tv DW News Deutsche Welle October 6, 2022 11:00pm-11:15pm CEST
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oh, these technologies work, how they can go with how they can also go terribly. watch it now noon. noon . ah, the c w news line from berlin. a horrifying attack under nursery and thailand, emergency responders remove the bodies of more than 30 people. many of them small children from a daycare center where they were shot dead by a former police officer. also coming up with russian rockets,
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head homes in the ukrainian city of upper regia rescuer, a search for survivors as authority say some residents were trapped under the rubble plus french author. i know when this year's nobel prize in literature she has written more than 20 books, phrased by the nobel committee as uncompromising, courageous and enduring. ah . nichol for like, it's good to have you with us. in thailand, at least 36 people, mostly small children, have been killed in an attack at a daycare center. it happened in the countries north east, a man wielding a gun and knife is said to have entered the nursery and open fire before later. taking his own life. 2 scenes of panic and chaos after
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a former police officer attacked a j. give hendo, armed with a pistol and a knife, he opened fire and stopped dieter and children killing dozens of people. this dieter describes what she saw. he used his feet to kick the window and then he shot at the door. i thought he got inside, so i ran to the kitchen behind. i was in shock. i didn't know what to do. paintings, prime minister said the moore to for the killings, could've been missed to get it and offered his condolences. society must take care of everybody. he might have something inside him and have been facing problems. i don't take any one site, this definitely shouldn't happen. i feel deep sadness for the victims and relatives believe, said the gunmen fled to his home and get his fight and trite, then took his own life. the also see, the former police sergeant had been suspended for drug use. at the hospital, people rach to nate black for the injured one of talent that live masculine,
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has left a community distraught and in shock. russian missiles have hit residential buildings in the southern ukrainian city of separation. ukrainian officials, a several people were killed in the strike and at least another dozen wound it strikes come, as russian forces continued to lose ground to ukraine's counter offensive in the south and east. gutted by russian rockets here ins apparition rescue workers searched the rubble for missing residence. local officials say several people were killed. while moore had been hospitalized off the initial dawn attack firefighters headed to the scene. but a 2nd salvo, cent locals running for cover as well as rescue workers present zalinski condemned the strikes was of an easier beast of persons aboriginal after
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the 1st rocket strike to day when people came to pick apart the rebel, russia conducted a 2nd rocket strike available in absolute vileness absolute evil up. and there have been thousands of instances of this already. and there could be thousands more. unfortunately he shannon, as ronald, more humbled locals were left reeling through them. why are they doing this to us? what are they trying to prove? killing or people. why, for what the attacks come as ukraine continues to force russian troops back in the south and east with these ukrainian troops and the don bass telling french reporters that they were using shells captured from the russians with winter. fast approaching, keep seems determined to press its current advantage, as long as it can. the head of the international atomic energy agency who's in the
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ukranian capital key for talks about security and europe's biggest nuclear power station. precisely ins. upper regia is discussing plans for a safe zone after months of shelling near the facility. the plan is located near the front line in a southern ukrainian, a region illegally annexed by moscow. russian president vladimir putin ordered his government to take formal control of the facility on wednesday, but at a press conference in keith grossey said it was quote, obvious that the station remained a ukrainian facility. this is, this is a matter of house and i guess you have to speak now on some of the other stories making is around the world today. japan and south korea have condemned north korea's recent missile tests. young young earlier fired to more ballistic missiles into its eastern waters and full war plains near the border with the south. sol scrambled plains and conductive naval drills with the u. s. and response phone. at
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least 22 people have drowned and dozens are still missing. after 2 migrant both sank and separate incidents and the mediterranean. the boats went down off the greek islands of casita and less boss. in a 9 time rescue, some migrants were saved from the boat that foundered near casita the mayor of a town and southwest mexico has been assassinated in an attack that left at least 17 others dead authority. se gunman, storm son miguel total pounds town hall and a broad daylight local media or blaming a local gang connected to a powerful drug cartels. the u. s. has imposed sanctions on 7 senior iranian officials for shutting down internet access and for a violent crackdown on anti government protests. the demonstrations were ignited by the death of 22 year old martha. i mean, she died after being arrested by iran, so called morality police,
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or allegedly violating the country. strict islamic dress code videos posted on line show women and girls leading protests in various cities. the demonstrations have spiraled into an anti government movement that's pushing for regime change. dr. i saw rod is a senior research fellow at the national arena, an american council, and i asked her earlier of the fact that even school girls have joined the protest . now is a game changer. i think it's important to realize the impact of the generational shift, right? you have a country where 40 percent of the population is under is 24 years or under. this is a group that's now come of age and is involving itself in the political scene in a way that we haven't seen be in, in previous protests. well, you know, there's parallels with this protests and protests from 2009 because they involved both the middle class and working foss, iranians. but of course in 2009 when you have people who are now under late teens and early twenties, they were just kids. they couldn't have been involved then. so i think we
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definitely have to, to keep in mind both to the role of women in these protests and the role of youth in these protests which, you know, even if it doesn't culminate in overnight change. i think that we've reached a watershed moment where this generation is standing up for their rights. and this is a movement that is critical in of itself. so would you say that at this stage already iran has changed forever. i think it's hard to go back to the way that things were in terms of at least the, the makeup of the people who are there. right. you, you're not going to convince these a gen z, these young iranians, that they will be okay with a system that doesn't allow them. you're most basic freedoms at the core of this. while it is about women's rights, while it is about the compulsory her job a while goes to the core of the system at the core of it is called for freedom, which is why it's been encapsulated by the slogan. a women life freedom at the
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movement is of course led by women, but supported by men, all sorts of minorities, rich and poor people alike at their all asking for freedom of course. but do they all have a common vision of what a post islamic republic a run should or could look like? well, i think it's important to realize that these protests cut across generations cut across iranian society as a whole of because there is many deep health grievances that right across that same society of whether or not you know what exactly these protests are asking for. if it's a unified message, there's different people protesting for different reasons. but the unified message at the core is a deep grievance with the system as a whole unified message at the core is the, is the hope for, for freedom. and you even have, you know, people, women from more conservative, traditional backgrounds, people who actually don, the trader, and the,
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the head scarf voluntarily. they choose to do so. coming out in favor of these protests supporting young women were protesting. because ultimately it's about the freedom of choice. we're seeing sanctions coming out of the us out of a in hugh, is that the right way forward is that enough? i think you know what the bite administration has shown is that regardless of what they choose to do in the path of negotiations with iran, where the j. c, p. o, a is concerned that they will hold human rights abusers and iran a countable before this new series of sanctions that we saw today, the u. s. sanction iran so called morality police as well as individuals involved in the killing of mass. i'm any so i think that we will see more of these target sanctions against human rights abusers and accountability. what we could hope to see as an international community is for the same a states to hold all human rights abusers equally accountable. and we've heard some voices from within, around political establishment,
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demanding change. do you think that is possible and it's, it's hard to predict what will happen in terms of a system being, having the capacity for change. i think we can always say that there is the capacity for change, but if, if the iranian people do not see it that way enough. the most important thing to keep in mind if the iranian people do not see this as something that can change or whatever change does occur, does not satisfy the will of those people, then they will continue to resist, to fight for whatever that vision is for the future of their country doctor i saw ron. thank you so much for joining us today. thank you for having me. now. she's famous for blending fiction and autobiography and her books using her experiences as a working class woman to tell powerful tales. now, french author, i need to know is also famous for winning the nobel prize in literature and no as a professor of literature as well as a writer. she was born in 1940 and grew up in normandy and has published more than
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20 books. over 5 decades, before the prize committee announced this year's winner, they tried to call her, but couldn't reach her french author on the on will soon out know, did find out. she'd won the world's top literature prize. or just because, well, i'm very happy. i am proud. that's it. you're not overcome with emotion. no, no, i'm not overcome a fitting answer for an author who writes about her own experiences with what she calls the knife, meaning a kind of surgical precision. her autobiographical novels prob subjects including her work in class childhood, her affair with a married diplomat, her own battle with breast cancer. her mother's, with all timers, really hard experiences and she gives was felicia fears is that the various in striking stories have resonated with many readers, especially women at
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a press conference in paris. l. no said that writing from the perspective of a woman was also a responsibility. mm hm. it does not seem to me that we women have become equal in freedom in power b o y. in general there still this domination said domino. when she 1st started writing l no was told by publishers that she was too ambitious. her 1st published novel, she wrote in secret from her husband who belittled her writing. she would go on to write about that unhappy marriage. it was at nos, 2008 novel liaison near the years that made her well known internationally. the book traces her life in an ever changing france from post war to the early, 2 thousands last year. her novel happening about her own illegal abortion at age 23 was turned into a gripping thriller like skitta. buncombe to the
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film wanted a tub and prize at the venice film festival. oh no, he said, it's the novelists, work to tell the truth, for telling her truth about womanhood and the working class. she's now the 17th female author named and nobel laureate, in literature. and here is a quick reminder of the top, no stories at this hour. authorities have removed the bodies of more than 30 people, many of them small children from a daycare center and northeastern thailand. after they were gunned down by a former police officer. the shooter reportedly killed his wife and child after the attack before turning his weapon on himself. russian missiles have struck residential buildings and the southern ukrainian city of upper regia. a governor of the region mostly occupied by russian troops, says several people have been killed on the strikes and at least a dozen others injured. don't forget,
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