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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  September 13, 2022 10:30pm-11:01pm CEST

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oh, ready? no. welcome to take told me about hackers, paralyzing the tire societies. computers that out some are you and governments that go crazy for your data. we explain how these technologies work, how they can work for that's how they can also go terribly. watch it now on you to when the russian invasion began earlier this year, ukrainian forces were outgunned and out. man, that is still true, but what it means on the battlefield that appears to be changing in the span of just a few weeks. the ukrainian military has outmaneuvered russian forces in both the east and south pushing the invaders back by hundreds of miles to night,
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the advancing ukrainians and the russians in retreat. i'm burnt off in berlin. this is the day. ah, we've seen significant progress by the by the ukrainians. our soldiers have already liberated $6000.00 square clematis of ukrainian territory, praying. what they have done is very methodically planned out shorter yesterday morning. there were russians this morning already ukrainians us. we met them with t, as in our eyes, we've been waiting for them. the russians have thus far failed to achieve their strategic objective with his reports of surrendering running away about whitman that no organized also coming up as britain bids
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farewell to queen elizabeth. the question of the country's colonial past is one which remains unresolved. it stopped by probably paying reparations to the people of the caribbean and africa full the colonial past. so that would be a big help in, you know, they could start maybe educational institutions to help those kind of trace, try and repair that. that means that was done to them. ah, which you, our viewers watching on p b. s in the united states into all of you around the world. welcome. we begin the day with the ukrainian military pushing back the russia invaders when the war began earlier this year there were 2 expectations that russian forces would quickly invade and take the capital keith. and that the ukrainian military would struggle at best to hope the law were to night. not only are the ukrainians still in controlling heave, they are now apparently re shaping some of those battle wives. there have been
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dramatic gains for ukrainian forces in the northeast of the country and advance that apparently caught russian forces off guard, sending troops into a chaotic retreat. it would be premature to predict how events of the past few days could impact the outcome of this war. us in u. k. officials, they remain guarded, but they are saying that the momentum for now it belongs to ukraine. we have this report. the front line is shifted further away, but hawk heath is still in rushes. sites as 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 and philadelphia zalinski lenovo hotels. on the one hand, this is 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
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our heroes on the battlefield, and that's why russia's directing it's 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 minute, your new husband there was seating bombing and shelling. day after day. we had no electricity and the water just on my hood chest, them wouldn't be, don't like. yeah, we had all my snack food. now we finally been liberated, but the world has to know what happened here. you specify in the city of these young resident, se 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 say i am happy, i just don't have enough words to express myself. the woman will flume fulton and mamma says it is them in the house as we met them with tears in our eyes. we've
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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 cleanup has just begun. ukrainian de mining units say they are 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, the anti tank minds of an anti personnel mines that are forbidden by the international convention lived. well then, see, those mines were found cleared by our unit channel with malicious flow, smoothly as ukrainian forces drive deeper rushes losses, litter the landscape on the scale of the counter offensive becomes clear. my 1st gives tonight is maria of davis. she is a security and analyst she joys midnight from the city of r. keith marie, it's good to see you again. i understand that you have been to the areas that are
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now back in the hands of ukrainian forces. tell me, what did you see there that i have been to deliberate are willing to crack over, which is on the way from hard give to zoom about 70 kilometers. it was under russian occupation for more than 6 months since. and it is heavily mind and the people there are clearly traumatized because what happened is when the invasion started and when this village was occupied, as other occupied territories, russians immediately cut off all means of communications. and people were leaving for all the spirit in basements, because of the destruction. massive destruction of their houses. so they did not know what was happening in the outer world. they were completely cut off. and of course, they were happy with tears in their eyes when they saw ukrainian troops elaborate
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in the area but steel, the residence of the village cannot to return it because because of the destruction and more because their area is heavily mind. uh, with the anti personnel and other kind of mines and steel russians continued to show the territories that were recently de, occupied by the ukrainian army. and you're in har, keith. we know the city of seam, regular attacks, particularly on civilian targets. is there anything different to the pattern of russian attacks that you've seen since this counterfeits of began? yes, russia has started furiously attack critical infrastructure facilities in and around hard give. recently, russian troops have targeted the biggest power plant station in eastern your grand 2nd lie just in ukraine, and there is almost no electricity in the city. so in,
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during the day time, there was nothing, no electricity, and it means no water supply. because the prompts who are not working and it means no internet connection, the mattress was not running today during the day time. and this is the safest and the most secure way to come. you would around the sea to, which is the 2nd largest city of ukraine. so now clearly, russian goal is to create humanitarian crisis because they can not do anything on the front lines and they terrorize civilian population. what about the, the amount of weapons that were left behind by fleeing russian forces? we've seen images. i mean, it looks like a, just a treasure chest of things that have been left behind. is that going to make a positive difference to the advancing ukrainian forces?
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what made at lodge the says success counter offensive possible was the delivery of western backgrounds. and just in july, i've been to the military unit to beach and we check chad has received, for example, drama and how he said 2000 and the soldiers told that immediately when the western high precise weapons have arrived, it changed the battle field just at that moment because they were able to heat targets very precisely and far more distances. so russian lap ponce easy larry of outdated soviet style. and the more difference of course, will be made, but more supplies of the western weapons, including from germany, tanks and the other kind of munitions right. security analyst, maria aviva. joining us tonight from our key for re as always,
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we appreciate your time in your insights. thank you. thank you. oh, the body of britain's elite queen elizabeth the 2nd has now arrived in london. the casket arrived at an airfield near the british capital before being driven to buckingham palace. it was greeted there by the late queen son britton's new king charles. the 3rd of the coffin will be moved to westminster hall on wednesday. and that is where the late queen will y in state for 4 days ahead of her burial at windsor castle, which is scheduled for next monday. sla bully now, rosalie hamilton. she is founder and ceo of jamaica's institute of law and economics. she was also an organizer and a co signatory of an open letter that was published as prince william. then prince
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william visited jamaica earlier this year, which called on the british monarchy to apologize for colonialism and to pay reparations for slavery. professor hampton, it's good to have you with us tonight and you, you've seen the news coverage all over the world the, the morning that's taking place in the u. k. for queen elizabeth, what that it has been the reaction in jamaica, where you are to the queen, passing a hurrying needs. and there are a few people really on this generation. as you know is grieving the loss and is that more in 1st i don't know about that has happened, but i will see a charge. you know, jimmy kinds are either a different you know, it's just another piece of news because they're not connected in any way to the queen of the she was the head of our state. and there are others who
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this whole conversation about the end on your own is about, you know, bringing back these people memories of the past. and people say, no, there's nothing more. and, you know, she resigned it over the course legacies of i'm up here. you are, you know, he's sure that was very painful. and in, you mean, you asked me if i'm, if i, if, if, if i could just ask you if they, if we're at a situation now where is the end of an error? would you say that maybe it's also the end of an era for jamaicans or that now is maybe the time to become a republic? is there public support for for that to happen? absolutely. that's been the conversation we had in jimmy actually from 1995 wind of
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both major political parties had agreed that they were going to move on. and there's been a range of issues why it has not happened. but the, since barbados became republic conversation started again, and it took, you know, kind of it during the royal, this is when you know, the africans network was at the forefront of demanding an apology. and basically, you know, reminding jimmy guns that it out the 60 years of independence instead of a 2 year it's time. and so yes, they get has drawing more public attention to this issue and makers are in fact talking a lot about it. you bring up the royal visits, i want to play a statement by prince williams of statement that he gave when he was in jamaica back in march. take a listen. i strongly agree with my father. the prince of wales who said involve
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a dose loss here. the appalling atrocity of slavery forever stains on history. i want to express my preferred sorrow. slavery was abhorrent, and it should never have happened. professor hamilton, me, given that statement, are you expecting a change in the way the u. k. addresses it's colonial legacy of the prince. william . he did not mention the queen there at all. you know, when the statement was made in the ambulance network had responded by saying the statement was to and it is simply and was his father had said earlier and pretty much in sensitivity. i think to me is that we were
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professor hamilton. it looks like we've lost professor hamilton, she's frozen at her signal there. unfortunately, we do apologize for that. that was professor hamilton joining us from jamaica. well, what do a 1000000 people are expected to descend on london this week to pay their final respects to queen elizabeth? it is a global event and at the same time, touching all the different communities, having found a home in britain throughout the last decades, many of them have their roots in the u. case. former colonies. what do they think about events g w's? barbara vase visited a market in london's east at london this morning. the death of queen elizabeth and her picture is everywhere. even here in white chip, a market where 2 local store holders have put up this banner. when they
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i gone and in, she's a quinn and she's good bought for the borough of tower hamlets is the center of london, bangladesh, community and one of its ethnically most diverse areas. it is also one of the poorest. but all around here seem united by their love for the clean. i am like them quinn where hard also. she's gone. we are barely off said at the dinner. it's quite the same at the green grocer's next door. nothing compared about when she was great. i hope she will go habit, but his main concern is the cost of living inflation in britain stands around 10 percent and is said to rise even further. people are more careful than ever when they come to do their shopping. everything going up, guesses rise up budget for this up electricity is up. every single thing is going up for us all. and his african food stalls, having the same experience facing glank up on to be honest in the rain. if stuff is
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very high. of course, everyone worrying about this is really like serious situation. may nurse angela like spying her lunch at peasants. she works at the nearby hospital and knows her hard life is becoming for people in the area. i'm just worried about what's gonna happen, waive our gas electric, and obviously the think his writing said quickly and our salaries are not rising to that extent. people are hoping for help, but the morning period for the queen has stopped all government business. angela's also expecting some deeper changes in british politics. it stopped by probably pay reparations to, to paypal off the caribbean and africa full the colonial past. so that would be a big help in, you know, they could south may be educational institutions to help those countries try and
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repair the damage that was done to them. thank you. teacher one. paula comes from peru and works in a local school. its pupils are more and more taking up the issue of britain's unresolved colonial past. if they believe there is a strong emotional attachment, and at the same time, there is the speak questioning movement of all the legacy of the monarchy unframed, to the construct. all the colonial in both in to that. so i think that there are a lot of emotions involved. strong feelings on both sides as many in britain still stressed the good aspects of their former empire. but the discussion has been opened. this is the main thing to establish that adolescent with i said if he has fallen in, then people can think of nagging, acknowledge. now what beat is deed to them, that, that's how this could be. one of these colonial legacies can be seen right here in tower hamlets, where deprivation and poverty are just steps away from london's gleaming financial
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district. ah, the veteran u. s. television journalist wolf blitzer has just produced a documentary on the holocaust museum in washington, d. c. windsor is the son of holocaust survivors, and he says that a rise in anti semitism in the united states and around the world. prompted him to make this documentary. he spoke to our washington bureau chief in his po, wolfy, or one of the best known journalists in the united states. i think you can probably do anything you want. why did you decide to make a documentary about the washington holocaust museum bright. now at a time when there's so much increased antisemitism going on, not only in the united states, but indeed around the world at a time when there is increased holocaust denial that seems to be escalating people making up stories are the 6000000 jews. they never really died. that's, you know, fictitious, fictitious,
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or whatever. i just thought it was important. and cnn thought it was important that we'd take a tour of this museum, which as you know, is a very special museum, dedicated to the memory of all those who were killed during the holocaust. so it's, it's, it just felt like a good time to do it will thing the documentary i had the feeling you paused when we saw this pie as of shoes or what really kind of move to a move to most when you walked through the museum. that was one of the moments that really moved me because having lost all 4 of my grandparents during the holocaust, my mom, my mom's parents and my dad's parents, all 4 of them were killed during the holocaust. my dad's parents and i shoots. and my mother's parents at a slave labor concentration camp. she got her cisco in poland and i went to outfits and i went to, she goes to school. and you know, i walked around,
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i tried to appreciate what was going on. but over these many, many years, i always wanted to touch and feel some remnants of my grandparents and i'm now a grandparent. i have a grandson and i know what it looks like to be a grandparent. but i grew up without any grandparents. and i really don't have anything that they left behind. when i saw the shoes. i said, i wonder if maybe a pair of shoes are from my grandmother. my grandfather, i would have liked to have had some token, some, some representative of my grandparents which, which i don't have in the images of the shoes. you know, they are striking. m e dispose, she joins me now from our washington bureau. in is the me ask you as a reporter you travel across the united states. do you agree with wolf blitzer that
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i'm anti semitism and white supremacy that they are on the rise in america? i do her share his vari, brand, sir, that the younger generation, the younger generations generation, sorry, is not being a tardy or about the holocaust or other human rights violations committed in the united states. but also around the world like in maya home country, germany. and that means that political ideologies, like white supremacy, can spread easily. and we have seen events and rhetoric around the country that once were seen as french. they have slowly made its way into the mainstream, or we see more and more as, as sinister blitzer pointed out, holocaust deniers. and there is this dangerous tendency, the white supremacist divide this country in us and them are with the danger that the others will be blamed. for whatever goes wrong and the others are often non
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white and non christian. you know, here in berlin, not far from where we are right now was a place called people plots and that is where the 19 thirty's nazis burned books that they considered to be unfit for the state. i know that we're flints are, is concerned about books burnings in the united states. talked me a little bit about that which books are be bound or which books are being debated right now, and i know that they're talking about putting them on lis. why is that? it's interesting brand that you mentioned the vivid let's because this is really awesome. but i think of all the time when i talk to people about banning books or also watch our reports, we do here in the united states. so much of the books being banned or debated are mostly related to subjects like algebra to q writes of slavery,
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a black empowerment and a book said basically pined out the history of anti semen. 2 anti semitism around the world. they are actually as school districts here, which considered a removing even. and frank's diary and frank's diary, i mean it's, it's, it's hard to, to grab that at least as a german, the argument is. and you asked for that brand that americans should not feel bad about themselves or their history. i'm just coming back from a trump rally, but someone was wearing a shirt. i'm proud to be american, i'm not feeling ashamed. and i talk to him what he means by that, and he exactly explained to me he doesn't want to be of good kind of confronted with the dog sides of the american a history. and this is what mr. blitzer pointed out. and this is what he's worried about that more and more children will be not aware that events like the holocaust
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or slavery happened in. do you see that in the united states? do you see a willingness when you're out, reporting for people to simply shut down and not want to talk about the past and that increased it doesn't, it is increasing. and this is part of this cultural war of the so so called cultural war. what is the united states, and will they really be responsible for what they did? this is one question, but i think the over arching question really is, who will be running the united states in the future? is it a kind of the white christian americans, or is it what's democratic kind of is moving towards, is it a much more di, worse, a body of people with different colors of skin tones with different
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religious orientations with different sexual orientations. so this is the overarching questions and those people who want to ban, for example, books which teach sexual diversity. they don't want that to happen. did abuse in his poll 20th to night from washington illnesses, always. thank you. well, the day's almost done the conversation, it continues a line. you can follow me on twitter at brent golf tv. and remember whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day we'll see you then if ah ah, with
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jim been wonderful in a relationship of equals a rarity in mexico where tradition still expects women to
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feel the magic discover the world around you subscribe to d w documentary on youtube. mm hm. when you work as an architect, go online or not at all women in architecture. why are they so invisible to the larger public? we decided to ask them, messes, and what is the poetry? the secret of the house? i'm ours about their motivations. the real goal of architecture is to create habitat for human, about their struggles and dreams. sponsibility is huge. they have to so much to
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lose, shattering the glass ceiling women in architecture. just this has to be really, really good. start september 30th on d, w. o . ah, this is the w news live from berlin tonight, ukrainian troops liberating more territory. it's a dry brush and forces out of the heart keep regent keep is aiming deliberate all of its territory from moscow. and it's calling on the west to speed up the delivery of.

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