Skip to main content

tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  November 17, 2022 9:00pm-9:31pm CET

9:00 pm
hello j as well is the only one i the super lucky and listen to music the swastika starts november 19th on d w. ah ah, this is dw news live from berlin, russia launching a new wave of missile attacks on cities across you, craved with winter closing in russian forces are again targeting the countries power grid, knocking out power and heat for thousands of people. keep says that several people have been killed. also coming up tonight, a court in the netherlands has convicted 3 russia back shepherdess over the
9:01 pm
shooting down of a malaysia airlines playing back in 2014, all 298 people on board. died with the plane went down over eastern new cray. and the clock is ticking at the camp at $27.00 climate summit. the un secretary general is warning delegates, stop the finger pointing or face mutually assured destruction. and for your viewing pleasure. the creators of dark set sail with a new thriller. mystery series, 18. 99. fall as a group of passengers called up in a nightmarish journey on the open sea. ah, i bring gov to our viewers watching on p b. s in the united states into all of you around the world. welcome on this
9:02 pm
thursday, russia has launched a new wave of missile attacks across ukraine, killing at least 4 people and injuring many more. the strikes were directed mainly against the countries power and heating facilities. and these drives come as much of the nation. so it's 1st significant snowfall. ukrainian president vladimir zalinski says that moscow is deliberately targeting civilian sites. surveying the damage from another deadly attack on ukrainian homes. emergency teams came the wreckage and pick up the paces. this time it's body's being recovered from the rabble. ne, beside the blast hit as many would have been sleeping as well, or i heard a strike around 3 am, which i heard 3 explosion that it was. i realized it was somewhere near by a book and nothing else. then in the morning, i found out that it had happened in this area love for this. and so what are you and 3 families used to live in these homes,
9:03 pm
but suffer asia has been pummeled by russian attacks and recent month and locals don't know who was home during the latest blast. it's the 2nd time the city was hit with how we surviving. there's nothing else left to do. here is the way we're surviving. living our lives with the devastation. here is the result of another barrage of russian mussels, battering ukraine, explosions, injuring people, and denise pro ha, keith and odessa general, what is he's got the nervous tissue, another russian terrorist attack has just occurred this after this morning. dozens of missiles civilian sites of the main target line. russia is waging war on electricity and heat for people by blowing up power plants and other energy facilities in atlanta called russia, confirming that its defenseless hit targets. and denise pro, ends up a regional regions that ukrainian civilians continue to fall victim to the attacks which show no sign of easing as the warn me as its 10th month. would it be as de
9:04 pm
connolly as in southern ukraine. he told us more about these renewed attacks. we've even heard from the criminal spokesman george best cough basically. yeah. black and white, putting it out there that. yeah, russia is going to continue attacking ukraine's energy infrastructure. he says that to make ukraine come to the negotiating table. basically, making it clear is that if you crane doesn't come to cut some kind of deal to give russia the kind of breather that it wants, given how about it's doing on the battlefield at these attacks. will continue now which bisco of says, this is about attacking ukraine, the ability to fight war. but i think, you know, lots of experts of analysts are saying that at a time where russia so far failed to destroy any significant amount of western provided weapons. so far, we have no confirmation of even a single high mas unit being destroyed. it's also much easier to attack power stations, transformers and other bits in structure that are very difficult to defend and all going away and initiative we,
9:05 pm
we have to remember what time of the year it is. winter is quickly approaching, the temperatures are going down and it's this coming as russia is targeting power grids, heating facilities. i'm wondering how is the morale of just everyday ukrainians, knowing that they may not be able to turn the heat on in their hopes. you might be able to see that where i am now. it's pacey, ship blowing, a gale. this is really, you can really feel the weather has kind of gone up again in terms of kind of wintery temperatures and kind of think being difficult to be outside, to not have heating to not have electricity up until the last few days. it was a can remarkably warm autumn, lot of sun and comparatively high temperature. so definitely this is going to bite more in the days and weeks to come. and we're seeing that to the energy networks here that we're doing so well. we're extraordinarily resilient up to now we've had hundreds and hundreds of russian missiles hit ukrainian targets in recent weeks.
9:06 pm
but up till now it's always been a matter of hours most a day or 2 before things more, less go back to normal. that is definitely no longer the case. lots place now deal with a day or 2 of no electricity or electricity coming on, maybe for an hour or 2 at a time. but basically power cuts becoming the norm. the exception of being near the norm rather exemption. i think now people are wholly up remarkably well and are quite defined. this is something that is basically involving the whole country. there is no place in ukraine right now. that is not affected by this. that can forget about the war. i think it was important to him, but i think these images of ukrainian civilians in kind of dark cold apartment blocks trying survive. there's also really rallying interest in this war and keeping this on the front pages in countries far away from this conflict. and we're, we're seeing greater willingness by western countries to send weapons ukraine. so this may end up being a case of the russians shooting themselves in the foot by actually generating a lot more simply a lot more interest for ukraine. and it's cause i know that you just spent a couple of days in the liberated city of her son, which is also in the, in the south. what were people they are telling you with his extraordinary
9:07 pm
optimism and confidence that had sun is not in ukrainian hands, it will stay that way. even though the russian army is just over the river, a few comments away. we were near the main bridge across the other bank that was blown up by russian forces. they left verizon and there was definitely a lot of alteri for coming in. we saw some kind of shrapnel ammunitions, some cosette musicians exploding not very far away from us. it's definitely a not a safe place for civilians to be before that you counseling meet people who've just come back or people do planning to come back, who've traveled back from europe in countries where they are living in safety. desperate to get back as soon as they can. so there is extraordinary optimism day and a kind of feeling of the under wind behind them. ma'am. as to the reality, while they're still living without power, without water, there's no real kind of plan as to when that's going to come back. and there's definitely said the russians might want to take more revenge for these kind of accumulations. they be having the battlefield and thought, you know, attacking, had shown in a way that would cc it, you know,
9:08 pm
levels in the way that we've seen him. marable though and elsewhere. it's very difficult situation, but pretty extraordinary morale among the civilians that have stayed there for 8 months. those that are now trying to get back g, w nicolai nick, excellent, reporting. we'll let you go inside. now we can tell the winds, getting up winter is coming. thank you. it is crunch time at the cop $27.00 climate conference in egypt with the beating set to end on friday. negotiators a warning that a deal to help save the planet is looking more and more elusive. rich and poor nations are clashing over how to tackle the challenges and the costs of this climate crisis. it is evidently clear that at this late stage of a cop 27 process, there are still a number of issues where progress remains lacking. i am frustrated that political commitment has not yet been translated into political action. we are out of time
9:09 pm
and we're out of money. we'll have patience. at some point we will have to leave the all the technical discussions behind us and start stop looking for political common ground. and i hope this the situation will occur very quickly because we have so little time left. and one of the key sticking points, financial compensation for nations hit hardest by the extreme, whether connected to global warming. deep divisions remain over how rich countries can help poor nations coping with a warming planet. un chief antonia will cherish, is warning the climate clock is ticking. these is no tie for finger pointing. the blame game is the recipe for mutually assume destruction. i may have to appeal to walk part of his who rise to these moments and to the greatest challenge that humanity is facing. alum joy, now by mr. one year,
9:10 pm
across the permanent representative of pakistan to the united nations in new york. it's good to have you on the program called 27 will in tomorrow. will it be ending as a success or as it is appointment? well, at the present moment, it looks more like this appointment. but as you know, the breakthroughs usually happen at the last minute and the us to hopeful that on some of the principal issues, especially on the lawson damage facility, as well as on climate finance. we will see breakthroughs, but so it's not looking good. what did you say to colleagues of yours at the you when? when you talk about the impact of climate change and you point to your country and the fact that a significant part of it was put under water this year because of flooding that was
9:11 pm
caused by climate change. well i, we have outline the impact of the disaster that facebook is done. it was directly induced by climate change. first of all, extreme heat in the summer, which melted the glass is filled up all the rivers and can as and then of 40 days and 40 nights of raines which will obviously overflowed and covered one 3rd of the country under water. so that could not be a more stark illustration of the magnitude and the impact of climate change. and then what we're paced in pakistan this year. and i think this is a, we would wake up call to the international community that the must do something to 1st of all, mitigate,
9:12 pm
adapt to the climate change that has happened. and compensate countries like mine, which have had to face such a huge disaster. while we not contribute more than one percent of global emissions, yet we have suffered the worst. and is our because mr. ok if i could, i know that your country's climate change minister has been pushing for wealthy nations to help to help finance the cost of dealing with being hit by global warming for our viewers. tell us how exactly, let's assume the money were to be appropriated. how exactly would that money be spent to protect the land and the people of pakistan? well, in several ways. firstly, i think it is important for countries like cards to take and act taishan measures
9:13 pm
to prevent that damage happening as it has happened this year, which means building a higher was on the can as channeling water into outlets rather than letting it overflowed onto the p. is a building, hydro dams, a to store water and regulate the floor or to take mitigation measures such as re father station. and of course, to use the money to rebuild the damage which has been done in pakistan and several other countries which have suffered from climate disasters. yeah, the, the suffering continues. that is for sure, mr. when you are from permanent representative of pakistan to the united nations in new york with drug and we appreciate your time and your insights tonight. thank you . thank you so much for time is running out for those countries that are on the
9:14 pm
front lines of the climate. crisis. countries such as madagascar where low rainfall has led to severe drought w's. audrey increase visited one part of the country in the south, where the situation is particularly bad. nearly 1500000 people are already depended on. a mini are living in famine like conditions. this is man, i'm volvo river or what's left of it for 2 years. residents of cham behalf to dig in the river bed, their main source of water that we are truly suffering my salad . and now it's really dry, dry, dry no, no rainfall, actual season. the rainy season should have already started. but once again, people are still waiting, lifted. i and her family left their village and came to town because of the drought back home. everything had run dry, but here things were not much better. yes, it's
9:15 pm
a tiny house, but this is what we can afford to rent. our house is in the village far from here. but we come here because we need access to water. we brought all the kids here and now they work as water carriers. done, one of them that ran fetching water and selling it is their only option of earning money for food every morning. this is the reality for tens of thousands in the region who live in villages without access to water. they have to transport their water containers to water sources, then fill them up and bring them back to their villages. of course, at a price. and it's often children who are doing this work. skipping school southern madagascar has always been poorer and dryer than the rest of the islands. the reason drought combined with decades of neglect by the central government, has aggravated the situation. we meet the regional governor, he says their plans to build a road and
9:16 pm
a massive water pipe to bring in water from areas better off. but he can say, when you can expect that those problems to be a reserve within ah, one year or 2 years for the last a decades, nothing has been done. and this is the 1st government. this is the 1st regime which is ah, taking care of their hold of a problem. he says residents are also to blame because for generations they have been cutting down the forests in the area. beckett my number over river leave it. i says she has no energy to think about who oh, what is responsible for the crisis? the handling it was then had sometimes the children don't get any money until the end of the day. so late at night. sometimes we don't eat the whole day. we just stay hungry. then i just set the cup tis fates. now we don't have anything to cook, so i need to go and look for kat history. so we have a meal in the notes laundry in. so once again,
9:17 pm
see ventures out in the heat without shoes looking for something to eat. trying to make ends meet, finding food and waters, all the foot i can think of every day. so i mel for some of the other stories that are making headlines around the world. at least 2 people were killed after a multi story building under construction collapsed on the outskirts of nairobi. 3 others were rescued from a nearby family home. this is the 2nd 2nd such incident in less than a week in the kenyan capital, where developers often ignore government building rest regulation. he was house of representatives. speaker nancy pelosi says that she will step down from her role in january when the republicans take control of the chamber. pelosi is 82 years old. she 1st became speaker in 2000 southern and she has presided over both impeachment of former president donald trump. the democrats,
9:18 pm
narrowly lost control of the house to the republicans in mid term elections. earlier this month, north korea fired a ballistic missile towards its eastern waters on thursday as it warned of fiercer military responses to the united states and american allies. the launch is the latest in a record number of such tests. this year. me and mars military regime is releasing about 6000 prisoners demarcus national holiday next week. following the announcement relatives gathered outside of a prison in yan, gone. among those being fried, a former british ambassador, a japanese journalist, and an economist from australia. thousands of protesters have rallied in prague against the government support for ukraine in its fight against russia. the demonstration united far right and far left groups under the slogan, the check republic. first. they want the cabinet to focus more on domestic problems,
9:19 pm
not foreign affairs. a court in the netherlands to day convicted 3 men in absentia for their role in shooting down malaysia airlines flight image, 17 over ukraine 8 years ago. now the men include 2 former russian intelligence agents and a ukranian separatist leader. a 4th defendant was acquitted. the passenger jet was shot down over eastern ukraine, all 298 people on board. died a verdict years in the making. after 68 hearings and 70000 pages of documents, a dutch court has issued its judgment on the downing of malaysian airlines flight. mh 17. the rebel is from order. the court is of the opinion that m a 17 crashed you to the firing of a book miss out from a field in the paper,
9:20 pm
mice care region at oscar full. and as a consequence, all the 283 passengers and 15 crew lost their lives. the court ruled that the passenger jet was brought down by a russian made missile supplied from russia and fired by an armed separatist group . under russian control. for military commanders were accused of murder, though none took part in the proceedings. 3 were found guilty. yes. one ukrainian and 2 russians. the verdict means life imprisonment. but it's unlikely that any of them will see the inside of a dutch prison. for some relatives of those killed in the attack, that was never the point who did anything with so they will do here time. we notice you can be, you can read about it, help us that you know that anybody good. think this the most important
9:21 pm
for other grieving families, the ruling brings little comfort. you've got to remember while we are in court today, we still have to go home and said or disable has grave out our little ones and nothingness. not never going to go away that feeling that you know, no matter what the court says or what happens in coal, i thought still or is going to be the case. though the ruling cannot restore those who were lost. there is hope it can bring at least some justice for the victims and their families. a correspond barbara visa was at the court house in the netherlands . and the verdict of chrissy was facing a chain of evidence that was rather difficult for the dutch ship. a dutch court to assess because some of it was open source that was like telephone calls between the accused that have been monitored at the time. and there were satellite images,
9:22 pm
how the book messiah that was responsible for the or that was of, you know, a functioning as the messiah. they do shut down at the, at the flight, the image 17, a, where it was moved from where it was moved to. and it who had the command over those rebel is militants there who were active in the area at the time. and so 3 of the defendants have been now found guilty that they were, in fact, the commanders who did it, could that, who did have their responsibility for what happened in the area had responsibility for moving dismissal, of course, with the intent to shoot down military planes ukrainian planes, but the they by accident they shut down this passenger plane was it's 298 people on board. all of them died as we know and is still they are responsible for what happened at that point. it was more proposal there in the netherlands. barbara
9:23 pm
spoke with a relative of one of the victims a flight in age. 17 bet talk is coming up. next in the day, hundreds of mourners have attended the funeral of a protester killed by security forces in the western iranian city of bukosa. the demonstrator was among the victims of what human rights groups described as one of the most violent night of the government's latest crackdown. several people, including a 9 year old boy, were shot dead across the country. come run. my team is a senior lecturer in international relations at the university of sussex. he shared his view on the iranian government crackdown, especially in certain areas. i mean from what we hear from, for example, citizen cornerstone in con itself to which you refer. it seems that during the night, the cities basically at the hands of the people and during the day the regime troops
9:24 pm
kind of regaining control. and a similar situation seems to be the case in some other towns which shows kind of the erosion or exhaustion of regime troops that are also reports. which are remarkable in some sense, that the government has evacuated. some of the quite strategic points on top of high mountains, in the border regions of kurdistan, where military troops have been based for a very long time to deal with a position groups and evacuated them to the cities you know, to, to kind of track down on the protest as leaving those areas kind of undefended and you know, increasing use of i come by the mission and what i just described in terms of a kind of a deployment of troops to just that the government is struggling with actually managing and controlling the spread and intensity of the protests that was coming much there with the university of sussex. if you liked, the netflix should dark. we've got some good news for you. the. the shows german
9:25 pm
creators are back now with a new mystery series that combines european history with fantasy show was called 1899. it is a multi lingual drama that is set on an ocean liner, bringing immigrants from europe to america. they are dreaming of a better future, but then something unexpected happens along the way. in the mid atlantic, a migrant steamer receives an impossible distress call. 6 hours ago we received a message. we believe this comes from the prometheus. he think the passengers ester alive, equity. so begins 1899, the new netflix mystery series, where nothing is as it seems, the series had its world premiere in berlin, the creators see the show as a metaphor for europe itself. we thought we really want to take
9:26 pm
a look at europe and just take it, put it on a ship in a confined space, nuts of ocean around can't escape. and i have like a little bit of an experiment, almost like a lavatory experiment. how people cope with situations when they're not able to speak the same language. $1899.00 was also a technical experiment. one of the 1st t v shows to shoot entirely in a new volume studio using cutting edge digital technology. with st. his surrounding a big giant cylinder tenement screen and then stage retakes in the middle and it's operated by about 20 technicians. i'm. it's quite something to look at and anyway, and it, it does look amazing. you transport you to anywhere $1899.00 dazzles with its visual style. even as its twisty plot will leave,
9:27 pm
many viewers baffled. but fans of meta mysteries should dive in. well that and the crown. a quick reminder of our top story this, our russia has launched a new wave of missile attacks across ukraine, killing a lease for people, injury many more. the missiles have damaged more of the country's power grid cranium. presidents zalinski says that moscow continues targeting civilian sites. you're watching the w two's after a short break. i'll be back to take you through the day to night, the shooting down a flight image. 17 mass murder in the skies over ukraine will be right back with ah, with
9:28 pm
oh, i my power is my was, says journalist, a teacher genius. it has been for years since the murder of her fiance, jamal kush ok to this day, the crime has had no political fallout with i continues to fight for him.
9:29 pm
the journalist who was silence hulu. so in europe, in 60 minutes on d, w. o i discovered stories that can change your mind just to click away, find out best documentaries on you to see the world already subscribed now t d w documentary blue a rear natural spectacle in an improved world
9:30 pm
the meeting of the loom whale sharks of the remote island of saint hulu is a testament to the quality of the islands waters. one of the many success stories from a bastion of biodiversity. saint own starts november 18th on d. w. a dutch court to day sentence 3 men in absentia to life in prison, for shooting down a passenger jet over ukraine. almost 300 people died. the men have never been called fugitives connected to russian back separatists in eastern ukraine. how families of the victims have spent years trying to make sense of.

19 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on