennis news from the us open 20 to time grand slam champion rough and now dull, has been defeated by american tennis player. francis t afo. the 24 year old american became the 1st player to defeat a doll in a major tournament this year. and what became a very emotional victory t afo down a doll and 4 sets. he also snapped adults, streak of 17 st. majors. were he reached the quarter finals or better and some football. now germany had an easy time beating bulgaria, eat nil in their final match. of world cup, qualifying the star of the game, lay
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a sheila whose hat trig guaranteed her sight of victory before allow flag and shipped and 3 goals of her own germany and his qualifying on top of their group and are through the world cup in australia and new zealand. next year. more sports ahead, stacy, i'm for kick off with the highlights from germany's bundis legal. don't forget, you can stay up to date between bulletins on our website. that is d w dot com. i'm nicole really and for me and the entire team. thank you so much for a company with a, with
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a beginning of a story that moves us and takes us along for the ride.
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it's all about the perspective. culture information is dw double you made from mine? oh, mm hm. when you work as an architect, like go, allan or not at all, women in architecture. why are they so invisible to the larger public? we decided to ask them. and if women grow up with insufficient law models, they can't identify with certain professions about their guiding principles versus i, what is the poetry, the secret of a house? i'm house about their motivations. i think i'm texture
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does so much to you. it easy. the real goal of architecture is to create habitat for humans about their struggles and dreams. responsibility is huge. they have so much to lose. ah, shattering the glass ceiling. women in architecture dismiss has to be really, really good story, september 30th on d. w. to day on read the auto and mobility show the nigerian so la beth's revolution, the v 10 engine lamborghini order can technica driven flat out as a race track and we go back to the future with the delorean.

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