tv DW News Deutsche Welle November 7, 2022 8:00am-8:30am CET
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. ukrainians forced to live life by candle light after russian a tax on ukraine's energy networks president to landscape once they could be more to comp dw, meets the russian woman who worked for years in the security and defense ministries before suddenly decided to flee and seek asylum in france and on the eve of you with midterm elections, many young people are gearing up to vote for the 1st time. and in record numbers. ah, i've been fas orlan. welcome, wild leaders, a gathering for climate talks in egypt. the un scott 27 summit. natural disasters have taken thousands of lives this year and cost billions of dollars putting policy makers under increasing pressure. the past 7 years have been the hottest on re court. tropical storms at harkins,
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a bad coastal areas in southeast asia and the united states at an ever increasing rate. when in temperatures at estimating the arctic where melting ice is destroying ecosystems and racing sea levels world wide. the 1st cop summit was held in berlin back in 1995, 2 years later in kyoto, major industrialized countries committing to reducing greenhouse gases, but not the u. s. the 2015 paris still set target said that you assigned only to re neg last is glasgow packed, laid out financial commitments that included payments to developing countries already dealing with the effects of climate change. but the issue of how much major polluting nations should compensate those with a smaller carbon footprint? remains a contentious one. a breakthrough in the egyptian resort town of charm l shake. never before has the issue of financial compensation made it on to the official negotiating agenda at the u. s. climate talks. the steamer,
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rid of the topic is on the schedule is over. i think it's a reassuring indicator that we are going to make good progress here in shemelle shade on this important issue for the victims dinner von graham. although developing nations contribute the least to climate change, they suffer much more from its consequences and often end up stuck paying for them . it's now set to be a central issue at cop $27.00. a recent report by the world media or a logical organization puts this climate inequality front and center the fact that was not lost on un chief antonio quoterush as well, methodological organization so. so clearly change is happening with catastrophic speeds. devastating lives and lively woods on every continent. people and committed is everywhere, must be protected from the media and ever growing risks of the klamath emergency. but even the most dire warnings are no guarantee that the conference will deliver results. while war and crisis are driving a push in many places for more renewable energy, fossil fuels are still seeing
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a come back for the next 2 weeks in egypt. it's not just the climate on the agenda, it's our future. beatrice christoph ro is from d. w. 's environment disk. a beatrice, tell us about this most contentious issue of industrialized countries that have been polluting the globe for years and years and years and emerging economies that in many cases want to be compensated for having to take much quicker action right now. i mean, they're not only wanting to be compensated for taking action and moving towards an economy that is using cleaner energy, but they also want to be compensated for all the damage they've already suffered. you know, even though it, there are only very few nations that historically have polluted the most. and that have made a lot of money out of burning fossil fuels like coal and gas and the countries that
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are really feeling the effects of it that are really at the forefront of the climate crisis. are the ones that have emitted the least. and so what is on the table at these climate talks is, will they receive compensation for that? that is something that has already happened in the past in 2009 rich nations had promised about one $100000000000.00 per year until 2020. but this didn't happen less than materialized, so we'll have to see how things go after these talks. and it sounds like a voluntary system is going to come out of this, which is probably going to mean it will be very tricky. what 2 world leaders need to do to urgently tackle climate change. i mean, the thing that is really at the top is, you know, curbing are and greenhouse gases emissions. and that mostly comes from burning fossil fuels. so when we bought burn fossil fuels, we emit gases into the atmosphere that kind of create those greenhouse effect temperatures go up. and that makes extreme weather events way more likely and maybe
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more severe, which probably most people watching at home have experienced them in the past few years. whether it was a heat wave or a drought, or a flood. and so really what leaders know they have to do and what they have known they have to do for a long time is to d, carbonized their economy and move towards cleaner ways of in creating energy. yeah, well the urgency is there, but do you reckon to break through is going to come? well, that is a question that the people at these talks have been asking themselves because one of the main issues is that there's a lot of competing kind of conflicts going on. there's the war and ukraine, lots of other armed conflicts, rising cost of living. so what even world leaders have said is, how are we going to find the money to channel towards the climate when we're fighting all of these other issues. but what we have seen in the past talks is even if there is no breakthrough, there tends to be incremental progress. and at least the nations are feeling
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a little bit of pressure each time to make higher pledges and to, you know, change their, the way their economy works. some hope they're beatrice. thank you very much for coming. ukrainian president, flor to me. so lansky is warning of more attacks by russia or on energy infrastructure. keeps mer, says residents may want to consider temporarily relocating if the cities power and water supply becomes stretched any further. around 4 and a half 1000000 people without electricity, a city plunged into darkness. only a few lights on in keys after missiles took out much of the electric grid, the mayor urging residents who can leave to do so. and warning a total blackout may be on the way we're all, but we're doing everything so that this doesn't happen. but let's be honest. our enemies are doing everything to keep the city without heat, electricity, and water. and in general, they want us all to die coupler, whereas electric,
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while the capital struggles to keep the lights on fighting rages in multiple regions. this house in a town inside part of the russian controlled, done yet to region was destroyed and shelling. luckily no one was killed. i'm wish, you know, the mom was over there. he was lucky, he wasn't in the out building markup or he, for the beautiful dog got killed. meanwhile, russia claims that ukraine bombed a dam in russian controlled territory in the south, near the city of cas son. if the dam fails, catastrophic flooding would result something. russia claims ukraine is planning to do as part of its counter offensive to reclaim the area. one rare bright spot, a prisoner exchange that saw more than $100.00 men from both sides come home. these men and the don bass were fighting for the russian side, fell. now go to russia for rehabilitation. while those stuck in ukraine brace for
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a cold hard winter, the w corresponded nick connelly is in the capital and told me how di the situation is want to give you a sense of how things are here and key of been. and people in key of monday morning, basically most people you speak to will not have made any pants this day because basically for the past month, every monday morning, we saw russian rocket attacks on the energy infrastructure. hearing key of you basically put, you set your clocks to that. they were kind of dark jokes about the russian military hierarchy can organizing these strikes in time for their bosses coming in to work on monday morning, giving them something to, to report back on so far. they haven't been any attacks this morning, but it's definitely the acute expectation that there will be more we had the news in recent days from the authorities here in care of that they basically got over and kind of restored most of the kind of, most extreme damage from last week's attacks, and they could now basically go back to scheduled or electricity cut. so basically everyone here has a time table 3 for our slots a day with electricity,
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but at least more or less. you can plan your life around it. if you don't have a generator, you can organize, went to cook, went to wash your clothes. but there is definitely the sense that if there are any further attacks, there will be no more kind of december resilience the system. the spare parts have now run out. ukraine can't restored system on its own, and any further repairs will be 100 percent dependent on foreign aid on foreign as spare parts. to make sure this circ city can continue living, the mayor is telling residents to be ready to leave up. people heating his advice i think for now people are not going there. the people who are in care of all, indeed many have returned from, from abroad in recent months, having fled in the initial weeks of this war. for now they are seeing that the city has been able to cope has been able to restore our power. and that it hasn't come to kind of chaotic blackouts that it is somehow a controlled situation. but there definitely is a sense now as temperatures dropped winter, finally kind of beginning to bite that people do need contingency plans. and you
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hear people in the streets talk about generators asking each other if they can put them on their balconies. what to do about finding of diesel to run those generators, gas cookers, all kinds of kind of camping equipment, these kind of things that are not normally part of everyday life in the city of millions of people, but no sense to panic here yet. and i think people not really wanting to think about leaving, having, you know, in many cases come back fairly recently. could these attacks on infrastructure ultimately force ukraine to the negotiating table? that's obviously the kremlin calculation, all this that given the russian defeats on the battlefield and really have been coming in thick and fast in recent weeks. that's basically the only option. moscow has left is to basically make every day life unbearable for ordinary ukrainians. hundreds comes away from the front lines in cities like kevin of eve and elsewhere, and that, that would then put pressure on ukraine's leaders on present lensky to somehow come to an agreement with russia on moscow's terms. for now,
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we're not seeing that we're seeing kind of the opposite. we're seeing public opinion rally behind the government, and people just increasingly angry at these tactics. i'm also seeing that it's back fine internationally, lots of international support coming in for ukraine. countries like italy and france who'd been pretty slow to deliver weapons now forced by their own public opinions to increase their support for ukraine w's economy. thank you. hundreds of thousands of russians have left their country, fling hooton's partial mobilization, summer, leaving for other reasons. in conjunction with the germans contrast from the r b b network, d, w, spoke to a dr. mohir dmitri eva. she was loyal to the regime, having spent years working in clinics at the russian defense and interior ministries and secret service. but 2 weeks ago, she decided to flee and apply for asylum in france. we meet maria on the coat to door in the south of france, just a few years ago. this region was among the favorite places for rich russians to go on holiday and buy houses, but the war changed everything. maria dmitri eva is
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a doctor. she travel to paris fire algeria with only one goal in mind to apply for asylum. she spent years working in clinics of russian ministries, most recently the f. s. b, the domestic secret service. there was her share. so yours is also good. the, the yours, you spent like your live or your beast, years on your education, on your profession. but your government does not even think about the paypal roles they are thinking about is themselves. you know, the certain when and his entourage adjust criminals band of who and all the years and power who did nothing good for the people that shem on was no breathalyzer not reason did they need to annex territories of other states by the means of illegal referendums? and terror threats grows gera. maria says there's
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a growing sense of bewilderment and unhappiness among her friends and the russian secret services about the so called special military operation in ukraine. they're wondering about the numbers of deaths among civilians and harbor fears about the rising influence of some figures from putins in her circle. she says that even before the war, her patience and the clinic of the ministry of defense were complaining of bern eyes. but nobody dared speak as against the commanders. nope, you might say, but you know, everyone is scared because every st protest and moscow is being stopped very quick and very brutal. d, w in cooperation with or b, b contessa, has been researching refugees from russia. we visited the founder of the human rights network, gallagher dot nes flooded miro sash kin. in the north of france, his mission is to collect eye, witness reports on violence, torture,
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and corruption and russian prisons. he receiving 23 letters from the army from the police, from prison, gods from private military companies. the amount is huge. in previous times, it was a message once in 6 months. and our sources were very cautious about the anonymity or they didn't use their names. they registered email addresses on proton mail. now they're just playing a got a says cane is helping maria to she didn't want to support the war. my room, i was able to get out to turkey. it's a visa, free country for russia. i was able to leave quietly, no one would know where i was, i would get lost and live my life. but with my escape, i wanted to tell the world things a really bad. maria says her entire family has left russia in france. she's been giving interviews to the big tv stations. she says she wants the world to know that not everyone in russia supports putins politics and his bloody war on ukraine.
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did of use rush, analyst konstantin, exit is in the lithuanian capital williams. how probable are these claims made in this report? well then i think the operable, oh, it's clear that this war is not going the right. why a full poaching then for his regime and lots of people inside the regime. pretty much loyal until the very last last moments until the recent months are starting to doubt it. i actually find maria story, pretty credible. although if i were her wouldn't travel via algeria which has very good connections to, to the kremlin. but yes, i'm certain that there is discontent. mounting and actually just very recently here in lithuania, we've seen puddings got daughter and the daughter of his ah, let's say godfather in politics, the former mayor of st. petersburg on natalie's, of chalk, senior arriving here on an israeli possible,
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also running away from russia. so i think that's a quite a lot of these people that were pretty loyal until recently. ah, trying to jump ship and some of them are succeeding. how is the kremlin dealing with the growing skepticism over its invasion of ukraine? well, there is not much they can do, but i think that's a will. they basically are going to applies the old trusted method of pressure and fear. you see, been that the put in regime is based on 2 basic tools. corruption, i, you are allowed to steal until you're loyal and fear fear. when you think about becoming disloyal and, and repressions may follow. but i suppose that in such situation when the war is not going the right way, when there is calles, evidently mounting chaos at the top in the kremlin. a lots of people decide to risk to risk it than jump ship before the church ship things. that's a classic situation for many authoritarian regimes in history,
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and i think pollutants is no exception. thank you very much for your analysis. constantine. i get thank and let's look at some other stories making headlight several rescue ships with hundreds of migrants on board of waiting for permission to dock in italy. 2 ships have been allowed to joke in sicily with mainly miners and people needing medical help allowed on shore. italy's new right, when government has hot stance on migration since taking over the last month. u. s . media reporting the twitter will delay charging for its verification badges, the blue tick until after the u. s. midterm elections. it's also been reported that stuff who were fired just days ago, allegedly by mistake, have been asked to return with one day left before the u. s. mid terms of final campaign pushes underweight seats in both chambers of congress are up for grabs, as well as governorships and city merrill offices or is it in joe biden?
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has been campaigning in new york where the states democratic governor kathy hoko is facing a tight race against her republican rival. former president donald trump was out in florida, calling on crowds to support republican candidates. in today's vote. all than 8000000 young americans are getting ready to vote in the elections for the 1st time . many will be looking to elect lawmakers to bring about change. experts say they're less motivated by party and more by policy. jamie is a dedicated climate activist. she was sending campaign post cards to people around the country before she was old enough to vote. now in the mid term elections, she finally has a voice. she's one of 8000000 kinsey 1st time voters. and she's clear about what's at the top of her agenda. they say we have, i think, 8 years like now had to reduce our comm emissions by 1.5 degrees. and in order for
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this planet to be livable, um, so the policies that are enacted now will determine the fate of this planet. for centuries. she's not a dedicated democrat, but she like many other young people, feels that when it comes to climate change, she has no other choice. at the end of the day, if it's down for democrat or republican democrats are far more likely to either be persuaded or actually make the right decision for the climate. aiden is also a student in a 1st time booter. he has 2 major issues in mind. this election cycle, which makes choosing between parties difficult. i think democrats kind of have more of a initiative and rise to um, you know, that tackle the, the climate change issues than conservatives. but i think economics wise, i think conservatives have a better, a better mindset. going into that side of the climate change issue. i assume i'm
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sort of a byproduct he's involved with left middle home with bright washer. so the 1st question is, how important do you think your vote is in elections and that the student found it? news outlet, showcasing diverse political perspectives from jesse, i'm from his work there means he talks with many people, his age, which painters, a lot of people like me who kind of don't see a fit in either party. so they're kind of just stuck in the middle kind of, you know, going back and forth between left views and right views. sandra ochoa knows just how much young voters can be more focused on policy than party. she spent several months talking with 1st time voters for the non partisan youth organizing group 18 by vote. young people aren't too tied down to parties themselves. so i think of other parties were able to rise up to power and represented us better. i think young people would be very willing to vote for them because i don't think they're tied down to a party named. they're tied on to to the issues. first time voters in the u. s.
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have seen the 2 party system produce chaos and a stalemate. while real life issues they care about become increasingly urgent. so young people will have to make frustrating compromises with their boats in the selection. until the system or the parties adapt to how these new voters think about politics. authorities and townsend, he is at least 19 of the 43 people on board. an airplane died after plunged into the borders of like victoria bad weather strop shortly before the plan was due to land in the lakeside town of vocal bar. with just the top of the plane still above the woo. as of lake victoria, rescue was rushed to save though still on board. emergency workers and bystanders used ropes to try to pull the air craft from the water. while some passengers could be saved for many others, the efforts came too late. the small regional
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plain plunged into africa's largest lake as it was coming into land, but cobar airport, situated right on the lake shore, lydig 2 of them. and when the aircraft was about 100 meters mid air, it encountered problems and bad weather. it was raining and the plane plunged into the water. everything is now under control. they let the people i want. officials try to pinpoint the exact cause of the crush. the high death tone has sent chill, quaid still the country some sport now in sundays, bundis league or action they because in and only on belling fe, stuffed at opposite ends of the table on the vehicles and found themselves in a surprising relegation battle. when yawn had been on buoyant form sitting at the top of the table for 7 straight match days. things went a little differently in that latest encounter. ah,
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lay the crews and fans expected far more from their attain this season. and there, hoping things will finally click under new coach, shabby alonzo. yet during a di, 1st half, it didn't look like they were ready to kick start. any kind of revival on yon's fans were equally unimpressed. one minute into the 2nd period, however, lay the crews and found their stride, robert andrew poking home at the far post against his own club. and 10 minutes later on yawn imploded, mussa dear be making it to nil after goalkeeper lennox gills blunder. 2 minutes later debbie found himself through on gall, yet again his force of the season
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autumn lo ships, clever flick made at for neil on 68 minutes before mitchell becker sealed the 5 nil victory. i demoralizing last or noon for they can still be proud of their table position to lay the cousin. they'll hope this wind will prove the decisive turning point in their season. ah 5 or was one of the teams that had the chance to capitalize on union stumble and sundays light came against cologne. after a goal, this 1st half the deadlock was broken by william john in the 53rd minute. the south koreans finished celebrated by his teammates who only had to wait 10 more minutes for another. michel gregory, which put the result young dash to no wind means typo. moved up to 2nd in the buddhist, like a set and some significant changes at the top of the boat as league
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a table after matched a 13 williams los means that not from the top spot by, by and munich, who won on saturday and fly books when also has them now above the berlin is in the bottom half stood gut bo hm. and shaka o last and are anchoring the table with 2 rounds of games remaining before the season pauses for the cat woke up the chinese capital by jing hosted its annual marathon for the 1st time since the cove at 19 pandemic began. it was the 1st major sporting events be held in by jake since the winter olympics, because of china is strict 0 corporate policy. only city residents are allowed to take part around $30000.00 run. it's turned down for the race some even completing course, wearing face mos reminder of the top story we're following for you. the you ends annual climate summit club. 27 has begun in egypt against the backdrop of
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who nico africa. they are real specialists in soil care. but you should avoid using insecticides. an initiative in uganda is teaching farmers about sustainable agriculture. fertilizer is fine, but make sure it's organic. being environmentally friendly can be business friends with eco africa. next about d w. ah
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. how many pollution? so now in the world right now, the climate change, very hot, the story. this is my place, the way home just one week. how much wife can really get we still have time to go. i'm going on with foot 5th. hid subscribe all morning. like with her, i think everything jenny fair, some are big a muslim. so much different culture between here and there. so challenge for everything. ah, in december i think it was worth it for me to come to germany. shove my got my
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