tv DW News Deutsche Welle November 11, 2022 7:00pm-7:16pm CET
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story about survival. thanks to music. fetch the cello play out. well, i used the only one. i'm super lucky. music under the swastika starts november 19th on d. w. ah ah ah, this is d w. news coming to live for berlin. crane says it's forces are liber anyhow, song cheering crowds, welcome ukrainian forces into the city president to lansky, calls it a historic day. the kremlin though, says that it will still consider that area to be part of the russian territory.
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also on the show, joe biden calls take center stage at the un climate summit in egypt. the u. s. president warrens global warming threatens the life of the planet, but he says america will meet. it's a mission targets i $23.00 ah . hello, i'm terry martin. good to have you with us. ukraine says it's in the final stages of reclaiming territory left by retreating. russian troops in the southern region of how song president blossom is zalinski is calling it a historic day. internet video show civilians cheering and welcoming ukrainian army . moscow says it has finished withdrawing its forces from the area. the defense ministry claims had ordered the retreat to save the lives of soldiers. it was no longer able to supply the kremlin, maintains that shall san is and will remain part of russian territory within
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the scope of moving closer to the city of her son, look like that. you cranium flat is flying again in dozens of small towns around the regional capital. over m sydney, her rifka, about 50 kilometers north of her son. people gather to thank soldiers as they enter the city. but not everyone here shares their sense of euphoria. oh, isn't it still very, very scary. when you drive through the region, you see how many villages have been bombed, that her so much destruction of our school is destroyed. that is not a single window with lie. all the buildings are shattered. we all know there's wood for the 1st time since moscow launched its invasion in february, guns have fallen silent in this village, close to the front line. this man who has been living on humanitarian aid
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for months, has only just heard of the liberation of neighboring cni horoscope. renewal only with the little sigma. there's no food, all or nothing there. i was immensely people who are there right now, told me they have no food. oh nothing. what we'll do is we have to bring them food garages, little waller, boom. seen those who have survived the shelling or wondering how they will make it through the winter. i with oh, we've had no water supply since the end of february. they are bringing us drinking water to a school. we can bring water from a nearby well with our tractor, but it's not really drinkable here, the 2 sides keep volleying rockets at each other. so no hurry, yesterday i was removing leaves and right behind this building, it was terrible. the battle went on with machine guns for weeks. ukrainian forces have been advancing on her son. its loss would leave russia with few territorial
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gains since the beginning of the war. i asked he w correspondent conley and cheer of about the latest developments in the house on region. if you just open up your phone here in ukraine, look at a social media, spicy flooded with images of people out on the streets of song with ukrainian flags . people dancing the streets, bonfires, seemingly lots of enthusiasm and lots of a kind of shock, even that this has happened as quickly as it has. am just yesterday, people were talking about this taking a week up to this morning. they would talk of this taking several days now. the russians have had to leave a lot faster than anyone really had predicted. even though we now believe that about $10000.00 russian soldiers remain basically abandoned by their own commanders on the western bank in the pro river, the russians have blown up the bridges going across those merchant soldiers. now,
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often as we are to believe, throwing away the uniforms changing swelling clothes, hoping they can somehow go unnoticed and maybe get back to russian positions. and then are being called on by the ukrainian mutually ship to give themselves up to a girl, become prisoners of war. being promised, the conditions are going to g, the conventions. so seemingly things going very well for the ukrainian lead military leadership and they are the kind of image that the russian admin she command was trying to present of a kind of control planned withdrawal that really has just fallen to pieces. and this is really a fiasco for them as something that is likely to really be a big blow to morale amongst russian soldiers in ukraine. now, when russia announced is withdrawn, there was a lot of skepticism among ukrainian officials. there were concerns that it could be a trap. what are ukrainian troops facing? nick as they advanced into those areas previously occupied by russian horses
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will definitely even yesterday, there was of talk of this being a provocation. a trap attempt can view the ukrainian army and then throw some considerable force their way and there had been seeming quite credible reports that rush had left some of its best trained and best prepared upstair instead of song. so far, we're not hearing anything of the kind, it is true that it's very difficult get reliable, verified information out of course on there are no independent, jealous on the ground right now. and we just have social media to go by and what the ukrainian media tell us. the korean military rather, and an occasional contacts to people we've known on the ground for longer periods. but there is the very real danger of minds of booby traps of middle improvised traps with kind of grenades attached just kind of to trees to kind of bush's so a very, very unsafe place force of it in there. and then even more pressingly, you've got the russians on the other side of the river with heavy artillery, who can really do as much damage to herself as they want. and lots of people we've
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spoken to. there were actually even more scared of the can. next step, rather than the actual entry of the ukraine, forced into harrison. they were really scared that now. now the russians have basically nothing to lose the steps on the more that they would unleash that artillery power and get turn dosage trouble. now there were rush in airstrikes this morning. nick that left 5 people dead. are in the city of nikolai. of that, sir, not too far from chance on. how vulnerable does ukraine remain even after this? withdraw from house on i oversee pushing the russians that much further away, especially makes a difference is like a life odessa who that an hour just simply further away from and walk out short range russian systems. but obviously russia has, those cruise missiles has those drones which are able to reach basically anywhere within this country and which have been doing so, and seemingly the worst russia does on the battlefield. the worse it soldiers come
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out of confrontations with ukraine's army. the more it's basically using the tactic that is seemingly bring any kind of result right now, which is bombing civilian infrastructure, attacking the energy system, the war system in the hope that eventually that'll see civilians here pushing their own government to come to some kind of deal with russia right now, we're not seeing that happening. we're seeing of the opposite. we're seeing for a lot of anger among ukraine citizens and a can desire to keep on going. but right now doesn't really. russia has many options. nick, thank you very much for now. our corresponding economy there in cheer sketchup on small the stories making headlines around the world today. french police are ramping up checks at the border with italy in a growing spot between the 2 countries. over migration, italy's prime minister george maloney is accusing paris of being aggressive. this comes after france tooken over 200 migrants from the charity ship ocean. viking because italy refused them entry. a south korean police official who was being
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investigated over the halloween crowd crash has been found dead. at his home 156 people were killed in stampede police admitted there were sufficient insufficient safety measures in place. the official was accused of destroying intelligence reports. warning of the danger. oscar winning filmmaker paul higgins has been ordered to pay $7.00 and a half $1000000.00 to a woman who accused him of rape in a civil case. publicist haley breeze is one of 4 women who have accused pages of sexual misconduct. he denies the allegations good climate policy is good economic policy. that's the message u. s. present. joe biden brought to the cop 27 climate summit in egypt by the warn, the global warming is threatening the planet. he apologized for america's withdrawal from the previous paras climate for what he says. washington is urgently
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addressing with climate crisis. thank you. thank you. bye. now for delegates, this assurance today finally, thanks to the actions we've taken. i can stand here as president united states of america and say with confidence united states of america will meet our emissions target by 2030 we're looking forward to do our report 2 words, the climate hill that the un secretary general so passionately warned about earlier this week we're not ignoring harbingers that are already here. is true so many disasters. climate crisis sitting hardest, those countries and communities that have the fewest resources to respond and are showing me in the studio is d. w. climate reported us in iran, john,
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or to you and our listening that speech together by us presenter button to the climate conference. so you heard biden say that he would, he would, that america is on track to meet its climate reduction. it's greenhouse reduction commitments, greenhouse gas reduction commitments. do you see that actually happening? the analysis was seen so far, 5 of not on the card for an analysis. i buy it and has said with absolute confidence to quite them that the youth will meet these targets by 20. that would mean cutting a mission that the greenhouse gases heat the planet by about 50 percent from 2005 levels into fate. yes. of the provisions actually contained within, within the inflation reduction actually to the big landmark piece of legislation that was passed out this year in the u. s. according to princeton research shows that gets down to about 42 percent climate action tracker and independent for reset groups in europe. put a bit lower than that. i mean, the still more that needs to be done while it is also clear that this represents
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a huge step forward in the u. s. a. policies to cut it for inclusion job. i'd also acknowledge the need to support developing countries in adapting to climate change and helping to reduce their own emissions. ah, there's been a serious demand for climate compensation at this climate conference in egypt. do you see the u. s. taking a lead on that? the u. s has avoided making commitments of some of its european allies. allies have started making of the last few days. so one of the key demand this for kind of the rich countries who done the most to heat the planet by burning fossil fuels and for them to pay for the damages. so as he said, the compensation, but thing that were already gone wrong, so we're not talking, sorry, we're not talking here about building clean energy system. that's one thing. we're not talking about adapting to extreme weather events. another thing, instead the saying if an extreme weather event like a flood or hurricane have been made strong by climate change kind of takes away my
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house, he's going to pay for that loss and damage exactly. and leave loss of the lawson damage argument have been kind of one of the big tension points that this climate summit and a few countries. we've seen countries like denmark, a belgian put forward amounts of money still small amounts of money. not nearly on the scale that would be needed to actually probably come it's a poor country, but we've seen some start to put forward money and there is some momentum growing here. this is the 1st year where it's even been on the agenda, vitamin a speech avoided read even mentioning the one time he said the word lawson damage, we're in relation to a program called the global shield that the u. s. supporting and that's a gemini lead initiative to kind of act as an insurance pot to help poor countries when so before extreme, whether been strike that money to be invested to use of insurance. there's also been a, a big focus in, in biden speech that we heard about the transition to clean energy. do you see the
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us doing enough on that? it's not quite daring enough, but it has undergone a massive kind of shift in direction. so this inflation reduction act that was passed early this year will let the country massively build out clean energy source as a wind turbine solar panels investing kind of the more of the technology that kind of haven't come on to the market scales. yes. and there are some things are being pushed forward and have the benefit of bringing costs down for everyone. for the more of the, if you build the cheaper the more efficient companies get, making them, implementing them. and that can be spread across the world. one of the problems that he did addressing is speech just audio, though with that it's still too expensive, the poor countries to be doing this. and so he said, if countries can finance coal in developing countries, then we can find out clean energy to an overcoming bat. hurdle will be kind of crucial for countries where they can't even afford the interest on the loan
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repayment to build a big wind turbine oh solar farm. and instead of choosing to take subsidized fossil fuel instead of you. thank you very much for your insights. our, our environment desk correspond, as you can imagine, you're watching d w news. just reminder of our top story. crowds of civilians have welcomed ukrainian forces, liberating the city of hassan. moscow has withdrawn its troops from the illegally annex area, but trembling continues to claim it is russian territory. i'm terry marching. thanks for watching. oh, we're natural spectacle. the world. the return of the spiky yellow with the survival of the entire ecosystem. one of them.
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