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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  November 14, 2022 1:00pm-1:31pm CET

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ah, ah ah, this is dw, use life from berlin as g 20 leaders gather in bali for their annual summit. the focus is on 2 nations in particular. the united states and china, far apart on issues like taiwan and ukraine. now president stood by nancy jim pink sit down in bali for their 1st face to face talks. in spite took office 2 years ago . ukrainian president, florida to landscape visits the liberated city of hassan, to congratulate the troops and 8 months of brush and occupation. the kremlin reacts
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by claiming the city is still part of russia. turkish police making arrest thing to sundays, deadly bombing. at least 6 people were killed on a busy pedestrian street in the heart of his temple. the president describes the attack as having a smell of terror about it. ah, i've been for sewland welcome. well, leaders arriving in indonesia. a group of 20 summit begins a bali on tuesday, and all eyes are on the high stakes meeting between the american and chinese presidents, joe biden. and she, jim ping a holding their 1st in person, talks in spite and took off as the 2 nations are competing for global influence. amid increasing economic insecurity tensions, the talking points of prickly especially china's military provocations against self rule ty, one and its treatment of ethnic minorities. ahead of the meeting bite and said he
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wanted to keep communication channels open. as the leaders of our 2 nations, we share responsibility my view to show the china and the united states can manage our differences, prevent competition from becoming anything, every mere conflict. and to find ways to work together on urgent global issues. a require our mutual cooperation. d w. 's alexandra phenomena is in bali for the summit. i asked her what the 2 liters have been discussing at their meeting. here. we know that this a meeting can go on 4 hours, 2 hours, for instance, up to 4 hours. we don't know exactly how long it's gonna be. what we know is also that the both the both leaders are not planning to publish a joint statement. after the meeting, however, what i thought was quite striking was to see that they both are sort of struck her the same or very similar tone in their opening for mark. so we just heard from the
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you as president saying that he would like to put a communication channels to remain open that there are areas we're both countries can work together and said their chinese president, she doing being are also are struck the same tone saying that that is on the oh, good for the people in the you as and in china for both sir leaders to try to to find some common ground. and it's also a good for the world because word is paying attention as he put it. but of course, those quite positive statements or doesn't, they don't mean that they will agree on all those controversial issues that you have. just to mention taiwan, of course, china's coercive fur trade practices, china's stands and support for o rushes, position china, the rejection of for condemning rushes aggression against you crate. all those
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topics are, are here on the agenda. what else there would you say is expected from china? at this summit the chinese president is going to meet with the french president emmanuel mccomb, for instance. he is also said to have a number for over of abra bilateral meetings. but the question is, of course, where the china can play a more positive role. here during this g 20 meeting, i spoke with her, some experts, they'd say that that could be the case. for instance, when we speak about food security. however, many here fear at that. so china and russia could try to team up here to work together in order to prevent that g 20 from agreeing on anything that they don't like accidentally phenomena for us at the g. 20 meeting and bali. thank you. ukrainian president louisa lensky, his research, the you, the liberated city of hassan,
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it congratulated ukrainian troops retook the city. last week. the kremlin reacted to the news by claiming his on his still part of russia. lensky says investigators have uncovered evidence of russian or crimes in the region. oh god, me. oh, do all the country timber divided territories and goes this. is it beat it, but as long as we difficult we, because this is war, do the best heroes walk on. and so, but for us worry understandable, we don't believe russian. yes. did it rekey with all the well, that's why we have to leave. we're. we're ready for all of these for our conference . russian forces destroyed much of the cities infrastructure before pulling out.
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but for residents, the important thing is they have freedom for days on from how songs liberation, residents of all ages, still haven't stopped celebrating popularly thought off to 8 months of russian occupation. the overjoyed to see the ukrainian flag and ukrainian soldiers finally back shop. nasa, we have no electricity, no water, no internet, no communications, no heating. but there are no russians either, and that's why we're happy with the rest will be restored, everything will be fine. we are happy, the ukraine is back, which is the most important thing in the whole initial burden. noise, with much of the city's infrastructure destroyed, volunteers have already begun distributing much needed aid to residents facing shortages of food medicine and water. but presidents lensky has warned the russian occupation left far worse than just deprivation. in its wake.
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sleepless investigators have already documented more than 400 russian war crimes. bodies of both civilians and military are being found at the southern region. the russian army left the same savagery behind as in other regions of our country that it managed to invade good is a, has 8 the while russian forces have pulled back over the now destroyed antonio ski bridge, which linked half on city to the russian controlled eastern bank of the nepa river . the city and its surrounding region remained well in range of moscow's artillery . but despite the danger and the deprivation in half, so on the celebrations go on over here. frankly, which is a military analyst at the university of portsmouth in oxford. i asked him if the city's residence still have to worry about being within range of russian artillery
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. well then, good morning. yes indeed. russian artillery has not retreated to a point where i can't help the city. i think presentation that would not look good, but who knows what the reasoning behind russian restraints at the moment is, is also the other factor, of course that they will need to dig in. so the next steps will probably not take place around curse on, but preparations are certainly being made for the, for the medium term for operations around there. what about these claims of hundreds of war crimes by russian troops? it's the same pattern, isn't it, that we're seeing it time and again for her. i heave summa and, and now her son absolutely. it does tend to indicate that the examples you have given, which i mean by the very fact that you could give so many really off the top of
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your head is that this is standard operating procedure on that there is a course of behavior that russian troops indulge in that goes a little bit about goes considerably beyond the normal, the normal discipline, right? is that sometimes they'll discipline trips. take part in this look. systematic will see who the victims are, but the victims in those places that you mentioned before, did tend to have some element of being selected, which of course would indicate a systematic behavior. and that in turn indicates that a chain of command was involved, not only allowing things to happen, but authorizing them. we'll see when the details come out. but certainly a systematic, frank, how hard is it going to be to investigate what happened in has on resources. i think the issue here, ukraine is stretched across the spectrum of its capabilities, the municipality of the blah, blah blah. capital of,
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of hassan will have limited capability. limited capacity. forensic scientists are already in full stretch. the police team will be at full stretch. the military, of course, has other things to be doing. so investigations will be going on, but it will be very tough to get them done without i think a considerable help from overseas, which one hopes will be forthcoming in this under the context. this also harolds, another huge withdrawal for the russians. what, what does this mean to moscow's campaign? what, what could it, it's next? move b. okay. first thing has to be conceded that the russians withdrew in reasonably by their standards, which isn't good by, you kind of standards, but reason they go to water, they didn't take vast casualties here. so they've reordered that strategy here to a defensive one. that dick in across the front, what we can expect over the next few weeks is a slowing down. notice the station of operations on both sides. the kind of
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surprised us before, and i suspect the next attack will be directed once again and not, not at least towards that the aim or objective of crimea, or that takes place around because some parisha, one doesn't know. i have my suspicions that conversation another time fighting of course, is still going back in the east. but to answer your question directly, the russians are now on the defensive. digging in, and they're going to be waiting for the credit. next move, it could take place soon, but i think it's more likely they'll be something of an operational pause. now for a few weeks, shall we'll be talking about this again so frankly with ok. so thank you very much for your analysis. thank you, but you know, some of the other stories making headlines the russian foreign ministry has released a video of foreign minister survey lever off in his hotel to refute media claims he was hospitalized. and by the governor of bonnie says lever was taken in for a checkup after his arrival from for the g 20 summit and has returned in good
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health. german chancello left sholtes as agreed to strengthen business and security cooperation with singapore on a visit to the city state. the visit is part of a trip to southeast asia. wes sholtes is seeking to deepen economic ties to reduce germany's dependence on china. will then join other world leaders at the g. 20 summit in bali, france and britain have signed a revised deal to try to stop people crossing the english channel in small boats. you agreement means the u. k. will pay france about $72000000.00 euros to cover the cost of security forces patrolling the french coast record, $40000.00 people across the channel this year. police and turkey, se a syrian woman trained by kurdish militants carried out sundays bombing in istanbul . she's one of 46 people detained in relation to the attack. the band code of stan work is by a p. k. k. has denied any role in the attack. at least 6 people were killed and
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several dozen injured when the explosion ripped through a crowded pedestrian street. it talks him square. footage on social media shows the moment an explosion transformed an afternoon, honest and bold, bustling shopping, mile into a nightmare. panic and confusion descended on tourists and shoppers out for a stroll on his declaw avenue handle. it was rushed to the scene to treat the wounded. and police cordoned off the street warning onlookers to stay clear in case of a 2nd explosion. so we would have it far away as was us, but we saw a few people lying on the ground. we heard a huge blast, and afterwards there was dark, smoke rising up lots and people began running away. i want people not to panic since they were children and families present, but it failed to control further. precedent rich uptight bear to one praise the
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swift emergency response, and promised to find those responsible to, to keep the effort to make turkey and his people surrender to terror will not succeed obama, neither now in old or in the future. good. just as they could not in the past. net, lucia music turkey's vice president later confirmed that investigators are treating the explosion as an act of terrorism. whoever's behind these incidents, no matter who they are, whether they stay in the country or if they go to the other end of the world, they will be caught, just as we have caught other terrorists, and they will be brought to turkey. they will be brought to justice and they will be held to account at all costs. didn't. it's not the 1st time he's to qual avenue has seen bloodshed in recent years. a suicide bombing in 2016 killed 4 people and wounded dozens more. the turkish government said the
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perpetrator then had links to the so called islamic state. turkey's broadcasting authority says it restricted news coverage of the explosion in order to avoid sewing panic. access to social media networks is also reportedly limited across the country. asked our assemble correspondent, johan, what we know about the arrest will turkish police said in a statement that the suspect who is believed to have planted the bomb here on a stickler avenue in the very center of the city is as syrian woman who was trained to fight the kindest on workers party or p k k, and it syrian extension the p k. k is listed as a terrorist organization by on cra and it's western allies, including the u. s. and the european union. this woman was arrested here in
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istanbul, in the early morning hours. she entered turkey the statement. the police statement further says from a friend in north and syria, and more than 40 other people were also detained in connection with the attack. i should add, though, that no group has so far officially claimed responsibility for this attack. so what we know so far is coming from turkish officials. one of them is the turkish interior minister, who was the at the scene just a little earlier, he was here. and he interestingly lashed out and washington, he accused the united states of supporting the terrorist organizations. in syria, the turkey is now blaming for this attack, and that is why he said turkey rejects all the condolences coming in now from the u . s. embassy. okay, we're talking about the most serious attack in some 5 years. just talk us through more of the reaction while yesterday the
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immediate reactions off to the attack were of course, fear and panic. these emotions, that's my impression, have changed into very deep sadness and anger. even people are coming here to the scene of the blast to pay their respects. they are laying down red coordinations in memory, all the victims of those who died and those who were injured as city workers have also put up a turkish flag. as you can see, a long istic life avenue of the people i spoke to says they are very, very sad. they see this as an attack on the entire nation. and they also told me that they hope those who are responsible for this attack will be brought to justice . but really sadness is the overarching emotion. i've seen many people cry because this explosion, it brings back a very painful memories from millions of people here. and it's them who would also
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elsewhere in turkey, of a series of bombings and explosions in the years 2015 to 2017, which killed in the entire country. several hundreds of people, those attack, some of them were blamed on the so called islamic said others were blamed on kurdish militants. and then of course, there's the question, how did it come to this? how could this happen? because it's declared avenue is actually one of the most secure retire places in the entire cities with lots of security cameras, with lots of armed police around and various folks. so that's also question people are asking, how did it come to this? how was someone able to commit such an attack attack in broad daylight? julia han in is sample a lot of unanswered questions there. thank you very much for your reporting. a lazy cup 27 climate summit and as its final week developed countries that grew rich by burning fossil fuels are still at loggerheads with developing nations reeling from
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the impacts of global warming. one of the key issues is climate finance. the v 20 group of vulnerable countries once more aid to battle. some of the worst disasters from drought in the horn of africa to floods across the south asia are the responsibility for causing climate change largely rests on industrialized economies . poor regions the bearing the brunt in the philippines. rising seas threatened the capital. if you kilometers from manila on the island of salam bow, many residents have had to leave the sound of waves work the middle family up early flood waters into the home on the philippine island of salam bow more and more often in these days the children's mother jeremy has decided that all 4 should go to school, including 6 year old joselle. the path a walk has been raised several times over the years, but sea levels keep on rising. beneath the water,
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there are dangerous concealed dips and hollows. just a few meters from the school. it gets too deep for just so some children even come by boat. the floor of a classroom is still on dry ground, but no one knows how long it will stay that way. 34 year old jeremy runs a small store from the front part of her house. this used to be the top floor. they had to abandon the ground floor years ago. along with their dreams full. everyone would like to move away, but how will we mean to make a living? people here at fishes. if we move to the mainland, things will be difficult. we don't know anything else and a blaze full big. 1500 people still live on solemn bow. others
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have deserted their homes. you could call their former inhabitants climate refugees . in the bay of manila, sea levels are rising twice as fast as the global average by 7 millimeters a year. at the same time, ground levels are thinking due to a construction boom and groundwater extraction, large scale land reclamation projects are also making flooding worse than there's the impact of climate change. according to environmental expert carlos de la cruz, the philippines have been in denial for too long. the solutions to our problems that have happened 20 years ago, i should have started 20 years ago because dealing with climate would require longer planning horizons. and right now we don't have that that, you know, we don't have the luxury of time. so now we're in the philippines. everything feels like an emergency. everything feels like a crisis because they are,
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everything's against them. in the past, people often chose to settle by the coast, attracted by the riches of the sea. now many are running the other way, like a race against time. as we heard there dw climate report, i did iran, john is here to talk more about that. how, how much time do we have? because so many people say we have no more time at all time has already run out. and this sort of flooding and these sorts of catastrophes are just going to get worse and worse. there's never a point where we'll have completely run out of time. there's no point at which not acting too cartoonish of stop binding fossil fuels. there's no point in which that will make sense and won't stop eating. but there are people around the world already who have lost lost their lives because of extreme weather events made worse by climate. now with most of the kind of damages we're doing to the planet things we do now today like restore permitting, today we stop eating the planet. that's pretty much settled. science as far as we
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can tell so far, but there are still impacts and damages that will continue on with the sea level rise of the big one of the more we keep the plan at the oceans. keep on the open kind of come out and building the heat and getting bigger and growing and ice caps melt and so on. and so by the end of the century, for most of the worlds coast, the sort of extreme sea level events i, coastal floods that you've had once of entry, will be happening every single year. in many regions will, they'll get to that stage by 2050. and so the image that we've just seen, high sea levels washing away homes, livelihoods, these are becoming increasingly common, which made huge costs, of course, not just the cost of lives, but also the economic costs to so many countries. now the poor ones, one aid to battle this for the richer countries. but at the same time, the rich countries do want to see these poor nations when themselves, all fossil fuels exactly for the 3 basic arguments that are happening about money,
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the 1st of money to kind of transition away from dirty fuels to clean energy and rich countries promised poor ones, a $100000000000.00 a year by 2020 to do so. they broke that promise. they did not stump up that much money of 83000000000. i think by 2020 still haven't quite got that. they're arguing about that now at this climate conference in egypt, but there's all sorts of other money that's also kind of part of the question. so the money to compensate countries for the damage is done, the kind of homes up and washed away, well, who pay for that at the minute if for countries paying for themselves and individual people doing so, some countries are willing to put forth some small amounts of money for ones who have had announcement from countries like denmark in belgium over the last week of putting money forward to help address these problems, they'll pay for the damages. but the big admit of the us is not willing to engage in this conversation because it says that i mean it. some of it senior diplomats have cited a couple of times in other setting,
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but they don't want to be held liable for the trillions of dollars that they would be responsible for. if they were to concede. but can you go as far as saying that this cup 27 conference is a huge green washing affair is going to to back for example, is that a lot of green washing of happening at this conference at the have all the other conferences that happened on this, that doesn't mean it's not useful. so pressure on government on business leaders as well to come up with stronger pledges and to say they'll cut to mission faster. the intergovernmental panel on climate change in their big review of the climate. i've let you driving. they even found early this year that a lot of these play just hit net 0 missions with sucking out as much as we're putting into the atmosphere. they found a lot of the, the vague back top by proper commitment. and so the question then becomes, if governments are under pressure to say they're going to be more climate change, are they going to be held accountable by trading partner that they can be held accountable by journalists. they can be held accountable by civil society in the countries under n. as in jan,
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thank you very much. so very good. valid points there too, but it's like a football pi bulk have taken 2nd place from audio and belinda after a for one victory over their fellow time challenges. gentle grateful was 5 books. hero scoring a hattrick in a match, featuring lots of penalties. been schanzer griffith, italy didn't make it to the world cup a 4th minute healthy for dis handle. gave him an early chance to show what guitar would be missing. he didn't disappoint no mistake from the spot. and there was even more to laugh about the italian stages. 2 minutes later refer leading fryeburg break away. he got the boat back to make it to nail the house and sit down a firm marker in this battle for 2nd place in the table. union could have pulled one back moment later, but mister spoke he could thereon before imploding by giving away yes, another penalty, tioga light, seeing red, but loony on that man, grief i went in
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a different direction. the outcome was said don't number 3 for fryeburg o number 3 for him. and lots of penalties. sandra, catch up next eco, india takes of closer look at a construction industry and a resource strapped. well. i main facility in excel. ah ah ah
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ah ah ah ah, ah, who e co india 8 garbage photo op in delhi scouts comes for legally dispos demolition ways. it contains valuable raw materials, but much of it gets dumped in the natural environment with becoming a gigantic environmental problem. volts and waste scouts are intended to motivate people to recycle ego, india. on d w. oh,
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we're all good to go beyond the obvious. where as we take on the world 8 our i do all this. yeah. we're all about the stories that matter to you. whatever it takes, 5 police, my follow being paid. you don't. here we are, your is actually on fire made for mines. sometimes a seed is all you need to allow the big ideas to grow. we're bringing environmental conservation to life with learning pass like global ideas. we will show you
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how climate change and environmental conservation is taking shape around the world and how we can all make a difference. knowledge grows through sharing. download it now for free. ah, ah, ah. was centuries, new buildings have been a symbol of progress and economic prosperity. but construction today is a major source of waste and environmental degradation in a vsl strap. what should be really start every new project from scratch? join us as we explore the question on eco, in the i to the hello welcome. i'm son of.

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