tv World Stories Deutsche Welle September 26, 2022 1:15am-1:31am CEST
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i remind to now all of our top new story this hour, early results from italy's parliamentary elections. i was showing a clear victory for of right wing block led by georgia, milan, nice brothers recently, party. the alliance is expected to get between 41 and 45 percent of the vote. that's enough to guarantee control of both houses of parliament. you're watching d. w, wild stories. these op next, looking at the atrocities committed on to russian occupation in ukraine, of course is more on d, w dot com and all of our social media accounts, i think we can use i'm terry. great, thanks for watching. every day for us and for our planet, global ideas is on its way to bring you more conservation. how do
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we make cities greener? how can we protect animals and their habitats? what to do with all our waste? we can make a difference by choosing reforestation over deforestation recycling over disposable smart new solutions over steam set in our ways. earth is truly unique and we know that that uniqueness is what allows us to live and survive global ideas. the environmental series in global 3000 on d, w, and online with this week and world stories the bloody drug war in the philippines. germany's humboldt forum opens up to the public. we
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begin in ukraine where residents are rejoicing after taking back control of russian occupied territories. but there are also reports of detention and torture. ukrainian blue and yellow flag floats again on the statue of match, loved poet and nationalist terrace. f sankoh on the likely as men square. it has only been a few days since tom was liberated from russian occupation. locals are still trying to come to terms with what they've been to we meet r t m last ankle who wants to show us where he was in prison for 4 to 6 days over the summer. he was arrested because his brother is a soldier in the ukraine, an armed forces. i'm hoping this is my line 46 days. each stroke represents one day just so you don't get lost in time. here are 10. had to share the small windowless space. we several other people are what can i say?
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normally 7 of us lived here. i think one here sometimes to here to here and 3 here . they usually slept at each other's feet. water was under the sink. some withers on the 1st day was the hardest for them. i was blindfolded. they could have been taking me to lou hunched somewhere there. where is there? it will hans mother from ukraine in authority, say dozens of civilians were arrested and tortured by russian troops during the occupation. they were more interested in knowing with status by the clia than those with shirt before, who were officers who were at arsenic, who fought in the war. i said, i didn't know and they started to electrocute me. is a switchboard with an electric current. the more you move, the stronger the impactors. somehow i was lucky. i was there for for half an hour. people used to scream for one and a half to 2 hours, and the lawyer to papa looked at each. i looked up a bolt of la doing d interrogations. prisoners had to record themselves, reading a piece, paper,
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pledging their support for russia. local ukrainian police officers were powerless once the russians took over. some fled or went into hiding some collaborated, others joined a resistance. dis officer agreed to talk to us, but asked not to be named. i distola such an malady. many people were arrested for being pro ukraine and for cooperating with us and passing on information in limited for my some were held and we still don't know their whereabouts. and some were sent away a week later. i don't know what it depended on me. i know friends of mine who were also beaten was a reseller. they broke ribs hands and everything else, school, my aide, all but out all key, easiest in on the likely as man square to blue and yellow flag brings locals together, but he will take weeks months, so even years until older stories of their time and her occupation are revealed
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germany is sending more troops to lithuania to strengthen nato's eastern flanked defences, about the country, his feared russian aggression since the war began rolling off the boat into nato's most vulnerable region, staff, sergeant, macs, whose last name we've been asked not to give is providing security for the bonus vales, new forward command element. in lithuania, it's the headquarters of a german combat brigade with up to 2500 soldiers. max is a deputy squad leader on this armored personnel carrier. part of one of germany's armored infantry brigades damaged by learned of. i know, i think it's important because want to protect what we have at yahoo. got involved and protect our country. went out. and now that i've been in the army for some time, come, i also to fight with my brother in arms and keep my men safely. men on your line
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ingle, vincent hathaway. the soldiers are also here for lithuania, as collective defense, which is how nato calls it. vilnius, along with the other baltic states had been calling for more troops. and in june, german chancellor, olaf shorts granted their request, an additional combat brigade on top of the $1600.00 soldiers that are already there . but there's a catch out of the convoy traveling down this highway, only the mand elements, comprised of around 50 soldiers will be stationed here permanently. the bulk of the troops will remain in germany on high readiness, and can deploy quickly on short notice. cone us lithuania is 2nd largest city is only a half an hour's drive from the base where german troops are stationed. people here are largely happy that more soldiers are coming or soreness to the most important
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thing is that russia doesn't even think about taking any aggressive steps towards nato. all it delaney of sherman thought on the market to ensure that max and his men are armed with some of the most modern equipment in the german military. they say they are well trained and ready to go to war. if they must, after accompanying their brigades combat headquarters to lithuania, max and his comrades will go back home. but not for long. in october, they will return for their combat exercises with the lithuanian military. when the former president of the philippines rodrigo de dirtier took office, he promised to n drug trafficking. 6 years later, the problem and its related violence are more widespread than ever.
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each of these skeletons has a story to tell the story of a war on drugs. the philippine government fought over the past 6 years. officially some 6200 people were killed by police for dealing with drugs. the true toll is nearly certainly much bigger and the expiration, oh let's with that means okay. and i am just so happy that it was they were not lost. they were not lost. so 2 bullets came in that i examining the remains of some of the people who died forensic pathologist, raquel for tune made a shocking discovery. in 7 cases out of $47.00, the death certificates were false. here, they listed a natural cause of death. when people had actually been shot rational,
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the philippines procedures for investigating death says the 60 year old have always been flawed. if you have anymore questions on the 16th, giving me escalate. nancy black, blue around me. somebody can give me many families in the philippines have experienced this kind of scenario hitman approaching at night to shoot aloft one then evidence of drug abuse is planted, says grace. she lost her father and brother. 6 years ago when me, when ha, civilian and shopping. gib ah may find there. one shot again to sure. she's dead. he's dead. eyes that darcy me leanne planted. my father ah!
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dying ah dorothy, she's damn trashy and my knee. the poor were the primary victims of the war on drugs. the international criminal court estimates that up to 30000 people more than 4 times the official number were killed on former president. 2 testers, watch many relatives now want to set the record straight. this catholic priest is doing his part to support them in or referent. love yano villanueva pays for the exhumations and for legal advice, he fears that the killings even with to tear to gone, are far from over. in the past the weeks, we have counted at least 8 or 9 killings. to this very present day. my point, there's no difference between that then and to day. so the water than the
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dogs is a complete failure. if it has one success, it left families broken, widowed, an orphan that the ranks continue, that the rugs are cheaper this days. dr. fortuna is convinced that the 2 toll of the war on drugs will never come to light. too many of those who lost their lives remain unidentified and unclaimed. but she hopes that her discoveries will bring a semblance of justice to the families who remain behind ah, located in the reconstructed berlin city palace. the humboldt forum is one of the city's most famous museums. now it's showcasing the famous benign bronzes. before the returned to nigeria,
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the humble forum is finally opening all it stores. it's taken to decades, it almost 700000000 euros, but the opening of the east wing means the form can now be enjoyed in full. it's also been the source of much debate, something that director general welcomes elmwood form perhaps became a catalyst for many, many discussions, not only in germany, but also bird wide about the future. for example, off collections. the best known examples aren't from germany's colonial past, but britons the benign bronzes, british colonial forces, looted 4000 of the bronzes from the kingdom of benign modern day nigeria, in 1897. after much discussion, germany signed a deal that will see the return of the bronzes. a 168 will remain alone in berlin for 10 years with just 40 on display, the original bronze. his exhibition was changed to a story of restitution and installation. now features those involved in the process
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. could this be part of a wider paradigm shift when it comes to stolen artifacts? this symbolic return unsigned of these agreements are here, are, would germany. and of course, with other countries. ah, it's in us as a, as, as a point as a symbol for also other countries to good. there are 2 fox book against the current links, a u. s. collection by an indigenous omaha acknowledges from the late 18 hundreds with personal stories from to day. well, you have here that belongs to us. they don't have anywhere else in this world. there is not a replica of some of these items. nowhere else on this earth. you have the only one. there's been a palpable shift in public attitudes when it comes to how problematic artifacts are dealt with. now the humboldt form is fully open. we'll see if it's up to the
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gargantuan task. it's set itself. ah ah. then i can mules on wheels. free cruise eat the bikes, me 1000000000, master tile. sustainable. and they're walking, one does on the streets of africa. let's take a closer look. read on d, w. a, across europe, in a motor home, in a way that says environmentally friendly as possible. to you as the americans
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take up the challenge with all its pitfall, what do they experience in their e camper? their travel blog is all theories, world tripping europe your romance? 30 d w. i think it is a thought they were great you ah . to day on read the altar and mobility show how the chinese start up neo wants to come here. the german market, how he buys from germany are solving mobility problems in uganda and hub. attuned to where joe, whose legs were amputated, became a cab driver in nigeria.
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