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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  October 11, 2022 3:00am-3:16am CEST

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experience outstanding shopping and dining offers and try our services to be our guest at frankfurt airport city. managed by frappe art. ah ah, ah ah, this is d. w. news live from berlin. international condemnation of russia's biggest yet air strikes on you cry. a wave of cruise missiles killed and injured dozens in cities across the country. president lensky says moscow wants to what you cried on the face of the earth. meanwhile,
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vladimir putin claims the strikes were retaliation for an explosion on the bridge. lincoln, russia and the legally annexed privacy in peninsula and says this by just be the beginning. ah, i'm anthony howard. welcome. a furious response from western nations to russian strikes across ukraine that claimed at least 14 lives and left scores injured us. prisoner, joe biden, calls us brutality. the latter, mister lensky accuses russia of wanting to wipe you crane off the face of the earth . and on monday, protested many of them ukrainians who fled the war, took to the streets of european cities, including the polish capital war, saw where they get gathered outside the russian embassy. and prog demonstrate has condemned the russian strikes and demand additional international support.
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ukraine's air defenses is a closer look now at the attack on busy ukrainian cities. just after 8 in the morning, a rush and miss aw finds its target. a glass bridge, a major tourist attraction in the heart of the cranium. capital security camera 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 me to some a children's play area. many here are lucky to escape with their lives in livermore, elsewhere, residents race to bomb shelters. among them alayna, who recently fled to the capital from her on hoping it would be a safer environment. they want to destroy our people, our infrastructure ever since. i really don't know. why don't you tell people, should she, she,
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i don't know how would the same why the strikes on the capital of the 1st since june and come up the russians. president putin blamed ukraine for a blast on a bridge. lincoln crimea, with russia. the weekend speaking on the streets of keith, ukraine's president accused moscow of trying to wipe his nation off the map. binding the one acquaint panic and chaos they want to destroy our energy system. the 2nd target is people can know, but they deliberately chose such a time and such a target in order to cause as much harm as possible. but we are ukrainians. we help each other and we believe in ourselves. we will restore everything that was destroyed and key was not the only target. dozens of russian rockets also caused 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 country is 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 is this ethic half doubled. different the emotion of our people is angry, angry, and want to defend houses, defends our families, our children, just communities right across ukraine, count the deadly cost and assess the damage of this attack. they know more maybe to come early. we asked a correspondent in key funding for what she witnessed. 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 a big bank was in february 24th when the fullest can invasion of russia started.
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but then of course we a journalist. so what do we do? we 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 called racks. also, we have seen a huge crater in the middle of this road, 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 every one was i try 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 dw correspondent, money for shot in keep for the view from russia. we asked d. w analyst robin going to ranko how the latest developments might affect russians support for the war. it is important to say that we do not have scientific days or reliable data on the morning, rushing, the russian society the poles that we had in the past weeks suggest the majority of russia support this war a relative majority. and demobilization that president political cartoon started a few weeks ago. he's not so popular as he would have expected. we see that we've hundreds of russian men leaving the country trying to escape from the public asian . so that a clear indication there is, there is
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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 polarized. so people who supported this will before their support is growing, and people who are skeptical or maybe opposing this war, their opposition is also growing. but that opposition is relatively small in their, our 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 that the state of his ration analyst robin going to rank talking to us earlier, or germany is promising to speed up delivery of a long white and a defense system to ukraine. the government say is the 1st anti missile battery should arrive within days. this air defense system, the iris d, s o m,
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can intercept enemy air attacks within a 40 kilometer range and up to 20 kilometers high and can protect a large area on the ground. germany promise 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 lamb, correct, said it had become a matter of urgency. germany will deliver the 1st of 4 iris t. s l m ad defend systems to ukraine within days. the renewed miss, i'll fire keith and many other cities shows how important it is to supply ukraine with air defense systems quickly. but the other 3 units will only be delivered next year, crushes attacks on civilian targets across ukraine, drove home to germany, just how important it support for keith is foreign minister anna lena bear book called the attacks vile and promised berlin would do everything possible to
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strengthen ukraine's air defense, chancellor of shells also offered solidarity and support. the chancellor assured ukraine's president office on the density 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 a virtual meeting with ukrainian president for leukemia is the lensky on 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 defensive them deliveries to ukraine. the united nations is moving in new york to the bite of resolution condemning russia's illegal annexation of parts of ukraine. russia vetoed
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a similar initiative last month in the security council at moscow. cannot block decisions of the $193.00 member general assembly, which will vote on the resolution. light of this wish understood. all right, let's take a look at some of the other stories making headlines around the world. work as in a bronze energy sick to have joined protests against the regime. these images from social media appear to show workers from an oil refinery shop, chanting, anti government slogans and walking off the job. student led protest continue to spread following the death. but 22 year old woman in police custody the death told in the massive mudslide that switch through a been as why the town over the weekend as reason to 36 with another 56 people. still missing. it happened after hurricane julia pummeled the area with heavy rides risky fruit using drones and trained dogs in search and recovery. if
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cities across the united states have celebrated the 2nd indigenous peoples day, which commemorates the lives and heritage of native americans who subjugated by european settle. this event coincides with christopher columbus day, celebrating the italian explorer who is credited by some for discovering the americas of a se. his landing actually led to the genocide of native americans for magellan, south langley mifflin, called for the protection of refugee writes. as she accepted the un refugee agencies, top award, knuckle was given the prize in recognition of her role in welcoming more than one point. $2000000.00 refugees to germany during the 2015, martha plus the u. s. phil mike a has completed an ambitious documentary on the holocaust, ken burns, looks at america's response to the nazi threat and uncover some awkward truths. but
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it's documentary is a hugely popular on us public television. he tells d. w. washington bureau chief innes pole. the holocaust for light, a film is the most important 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 there were 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 challenge is some of the established narratives and suggest some chilling echoes to today's world. the anxieties about organization, about an lettered, untutored, relatively an educated peoples coming in in large numbers. the sense that disease was a problem. all of these worries were amalgamated into
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a belief that immigrants caused these problems. you know, mark twain are great writer once said or is supposed to have said that history doesn't repeat itself, 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 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 i this i knew it would be speaking to the present, but i had no idea by the time i just finished how directly it would be speaking to the the rise of authoritarianism, the rise of anti semitic rhetoric, the rise of hate speech are the kinds of things that you see in the lead up from the american side and also from the german side to what happened in the 19 thirty's
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. and then what we now call the holocaust, the fragility of civilized behavior is the one thing you really learn. these people who we now see in these photographs, the sepia photographs and the 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. now before we go, a new record has been sit at an annual autumn competition joint, pumpkin grown, and the midwestern state of minnesota was hold all the way to california. we're at
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white in at over 1160 kilograms fitting a new national break, or the award for prettiest pumpkin. went to a somewhat more slender. let's say small entry. now before we go, a reminder at the top story we've been following for you ladies from around the globe have condemned the latest russian air strikes on this. all attacks on the capital. keep and other cities have killed at least a live and that's all for now. off next is adult film focused on the conservative catholic group known as a bush day that's coming up. after short a vibrant habitat ended glistening plates of long the mediterranean sea. zenith almost far. and so far, abdul karim drift along with.

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