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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  September 16, 2022 10:00am-10:31am CEST

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ah ah ah this is news line from berlin, ukrainian authors, you say they found mass graves outside the city is you which was liberated from russian forces 6 days ago. president zelinski says russia must be held responsible for leaving behind the trail of death. also on the program, germany takes control of russian refineries to protect energy supplies. the
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government takes charge of facilities in germany owned by russian oil giant ross and f, meaning they can operate, they can continue to operate after the start of band on russian oil imports. and the w visits the hotel in kenya, britain's princess elizabeth learned she had become queen. we'll hear how people in the former colony feel about the monex legacy. ah, i'm so gale. welcome to the program. a mass grave has been found outside is human eastern, new crane, a days after the city was liberated. 40 say it's one of the largest burial sites found in any city recaptured from the russian army. and the soldiers and civilians are buried that a pine forest hiding a horrific mass,
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grave. and ukraine and soldiers have found more than $400.00 bodies buried near the city of israel. after it was freed from russian control wouldn't. here lie the bodies of 17 of their comrades, surrounded by hundreds of individual graves with only crushes to mark them. a typical william, we only found this place because russian soldiers posted a video on line a lot there for she is there with there was any those ever and with whom i am on the cross, it says there's 17 bodies, but i'm that video. well, in that there were more busy lucian, that we have not counted them yet, but i think there must be at least 25 or 30 bodies will say she may be, this is not the only mass grave here we now have to work and identify every one who died here calling ah, earlier this week, president zalinski raised the ukrainian flag in indian cabana. the city
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had been under russian control for more than 5 months. is now show scenes of destruction on isabel and people are without running water, electricity, or heat. sa lensky said an investigation would follow the findings in the forest. my whole chima shall we want the world to know what is happening and what the russian occupation has led to watch in butcher mario, paul. and now, unfortunately, is you or she, if russia is leaving death behind in everywhere and must be held responsible, the world must bring russia to real responsibility for this war. then we will do everything for this. 0 more said little ukraine age to re claim all its territory after re taking a z m. however, russia still house around the 5th of the country. le,
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correspondent ne, commonly in hawkins says, the ukrainian authorities now face the task of pacing together the circumstances that led to those mass graves. well, definitely it, there is little to say that somehow those russian troops who were in his room for 5 months, we heard that would somehow have behaved very differently to what we've previously seen. goes to kia place like butcher. and it appears in terms of the way they behave toward civilians has to be said there, there are reports in the ukraine press right now that it is believe the least a part of these bodies belong people who lost their lives during shelling of the city. these things take a long time when you think back the spring when those cities closer to key. if we're freed, were recovered by the cranium forces. it took weeks and weeks for the for the you cranial thirty's for all the kind of judicial organs to get involved to, to those dna analysis of the people there. and also to trying to track down their
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relatives in support to room. a lot of people from this part of ukraine have either fled deep into a western ukraine or to europe or to russia to try to fight and reconstruct who these people were. and how their last days looked like is a very long process, but definitely that is the fear that as this ukraine comprehensive takes and secure was more tertiary, they're going to be finding people everywhere they go. i was close to the russian border yesterday and the locals. there were pretty much sure that in the forest around they would definitely be still be finding lots people who lost their lives, trying to get out, trying to get ukrainian held territory. also, they were sure that there were bodies of lots of ukrainian soldiers, maybe prisons of war that they believe might have been mistreated by the russian forces in that part of the country. so lots of gruesome discovery is expected here in the days and weeks to come. right. and the ukranian a counter offensive ha, ukrainian force has been able to maintain their momentum it is ongoing, obviously, for now, the russians been able to kind of take up more stable,
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new positions using rivers and other bits of kind of the topography of this part of the country to make things easy for them to defend. and also now we have seen that the ukraine's now hit russian positions kind of foot se forgive towards don bass, where the russians are better set up, have more in the way supplies and better trained troops. but this is ongoing and we definitely have seen now that without this fact of reason without this kind of way in to supply its troops in dumbass rushes, having real trouble. and we're seeing you claim making real progress around city or towards citizen. yet that city, that early and summer was such an important but very hard one victory for the russian. so a sense that ukraine is on role, but maybe the next week's not going to be as easy as fast what we've seen in recent days. i thank you for that, nick and nick, commonly in hockey. those mass graves in is in, were discovered following sweeping advances by ukrainian forces. president zalinski
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says caves troops have recaptured around 8000 square kilometers in the east of the country. the error in solid blue shows ukrainian gains over the last 2 weeks, while the striped region is still held by russian forces to any man. this is an expert in russian politics and security of avarice with university in wales as to how russian president vladimir putin is likely to react to these latest defeats. well, what's interesting is that so far he hasn't made any direct response. he's had made no public statements about the ukrainian counter offensive. he's really left it to other people to try and explain it away. and that means that there hasn't been any clear line from the kremlin. so different those people are saying different things in the sizing, for example, that the military is simply withdrawing regrouping or blaming nato, claiming that nature forces are actually fighting in ukraine or, and calling perhaps for an acceleration in the, in the attacks on ukrainian civilian targets. so there's been
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a very diverse response from across different aspects of russian sort of officialdom and does, does the lack of a response from the top tell us anything? i think it tells us a great deal. i think it tells us that the kremlin is in a certain amount of disarray and confusion and perhaps in shock that they, they certainly didn't expect this. no dramatic counter offensive, a great success, a humiliating defeat by their own forces in ukraine, at every step of the way this war has not gone the way that putin in his supporters had wanted it to. um and so you know, perhaps he's hoping to just get on with his or other business and then you know, hope for better news to come. so given what you've said about that disarray politically is mr. perkins still, we untouchables, strong man at home, but we presume he was when he started his will. well, that's very interesting because so much of hooton's strength comes from reputation
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and it comes from other people's responses to him. and once there's evidence that, that strength is perhaps not like what we thought it was, and then the whole edifice begins to crumble and is certainly very vulnerable. and he's been not he personally, but the regime has been the subject of very harsh attacks. now from the more hard liners in russia, the nationalists that the people who are ultra extreme in their views, in terms of their support for the war, and really want more distraction and ukraine and, and more bloodshed. and they been very critical of the ministry of defense and the generals for the way that they wage the war. and they called upon, you know, a national mobilization of the country, of economy, of the armed forces and so on. which is definitely something that, that putin has been trying to avoid. so he is vulnerable, i would say to these kinds of attacks and pressures from the, the nationalist in the hard liners. more on a quick word about his meeting yesterday with the chinese leaders. eugene ping in was becky stuff. how important is that relationship now that russia is so isolated
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from most of the rest? the world? it's really vital. as far as pushing is concerned. he wants the world and particularly the west to see that russia has strong friends that russia is close to china. because of course, china is, apart from the u. s. the leading power in the world. and so in russia wants to, to be sure to be seen to be close to china. china, however, it has been quite careful in its relationship with russia during this war. it hasn't provided you know, direct, clear, clear support. it hasn't provided a direct clear condemnation record of trying to walk the line. and so i don't think that the president g of china is going to give putin everything that he wants by any stretch. how you so much with us for the clear tony madison auburn with university germany is taking control of russian owned refineries in the country, including units of the oil giant rosin aft. the hope is that this will ensure
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energy security before an embargo on russian on the kids next year. or they was placed at ross nest german subsidiaries under trusteeship, which means a federally regulated can take control of 3 law refiners in the country. on the eastern time of shred, which used to draw a 100 percent of its own from russia. williams. now looking for alternative sources to keep the refineries running, we can get more of this from sticking beardsley from a business dest. welcome, steven. so why is the german government to doing this now? as you said, the some, this goes back to the decision taken by germany along with much of the rest of the you to end russian oil imports by the end of this year. now much of that oil comes into eastern germany via pipelines and a lot of that oil goes to this key refinery, fit in the north and actually supplies the berlin region as well. it's seen as one of the critical refineries in germany. it is controlled, however, majority controlled by aroused enough subsidiary. now that subsidiary has made
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clear that it has no incentive and no interest in procuring other kinds of oil. once the pipeline oil cuts off. now poland, in the mean time has said that it's willing to provide some help as a pipeline from good dance. gonna baltic see the could actually help provide some oil. but it said that it won't. russian control removed from shred before it acts. the german government had another reason to take care of matters that is that there are a number of employees, 1200 employees, in fact, in that refinery. many of them german, most of the german perhaps who want a resolution to this. it's also had reason not to act. so rash out is all is still flowing through the pipeline. it doesn't know how russia is going to react. ultimately, what germany said is that the position that banks were put in that ensures were put in and that suppliers for these refiners were put and meant that they had to act now because they were raising questions and saying, what is the structure of this refinery? ok, does this mean that germany is all supplies are secure for the coming winter? that's what the government says is that ultimately it has other options in terms of
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global supply. and that does make sense as well. the question will really be, how is that supply going to get these key refineries. they are essentially connected, right? to russia, that is where the oil comes in and very cheaply over time. that is a very cheap solution. now you're gonna have to bring a lot of that in with tankers, and there are 2 ports that they're looking at. one is ra stock in germany on the baltic sea. the other is good dance tanker. prices have already shot up. that means is going to be expensive also to those ports have capacity to bring enough oil into those into those refinery. so these are the questions that are looming. it means that prices could go up, but the supply is there. the logistics are pretty tricky and then we also don't know what russia is going to do in response to this and just sort of zooming out from it. so it has the german state effectively nationalized these, these, these russian facilities. are we talking about a temperature? you know, it has a nationalize that it's not taking possession of the assets of this refinery. what it's doing is, is taking control of critical infrastructure and it's legally allowed to do that.
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it says its own privately, but it's critical for our uses here. and so we will control the assets that are still owned by others. it will push ra, snapped out of the way and look for another operator. there are signs that there could be groups interested in coming in and taking over the position. the question is, where it goes from here. we've seen that with something similar happened with a gas prompts today. that's the state, the russian state owned natural gas firm. they had a subsidiary here in germany. it was also put in trusteeship, but it's been burning through money. and the question is there, a nationalization might make more sense because the difficult economics of natural gas right now with oil, it might actually work to bring in another provider that the economic incentives might be there. so there is probably a better outlook, but the logistics are still going to be tricky. thank you for that stream. basically from a t w business. vladimir putin is due to miti, meet his turkish counterpart that type early one to day at a regional summit being held in was becky sta,
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global attention will focus on any changes made to a deal that regulates exports of ukrainian grain. there was broken by turkey on the united nations and is due to expire in november if it's not renewed, hasn't posted his calling for it to be revisited, saying he, it isn't fair for russia or many poor countries that depend on grain shipments from ukraine. wheat from ukraine arrives in africa, the 1st aid shipment from the world food program reached harbor in late august carrying much needed grain destined for ethiopia. since july, only 2 such humanitarian deliveries have taken place. while more than a 100 commercial cargo ships have set sail from ukraine, russia says european countries, other biggest winners, rakish, give you exactly. all the grain exported from ukraine has been shipped not to the developing and porous countries, but to the countries of the european union. and just as many european countries
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acted in previous centuries as colonialist liza. but this is how they continue acting today, which you didn't. they have once again cheated the developing countries and continue teaching them under the black c grain initiative ships from ukraine passed through an inspection center in turkey. the majority of their cargo stays in turkey, which byes some 19 percent of the rest. european union countries have collectively bought 38 percent followed by asia and the middle east. african countries have so far received just 6 percent of all the exports. while the poorest nations have seen the least of ukraine's grain, the united nations has defended the deal saying it has helped by putting downward pressure on global food prices. because of that, draw people who had been ordering grey and hoping to sell it a high price are actually now selling it, which is putting more on the market. and hopefully that rick will bring some of
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those local prices down to russia is also upset that it's fertilizer exports haven't restarted as agreed under the deal. a pipeline carrying the fertilizer ingredient. ammonia from russia to ukraine's odessa for export by sea has been closed since the start of the war. the u. n. is trying to get it flowing again. time is running out. the current deal expires in november unless all sides agree, grain and fertilizer exports from ukraine could again come to a halt. last date of loser julia han. in istanbul, if the turkish president is likely to share with mister prudent dissatisfaction with the ukrainian great deal when they meet to day in his becky sta, all the turkish president played a key role in brokering this so called grain deal back in july. he has, i believe, no interest in seeing it fail. turkey is one of the countries that has so far
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received a, most of the grain shipments from ukraine. but add one is also carefully balancing interests between keith and moscow. and he has a coat, proteins, criticism of the deal, but i should add that putins claims and i caught him here that almost all of the grain shipments have so far gone to european union countries is simply not correct . not according to the figures we have from the united nations who are overseeing the entire process. they say that about a 3rd of all exports have so far gone to low and lower middle income countries in asia, the middle east and africa. so the question is, why is putting, trying to discredit this deal? now i believe it is because russia things that is not benefiting from the agreement . the agreement officially also allows russia to export grain and fertilizer free of sanctions. but that's not, it seems that's not what is happening right now. in practice,
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russian grain exports have decreased in recent months. the numbers of countries buying or willing to buy from russia has a decrease. there are still many restrictions when it comes to shipping companies to insurance to banking. now, turkish officials say they have pushed on an international level for that to change . so i think this is going to be at the core of what president edwin and president, 14, are going to talk about today when it comes to that grain deal. and you mentioned the mr. erred ones, balancing act with russia as a member of nato, a russian military clients, and with competing interests in syria is going to be hard for him not to be accused of, of playing both sides. well, this is already our president edwin's so face to face meeting with vladimir putin since russia invaded ukraine in february. i should add that turkey is not a member of this shanghai corporation organization. but edwin was invited by blood
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reporting to attend. now this summit led by russia and china, is seen by some as an entire western alliance. so i believe ad one's attendance is i'd with a lot of skepticism by turkey's partners in the west, in europe, in the u. s. on cra, has so far not joined any western sanctions on moscow. western capitals are unhappy with russia, and turkey continues to receive tourists and finances from russia. they're continuing to trade and there are serious concerns and western capitals that turkey might be helping russia to avoid the sanction. so i think this summer today also sends a signal to the west. thank you for that you johan in istanbul, take a quick look at a couple of other stores making headlines around the world. hope francis has said that he believes it is morally right for countries to supply reference to help you
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cry and defend itself against russia. the pontiff was commenting to journalists on the plane after returning from a religious conference, and cousin stout said the catholic churches just wor, principal, allowed for proportional use of deadly weapons on shoes stretching along the banks of the river times in central london. as people wait, as long as 9 hours to pay their last respects to queen elizabeth, died last week. the late british monica logon states in westminster hall, well she will remain until our funeral on monday. most people around the world to mourn queen elizabeth's death as some commonwealth countries off re examining their relationship with the british monarchy. feelings of mixed especially in former british colonies, like kenya, w's fuchs. miranda has been to the canyon hotel where princess elizabeth learned that she had become queen, not far from the spot where british soldiers later committed atrocities against independence fighters. this is the princess elizabeth became
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queen. she was thing in the original tree tops telling kenneth about the unnatural park when she was told her father had died making had the morlock in the reception of the rebuilt hotel, a book of condolence for guests to write their commons. i must dare guar a guide walks there, says his father cooked for elizabeth when she stayed here in 1952. queen was very talkative to the cooks with us and they could all always call or the stuff around were working, you know, 10 and then a, get them together to give them a tip. and they were very happy when the staff are given the money, then they're going to help with their families. so they are very up under the doctor quinn, very much at the time canal was still part of the british empire. so the hotel became the target of homo in dependent fight, as they bonded like every british establishment they could find it is,
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here are the tree tops hotel in mount, kenya that queen elizabeth the land of her father's death. and that immediately ushered her into her new role as queen. but just a few months down the line in october 1952, when the state of emergency was introduced. a few kilometers from here. some of the worst atrocities committed on the mo, mo, fight as what dan, by the british soldiers and other quince watch. professor mushroom wannna is a historian at ne robbie's united states intelligent only by the time he says people across africa have mixed feelings about queen elizabeth. we are loose will see the queen from presenting the colonial past and she is the last of the monocle . the english monex who had something to do with colonialism and because she's, or was there all the atrocities associated with colonial really,
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she took responsibility. people do not have hostility towards these up. if as a person goes, tilley t is towards the system she presented. she did not create it. she narrative theater to these canyons. have many different feelings about her. i don't think that death of the queen affects me, please. i am pretty young and she's a british state and she is a british. and um, i'm cannon's it doesn't matter. to me that once she balanced against all the turmoil that was going on in the world and bust, not only her nation into a new century, but also african nations like ours, we're love for the british. you apologize. i feel apology is only a word if you really want to apologize. there are so many stolen artifacts in the british museum. give it back to us. well, some will take the opportunity to write in books of condolence. milliken has filled these and finished business with their former to less. in sports,
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tennis legend wrote a federal house, announced his retirement. 41 year old has undergone 3 knee surgeries in recent years and says he's decided to give his body arrest fans around the world. will miss this all time? great. roger federer can look back on a long professional career. but after next week's labor cup will finally come to an end. as federer announced on social media mostly more than 1005 on a matches over 24 years. janice has treated me more generously than i ever would have dreamt. and now must recognize when it is time to end my competitive career. the 1st legend made his professional abuse in 1998 and was ranked number one in the world for 310 weeks, including a record 237 consecutive weeks. but fans will remember him not just for some press stats, but for this style. he was so fluid in made it look easy, no sweat,
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even when it was tough mat tough point to me. the jordan of tennis style class, amazing tennis players. i've been watching them since i was like, you know, 15 the 20 grand slam singles when i was dog by injuries in recent years and has been overtaken and the grand slam race by rivals, raffle nadal and novick joke of it's federer. it's one of the highest paid athlete and sports and it's well known for its charity work around children's access to sports and disaster relief though he'll hang up his racket by the month's end. federal impact on tennis will stand strong for the years to come. so josie, worn by another sporting legend, basketball star, michael jordan, during the 1998 n b a finals, he lost major title, a sold at auction for a record $10100000.00. the red, chicago bulls jersey bearing his iconic number 23. so for the highest price of any game wars, sports memorabilia ever and twice the upper estimate of the ocean,
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how sotheby's $199798.00 was a huge season for the balls and was chronicled in the hit netflix documentary, the last dance jordan's tape actually lost the game in which he wore at shirt. i'll set you up to date on your cooper's mckinnon. we'll have a more well news of the top of the, our next here on the w global 3000 looks at water conservation in the u. s. southwest. have a good day ah ah, with
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who? a saving water anyway possible. san diego has been battling extreme drought for years. now the city is counting on its
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residence for health and long sustainable technology. about $3000.00 on d, w biggest taiwan on guard. growing calls for independence. r ruffling the fathers of big brother china. kim, this small country take the pressure he and how did it come to this? facing the threat from china in 45 minutes on d. w. o. devastating. how are we can with cars carried off money, effects of climate change?
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i mean, felt worldwide before a station in the rain forest continued, carbon dioxide emissions have risen again. young people over the world are committed to climate protection. what impact will they have? because change doesn't happen on its own make up your own mind. d. w. late for mines. ah ah, welcome to global 3000. up to purse and said delicacy. the highly intelligent creatures are threatened with extinction.

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