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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  October 11, 2022 1:00pm-1:31pm CEST

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ah ah ah ah, this is steve w. news live from berlin. russia strikes again. this time in the southern ukrainian city of zapora, asia, local officials say at least a dozen missiles struck a school, a clinic, and residential buildings. fresh strikes are also being reported in the western city of the v ot on the program. how can natal provide more support for ukraine?
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that's the issue facing the alliances defense ministers as they prepare for a 2 day meeting in brussels. the leading u. s. documentary maker ken burns turns his attention to the holocaust. he talks to d w about why he thinks it's the most important film he's ever made. ah, i'm glad else as well come to the program. a day after ukraine was hit by dozens of russian rockets, security services aren't reporting more strikes in the south and west of the country on tuesday. ukrainian authorities say at least 12 missiles of slam to 2 public facilities in the southern city of support is yep, killing at least one person explosions. set off
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a large fire in the area. readers are leaders of the group of 7 countries. the g 7 will hold a video called later in which they expected to reaffirm strong support for keith, including helped to rebuild ukraine's damaged infrastructure. following those latest attacks, people in keith have already made a start themselves. just hours after the missiles struck ukrainians got to work, cleaning up, determined to send a signal to russia. president phil automate. zalinski said the attacks had not a demoralized ukraine. in fact, quite the opposite was and that rebuilding had already started the children they nazzo another day of our defense, a difficult day laying in their la restoration work is currently underway across the country. so, and we will restore all objects that were damaged by the attack by russian terrorist i inches. it's only a matter of time i task are all structures of our state to ensure recovery as fast
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as possible, just the knees. in some places the attacks didn't have the effect moscow desired. this footage shows keeps mer bitterly clinico inspecting one of the capitals tourist attractions. a glass pedestrian bridge damaged, but still intact. a day earlier, just after 8 am. a russian missile had slammed into the structure. perhaps an attempt by moscow to destroy a prestige project failed. as the bridge remained standing security cameras showing just how close one morning commuter came to being caught up in the blast. across the city, a giant crater created by another strike. just meat is from a children's play area. many were lucky to escape with their lives. who should all of them are elsewhere, residents headed to bomb shelters?
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among them, alina recently fled to the capital from his song, hoping it will be safer. they want to destroy our people, our infrastructure ever since i read them all and i'm extremely envy you know why it keeps how people should shoot. i don't know how to say why and keith was not the only target russian rockets cause chaos and destruction in cities across the country. like here and denise pro. ah. despite russia's escalation in the war, the spirit of the ukrainian people and their resolve remain strong. but with reports of more russian strikes in the south of ukraine on tuesday, many a weary of what's to come. correspondent, funny such eyes in kiff and reports about the most recent strikes. exactly
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nationwide. care hard with regard to the attacks the various attacks again on various parts of ukraine, not in the very same scale as yesterday, but regardless of course, the damages and their casualties. let's zoom in on one particular area here on jeopardy just city. it has been hit quite a few times during the past couple of days, especially residential buildings have been hit with a lot of casualties. what we know today, that one miss us truck. the city wants to get a city that russia would love to control. but ukraine manages to keep the upper hand over the city that he's surrounded by a territory that's being controlled by russia. at least one person is being reported killed because of that missile attack. we do not know more, but as it is often the case when there is a missile attack, that number is usually corrected outwards with a lot of injured people to be included as well. not only is up or just city again live in the western part of ukraine was said again of the power supply. so that
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seat, it was already partially under blackouts. came on the partial blackout again today . and really the country's 1st of all, busy trying to the assess the damage from yesterday. why? again, it is also try to prepare the country for what else is there to come to. actually, it is urging citizens to not only stay in the shelters, but once they are in their homes and not in the shelters, try to be very, very cautious just how much energy they use because of the partial blackout in many parts of the country. in fact, ukrainian government said that they will put electricity exports on hold. who was the european union because simply, you do not know of just how much energy you can calculate with to keep this country running. a you are in a key of the capital. can you give us a sense of what things are like them? seeing that you standing in front of what i assume is it is a crater. exactly. is a show you this a crate that wasn't here just 4448 hours ago. really shows you the magnitude,
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the power of the blast struck here yesterday in the heart of the city center. and if you zoom out, you see, of course, over there. the playground. thankfully there were no children here yesterday. but of course, with the people around here looking at the side in this belief that really this is possible in the heart of the city. it's a mix feeling of both anger, but also a growing hatred towards russia when he is going to stop. when will prudent finally realize that he's not the civilians who should come under attack, it's not ukraine. we should come under attack. they have nothing to do with this war. she will hear a lot of people who are angry, who, who increasingly talk about the hatred to both russia, but who also say that they are not going to back down. in fact, all these attacks that happens here and keep city, but also in other parts of ukraine, only tell people, well, we will continue to defend our country. we're not going to go anywhere. but of course is also another side of the story. in fact, for the very 1st time in months,
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i have seen people packed out with mats, with the essentials going to the nearby metro station because it's simply scared, staying at home, and sleeping at home. fun if a child that reporting from care, thank you very much. funny. knowing rushes capital. moscow, there's been a mixed reaction to those strikes. 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, won't be explicit and beat me and made it longer. our patients has limits. the crimean bridges, russian infrastructure and ukrainians also have that kind of infrastructure door, which is also, i feel very thought that innocent people are dying. they don't. but if they have sufficient strike such, then it's all right over the miss regina. otherwise we should have done it so no, because it's an answer to aggression ada. no, 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. our rush analysts constant in aga told us how those missile attacks on ukrainian cities are actually being reported in russia. a good i think you had a very good selection of voices just a few seconds ago. and i think that the last person, the last man, i said the right thing, people do not understand or rather probably a lot of them pretend. they do not understand what's going on. i suppose that if you look at russian social media and at the wrought, cough, it's clear that or the state is telling the russians that russian forces only striking critical infrastructure and military sites which, which is patently not true. but it's difficult to verify from many t v viewers in russia. ah, is for social media. there is a lot of a really hatred, i would say, and look at the strikes against ukraine. so there is park russia public opinion,
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which actually not only supports the war, but supported hysterically. the majority, as far as i understand, still tries to basically keep away from any observations and from any attempt to really understand what goes on. and it always, as was frequently in russian history means that lots of people instinctively understand what's going on, but do not want to bother themselves and do not want to ask themselves hard questions. not to he unpleasant answers causing these attacks. now coincide with the appointment of a new commander of russia's invading forces with him in charge is should we expect more indiscriminate shelling, for example? yes, absolutely. general sort of akin is known to be a very apt bureaucrats who is very good at divining at and figuring out what the, what, what the boss's wants. so it's clear for him that putting no wants revenge,
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wants to be shown that there is maximum damage inflicted on ukraine. so i'm sure the orders will be the harshest possible as for the future. well, look, i think that's a none of the russian generals of the last 30 years has ever been engaged in a wall like this. it was either church now, which was essentially a gorilla complaining of guerrillas, or it was syria where the russian forces with central obliterating cities with the missile and air strikes. there was nothing serious on the ground where the general sort of akin will be able to tackle that remains to be seen, but again as full of the the retaliation as for the strikes, i'm sure they will continue less and very sorry for those who will be on the targets now the president of been a rose that it's on a look, a sanker has ordered his troops to deploy with russian forces near ukraine. how likely is that bill a ruth will now get fully involved in this war?
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i think we're still away from that and i think that lucas shameka knows his forces are not at all motivated to fight in ukraine. it's not there was definitely it's not accidentally that just yesterday. lucas angle is signed. the degree which subordinated the, the, the k j b will call the cage being bill or was the state security service solely to the president i. e to him. that means he's afraid of potential or potential followed or by him becoming closer and closer to the kremlin. it. i think that if he starts to invade ukraine together with putin, a lot of consequences will follow a lot of them very unpleasant for both putin and looking. are rush analyst constant in aga there. thank you very much, constantine. though i tell sesna
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u. s. presidential biden has spoken to president zalinski and promise to supply ukraine with advanced air systems biden as harshly condemned russia's attacks on ukrainian cities. he said they demonstrated the utter brutality of a vladimir putin illegal war. now support for ukraine is on top of the agenda. of course, as nato defense ministers prepare for a 2 day meeting in brussels and dw thresholds is then joins us. and now terry nato . secretary general start back says the alliance will stay the course and it's support for ukraine. that's easier said than done isn't it? that's trigger hard, especially as, as long as it takes is looking longer and longer. and with these most recent, brutal attacks by russia and ukrainian cities is clear that despite the huge losses of territory that the crumbling has suffered, it's definitely not planning to retreat from its occupation any time soon. and that
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means indeed that he is going to need constant huge influences of equipment from his western friends. now have any alliance members publicly admitted, they're worried that funding ukraine will drain their resources financial this is sort of a problem that everyone acknowledges and no one specifically is going to say that that they've got a real problem with it. one country that has come out and talked about how it's going to mitigate the problem. it is norway, it says that it is going to go ahead and temporarily level the reserves for its munitions while it sends more, more material to ukraine. you've also got germany just coming out yesterday and saying that one of its systems, this iris t air to air missile defense system will now go straight to ukraine. this was something that germany intended to have for itself. it's now going straight to keep . so let's take a look at, at how nato plans to help its allies deal with the potential shortages ahead.
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ah, spend more, make more, send more. nieto allies are under pressure to continue supplying ukraine with increasingly sophisticated weapons, while maintaining their own stock piles up to alliance standards for ukrainian president volota mir zalinski. it st. forward as be sure to mr. chance will increase the supply of weapons and ammunition to defend against the russian pressure. increase the manufacture of weapons and ammunition in europe to be always ready to defend our common space. but some allies are voicing concerned. they can't keep this up moneys getting tighter and weapons. manufacturing is a slow process. according to the american think tank, the center for strategic and international studies. even the leading arm supplier, the united states, may be running low on key weapons, very that nato's head of defense investment says for most countries, the cupboards are not bare yet altima t. i do believe that many others can do somewhere between a little more and
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a lot more, but that's the that, that has to come from a decision. and he also a very honest assessment of what's the state of their own stock buds grants as nato is helping allies become more comfortable with sharing their stockpiles with ukraine by working and ways to speed up production, re supply and inter operability. so countries can share stocks. such changes are essential, grand says to whether both the war in ukraine and whatever the future holds in the long run. we want to make sure that in an environment in which i intensity warfare has made a dramatic comeback in european security landscape, we are up at the right level. some allies aren't waiting for new solutions, topping the list of donors to ukraine as a percentage of their g, d, p. the baltic states and poland. they have been occupied by the soviet union. they have experience with what russian do. former estonian president thomas elvis notes
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. his country is spending more of its g d, p on aid to ukraine, than some nato allies spend on their own militaries. we bought a lot of javelins, we gave them all to you. great. and the idea is that every tank every t 70 to the depths knocked out by in the stony and javelin in ukraine is one t $72.00. we don't have to knock out with our javelins at home. ukraine's former foreign minister, pamela lincoln, also urges nieto countries not to make a distinction between helping his country and protecting themselves their real estate flank off made all all 0 in formal one is also in your green soldier, half a strategic region on how to deliver response to agree, easy boy, door of been credible for the west. clim can hopes this increased integration will
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also speed the process of ukraine becoming the formal eastern flank of nato. once the war is over. so here at nato headquarters, even before the today ministerial starts, the u. s. will head up a meeting of what's called the ukraine contact group, and that in fact, brings together more than the 30 nato allies. also other countries coming together to try to ramp up supplies for ukraine. this is something that seen as very crucial moving beyond just nato supplies, in order to, to bring really a global effort to help keep, to defeat moscow. it under social stat in brussels for thank you her though as have look at some of the other stories making headlines around the world, tourists have started arriving in japan again after the country lifted all. pandemic travel restrictions after 2 and a half years visa, free travelers back for short term business and tourism. from more than 60 nice
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japan hopes to his will give its economy a much needed boost. workers in iran's energy sector have joined protests against the regime. these images from social media peer to show workers from an oil refinery chanting anti government slogans. and walking off the job, protest continue to spread following the death of a 22 year old woman in police custody. the death toll in the massive mouth slide that swept through him in his wayland town over the weekend has risen to 36 with another 56 people. still missing it. half of the hurricane julia pummeled the area with heavy rain rescue crews are using drones and dogs in recovery of israel has reached a historic agreement with neighboring lebanon over their shares, maritime border israeli premises. ja la pete has announced that the us broke
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a deal would end a year's long territorial dispute and unlock rich gas reserves. lebanon's negotiators have green to deal lebanese. president michelle is now about to make an official decision in the coming hours. you are indeed of you, new still to come. i've worked believe the u. s. documentary maker ken burns talked to, did of you about his latest film on the us response to the whole voucher as pakistan has had some of it's worse flooding ever this year, putting a 3rd of the country underwater and displacing millions of people. scientists say cloud change has made the disaster worse. and now after the flooding comes disease, then the fever, cholera and malaria are leading to what the one is calling a 2nd wave of catastrophe. for 2 weeks now, my ridge egg,
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ronnie has barely been able to stand up the 12 year old girl from sue curran, southern pakistan has malaria. the area near her home was badly hit by flooding. the stagnant waters and mosquitoes helped infection spread, and getting treatment is almost impossible. planning yard. the shag, my family is very poor body, we can hardly afford medicine. they still manage to get me something from the pharmacy, but it hasn't made me feel better. i had the at the rena hanniman in to had her main caregiver as her grandfather, sadie or din. but he doesn't have much money either. he had hoped for medical support from the government or aid organizations. but so far, nothing has come through in joe's well, in a nobody has come to our area of garcia. no organisation, no one at all. only our neighbors try to help us with that. other than that, we haven't had support from anyone that may go to fighting. once a week sat,
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our dean borrows and motorcycle to take my retain kilometers to the doctor. the bumpy ride is strenuous, especially for myra. once they get there, she usually has to wait a few hours before she can be seen. while he the only runs the clinic and is the only doctor, he is completely overwhelmed. now the midday our biggest problem is that we have virtually no doctors in the entire region. we have no staff with no medicine that i will no rush all in the government is doing nothing that he but we have no beds. this is not a real hospital, you were muffled. everything was destroyed by the flooding to death. myra feels weak and listless. she often has a high fever. while he to alley tries to help as best he can, but his options are limited. within one little muscle, al gore, the government should provide medicine. they will give the patients prescriptions,
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but most of the time the medicine is not available anywhere while it, if it is the only a black market prices. so everyone suffers ability movement. myra urgently needs malaria medication. but her family can't afford it. she is in such bad shape . she can barely eat on mine. i'm so sick. i'm not hungry at all. thank god, if i were well, i would help my mother with the housework. i had dinner at the moment, i mostly just lie around mounting to sega. for now, my reckon only hope that some day medical help will arrive in her village. and that finally she will get well. the celebrated u. s. documentary maker can burns as completed a very ambitious film on the holocaust lock side. america's response to the not the nazi threat and uncovers some awkward truth. burns emmy award winning documentary is, are hugely popular on us public television. he calls the holocaust related film the
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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 a belief that immigrants caused these problems. you know,
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mark twain are great writer once said or is supposed 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 1900 thirty's. and then what we now call the holocaust,
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the fragility of civilized behavior is the one thing you really learn. these people who we now see in these photographs, the c b of 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 are these people word 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 he went to the w sir ramado, the top story we've been following for you. the southern ukrainian city of zapata just has been hit and further russian strikes. local officials say at least
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a 1000 missiles have struck a school, a clinic, and residential buildings. fresh stripes have also been reported in the western city of la b, and that's it from me and the news team for now i have an update for you at the top of the hour. don't go away. kickoff is next. with the latest on this legal action, and of course there's a lot more news and all my websites business and sports as well and do follow us on social media. i've got office in berlin for me and the team export ah ah, with
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who ah. a pulse with the beginning of
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a story that moves us and takes us along for the ride. it's only about the perspective culture information. this is dw and d, w made from mines in say i used to rough weather, but now things are getting really tough. for shrimp, fishermen in northern germany, they faced price fixing by the dutch competition. then the pandemic. now the rising price of diesel red gold, germany trim fishermen and prices close up in 60 minutes on d w. o.
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