tv DW News Deutsche Welle September 13, 2022 9:00pm-9:31pm CEST
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but calls on the west to speed up the delivery of weapons also coming up tonight, the final journey home queen elizabeth's coffin is on its way to buckingham palace after a flight from scotland. hundreds of thousands are expected to pay their respects when the coffin is moved to westminster hall on wednesday. and armenia says that dozens of its soldiers have been killed and attacked by either by john what's being called the worst fighting between the 2 since 2020 and ah, william rudo is sworn in his kenya's new president, but he's taking over the leadership of a country that is facing a cost of living crisis and a devastating drought. ah,
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i'm break off. good to have you with us. ukrainian, president. bonum is zalinski, says that his forces have liberated 6000 square kilometers of the country from russian occupation. it since the start of the month of this follows a rapid offensive in the northeast of the country. ukraine is also claiming significant gains in the southern region of hare song. moscow is conceding that it has lost some territory, but it has dismissed any suggestion of negotiations instead of retaliating with air stripes and artillery fire. the front line is shifted further away, but hawk heath is still in rushes. sites and strikes hit the city on monday, sparking fires killing at least one person and cutting power and public services. retaliation for russia's battlefield losses says president philadelphia to lensky lenovo, which on the one hand, this is
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a sign of the desperation of those who contrived this war. this is how they react to the defeat of russian forces in the harkey regional. they can't do anything to our heroes on the battlefield, and that's why russia's directing its vile strikes against civilian infrastructure . volunteers have rushed to the re taken villages to deliver supplies to residence, traumatized by months under occupation in your manager, new house. but there was cheating bumming and shelling day after day. we had no electricity and the water just on my hood checked them wasn't happy. don't wait. yeah, we had all my snap food. now we finally been liberated, but the world has to know what happened here. you specify in the city of these young resident say russian forces beat a hasty retreat. burning buildings as they fled in shorter westerly morning. there were russians this morning, all ready of ukrainians. it's not enough to sam happy. i just don't have enough
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words to express myself. the woolen will flume fulton, and mama says he has them in the house us. we met them with tears in our eyes. we've been waiting for them. we couldn't imagine that they would have come so unexpectedly, but we've been waiting for them for almost half a year, which and we're so happy over the clean up has just begun. ukrainian de mining units say they're clearing explosives from towns near the russian border, a task which could take weeks or months than it was at these positions. we found what you see here, anti tank mines. are you an anti personnel mines that are forbidden by the international convention live? we'll then see those minds were found and cleared by our unit channel releases so smoothly as ukrainian forces drive deeper, rushes losses, litter the landscape. and the scale of the counter offensive becomes clear. and d,
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w 's emmanuel shawn says she is in the eastern ukrainian city of harkey forest to night. the men will talk to me a little bit about what you're seeing. bear me. ukraine has made huge gains in the east or what's happening in that city. well, a branch is very interesting to be here. you can really a feel tonight or the eeriness of a night in the heart, a cave had a cave which is being shelled, you know, daily day and day out by her the russian army to night. we haven't had any alerts. yes. but of course, everybody is wandering when it will happen. it is absolute darkness or hear. so even he does a lot of successes that people are, are now uncovering about the ukrainian a counter offensive. people are very happy about that. you can also feel a sense, or you know, an edge or to that city a sense of dread as well for what is yet to come. because even if the tubes, the russian tubes are no longer
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a direct threat here in hard cave city and in how to give a region, you can as t expect, you know, miss saws as trikes are happening at any moment. so it's very much a city, a region on edge, even if people of course, are very happy about his counter offensive and it successes so far. yeah, the of the, with the advances are remarkable. i'm just wondering how worried though, or people are of russian retaliatory strike in hockey. they are definitely worried and you know, the fact that such a vast city is being plans in total darkness, so as not to facilitate it so as not to present an easy target for russian forces. this is just telling you how much people fear being our target and even we see it in the report. even yesterday there was a residential suburb that was targeted and we cl, so constant blackouts,
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energy blackouts throughout the city. so people very much know that they are not safe here even when they're just staying at town. they're nowhere here. it is say from russian me size the w. emanuel charles tonight with the latest from the eastern ukrainian city of harkey. manuel, thank you. and i want to take this story now to mike martin. he is a word studies fellow at king's college in london. it's good to have you on the program to night to talk to me about how important would you say these territorial gains or that we're seeing right now in the northeast of ukraine. they're significant. what we're seeing really is the 2nd turning point at the war. the 1st one was when the russians admitted that they were never going to be able to decapitate the county government and they withdrew from around keys in april. this is the 2nd significant turning point in the will. the ukrainians have liberated to
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that 9000 square kilometer charge and it basically removes the russians from the whole northeast and part of ukraine. we are spending a lot of time talking about the counter offensive that is taking place in the east in the northeast. what about the south of ukraine that we can we say that there is a counter offensive underway there as well? i think that's a really great question. because of course, the most important part of ukraine for the russians is crimea. that's the best strategic central gravity. the bit they have to hold and what the ukrainians have been doing is pushing in on trying to take that city back from russian control. so actually for the training, that's the most important effort. what we've been spending so much time paying attention to over the last 5 days or so these, these blistering, a varsity kind in the northeast was actually an opportunity that the ukrainian saw and they took it. but then the real goal is to themselves, and they're still making progress in the south. they slow and steady, rather than what we've seen in the northeast, which is basically
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a collapse of russian forces we have, we've all been kind of taken off guard by, by just what we've seen the last couple of days. how do you explain this counter offensive being apparently so successful? yeah, it's, you know, all war is psychological. so your emotions can turn from exhilaration to fear immediately. and that's effectively what happened because the russians had seen doubt taken lots of troops in the northeast and taken them down to her so and which was more important as we just discussed, that meant that the ukrainians were able to punch through the russian lines. and once they've done that, they were able to track chap pockets and russian soldiers destroy their logistics. when that started happening, also snowballing russians started running away, surrendering, disappearing over the border. and that fear is contagious. and once an army starts collapsing, it's very hard to get it back on it's 8. and is this
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a momentum that the ukrainian military can hold on to? i mean, it's one thing to make an advance is another thing to hold a bit territory. a good. another great question. there's actually a split in the analyst community because the big question is, i think that we have to hold the territory that's, that's fine. or we have to hold the territory, the question is, can they maintain their offense? it because this type of mechanized defensive takes a lot of fuel of ammunition. you know, you need to be able to keep supplying those trips. the troops getting tied me to rotating fresh troops. so i do the kinds have a strategic reserve with which they can continue to prosecute these fights and, and we are not sure about that yet, but we'll see in the next couple of days. mike martin in london tonight. mike, we appreciate your time in your inside. thank you. thank you very much. thank you, or hear some of the other stories now that i'm making headlines around the world, german chance are all short and spoken to vladimir putin today in
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a 90 minute telephone call. a german government spokesperson says that the chancellor asks the russian president to withdraw russian troops as soon as possible and to respect ukrainian sovereignty. he also called on putin to uphold the green export deal that was recently agreed with ukraine. but francis has arrived in kazakhstan for a 3 day visit to attend a major piece meeting of the world's religious leaders of conspicuous absentee from the event is the russian orthodox patriarch to rule. he has publicly supported rushes invasion of ukraine. the queen's cawthon has arrived at buckingham palace after flying to london from edinburgh. earlier this evening, the coffin will stay at the palace overnight before being brought to westminster hall. on wednesday it will lie in state there for 5 days ahead of the funeral,
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which is scheduled for next monday. let's take this now to d. w corresponded big and ma, she's in london. could he be to you? bear? good. so the, the queen's coffin now in london, i'm gonna give us a sense of the, the atmosphere there. i mean, it looks like we've got big crowds already outside of buckingham palace. exactly big crowds in london and even more crowds expected, say officials are thinking that really hundreds of thousands, almost a 1000000 people. we want to pay their respect when the queen is lying in state and london. and this of course brings with its challenges and challenges for the year for the, for the authorities. it's a security challenge because that many people to sending into central london expecting to form an orderly, british q all across central london. but on top of that, you will have heads of state and not just president biden, but other heads of states are expected. say,
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this is going to be an extraordinary challenge for the police, for the security. and we are already seeing how people are a trying to get a glimpse of the coffin of the clean, but it's expected to be more and more accommodations already hot to come by in london yet. that's why we've had rewards of the prices it for hotels in was in on sky rocketing overnight. so we see these pictures here. i mean, we're talking about unprecedented crowds. we saw large crowds in edinburgh. people there waiting overnight to get a glimpse of the coffin. the queen's going to lyon street now for 5 days in london . is there any way of predicting the numbers here that just the police are going to have to deal with? well, the police are getting support from all corners of the country, all the other forces, not just the london police, but from all across the country. they will be there in order to,
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to guard the cues. and they have said that it's expected that people will not really be able to rest there. it's expected that people have to cue maybe 20 hours of that. definitely have to key overnight and they can't just camp somewhere, but they expected to to have to move. so it's really a situation and it's something that we will have never seen in london. so it's probably the biggest operation for, for, for the authorities that we will have ever seen in london. and, you know, we've talked about large crowds before be a good in london for many occasions, but nothing like this. i mean, are you surprised? you know, you've been in london for many years, or are you surprised now that this, this just crowns will of sympathy that is being shown. and just the sheer number of people who were coming out well, brand, of course not everyone in the whole country is deeply affected by it. but a lot of people are, and
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a lot of people are really so respectful of the queen and she's just always been there for, for, for most people my age for people all the say, i think everyone is dealing with their own emotions. because if somebody dies that has always been around for, for really for, for decades, people are dealing with their own grief and losses that they might have had in the past. so i think that's one reason why so many people want to want to come and they just, they want to be part of this. what would they believe is, is really a momentous occasion for the country. it abuse big loss with those funeral preparations in london for the late queen elizabeth. the 2nd good. thank you to night. armenia is accusing either by john trying to advance into its territory after deadly fighting broke out over night. prime minister fashion. yon has phoned
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world leaders to demand what he calls an adequate reaction, or many released this footage, which the defense ministry says shows either by johnny troops trying to enter armenia. yet, yvonne says at least 49 armenian soldiers have been killed. either by john says that 50 of its troops have died. the neighbors went to war. you may remember the 19 ninety's and again in 2020, over the disputed region of no gore. no kobuck either by john is accused yet of on the other provocations as sabotaged along the border. the armenian prime minister responded to those claims. yes. i know that it was done by john is trying to claim that these actions came as a response to some kind of provocations by the armenian side. but we can definitely state that this information is absolutely false and has nothing to do with reality . yana got another inc or our lives and take
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a quick look back at the situation to give you some context. a heavy military presence in a gore in a car bug as part of everyday life in the enclave. in recent years, the dispute at region has seen fighting flare on a regular basis, located in the south caucasus. now gordon occur above as internationally recognized as part of as a by john, but is controlled by ethnic armenian forces backed by armenia. the conflict to dates back to the dissolution of the soviet union, much of not gotten a car back, has been under the control of armenian rebels, which as a by john refuses to accept a so called frozen conflict that remains unresolved. turkey has expressed it supportive as a by john, while russia has provided armenia with military equipment. so i want to bring in now not eggs of harry on a researcher on the caucasus. he joins us tonight from washington. d. c, not,
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it is good to have you with us. and we know that armenian eyes are by john. they have a long history of conflict. but how do you explain what we're seeing there right now? this is indeed a major development because other by johnny forces are outright firing into recognized sovereign armenian territory. there have been incursions by azerbaijani forces into arminian territory as early as may, 2021 last year. but this scale of attack across 4 different directions clearly coordinated. it seems like it's a new stage in this longstanding conflict, a new kind of escalation, a new kind of escalation. and there are parts of the calculus you maybe that we haven't seen before. for example, russia, you know, your broker to cease fire in the past,
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but now you're dealing with the situation of russia invading you crate me to how is that going to diminish the credibility of russia if it wants to take the role of a mediator? well, moscow has been the big player in the caucasus for almost 2 centuries now, whether in times of our or later. and so the at times and even after were, is it maintains a very strong relationship with both army and as are by john the day before. ready or 2 days before the invasion of ukraine, russian, azerbaijan signed a very comprehensive alliance agreement. the russian interests in the region stand in part from projecting itself as a great power. as a broker. it also has truth anyway, had troops in armenia,
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and it's true numbers have increased since the cease fire of november 9, 12020, following the 2nd car about war. so the peacekeeping operation run by russian forces and car is something that did not exist before this fighting however, is not taking place within the dispute of territory. it's taking place across the border into our media itself. our media and russia have their own bilateral security arrangement, and our media is a member unlike azerbaijan of the russian lead collective security treaty organization, c s t o. so. ready moscow has multiple obligations, in fact, to ensure the security of armenia with the incursions last spring and summer of azerbaijan into our meeting territory. there was not much activity on this front. however, the scale is much wider now. and as you say,
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the dynamic with ukraine puts new pressure on moscow both to project its power and to validate its credibility as a power over, you know, briefly before we would have time to our media. candidate, realistically, look to moscow now for military protection of reinforcement. i mean, you know, you know what the situation is right now in eastern ukraine for russian forces. it can be difficult to gauge the accuracy of information from any side. if you don't mind a little bit of skepticism on the media while speaking to the media. however, the army has also leveraged its position by appealing to the o. s. e or, you know, security organization. the web security council is also going to take up this issue tomorrow. so from yet evans perspective, there should be a multi pronged approach to resist. and from the pure hard power perspective,
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it's not really clear if there are additional hoops being supplied by moscow to yet on or what other as yet not public interactions might be taking place on this front. not exit. and we appreciate your time in your insights tonight. thank you. thank you. can yet has a sworn in william root up as the country's 5th president, where there takes office after a bid or election campaign. and after the supreme court dismissed a challenge by his opponent, who alleged election fraud, rudo faces a lot of challenges including storing food and fuel prices, high unemployment and mounting public debt. hi sworn in asked kenya's president at last. william brutal pledges to faithfully served as the country's new head of state for the 10s of thousands who packed the stadium to root for rudo. the new president's assent to the top is
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a symbol of hope during challenging times for kenya's economy. at the center of this remarkable victory is router's humble. past. a village boy has become the president of canyon the popular leader who once sold chickens on the roadside, pina the election as a battle between ordinary hustlers and kenya's elite, who dominated politics for decades. but rooters passed also has a dark chapter de new leader was once accused of feeling ethnic violence against you opposition. but in his 1st address, as president router thanked his opponent, rollo, dinner, and his supporters and signaled his willingness to pursue a peaceful resolution. oh i assure them that
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their supporters will be my constituents. i will walk with all opinions. it is betty. oh, they voted for at the stadium oh dang. as absence from noon operation ceremony sent a warning message. but kenyans hope that this time the peace will last but we spoke with kevin or cedar with the in geo county governance watch. we asked him what sort of mandate rudo hare in fox said, these are little lock loveday government to love to do. because if you look up to the number over, come out of the people who came out and voted against the total number over just a wooden isn't only 64.5 percent. the christian, the bench is what is zane crystals finance and began swanson elections as identity . and we have non psalm on some such indeed by talking to finance. and we had tried to find out why not as many people came out to speak and, and on that route. and they spoke to us and said that they didn't on see that is
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a link to another people's ent and election. the kind of narrative was up, lay used during the election yet, and video it was not as exciting for them. and indeed, the christian at island youth employment was a big got bigger corn song in this particular election. and if you look at about 15200000 people that didn't turn out to another 8 by 20000000 that had not done out what the question that that clearly linked schools is that the expectation is that most of them could be something who does order those young, the young k and what on, on the ego artifacts. so they governmental vipers, and we have moved to, we'll have a lot of what to do in terms of responding to the needs of young people and responding to the questions around employment. nicholas students that are on productivity and indeed the economic question. so he hoped, but when the government is formed, that'd be a much more st in thompson, responding to that glycerin does, but related to the degree of, of what gotten out there was kevin
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a seat there with county governance watch the pioneering french swift directors, young of goddard has died at the age of 91. his legal adviser says that he died by dr. assisted suicide. after suffering from quote, multiple, disabling pathologies. goddard rose to fame as a leader of the 1960 s french new wave. directing and writing films that have become art house classics. this tom priest gene seaberg, played alongside john paul bel mondo in his cheeky innovative, and very unconventional crime film thing. i want a, he's a breathless, made the unknown bell mondo a star and brought john luchador. his breakthrough as a filmmaker his style here and in all his future works was unmistakable. a break with the establish
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visual language. but his use of jump cuts considered a mistake and conventional filmmaking was all part of his plan. john lucas dawes, revolutionary technique had an indelible impact on cinema coming from a wealthy french swiss family. he was always ambitious. don't be c o, is it a week? my ambition was to be a master who um i met with blue. ringback you watch the w c, you get at the top of the ah,
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