Skip to main content

tv   Focus on Europe  Deutsche Welle  October 13, 2022 9:30am-10:01am CEST

9:30 am
oh, come to take, told me i wasn't, turn your systems, computers and government go crazy for your data. we explain how these technologies work, how they can go. so that's how they can also go terribly. watch. mm hm. ah, this is focus on europe. i'm labriola. welcome. the war in ukraine is escalating after moscow fired a barrage of missiles on areas far from the front line and ukraine. fear and
9:31 am
uncertainty have now returned to places of relative calm and safety. well, the latest attacks hit several civilian targets. russian president vladimir putin says the shelling is retaliation for the explosion on a key bridge, linking russia to the annexed region of crimea. even though it is still unclear who is responsible for that attack. the barrage of strikes destroyed a critical infrastructure across ukraine, water and electricity plants were hit, as well as residential homes for civilians. and the trauma of war is being compounded by worry over the coming months. winter is looming and in ukraine, temperatures often fall below 0 degrees celsius. many people now face the reality of getting through it without heat or hot water. rockets have been
9:32 am
raining down on harkey for months. and the apartment buildings in the eastern district of salty fca, have borne the brunt of it. lay on 8 lives on the 1st floor, the impacts of ripped through his apartment, destroying walls, furniture, the refrigerator. with his window panes gone, the wind blows right through the flat lay on it is trying to prepare for the winter woodward woodland motors. i'll figure something out and look around and make things pleasant and comfortable for myself. good afternoon. i might buy a sheet of metal, attach it here and make a hole in it. so i could set up a wood stove on that trim color because you can cook on that and it gives off heat, hooked her to about it. that would help lay on it be less dependent on electricity . when a russian rocket hit this power plant near harkey, his flat was also affected by the blackout. parts of the power grid and eastern
9:33 am
ukraine were out for hours. there was no electricity or running water and the subway in the city with more than a 1000000 residents stood still. so you theses, grains, you hundreds of thousands of ukrainians were sitting in the dark without power out of school. home hospitals, schools, these municipal infrastructure on russian rockets are aiming citrate or targeting that have nothing to do with our armed forces. infrastructure, seal, master does shop in presidents. so lensky is home town of cree. there each, a damn was severely damaged, several streets blooded. and the drinking water supply to the city of more than 600000 largely stopped working. russian attacks on critical infrastructure in ukraine are on the rise. the government thiers, the country, is facing its toughest winter since gaining independence in 1991. that's partly why
9:34 am
so much maintenance work is currently under way, like here on a sub station and the so low means key districts of key with the team from a local power great as preparing the capitol to whether the cold season they are very aware of potential attacks on the grid, the fuel with all these attacks keep up. there may be interruptions to the power supply for resident us and other consumers should. but we're preparing for that kind of scenario. the key thing we've put together plans and coordination with the municipal administration was good and the central energy system some tournament has . if that happened somewhere, we'll do our job with little what the good with the war has caused the countries energy consumption to plummet. much of the industrial sector has shut down, and millions of people have bled abroad. energy experts say ukraine is currently using 40 percent less than its average electricity and gas consumption. they say
9:35 am
the country is prepared for winter. not bad news, a blessing. we have enough gas reserves the shuttle and enough coal. we might even make a profit from selling power. looked at on that it. we can make it find the winter. it wasn't clear teachers in but only if rockets don't hit our infrastructure data collection, such as our combined heat and power stations. nuclear scientists, or other power atlanta fancied the political if they get heads, they'll stop working, da, da, da. when it was the widget you shot, this must be more that's part of the reason why the government is urging people to also independently prepare for winter on that. in the home of lucia is running out of time for her house near huston mill airport was hit half a year ago by a russian projectile. the only reason she and her family survived is because they'd already fled. yeah, but the cello, that 1st i cried a lot alcala, it was really hard for me because she knew bloating to my 14 year old son got up in the morning and said, mom, i don't cry, all of them the all rebuild your house,
9:36 am
kitchen and the blush as it looked to be hot, the will do what they are currently staying at their neighbors, but in just 2 weeks they will have to return to their still unfinished house, which they been rebuilding with the help of volunteers. there is still no heating, no. oh yes ma'am, we need a boiler daily to either one that runs on a solid fuel or electric little because we don't have any gas and we're not getting it back. i. e. e, one, they did, nobody so solid fuel or electric water, but they both cost money and cost of and that's really unrealistic for people who've lost that everything's a doza. nidia, in a linear lucia is thinking about taking out a loan to protect your family from the cold. the war has stripped ukrainians of security. many households are tied on money, and millions of people are heading into the winter months plagued with uncertainty . italy is on the cusp of
9:37 am
a historic change of government. the country is poised to have its 1st female prime minister once the results are confirmed. and ga, maloney will also be italy's 1st far right leader since world war 2. she is crystal clear about her vision for the country. maloney is a champion for conservative family values and rejects the l g t b q community one that monica and maria belong to a couple lives in sicily and maloney's victory has set off alarm bells for them. they fear the far right leader and her brothers of italy, party will be a threat to their family values. b, monica sub okay, comes from katana, the city in sicily. her wife maria harris, is from barcelona name at 15 years ago and described their meeting as love at 1st sight. shortly afterward, maria gave birth to her son pau with the help of a sperm donation. and 9 months later monica had her daughter mia the same when
9:38 am
ah, how you can taste it now and later. to see why. why have such a big spoon? remember, would you rather licked off my fingers? now? the election victory of the far right party coalition cast a cloud over the family, monica and maria worry about the future. so molto for my daughter. one. those are the children are well aware of what's going on and only and now when they hear the name george maloney, they get scared. i'm not, they asked us what would happen that not only reassured them, they shouldn't worry loudly to that i'm in their children or alarm because of speeches like this one by a georgia maloney, the leader of the far right brothers of italy. pardon? no. yet each of the traditional family, natalie? no, no, to the l g b t lobby at bay. the yes it is sexual identity? no, no, to gender ideology at all. yes, to the culture of life,
9:39 am
ah no to the culture of death. a strong words which carry all the way to mount etna in cataneo. maria and monica fear hard times, lie head for families like theirs, and that the l. g. b t. q. community will face an erosion of civil rights under the new administration. we uphold allocate duracell along his sympathetic with george maloney scares me because so far she hasn't shifted her position enough for leaving . so i doubt that she will change them now only because and this goes beyond analytical agenda. it's a precise idea of what society and politics should look like shown. grande seymour, i fear that minority writes lucy, a make big set baggy the belly, me not on say to something she both women work in academia. and they also worry that the aggressive rhetoric will poison the social climate c stand or so when on both off because of the danger is that these things become acceptable to that you
9:40 am
can insult women or be openly homophobic without any consequences. a man benefited any an day. during the election campaign, georgia maloney tried to present herself as a moderate politician. but she made it clear that for her a family should only be one thing. would have been rather leaky as far as the rights law. we're couples are concerned. and you know, there are already registered civil partnerships, and that is quite sufficient to whom am against adoption rights for gay and lesbian couples. not because i'm homophobic as some say, but simply because children need a mother and a father and a stable relationship, which is what our current legislation already provide. us with moderates, benita, that our goal. yeah. will get bit of it almost religion. shamia sucka is a professor at the university of rome. she studies political phenomena and has taken a close look at ga, maloney as election campaign and at her political values. quinn, look at maryland, the american pain can be summed up with one of her slogan logon as i am
9:41 am
a mother. i am a christian, and i am a woman after this aptly describes her, and her parties, political culture on the ship. and we believe this will also be her guiding principle when she steps into office at it and kill us at san diego at professor soccer says this is also because the heart right party will have less margin to take action in other areas. she said, i'll nat since they have little room to maneuver in economic and foreign policy. the new government is more likely to emphasize identity issues. and sadie minorities could be used as pawns to make a political martin. what this means for monica, maria, po and mia is not yet foreseeable. if the situation worsens, the family already has a plan that a default, ah, a profit in young cal buyers. i said the way said all if done through ation gets worse. if we're ready to move to another country for the safety of our children and our children, our top priority, her,
9:42 am
i love to pay and they'd be willing to leave our home country for their rights and well being forced to on get that us video to me monica's hope is that georgia maloney will not revert to social policies of the past which discriminated against minorities. as such a shift would significantly change the lives of her family and of many other italians. autumn may be upon us, but the traces of europe sweltering summer still linger the extreme temperatures left a trail of destruction across the continent with harvests withered rivers dried out and forests scorched. but there is a silver lining for some europeans like those in frances champagne region. and quill producers of the sparkling wine are raising a glass to an exceptional year. and wine growers, cedric new se, is looking forward to an excellent champagne vintage.
9:43 am
ah, here in france, a champagne region, wine makers have waited all year for this moment. this is when they see whether all their efforts this year has paid off philip, which is more united policy. this is the product of our year's work. also cope with the grape lar mills. these next few days will decide everything. yeah. will cause i couldn't sleep allow you. nigel said to like move say is a 4th generation wine grower. he's convinced 2022 is an exceptionally good champagne vintage. your bumper live police. there's no wrong. it's fantastic because it's fabulous. look at it. he's an oxygen without the regular like caviar, if possible makes very good champagne. it's a great he, la golden. and this, although the champagne region along with the rest of europe experienced
9:44 am
a heat wave this past summer with record temperatures and drought cool. talk out, look, these grapes ripened without a drop of rain in 3 months. it's incredible. this is your stock web. grape finds actually pull water from deep in the soil, thanks to their long roots. when i graduated, several routes are a problem for most farmers up at the roots of grapevines can grow 8 to 10 meters down. they get water, look in the soil where there are also more nutrients and mineral, you are the more meaningful ill them off the soil impacts the grapes wise. just imagine how they'll taste. you mentioned yellow, foam or else, cuz typically happy wine growers though patience is needed. i yes, go well as a why in prism it will take 3 years
9:45 am
into the champagne is ready and they can taste it to see if it really is a great champagne. there is some fuel. as of right now, this is great to then the juice turns into wine and only then to champagne. oh yeah, it takes time. goes on it do more do this here? yeah. i hear juice. i am looking for if it has a complex labor with a fresh finish and a yellow fruit outside. the reason it's very nice and excellent harvest after too bad ones. the price of champagne however, won't be falling any time soon. school school for the submit any of this year will balance out the past 2 less good year. well, let me quickly show reduction cost remain the same every year, but last year the harvest couldn't cover the causal nuku i probably could put so i'm not sure champagne prices will drop. unfortunately for consumers i knew missile
9:46 am
key. murder was what horrible cilenzo said. lake must say will produce over 100000 bottles of champagne from this year's harvest. he sells to buyers around the world. i feel so fulfilled. this is 100 percent loan. yeah, great variety, vintage 2017. a vintage that's peaked. this american wine buyers interest is a really cool to see though the beginning and it's amazing compared to last year. there there's, it's just night and day. you know that the different. so we're all really excited. we're all related. the demand is quite high. i would say it in new york and as but in the world, i think it's becoming more and more popular with marketings, the social media. last year record amount of champagne was sold worldwide.
9:47 am
said lake must say, send 70 percent of his produce abroad. the buy it for is the 2 pallets are going to the usa to, to luxembourg. we receive america is our most important market after brad said, to think most se wants to stop exporting to russia because of the war and ukraine. even though this would mean a financial set back and go sell stuff, it will actually be high. you'll need to sell 5 percent of my products to russia, so round about by 1000 bottles per year, 2000, but this year, they're not getting any until things have calmed down. so suppose what i'll do today, russia is trying to conquer a part of the world and we could find ourselves at more with them tomorrow. do mel players selling them? my champagne is out of the question with the new law, the multitude with a full cur. well, this aside, wind grow is here hope to sell 325000000 bottles of champagne this year,
9:48 am
which would mark a historic record. shaheen and albania is a growing tourist destination, located on the northern, adriatic coast, and living alongside the visitors are several 100 refugees from afghanistan, while they arrived at a resort after being evacuated from cavil by the united states. but what was supposed to be a brief stop over for jam, she'd act, barry has turned into an agonizing wait job. she'd act barry always loved basketball. back home in afghanistan, he used to coach a women's team professionally. the income comfortably sustained jam sheet and his family. this could last give all is my life and was my greatest passion. i'd reached a national level. i worked as a coach and coached a women's basketball team, basketball, hostile, but the taliban band, women,
9:49 am
sports jam. she'd managed to flee afghanistan just in time. thanks to assurances from the canadian government. but after a few weeks and cutter, he got stuck in albania as canada wouldn't take him in. he's now hoping for a u. s. visa, but check, you know, that he shows us pictures of his family who we had to leave behind his twins are just over a year old. now he hasn't seen them since they were newborns. then his wife calls the hold on me. i'm only am i am giving a television interview. in brazil, i will talk about my problems. loneliness, the family, the bureaucracy ritual. you know, if i swear all i do here is wait in, i'm audio, stop to mission. yak, sunday was ash over the past year. every one told me i had been extremely lucky
9:50 am
because i was able to leave my country and reach albania, but in your iowa selection 11, and that we are on route to canada or america or your venue. but i think i'm the unhappiest of all the unhappy people here who i never fig mccomb. but boston mass over a year has passed since us forces blue, thousands of afghans out of the country. following the taliban take over. us agencies asked albania, a poor country to take in 2500 refugees. the refugees were brought to a hotel and the resort town of shen jean. their stay was supposed to be a stop over, but 700 afghans remain here, stock among sunbathing tourists. with each day that passes, the united states promised to take them in rings holloway. ah, anita ha, dari and her sister were active and afghanistan's women's movement for years. they can't go back while the taliban is in power. but there isn't a clear way forward for them either, but that should allow that addition
9:51 am
e would get we were promised that all african refugees would be transferred from albania, to canada, in the condo, where the u. s. you go within 2 to 3 months, law beach dash that a fish that you that up to date. that hasn't happened, those done again. and it makes us worry. a gem. we eat the rosie ham dusty. we asked the u. s. embassy and albania, for an interview. but we're told to contact the us state department in washington. but even though we did several times, we didn't get a response. we had for the albanian capital to ronna, to interview prime minister eddy rama albania. after all counted on the us taking in the afghan refugees i understand them, but the time is going and we don't have the feeling that the u. s. a. this ration is processing them. we have the feeling
9:52 am
that they are here to stay. anyhow. they cannot so say for every military and they have to start to do life. how mania, however, is a poor country with high unemployment. those who can leave the afghan refugees are worried that remain stuck in albania. a few months ago, they staged their 1st protest and a ha, nita joined them and you know gushing muffled it on me. been in as you can see, albania as a poor country. but my so because we enjoy greater safety here than in afghanistan, but more that is all i me good im fucked up as, as refugees we have no opportunities for education, employment with or any other kind of development in this country, which is in india, us lenin composition is, jam sheet has almost stopped carrying. all that matters to him is reuniting with his family. validated us off on us, on
9:53 am
a 5 foot from afghanistan where there is a war going off grade on. i'm name miss wendell, who half of all people there on is on. i have no perspective, no work required you and or poor father, lines me, but i'm body. even these circumstances, life is better in albania, and i would say shot already, husky, beaudry, boom, albano formula, mcgee. even so jumps she'd still dreams of making a new life in the us together with his family. but with each passing day, his hopes slowly fav slovenia is a country known for its breathtaking landscapes. among these is the mountain resort, a vella cup plenty now is less than an hour's drive from the capital liliana. but in many ways, it's worlds away from the city. there's no running water or electricity, but there is a parliament one where cows have political influence in the herd or settlements on the veronica plan. nina, things run
9:54 am
a little differently than down in the valley. for generations, they have been hurting towers during the summer months, according to their own rules and bellow my mush. 50 years ago, my husband brought me up here for the 1st time and our children are now 50 years old. their children were here themselves now. declared vamos, m, i get up at 5 am, milk the cows cleanup and prep the mount before making the cheese. that that's life up here. the farmers are usually down in the valley, but from june to september they had up to the alpine past is when exactly that happens is decided by the herders parliament which meets in this building as well. and that's pretty unique, says robert zam leanne, who runs a small restaurant, me him and one william, we call it a parliament with as if we were a small country out of here into the loom or seen a thin robert and his wife only served produce,
9:55 am
made up in the alpine pastures. this was also decided by the herd, as parliament flashing would have usa. so deplore each cow you get one vote now, you know, we have 6 cows out, so we have 6 boat. so we boat on how to clean the pasture, where to fix the fences where to direct the water and which paths to repair things like that. i as a open novel with rights however come responsibilities. soco can i have on what is she in the summer? the herders have still claimed he worked the 8 hours of it per cow doing that, but a void. this blocked level, got the genders in this grassroots democracy. the herder with the most cows has the biggest number of votes, but also the most community duties. old customs remain, but the alpine pastor is changing. out of $64.00 huts, only 13 are still inhabited. tourists loved the seclusion. but what about the younger generation is my boy thump a tourism will be here for a long time, but probably not the herders. yeah,
9:56 am
young to stay in the valley and go to school there. well the hope is that a good community will encourage herders to return again next summer to this unique place in slovenia. well, at least they don't have to worry about energy prices. that's all from as this we get focused on europe. thanks so much for watching and bye for now. with
9:57 am
to enter the conflict zone. the war in ukraine has raised political tensions throughout europe, but relatively between cost and in brussels. officials have told both sides to cool rhetoric on one coffee vote without an agreement to normalize relations with
9:58 am
belgrade for time, for joining the you is running out my guess this week from christina, because i've been quoted to prime minister a conflict zone. in 30 minutes on d, w, climate change and a country underwater bangladesh in we take a look at the long term impact with natural disasters. how people become refugees. the companies that profit from them and how the economic then continues to destroy you. hey, it's 75 minutes on d, w o. we're all set to go beyond the citizenship. a menu. we're all live. as we
9:59 am
take on the we're full about the stories that matter to you. whatever it takes police my follow with w. fire made bob a ah ah
10:00 am
ah ah oh, this is dw news live from berlin. russia carries out more attacks on ukrainian cities for a siren sound in key as president zalinski says, drones strikes, hit critical infrastructure in the region. there are also reports of missiles strikes in the black.

22 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on