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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  November 22, 2022 3:00pm-3:31pm CET

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offers enjoy our services all. be all a guest at frankfurt airport city managed by for roberts. ah ah ah . this is d w. news live from bergen. rescue was rice against the clock to reach potential survivors after a powerful perth quake. shikes indonesia, at least $208.00, and i did, and the top looks likely to increase as more bodies are recovered from the worst areas. also in the program, the world health organization wants that russia's targeting of ukraine's health and
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energy infrastructure means winter could be life threatening for millions. and one of the biggest shocks in will cough history. saudi arabia come from a gold down the stun pre tournament favorite argentina. the to one. when in cat will bring you the best of the act. ah, i'm anthony. how'd walk into the program? where begin in indonesia, where the death toll from monday's earthquake has risen to more than 280, including children who were killed when their schools collapsed. the magnitude $5.00 event struck the main island of java south of the capitol, jakarta, landslides in tough to rain, a blocking access to where he is, where civilians are believed to be trapped. will he more from our correspondent on the ground in just a minute? but 1st, this report on if its define survivors break by break rescue team search
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through the wreckage for signs of life many here and she and you're close to the api said to the quake will have trapped inside their home schools and businesses as buildings caved in or collapsed this just one of the hundreds that had been reduced almost entirely to rubble for some of those who did make it out alive. this is where they have spent the night a make shift, emergency ward in a hospital car park. i b drips hung by whatever means possible and medical teams left needing torchlight to help treat the injured my story. amongst those receiving care is 48 year old cuckoo club legal bomb with them all. i have 7 children and one of them hasn't been fired. mamma away, the children were downstairs and i was upstairs getting laundry. young. i need a little my like you my and i'm at me. my wife. i had absolutely everything
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collapsed beneath me and i was crushed. a couple of high, high says flattened to minus one, come on in any more medical staff and our urgently needed to help deal with the sheer number of injured to continue to arrive. most of stuff had broken bones or wounds caused by falling debris. the military has been drafted into help but authority, se, landslides a hampering the relief effort. for mother there still an area that's not been evacuated because the road is completely blocked by a landslide. so that can't be evacuated yet. the number of dead an engine is expected to rise over the coming days. as search and rescue teams reach more isolated areas with authorities facing a mammoth task to find food and shelter to the thousands. now left displaced and homeless. they w correspondent, sharon, some alone has been reporting from me the earthquakes, if he center here,
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she takes us to a treatment center. right. i'm standing in one of the evacuation 10 sat up in a car park located in the sy young hospital into an area of this hospital have seen many casualties of the earthquake that happened yesterday. as you can see here, inside the tent, there are many ah bets, but some of them are unfilled because um, some of the patients have already been sent home as they have received a medical treatments like stitches or anti tetanus injection like mala health treatments. but i talked to the doctor and she said a 60 percent off, the casualties are badly injured. so thats why 60 percent of the patients here are being referred to another hospital. other hospitals here in t under that can provide them a serious medical treatment. um, like a surgery for traumatic for those who suffered traumatic injury. and right now the
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hospital a half enough medical supply. but the doctor said that they still wait for more to come as of now. and the officials have reported that there are 252 people have killed because of the earthquake with 31 missing and more than 7, thousands have been evacuated. the situations is still developing. so that was sharon sooner latin reporting from the the epi center of the indian asian earthquake for more. so the room inside is the secretary general of the indonesian red cross. we asked him whether i'd is reaching all of the affected areas. yes, we are still kept mobilizing the volunteers to give the american relief and most of them are already arrived on the scene and start working since last night. and so the good news is, i think we can mobilize the following data is coming from surrounding the sticks.
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so it is going to be more effective. oh, more impactful, within a couple days to come and i right? yes, that is still developing, including the number or death the other it just announced that up until this evening there are 287 a people day and then also there are wanting to more than 700. so i think the number is still developing and we are anticipating for the earth, less for, for horrible condition for coming this. that was city man said the secretary general of the indonesian red cross speaking to an earlier from jakarta. now, many russians who openly opposed the war and duke right have left the country in
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the last month for fear of prosecution. but the pressure from russia, the russian state continues even abroad on dissidence and their families. d, w met, i checked my kitchen in berlin, he's a climate activist to flayed russia. shortly after the start of the war. these passport you said the heart of a fight between climate activists, schuchman kitchen in the russian state. he and his 2 brothers and father had been stripped off. russian citizenship. now they're scattered. i shot isn't berlin, ms. ellis, disease, no, but i see we lived our whole lives in russia. ah, but i was there since the age of one. i thought i studied in moscow conservatory my younger brother was born there, so i don't get what they've done or is my marriage certificate still valid? he didn't. my wife is russian, or what about my education? do i even exist? my arbors of i near. well, gotcha, which is 3. yeah. our shucks. family moved to russia from armenia in 19 ninety's.
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they all got russian citizenship and have no other. but earlier this year, a russian court ruled there were mistakes in their applications. our shock and his lawyers are convinced the actual reason is his political work last long. he is not only russia's most prominent friday for future activists. he now combines this with opposing the invasion in ukraine. he won stronger embargoes on fossil fuels from russia, and even called for put his resignation at a rally in berlin. he says the removal of his citizenship could be designed to make him into an example and silence others. it was great to wear at the dealership. it's meant to intimidate the non russian population of russia so that they don't oppose the war and don't feel like rightful citizens. gradually mucous coming. our shock has a month to appeal the ruling on his citizenship, but little hope of winning than he,
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his brothers and his father will likely become stateless. not get it in his arms with a garage door, yet those with many people say i should be happy to lose my russian citizenship because russia is a terrorist state that russia has a fascist regime now. but for me, it's something bigger than the russian state. and i love my country with our shock and his lawyers intend to take his citizenship case as far as the un human rights council. but that could drag on were years in the meantime. i shock seek support from german in european politicians and genius. his fight for the climate and peace . i'm joined now by day devil is russia endless? constantine, a get constantine. we heard there from just one person in the report. i check the to, we know if that this is a common thread for the thousands of other peoples who have left russia. well, not yet. but again,
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the policies of the russian states on the putin to some extent resemble policies over the bolshevik regime, especially under stalin. when repression is selective, it's slightly lottery of repressions because of that, people feel threatened if you apply certain law in a systematic way. then if you find yourself on, on the receiving end of the state depression, you can work your way around it, find some other ways of kind of avoiding regression. if it is completely random that you are usually unprepared. but i think it is rather an example than the beginning of a trend and also as far as them remember, i'm not a lawyer. but according to the common thrust laws, you cannot basically remove the citizenship from a person even if it was received with some kind of irregularities. if there is no charge for a person to receive or to get another citizenship, then a person becomes stateless. i think that's my suspicion that may be the main
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argument of his lawyers. so to broaden out again, what effect does the exodus of people have on the russian economy and perhaps more importantly, it's politics if any. well, the exodus ah, that we've seen from russia in the last 89 months is because very significant. you see people, people that are leave are not only political activists and politicized people. generally, these are also people who see maybe they're not particular political, but they see no future in russia. these are people that are active, that are under pinero, of that are educated, that speak foreign languages, that usually not always, but usually live in a big metropolitan centers. that is, of course, a long term ah, deficiency of, it's a lot, the rational economy rush society will take a long time here, but for now, put in is very much satisfied with that for him. the few are there of this kind of
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smart, educated people that can voice their opinion, the better it is for the really, there's a beautiful moment in that report. so when ash was talking about his pride for russia, is there a sense that these exiles have left for good? well, russian 20th century seen several waves of immigration starting with the bolshevik takeover in 1917 and sadly, few of those exiles retained. so of course, history never repeats itself of the same time. so let's hope if this regime is not last thing for a long time. then probably at least some of those people will come back and work for the benefit of a russian future. but again, history teaches us otherwise, and that is a sad fact. constantine exit criteria, if thoughts. thank you. thank you. well, the world health organization has accused roger of carrying out the biggest attack on health care, on european soil since world war 2 and of leading millions of ukrainians facing
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a life threatening winter. the organizations, european head hands, crusade, freezing, temperatures and a health system badly damaged by russian missile attacks mean that for many ukrainians, winter will be about survival it. vito degrees celsius at night fault in her son, and at enough home plunges into darkness. turning on the stove is the only way to keep the family warm at the leslie and in the evening when it's dark and cold, my daughter becomes nervous. she is used to live with you, but it's constantly dark. no rush hath method attack on ukraine's bible crates. and other energy infrastructures means millions of ukrainians. we brief, a harsh window without proper heating. but that's not the only writing you
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the w at you thief. it has documented more than $700.00 attacks on health infrastructure since russia's envision, begin in late february, hundreds of damaged hospitals, lack basic facilities, like water and bower. and in that garden state, the health kit units cannot fully support the people. this winter may be life threatening for millions of people in oakland, the devastating energy crisis, the deepening mental health emergency constraints on humanitarian axis. and there is of vital infections will make this winter a formidable dest for the greenhouse system, to ease pressure on it. nor did he thought it a potties in person at urging people to leave that each and if they can't data
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please. nick connelly is in the ukrainian capital, keith, we asked him earlier about the condition of health facilities there after these attacks. it's really difficult to kind of divide up health from all the other services here in ukraine or here in the capital key of where i am now. things are still working. he can kind of, you can even for a moment, forget the war if you kind of don't pay attention to the news and don't happen to be near a place that's been affected by drones or bombing or some other kind of attacks. but this is the country where the energy infrastructure by the emission of the korean government has been destroyed about a quarter or 3rd of its pre war state where millions peoples of left, including a disproportionate number of women who are very over represented in the medical sphere doctors, nurses, administrators, and those 2 facts together, you're having, you know, hospitals that are living of generators where they don't always know where the next canister diesel is coming from, where they will get near more complicated medicines where they will get things like oxygen supplies, if roads and infrastructure are destroyed and yet lots of people who had previously
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have been organizing all these kind of logistics it and crucial for more medicine. those people are no longer there or fighting in this war. so it is kind of a perfect storm. lots of different things coming at the same time and a country that is really struggling to basically survive these constant russian attacks. or it's vill infra structure. for now, the ukraine government is carrying on his paying wages. it is able to finance the purchase of supplies with help from western countries who have been putting billions of euro's of dollars into ukraine government coffers. but there is a sense that now off to almost a year war, that kind of initial resilience is now being chipped away and that you know, if more tax come more tax on energy supply. if we have more a direct tax on transport infrastructure, then we could actually see a real decrease in the ability of the ukraine government to provide some kind of rudimentary medical services to its population. i from that coming in, katie is looking out some of the other stories making use around the world. the court in south africa says former president, jacob summa was unlawfully given medical perm last year and should return to jail
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the 80 year old who had serv 2 months of a 15 month sentence, for contempt of court. his convictions sparked violent protests, which left more than $350.00 did after a 4 year hiatus the government of columbia has resumed peace talks with the country's largest remaining gorilla group, the national liberation army. venezuela is hosting the talks just months after it restored diplomatic relations with colombia. 6th former staff from hong kong now defunct apple daily newspaper have pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges under the laws introduced by bridging in 2020. the pro democracy newspaper was shut down, following china's crack down on the 20192020 uncommon protests in a row branch groups. se security forces have killed a dozen people in the last 24 hours in a crackdown on demonstrators in kurdish populated, regents activists say 5 people were killed when police opened fire on protest. in
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the western town of which of andrews kurdish regions have been a focus of anti government protests since the death of kurdish iranian woman. massa armine in custody of morality police in september, despite the intensify crackdown, the protests show no sign of a base or new study by the tony blair institute for global change shows strong and consistent support for regime change in iran. joining me now to talk about it is casa abbey, the iran program lead at the tony blair institute. welcome to the w, can you tell us more about us all the sample size? how was it conducted? sure. well pulling aden, authoritarian contacts like the islam republic is extremely difficult and traditional appalling methodologies do not work. people will not answer at freely if they are conducted over the phone or if this is face to face for fear of
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suffering consequences, including imprisonment and ext execution. but the polls conducted by the group for analyzing and measuring, asked use in iran, gammon at who we parted up with an conduct polls using encrypted services, enabling iranians to freely answer and questions that are sensitive without fear of facing consequences meant by that, by the regime in terms of the sample size, there were 2 poles conducted by gammon. the 1st in 2020 and this was just under 40000 participants. and the 2nd in february at 2022. and that's just under $17000.00 participants. ok. so if we are to take the findings of the pole on face value, they suggest 70 percent of iranian men say they are opposed to mandatory. he jumps . were you surprised by this at not a so not surprised by they stick world for those of us who have been studying iran
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and have visited iran and have been engaging with the underground civil society. it is been absolutely clear for years that a wrong society has undergone unprecedented secularization. and while they iranian people live under a theocratic islamist regime at the society is actually the most secular society in the middle east. and the numbers show this, for example, are only 26 percent of urban iranians and 33 percent of ruby radians, say they pray 5 times a day. and we look at the anti compulsory here job sentiment in iran, over 70 percent of men, 70 percent full percent of women. now, what we see on the streets is this manifesting itself. the gap between a hard line is the mist regime and an increasingly secular liberal population. and this is, by the way, be going on at visibly for the past few years since 2017,
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a new wave of unrest. a new trend of unrest placed in iran that was distinctively anti raging. not wholly the report, but calling for the collapse of ad hominem regime. and the numbers show this 84 percent of the radians who are a gates the compulsory to job. oh, so won't raging change, we're seeing this by out on the streets and around here, the poll also shows that opposition to religious latest leadership, and that it isn't new. do you believe iranian society has now reached a tipping point? okay, absolutely. and it's been, as the tal shows, it's been ongoing for years, unfortunately at the west was completely blindsided to this. and because it was exclusively focusing on the 2050 nuclear agreement and focused almost entirely on trumps withdrawal from that agreement and the reposition of sanctions.
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therefore, it missed the visible signs on the streets. iranians have been protesting since 2070 explicitly anti regime. and this, by the way, to place these initial protests started in 2017 took place when the u. s. was still part of the agreement and 11 months it full sanctions were imposed. descent in iran is not being with driven by trucks with through or the reposition of sanctions, but it's being driven by life under a totalitarian ideological misogynistic regime that is consistently prioritized the interests of its hotline is the missed ideology. over that of the radiant people and the rainy people have had enough and are holding for outright change. this is not about reform. this is about the collapse of the islamic public in its entirety . because robbie from the tony blair institute for global change, thank you. thank you very much. ah, rotter's,
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florida and one of the biggest upsets in world cup history. now, saudi arabia have stunned one of the pre tournament favorites, argentina in their 1st group match that came from a goal down to turn the match around after halftime denting argentina's world cup hopes. all eyes were on uno messy in what is likely his mask shot at a woodcut prophy. he converted on the spot to give argentina the lead. but 3 off st goes in, the 1st half would come back to haunt them. saudi arabia launched the mother of our combats, sony and she, the leveling in the 48th minute. so any fans met with the moon and there was more to come less. i turned this match on its head in a matter of 5 minutes. selim although sorry, making it a barely believable to one margin. tina we have
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relentless as a push to an equalizer, but saudi arabia survived the onslaught ending argentina's $36.00 game and beaten, ran to seal a historic victory. now to a milestone for one of the european union's oldest institutions, the european parliament, the only a you body that's directly elected by the blocks citizens that i am a pays are marking 70 years since its 1st assembly back in 1952 am honors, attending a special session to mark the occasion of france's prime minister, elizabeth born and european parliament president for the ultimate solar dot. but like working on the inside or that funder, a peek into this ground political body through the eyes of 2 of its members. charles girlfriends from luxembourg was among the 1st directly elected members. he
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was born in 1952 the same year. the parliament was founded. kira peter hanson from denmark, the youngest elected parliamentarian, the 24 year old is now serving her 1st term. i had no idea what was going on. i was so confused and couldn't find my way around. this billing thing shadowed us, but i felt quite lost. you procedures, new rules. you and your colleagues and local reagan starting out as a tariff union for steel and coal, the parliament emerged from the destruction of the 2nd world war. it now represents nearly half a 1000000000 europeans from 27 countries of parliament. as parliamentarians, we had to fight for our rights. we had no rights, nobody gave us rights. we had to demand them the birth of its own currency, weight and even the when of the nobel peace prize, new members joined. others left them interrupted,
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change is inevitable results. so is a little courtesy report the european parliament is ridiculous, very ridiculous that he wanted the european parliament to be the democratic body of the community. no, no, and controversy goes and of course women must. and the less than men, because they are weaker, they are smaller, they are, listen, teddy, then they must, unless that's all. but there is hope, the for women where clearly under represented that has improved considerably over the decades. we haven't exactly arrived at parity yet, but that's changing from legacy. the church legislature? yes, in that sense one has kept pace with progress. i think we've gotten a more prominent role when i joined in 2019 and no sir in the green. there were a lot of support for especially young women. so on a happy note, happy 70th european parliament. now,
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nasa's ottoman moon mission is now well underway. the rhine capital spacecraft, which was launched last week, has flown around the mood. it 5, its engines, 130 kilometers from the lunar surface, completing a procedure required for the capsule to into the moon's orbit. and that will happen later this week if all goes to plan screen. the optimist mission hopes to put astronauts back on the moon surface by the 2025. done. so now news is coming up next with parish energy. it's coming up after a short break. stay with with
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you a, a beginning of a story that moves us and takes us along for the ride. it's all about the perspective. culture
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information is either you news or w me from mine's a master of the art of confrontation. this is wrong. a veteran of verbal combat. i mean, you're going to, we were, you know, i try the undisputed champion of tough political talk. you trying to frighten people, you know so far. everybody on the side there, except you enter the comp and joined tim sebastian as he holds the powerful to account. this is a big failure. whichever way you like to spin conflict zone on d. w. if someone else to the hardwood tv highlights is selected for you every week. you a box subscribe now. devastated. how is this softer are we can with cars caring effects of climate change?
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i mean, felt worldwide before a station in the rain forest continued, carbon dioxide emissions had risen again. young people all over the world are committed to climate protection. what impact will because change doesn't happen on its own. make up your room, mind. d. w. need for mines 50 dublin years, asia coming up today. indonesia is unfolding disaster. the earthquake on java has killed hundreds and displaced many more health continues to arrive, but for some it is too late. also coming up escaping buttons wall. how thousands of members of an ethnic russian minority have.

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