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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  November 22, 2022 5:00pm-5:31pm CET

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ah ah ah, this is the w news live from berlin. germany is government decides to withdraw its troops from molly, or lynn says it will be bringing its forces home by mid 2023. more than a 1000 soldiers will leave the un peacekeeping mission. it follows a similar move by britain rescue as bryce against the clock to reach potential survivors after
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a powerful earthquake shakes indonesia. at least 280 did. and the toll looks likely to increase as more bodies i've recovered from the worst hit areas. also on the program, the world health organization wants that russia's targeting of ukraine's health and energy infrastructure means the winter could be life threatening for millions. and one of the biggest shocks in world cut history, saudi arabia come from a gold down to stun pre tournament favorites. argentina, the 21 wind cutter will bring you the best of the action. ah, i'm anthony. how'd walk into the program? we'll start with breaking news and germany's government says it has agreed to withdraw all troops from molly. by 2024. the west african nation has been fighting a g. had asked insurgency for a decade now. more and more west nation,
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such as france have withdrawn peacekeepers from molly in recent months. it's military government has become a close ally of russia and russian mercenaries had been involved in several messages. there they doubly correspond benjamin over as grava has been following the topic for us from our parliamentary studio. welcome benjamin. does this decision come as a surprise was have been taken now? it is not really a surprise, and there have been several problems between berlin and by michael that also let to germany temporarily suspending it, spooned his emission in molly that was back in august were berlin accused by miko of not giving a german military planes so called over fly to rights, to a plan change of personnel who were there. so now they had this emergency meeting with german chancellor will have shawls with the ministers of defense. therefore, a minister and alida babbitt was also then the development minister deciding that they wanted to start this process of starting to pull out the troops in marley
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starting in 2023 and then ending in 2024. but they are, of course, still a concerns of what might happen after the german troops leave. that's also a discussion that we heard at back in august when the last french troops left. that was the decision taken back in march a to say that the security of the so just cannot be guaranteed something similar. that has been in that voice in the discussion for several weeks now. here in germany, benjamin, is there any sense of relief that german troops can now leave this dangerous situation attached to this move or the offense? this is going to be seen by many as a victory for russia, who are so active in molly that something that the german, a foreign minister and alina bab of said when she visited molly and she criticized the government for its ties to russian contract. as you mention it already, there is this russian mercenary wagner group in marley. we have the presence over then. that's a big question. now, what will happen now that them in newsome,
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a mission where their soldiers were also a deploy to what will happen with that? who will try to fill the void? it's understandable that the defense ministry wants to take the soldiers back saying that it cannot guarantee the safety. but if we look at the importance that molly is playing also in this a how region with the neighboring countries, what that might mean to the reach and the other voices will say, we have to be cautious if we decide that we will take the soldiers out it should be not in a couch way, something that we saw in afghanistan, for example. and that's why these pros is always take so long. it may take up to a years if they start in 2023. the last german soldiers might leave the country in 2024, but it's important to mention here that these are all media reports and we're still waiting it for the confirmation by the german government that was de w. benjamin alvarez, group book, thanks so much to indonesia now with a death tell from monday so quiet has risen to more than 280, including children who were killed when their schools collapsed. the magnitude
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$5.00 event struck the mind. island of java, south of the capitol chicata, landslides and tough to rain of blocking access to areas where civilians are still believed to be trapped. we'll hear from our correspondent on the ground in just a minute. but 1st this report on efforts to find survivors. the more alice path, the more destruction is revealed. this is one of the land slides triggered by tuesday's deadly earthquake. it's thought to have buried at least one village. rescue teams have been searching the debrief with survivors using chainsaws and excavators. it's a mammoth task in nearby towns and villages. the tremor caused buildings to cave in or collapse, trapping an unknown number of people and leaving thousands of others homeless
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business with some of the injured spent. the night a hospital car park was transformed into a makeshift emergency ward medical teams using torches to treat their patients overnight. with natalie dubois at the moment i have 7 children, and one of them hasn't been fired. but by the way, the children were downstairs. and i was upstairs getting laundry. yeah. a good a little mine. like you my and i'm not me. my was, i had absolutely everything collapsed beneath me and i was crushed. we'll talk about how my house is flattering to mine as well. so mom, in any indonesia as president, has toward some of the affected areas and promised to rebuild the homes that were destroyed to let them go to the family. but his 1st order was to rescue teams, find and save those who is still trapped under the rubble. the more hours path, the more hope is dwindling, that they'll get to them in time. of the doubly correspondence sharon soon milan
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has been reporting from me the earthquakes epi center here. she takes us to a treatment center right on sending in one of the evacuation tens, 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 are beds, but some of them are unfilled because um, some of the patients have already been sent home as they have received medical treatments like stitches or anti tetanus, injection like mala health treatments. but i talked to the doctor and she said 60 percent of 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 unsure that can provide them a serious medical treatment or like
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a surgery for traumatic for those who suffered traumatic injury. and right now the hospital a half enough medical supply. but the doctor said that they still wait for more to come. i was sharing similar reporting from near the epi center of the indonesian earthquake, or we can speak now with t w's bureau chief killed matter. so joins us from jakarta. go give us an overview of the situation in john ju, at the most affected area right now. yes, still a very desperate situation in john drawer of the main roads have now been cleared. so there is excess for rescue forces that have come in with heavy gear from jakarta, but night has set in. and as we have seen, the report, the clock is now ticking to find those survivors. the rescue teams on site have pledged that they want to look for them for 7 days, but obviously the earlier they find them the, the more chances that that people are still it healthy and,
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and may have survived. the big problem is that entire errors have been hit by landslides that were triggered by that earthquake. and so it will take some time until you get to the places where people may still be trapped. so such a difficult situation. hell have the or 3rd, he's been managing the rescue operations and indeed the needs of the, the many survivors when literally the main problem for rescue workers was the access to errors. now that has been cleared with heavy herb with heavy machinery coming in from jakarta, but i spoke earlier with our correspondent on site all of her, what would she things, how things have gone? and she said, actually the rescue work was, was done pretty well. the biggest problem is what many people have set on side is the long term effect that people should have been warned about these kind of
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earthquakes. now a 5.6 magnitude, earthquake is, is not, not such a big deal in, in indonesia that is regularly hit by earthquakes. the problem with this one was not only that, the soil, there is particularly soft and so the earthquake was particularly strong, not being very shallow. the bigger problem here is that the houses were built in such a bad state, not fit for an earthquake pro region. and that is what many people now say, the government and authorities should have warned people should have made sure that these houses are in a better state. kill pretty clearly. people in that part of indignation need a lot right now, but what to people now need most well, 13000 people have lost their houses. then you have a lot of people who are simply scared that the houses that are damaged may not withholds. of many of the quakes that, that there are front following that,
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that the big one. and so they also camp outside. so tens are needed at blankets are needed. food supplies are needed for all these people that are now camping in the dark, outside, or for the foreseeable nights, nights to come until they're better make shift shelters available. and then there's of course, the big question of medical health, many hospital still overwhelmed in the area guild matters in jakarta, thank you. of world health organization is accused roster of carrying out the biggest attack on health care on european soil since world war 2 and of leaving millions of ukrainians facing a life threatening winter. the organizations, european head hands krueger said freezing temperatures and a health system badly damaged by russian missile attacks. main that for many ukrainians, this winter will be about survival. it's 0 degrees celsius. at night fault in her son,
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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 me, but it's constantly dark now in a rush hath method attack on ukraine's bible crates and other energy infrastructures means millions of ukrainians. we brief a harsh winter without proper heating, but that's not the only writing you the w at. you thief, it has documented more than 700 attacks on health infrastructure since russia invasion begin in late february. hundreds of damaged hospitals, lack basic facilities, like water and bower. and in that garden state,
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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 access. and the risk of viral infections will make this winter a formidable disk for the greenhouse system to ease pressure on it. nor did he thought it, a potter teeth and her son an urgent people to leave that each and if they can't, will data please. nick connelly is in the ukrainian capital case. 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
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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 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 would briefly have been organizing all these can, will just exit 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 really infrastructure 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 in
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billions of euro's and dollars into ukraine government coffers. but there is a sense that now after almost a year war, that kind of initial resilience is now being chipped away at and that you know, if more tax come more tax on energy supply. if we have more direct tax on transport infrastructure, then we could actually see a real decrease in the ability of the ukrainian government to provide some kind of rudimentary medical services to its population. i was ne connelly in keith or many russian to openly opposed the board in ukraine, had left the country in the last months for fear of prosecution. but the pressure from the russian state continues even abroad on dissidence and their families. d. w met with us check my kitchen, who's a climate activist. he fled russia shortly after the start of the war. these passport, he said the heart of a fight between climate activists abstract, my kitchen and the russian state. he and his 2 brothers and father have been
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stripped off ration citizenship. now they're scattered. i've shock, he's in berlin, where he is, he leaves or jason or what 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. is my marriage certificate still valid? she didn't. my wife is russian or what about my education? do i even exist my arbors of i near well, the rochester, which is 3. yeah. are shucks. family moved to russia from armenia in 90 ninety's. the old 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, i convinced the actual reason 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 and fossil fuels from russia,
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and even called fo, put his resignation to 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, his brothers and his father will likely become stainless, not getting his armed 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 rec aunt who years. in the meantime,
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i sat to seek support from german in european politicians and continues his fight for the climate and peace. okay, his look now at some of the other stories making news around the world to sell the court in south africa. as former president jacob zoom was unlawfully given medical pearl last year and should return to jail. the id road had serv 2 months of a 15 month sentence for contempt of court. his convictions sparked violent protests which left more than 350 people 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 columbia. 6 for mustang from hong kong, now defunct apple daily newspaper have pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges under
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laws introduced by beijing in 2020 a. pro democracy newspaper was shut down following china's crackdown on the 20192021 con, protests ah sport now and to one of the biggest upsets in world cup history. saudi arabia have stunned one of the pre tournament favorites, argentina in their 1st group match that came from a gold down the turn, the match around after halftime denting argentina's world cup hopes. oh, all eyes were on you know, mercy in what is likely his nasty shot at a woodcock trophy. he converted from the spot to give argentina the lead. but 3 off site goals in the 1st half would come back to haunt them. saudi arabia launch the mother of all comebacks. sally, i'm she, the leveling in the 48 minute sony fans met with the moon and there
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was more to come less. i turned this match on its head in a matter of 5 minutes saline. although savvy, making it a barely believable to one margin tina where relentless as they pushed one equalizer. but saudi arabia survived the onslaught ending argentina's $36.00 game and beaten run to seal a historic victory. well, for more on that incredible result, i am now joined in the studio by a lima talking from the deadly sports, one of the generalists around the world, looking to find a bigger upset. where did that ranks all time? among the great world cup shops. i'm going to let the expert speak on this. so there's a data company, grace node, and they just crunch the numbers. and according to them, saudi arabia, stunning favorites. argentina is the biggest upset in world cup history. i think they only had like an 8.7 or something percent chance some people of course,
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might disagree or, but just to kind of give you a bit more current or prospective, they base this on the ranking and the history of saudi arabia and the fact that you know, then on fancy tied and against the history and against the strength of a, of the country like argentina and, and, and some of the other upsets, of course, just to you at the end. anthony can then decide what is the biggest the list is way too long, but i'm just going to give you 2 more making. number 2, of course as united state beading favors england back in 1950 by a suave one mills. and number 3, switzerland, b didn't spain, one mill in south africa in 2010. so argentina, hans, i guess should be too upset because we all know that speed went on to when the would come. right. so let's, let's get you out here in a moment. but what will this victory mean for saudi arabia? now, i think if you a saudi arabia, the team, i think as a collective, you're probably saying to yourself, look, we just meet one of the favorites in argentina. anything is possible. and i think
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even more delighted than there must be the hands because they have been showing up in the numbers. you just hung the piece you saw just how baloney and bonkers those fans went out. and we actually have our correspondence on the ground who sent us over some of the fan reactions. or let's take a look as so the out of saudi arabia made us proud to day this year. it was just great thought i yeah, this game changed all rules and predictions in a way we never expected. bravo saudi arabia about natalie didn't imagine this would happen to him. saudi played like they were playing at home. this world cup number 22, annual witches in an air country is pride for oliver. yeah, lemme get you done under one of, you know, lot of this when is considered a pride for all arabs for saudi and all era. so joy, understandably, for saudi arabia, alina. but the question now is,
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how damaging is this the fleet for argentina? and the star player lino messy it probably his last book. exact is, are obviously a big blow to argentina. i don't think they were expecting this, and like you just said, an even bigger plot blow to lena. messy because time is running out. this is a man whose one, almost everything except the world cup trophy. he's $17.00 bell under was what happens to the titles 10, a legal title, but, and this obviously how he does it. the world cup will obviously impact his legacy. cuz this, this debate about is he the goat? is he the greatest of all time? can he be on par with mar donna with kelly? if he hasn't on the worst cough. so for him, this is his 5th attempt, and he is 35 years old. so it is, it probably is very likely his last shot at was cut, laurie, sorry, question with that, notice you alluded to it a little bit before, but can i come back from here? is it possible argentina can? that's a good question. i mean, i think they can because they have been in the past teams as well that have taken
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a shock defeat in the group stagers. and to be honest, if you're argentina, you're probably saying to yourself, i'd rather take a chalk like this. this is a wake up call for me in the group stages instead of later on in the knockout stages. so i wouldn't be too upset, but you know, football, it's so unpredictable. it could go either way. you never know. her answer is music to these about anton fans. thanks so much. a lima. ha. talking from d. w. sports. thanks. now after that hi, there wasn't nearly as much excitement grip days. first match between denmark and she nicea the down to the book. mike is dark horses for the tournament as before kickoff, but they could only draw nil nil against their determined north african opponents. many tennesseans live and work in ketta, and they packed the stadium, giving their team, walk us backing throughout. and i now have one point now france, germany and italy, the 3 biggest contributors to the european space agency have an outside want to build their own european made rocket launch systems. the e s i, as in, on,
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recently had to turn to you at u. s. aerospace, them spy, 6 to plan to future missions. but developing europe's own systems won't be cheap. the cost will be a main talking point as a, as i officials gather in paris, the talks of the next $2.00 dice, a gluten head to the year 2035 amanda outpost is being built on the moon. european astronauts will train here for a flight to the martian moon phobos. this is how an e essay strategy paper sees the near future. the role europe will play in the raise to the moon depends on how much money countries are willing and able to spend manned space flight is just one of many programs. the e. s. a has made ground breaking achievements in space exploration. next year it's
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launching a satellite to measure the extent of the universe. but complex missions have to be financed for them to work. every one has to be on board. germany and france are making a strong keys for europe's new launch vehicle. it is intended to secure the e. s. is future access to space and it will give industry a share of the hotly contested space transportation market. that's why the long term goal has been set for innovations to cut costs for europe's new space transporter by half. e, as a, has launched the world's most ambitious program for earth observation with copernicus. german industry wants to participate in this sector ah, when taking into account the growing environmental problems and dwindling resources
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. satellite data from space plays an increasingly important role at the conference, the e essay will present its new astronauts selected from more than 23000 applicants. among them is the 1st pair astronaut, an astronaut with physical disabilities. one of these new recruits could be the 1st european to set foot on the moon. the e. s. a is confident that this will happen by the end of this decade. that's all for now. news i sure is coming up next with 1st banishing ah, with
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a season pro physics and the right vehicle, which can also be electron stunt driver. ronnie bechtel burger shows what possible
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with a test read in 60 minutes on d w. all we come a criminal mm franklin, ai already know that with hackers, paralyzing the tire societies. computers that out. sure. you and governments that go crazy for your data. we explain how these technologies work, how they can go in for. and that's how they can also go terribly. watch it now on youtube. with cheese ma'am. said, can i get the country? i came up with an increasing number of women in
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america, guessing better. i need to stop my doing and depressing i meant fighting against sexism, violence, and full access to abortion. pressure from the 3 have already proven successful. that opposition live on the rise. fed up with starts november 25th on d, w. 150 dublin years, a check coming up today in denise shows unfolding disaster. the earthquake on java has killed hundreds and displaced many more heads continues to arrive, but for some it is too late. also coming up escaping fourteen's wall, how thousands of members of an ethnic russian minority have entered my.

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