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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  October 10, 2022 10:00pm-10:31pm CEST

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ah, we explain how these technologies work, how they can count wilson for, and that's how they can also go terribly. watch it now on youtube. ah, ah, this is d, w. news live from berlin to night. international condemnation of russia's biggest yet air strikes on ukraine. a wave of cruise missiles have killed and injured dozens and cities across the country. president zalinski saying moscow wants to
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wipe you crate off the face of the earth. now, russian president vladimir putin, he claims the strikes were retaliation or an explosion on the bridge linking russia and the annex crimean peninsula. and he says, this may be just the beginning and germany, promising to speed up delivery to ukraine of its long awaited air defense system. is this a case of better late than never, or too little, too late? ah, i'm burned. gov to our viewers watching p b s in the united states and to all of you around the world. welcome, the international community is expressing outrage at the latest russian airstrikes on ukraine. cruise missiles to day had keep in other cities across the country, killing at least 11 people and injuring many more. you as president joe biden has called the assault under brutality. now the ukranian president vladimir zalinski
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has a keys accusing russia of wanting to wipe ukraine off the face of the earth. it just after eights in the morning, a russian missile finds its target. a glass bridge, a major tourist attraction in the heart of the ukrainian capital security cameras showing just how close one morning commuter comes to being caught up in the blast. across the city, a giant crater created by another strike. just meters mature drains play area. many here are lucky to escape with their lives, who should alabama elsewhere, residents race to bomb shelters. among them alayna, who recently fled the capital from her son, hoping it would be a safer environment. they want to destroy our people, our infrastructure, everything. i wouldn't know. i'm soon and we know by out here, so people shooter city, i don't know how with the same,
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why the strikes on the capsule of the 1st since june and come after russia's president. putin blamed ukraine for a blast on a bridge. lincoln crimea with russia. the weekend, speaking on the streets of keith, he crane's president accused moscow of trying to wipe his nation off the math. i bang you the one a creep, panicking chaos, not they want to destroy our energy system, right? the 2nd target is people. we can overall they deliberately chose such a time and such targets in order to cause as much harm as possible. but we are ukrainians. we help each other, we believe in ourselves. we will restore everything that was destroyed. and cave was not the only target. dozens of russian rockets or so cause chaos and destruction in cities right across the country. several regions across ukraine have been left without power after the strikes destroyed,
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key parts of the countries electricity, great. but despite the apparent russian escalation, in this war, it appears to have only strengthened the spirit of the ukrainian people. and instead, the depression, this attack have totally different her emotion of all as it is. people is angry, angry, and want to defend our ha houses, defends our families. our children are disability right across ukraine, count the deadly cost and assess the damage of this attack. they know more, may be to come. for earlier i asked our corresponded in keith funny for char, what she witnessed this morning. i was getting ready for the day when i heard the 1st explosions. and 1st i didn't even attribute to explosions just later on, and i called my colleagues right away who were on the way to the office to find out what the effort and to confirm. but i actually right because it was just so unusual . in fact, the last time i've heard such
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a big bank was in february 24th when the full scale invasion of russia started. but then of course we a journalist. so what do we do? you want to find out what exactly has happened. so we rushed to the scene where the so burnt cars at really, really if you looked at those cars, you could hardly imagine that anybody has gotten alive from those call racks. also, we have seen a huge crater in the middle of the throat, which is quite frequented, especially during russia also by us pretty much every day because it's in the city center. and what i've seen was chaos. people panicking at the same time trying to understand were they should go were do you actually feel safe and protected? and while i was trying to find out via an eye witness at what exactly he has experienced, we heard more explosions. so everyone was trying to look for shelter, literally and running for the lives. so did we and pretty much if you are now looking around and he, if city the streets are quite empty, a people are inside and they are actually call them by the government. and,
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and government officials to stay inside today. in fact, right now, also there's an air raid and active air aid alert, which means you have to stay in the shelters, which of course, you're also going to do a shortly after this. that was d, w for charge reporting from keith in the russian capital. moscow, there has been mixed reaction to the strikes. whether it's an answer to terrorist who destroyed the bridge, it was civilian infrastructure is no mercy for terrorists. no, it's not. right. you can't one piece, one second beat me. log on, our patient has limits the crime in bridges, russian infrastructure and ukrainians also have that kind of infrastructure. this is awful. i feel very sorry that innocent people are dying, they will do. but if we have sufficient strike such, then it's all right, talk to miss regina. otherwise we should have done it so no, because it's an answer to aggression. i don't know. it's a military question. you need to ask them. we follow what's going on,
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but don't understand what's happening with your mind. or earlier i asked our russia analyst, roman glencoe, how the events of the past few days might affect support for the war within russia . well, it is important to say that we do not have some scientific data reliable data on the moon in russia, the russian society, the poles that we had in the past weeks suggest that the majority of russian support this war a relative majority of the mobilization that president led him important started a few weeks ago. he's not so popular at heat as he would have expected. or we see that, or we've hundreds of russian men leaving the country trying to escape from that level is ation. so that's a clear indication there is, there is a problem with his plan to record more men to fight against your brain. as to the events of the last days, i would say my personal opinion is that the society is getting more and more
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polarized. so people who supported this war before their support is growing, and people who were skeptical or maybe opposing this war there, a position is also growing, but that opposition is relatively small in the russian society. so i would suggest that in the coming weeks it will depend on how the situation will develop on the battlefield. and maybe that will bring some changes, but those changes are likely to be rather slow. i would say, what was there in your opinion then a connection between what we saw today with these air strikes the bombing of the, or the explosion of on the bridge over the weekend. and what is happening on the battlefields? i mean, the criminal has made it clear that this was about revenge. what we sold today, but it's going to change what's happening in the, in this war. it is about revenge, but it is much more i think,
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and we have to look back a few weeks. and remember that this autumn has been extremely unsuccessful for the russian army with brain ukrainian army pushing in the north and getting back a lot of territory just east of the 2nd largest city of parking and then the ukrainians pushing in the south in the region of san and trying to liberate that region as well. and of course the explosion of the bridge, which is an extremely important and symbolic for symbolic bridge, for president william, important for his annexation of premier and the 2014. so russian has made it, russia has made it very clear that any attacks on that bridge would be a red line. so we had to react, and he had to come down. those who critic circle support him actually where they started to criticize him openly. it's a hard core, and part of the russian society who very much would like to, to see much heavier,
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much more brucell war than we've seen in the past month. those people were expecting something like this to happen, a heavy bombardment. so this is what he did. so once again, this is not just revenge. this is something that has been expecting from expected former reporting from his heart or supporters for some while. and there is also a new question, commander of, of this war, of this special operation in ukraine. is this new commander is his appointment, an answer to these hard liners? well, it looks like this. it's been too early to say to say to be definite. i will say because he's been appointed just 2 days ago, i think we know about him that he has been commanding russian forces in the south of ukraine after the invasion and during the invasion in february. and this is where a russian forces had the most gains of territory. of course,
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it is not just because of him. there were other factors as well, but the fact is this, this part of the russian army has been successful and occupied large territory in the south of ukraine. i think that spoke for him in the eyes of president bush and he also commanded russian forces in syria. he commanded russian forces and i think this is exactly what, what he can do. he can use our planes. he can use rockets, missiles to hit targets. what, what he cannot use, or at least it is too early to tell how successful he will be is to win on the battlefield. because russia has obviously not enough manpower to conduct a major offensive at this moment. this is why i present orders ordered that mobilization, that's what you had to react because he was facing winter and he was losing territory in roman pennsylvania as always we appreciate your analysis tonight. thank you. thank you. or the skill of now some of the other developments related to
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the ongoing war in ukraine bell roof and russian are forming a joint army unit, russian or leader, the leader of colors. i should say, alexander lucas shanker. claims have received intelligence, suggesting ukraine was planning to attack belushi territory. the head of germany's national security agency is facing intense scrutiny over allegations that he has ties to russian intelligence services. the television investigation claims that arna, shirley bought them started a cyber security group linked to a former russian agent or germany is now promising to speed up delivery to ukraine of a long awaited air defense system. the government says that the 1st anti missile battery should arrive in ukraine within days. this air defense system, the iris t, s l m, can intercept any air attacks within
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a 40 kilometer range and up to 20 kilometers high and can protect a large area on the ground. germany promised them to ukraine and june. and keith has been waiting ever since. but now the 1st system is about to arrive. german defense minister christina lambert, said it had become a matter of urgency. germany will deliver the 1st to for iris t. s l m ad defend systems to ukraine within days. the renewed miss, i'll fire keith, are many other cities. so how important it is to supply ukraine with air defense systems quickly but the other 3 units will only be delivered next year. crashes attacks on civilian targets across ukraine, drove home to germany, just how important that support for keith is foreign minister on a lena bear book called the attacks vial and promised berlin would do everything possible to strengthen ukraine's air defense. chancellor of shots also offered
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solidarity and support. the chancellor assured ukraine's president of the son, a devotee of germany and the other g 7 countries. he said, germany would do everything possible to mobilize additional assistance, and in particular, to help repair destroyed civil infrastructure such as electricity and heating sources in response to russia's missile strikes. the group of 7 countries will hold the virtual meeting with ukrainian president. leukemia is the lensky young tuesday . germany currently holds the g 7 presidency and rebuilding damaged infrastructure is expected to be on the agenda. but the leading industrialized countries will be looking to agree on a coordinated response to further increased weapons and defense system deliveries to ukraine. the united nations is meeting in new york to debate a resolution condemning russia's illegal annexation of parts of eastern new,
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great russia, vito, a similar initiative last month, the un security council. but moscow cannot blocked decisions of the 193 member general assembly. the general assembly was expected to vote on this resolution later this week from may remember back in march, the un general assembly condemned the russian invasion of ukraine with an overwhelming majority. only 4 countries supported russia. i asked the w washington bureau chief in his pole, if we will see the same outrage this time around over these latest annexations. i think so brand, i mean, russian president vladimir putin. beverly was hoping that the support for ukraine would falter over time, that the government would be overtaken by their own problems in the skyrocketing energy prices would town the alliance against the russian war, but that is not happening. actually quite the opposite. as we just heard in your so
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many countries, many world leaders, germany included, actually keep increasing their support for ukraine. but having that said, it is very likely that we see the same outcome that same some countries actually might abstain their road. and some even wrote with russia, the message from the kremlin has always been a, these votes of the un general assembly that they really don't matter and can, considering that russia holds a permanent seat of the un security council. perhaps it has a point there. well, it is solace, coming back to the problem that countries like rush hour china, which actually violate the un charter, has the right to veto sanctions against themselves. despite again, the wildlife, the principles of the un in the case of ukraine might even commit war crimes. so some people do say that the u. n is a toothless tiger, as long as they are not able to reform the rules of the security council. if we
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know that to day you as president j by, he condemned these attacks on ukraine. he called them according here, utter brutality. those are words, though. how much more leverage does he have? what kind of pressure does he have in his disposal right now to impact what russia does or doesn't do? well the white house has said that they will respond as putting and kremlin. i take this unprecedented step to use nuclear weapons against ukraine. but they do not though they did not specify what exactly they would entail. the retired force, our general david portrays, told me in our d w interview, that the response, however, would be devastating, but a bite and, you know, brand, we have to put that in consideration really had to operate it from a very difficult position where it kind of direct interference can spark
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a proxy war. so putting in many ways has the leverage here because it's still unknown of what he will do and what he is capable of. it abusing his pole with the least tonight from washington is always in a thank you. unless look now, some of the other stories that are making headlines around the world, workers in iran's energy sector have joint protests against the regime. now these images from social media appear to show workers from an oil refinery walking off the job. the student led protest continue to spread, following the death of a 22 year old woman in police custody. the council of europe has awarded it's vents, love, hovel, human rights prior to the detained russian opposition. politician vladimir, out on woodside and his wife, if genuine, except the award on his behalf. in strossberg, france, the criminal critic is charged with treason for speaking out against the invasion
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of ukraine. chad's military rule, it mohammed debbie has been sworn in for a further 2 years. he's promised a unity government in the next few days to steer the country towards elections. a national dialogue conference was earlier boycott in by some of the main opposition and rebel groups. a volcano on the italian island of stromboli has erupted and sent ash and lava towards the ocean. the volcano near sicily is one of the most active in the world. authorities have reads the alert level but have reported no damage to households or infrastructure or the trial of 8 people accused in the terror attack in nice 4 or 5 years ago has reopened. in france, a truck you may remember, plowed into crowds watching by steel de fireworks 86 people were killed. now survivors are hoping that the case might help to put the hor,
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behind them the w lease. at louis reports. the pullman now does on glare a spot of earthly paradise turned hell. on the 14th of july 2016, there's probably multiple barbara regime, patrick, please, on municipal police officer was off duty that day. narrowly escaped the attack of yellow rollers, who i happened to be under a pergola which was too low for the truck to drive through her over there, there were a few palm trees which were also on its way suffers icama commer coming on. i was somehow in a safe zeal. apathy remarked, i ought to come you. i followed the truck's path sure matters. everybody on my left had been killed. bruce, if as some people were as flat as my 2 hands together, it was unbearable. oh my brain blanked out people's cries and the smell of the blood, it put me into a protective bubble. yoder that had driven past me without seeing me. did you have
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you done? oh, look on the whole gather that night. a 31 yell to museum attack are killed 86 people, and injured more than 400. it was at wetzel to your buddy my once the truck had stopped me, office up, he's all went down to the beach to look for some friends he'd been with earlier, eventually found them. they were also unharmed. physically, that is what i have. who was it? because you're since then i wonder why i am alive and not dead like the others. i feel guilty about it. that makes life a struggle, but i feel i have to be thankful for every additional day. and my job as a municipal police officer, i can't go on petroleum or i can only do office work. the slightest sounds at a skateboarder behind me makes me panic. ah, i've become hypersensitivity complete. it's as if there were a snake inside me, which sometimes bites me and makes me cry. oh, don't critic. he killed off any more. he will reply. if open enrollment will your
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value of a piece all says commemorative ceremonies and statues to remember the victims like this one, help him feel less alone with a pain. and the upcoming trial could be important for his healing process. he's one of roughly 900 civil plaintiffs was historically keshawn. i want answers, for example, to the question what the attacker did when he went off radar earlier that day for half an hour or so. but i need to know that to build my personal resilience and i expect the judges to condemn these people in a fair way for what they've done or poor newly. the trial is also place for us victims to tell our side of the story and what we had to go through. it will be another chapter on the way to healing he mccall. unfortunately, a failure law office up. he's all says he'll never be able to leave behind the dreadful memories of what happened that night. but he's determined the horror won't take the sparkle from his
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life. 3 americans will share this year's nobel prize for economics. they're the honor for their work which highlights the dangers of what is known as a run on the bank. that's when people panic and suddenly withdrawal, all of their savings. ah, the creatures intervention of central banks and governments was hugely important in preventing the collapse of lehman brothers in 2008 from triggering a chain reaction of banking filiette. system critical institutions were half cute, save us deposits were protected, and markets were stabilized. been printing, he was at the hands of the u. s. federal reserve. at the time, he had the opportunity to put what he had researched 20 years earlier into practice, along with economist douglas diamond and philip to pick the 3 economists what
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awarded the nobel prize in economic sciences on monday for their findings on the role of banks and crisis and how to make them less vulnerable. the research, the fed has helped avoid destructive financial crisis and preventing costly bailouts. and i think the main thing is that it has the last on the sound, whole financial crisis, the relo on what to do, welcome. the basis of bronowski research was among other things, the great depression of the 19 thirty's. it would probably have been a much my downturn, had financial institutions been protected from the run on savings. and if the fed had intervened more strongly, you are. so maker has completed an ambitious documentary on the holocaust. kimber looks at america's response to the nazi threat. and he has uncovered some awkward troops. he told the w. washington bureau chief in his pull that this is the most
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important movie that he's ever made. it is an epic undertaking, a 3 part, 6 hour series examining how the u. s. responded to the nazi threat and the holocaust at its findings are not always comfortable. we tell ourselves stories as a nation. one of the stories we tell ourselves is that we're a land of immigrants. but in moments of crisis, it becomes very hard for us to live up to those stories. the u. s. and the holocaust challenges some of the established narratives and suggest some chilling echoes to today's world. the anxieties about urban is ation. about an lettered, untutored, relatively uneducated peoples coming in in large numbers. the sense that disease was a problem. all of these worries were amalgamated into a belief that immigrants caused these problems. you know, mark twain are great writer, one said or is supposed to have said that history doesn't repeat itself,
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but it rhymes. and there hasn't been a film that i worked on over the last nearly 50 years that hasn't rhymed in the present. and that's because human nature doesn't change. human behavior doesn't change the same, you know, degrees of virtue and villainy agreed and generosity exist. so every film rhymes what was surprising, what was startling is that as we began work in 2015 this i knew it would be speaking to the present. but i had no idea by the time i finished how directly it would be speaking to the, the rise of authoritarianism, the rise of anti semitic rhetoric, the rise of hate speech. the kinds of is it you see in the lead up from the american side, and also from the german side to what happened in the 1900 thirty's, and then what we now call the holocaust. the fragility of civilized behavior is the
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one thing you really learn, pers, these people who we now see in these photographs, the sepia photographs and they're receding into time, they're no different, no different from us. you look at your neighbors, the people at the dry cleaners, the waiters and the restaurant. that's how these people were. don't kid yourself. you know, this is the same sad story and unfortunately, you know, what it requires for it to take place is for good people to acquiesce and to not do anything. and an important historical documentary for sure. and an important film with resonance for today. for the present, you're watching the w news after a short break. i'll be back to take you through the day. stick around with
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with oh, a sports limos and sports cars, algae and b, m. w with the electric, a 6000 the competition against combustion engine,
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but the full, the future hits the road. let's look at the mentioned read how and wagon read in 60 minutes on d, w. o sometimes a seed is all you need to allow the big ideas to grow. we're bringing environmental conservation to life with learning packs like global ideas. we will show you how climate change and environmental conservation is taking shape around the world and how we can all make a difference. knowledge grows through sharing. download it now, feel free. leo, eternal pollutant dynamite,
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and the pillar of sticks and society. taxes the right to levy taxes and the obligation to pay them both inherent in the sovereignty of nation states and their citizens. but what happens when the power of taxation is undermined? can't pay won't pay. taxation and politics starts october 21st on d, w. across all of ukraine to day wash and rockets rain down, the broadest area will salt the country since the invasion began, almost 8 months ago, russian president vladimir putin confirming he ordered the attacks payback for this an explosion over the weekend, taking out the.

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