tv DW News Deutsche Welle September 6, 2022 11:00pm-11:16pm CEST
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experience outstanding shopping and dining office. enjoy your services. will be our guest at frankfurt airport city. managed by from bought lou. ah, ah ah, this is steve. we news live from berlin, the you ones, nuclear watchdog calls for a safe zone around ukraine. separate yeah, nuclear plants at orange, that's ongoing shelling poses of constant threats to nuclear safety as russian and ukrainian forces battle nearby. also coming up with thousands of homes and
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businesses are under water after monsoon, flooding and pakistan will hear about efforts to drain off the biggest fresh water lake in the country and divert dangerous overflow away from populated area. and b, u. k. las trust begins naming her cabinet after being appointed as brittany prime minister. she's promised a bold plan to rebuild the economy and address, storing energy hoxluth. ah, i'm nichol fairly, 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 and battles, upper region and nuclear power plant. in a report the i a said it was gravely concerned about the situation at the plant describing missions as untenable. as comes after
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a team of experts visit 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, even moscow have accused each other risking a radiation disaster by shelling near the site. and a virtual address to the un security council. i ha, raphael grossey more in the plan has sustained significant damage. the physical attack, we, or unwittingly, the hit that this facility has received. i'm that i could personally see assess together with my experts is simply an acceptable we are playing with 5 and something very, very catastrophic could take place. this is why in our report we are proposing
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establishing the establishment story of a nuclear safety and security protection zone limited to the plant itself. earlier i spoke to nash many misconduct. he's an engineering professor at the university of southern california and has worked as a safety inspector at nuclear power plants around the world, including 2 noble and focus shima. and i asked him what he made of the report. thanks for having me for printer, the read the whole record this morning is a very sober report on as director general roughly groceries, whom i think deserves another piece price. hopefully it's very serious issue playing with fire. and if you really read the district or what is written between the lines, i think is more important than what is written here because the report is very conservative. but what is written between the lines?
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i think the area that i'm mostly concerned about that is the pillar tree of all this stuff, condition, operating stuff and the potential for human error due to fatigue stress. there are some very, a lot of being forced to me on believe about pressure constant to stress under potential for human error under extremely stressful condition. all of these are, unfortunately a recipe for disaster. a big concern for the workers at the plant actually is the fact that the occupiers seem to not know what they're dealing with. how big of a risk factor is that that's a very important issue. but as we speak, the un security council meeting is going going on you okay, i'm back there. so these operators are not workers anymore. there are hostages that they work at the gunpoint. i cannot agree more with that characterization. we do
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also know that the buildings, housing, fresh, nuclear fuel, as well as radioactive waste or damage. how worrisome is that, in your opinion, most of them are. so i didn't even talk about the infrastructure, physical damage to the plan. as you said through the, those facilities and also the cost of the upside are, all of these are very important that concerns me what, what is going on at un security council? being honest with you, it's a little bit disappointing for them. this is the 3rd meeting of the un security cancer, which is going on. this is unfortunately, again, for the lack of better term with all due respect for these distinguished ambassadors over there. this is the 3rd act of the, of the, of service. i think the un security cancer needs to be more proactive. they need to
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empower a commission, something that they did that they are g 9940 iraq. at that time they called that united nations monitoring verification and inspection commission. and a need to really develop this thing and kind of it's already activity in its core is a technical inspector on a technical assistance agency. what we are dealing with is a piece making an a political negotiation which is above and beyond. the capability of the one wants to establish a security zone around the nuclear plant, which is of course, something that would be very desirable. how, how much leverage do you think they have in pressing forward with this suggestion? the ideal se demilitarization of separate regime was originated by secretaries job
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on shore, new york, which is almost a month ago, and immediately russia for says, a russian ambassador rejected. the idea came out in the 1st security council meeting, 2nd, security johnson. and again, right now there is a euphemism there are being using. it's called protection. so i'm being honest with you. i don't think that the russian federation would accept that protection zone. neutralization as being proposed by a year, which is a very noble, i'm very logical demand. my humble assessment is we need to really to elevate this, trying to escalate that to the level of the political negotiation and security. cancer needs to be more proactive, rather than sitting down and listening to their pontification and this fiery passion to speech. us. how is difficult with russia as a veto power, and the security council isn't that national mascot team? any? thanks. thank you very much. and let's get you up to speed on some of the other
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stories making headlines around the world today. hundreds of student protesters clashed with police outside the presidential palace in santiago, chile, the protesters are demanding more resources for education. just days ago, voters actually rejected a new progressive constitution in a referendum that would have included educational reforms. a powerful typhoon is itself, korea, leaving at least 6 people dead and dumping a meter of rain. thousands have been forced to evacuate typhoon, he numb nor battered the south of the country and left thousands of homes without electricity. pakistani authorities and 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 lake mon, shar, are said to be dangerously high following record monsoon flooding satellites show
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the scale of the disaster following a severe drought on soon rains and melting glaciers have submerged a 3rd of pakistan, millions have lost their homes. if this report now from pakistan's heart had sinned province and heard how their lives, there have been offended by the floods. rashana lea, any sunny mom, have lost everything on they put their savings into building a house, which they finished only 2 months ago. and the southern problems have sinned the floods have wiped out their home. and all their hopes was maybe one little good to me. i worked my whole life to build this house and i've never owned a home before. we was so happy when we finally managed to save enough to build it to medical, your god 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. no matter this did at it america. luckily we have relatives near by them and we're living with my cousin. anyway, i'm at amier. 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 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. now more than 30, a 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 know 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. about many residents of farmers who depend on their harvest. that the food means that is 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 dba, ye are gone, but the wait harvest will be devastated this year and next year i got a gay bonnie: the water in the fields has to drain away stop. they're already got of it's lucky they'll be no harvest for 2 years like on a valley. war is salbal gonzales albany. looks at me. we've got a guy that it with many here she'll the floods will main shoot shortages
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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. also. i wish that last was the village older, so it hasn't rained this hard in a 100 years. i think i can give it of course it's linked to global warming, lavonne and climate change. and i believe pierson mendoza. the is the government says more than 30000000 people are reflected by the flooding. the authorities of promising financial health 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. we're sure this is in the middle, but please don't ask me whether i'll ever be able to build another house. yeah, i'm to, i feel helpless and completely overwhelmed. damira, i'd certainly, i've never cried before my loss. oh, i'm just trying to stay strong and be grateful for what god has given me. your mid
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mid jaw, unless you my hair may was said because you'll rush on ollie's big hope now is that for his son, at least the dream of owning his own home will one day come true. and in the u. k. new prime minister las trus has begun announcing her cabinet after delivering her 1st speech as prime minister. she promised to tackle a host of challenges including a cost of living crisis, labor unrest, and soaring energy prices. later she held her 1st official call with a foreign leader, ukrainian, president, bullard. and where's the lensky trust? repeated the u. k. support for cave and its war with russia, and accepted an invitation to visit ukraine. a short while ago i spoke to our correspondent in london, beg at mass, and asked her about list trust as picks for the cabinet was really striking. is that the top many of the top positions are held by ethnic minority and
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he's, so it's not a cabinet full of white men, the pm, and also the deputy prime minister are both female to that is something that, that's very, very striking. the other thing 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 members of her own party by conservative observers, 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, mostly from the right wing of to party and also mostly breaks the tears. so it looks like a like a cabinet that almost that she's a, she's, she's building her image when it comes to their, their, their political convictions. last reporting from london and some tennis now caspar road has advanced to the semi finals of the us open for the 1st time after beating
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my tale bearer. 26164 and 76. the fed theda norwegian raced to winds and the 1st $0.02 before his italian opponent put him in a hole and the 3rd route. then safe to that point before going on to dominate the tie break. it will next face either nick care, gas or car and catch an off in the semi and that's all for me, but stay tuned up next is business with daniel winter. ah hey mike, when you work as an architect like go all in or not at all women in architecture wires it's so invisible to the larger publish.
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