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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  November 23, 2022 4:00pm-4:30pm CET

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because no one should have to sleep. ah, make up your own mind. w. made for mines with, ah, ah, this is dw news live from berlin, russia a tax infrastructure sites across ukraine. in this operation region strikes produce a maternity ward to rubble with a new born baby, reportedly kills. the russian rockets are knocking out power and heating even causing blackouts in the neighboring country. moldova also coming up on the show,
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the european parliament declares russia a states answer of terrorism. but will the move have any real impact on the war in ukraine? we'll hear from a member of parliament plus. so during this time of crisis, i can see sadness, panic, a disappointment, but at the same time, i can also see hope dw reports from the epicenter of indonesia as deadly earthquake will get the latest on rescue efforts there. ah. hello, i'm clear, richardson, thank you so much for joining us. fresh russian air strikes are being reported across ukraine, hitting the capital q, and cutting electricity completely in the western city of levine and the deputy prime minister of neighboring, moldova says, the strikes in ukraine have caused blackouts across half of its territory. will
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bring you more details as we get them. and those reports are coming in after ukrainian officials said a strike on a maternity ward in the southern apparition region killed. a new born may be on tuesday nights. yamazik was pulled from the rubble of what was the maternity ward. this doctor was fortunate to make it out alive. but the russian strike that flattened his workplace did take the life of the baby. he was there to deliver. its mother was rescued. just the latest casualties of yet another attack on a healthcare facility. moscow has long denied targeting hospitals and clinics, but the world health organization has recorded moulton 700 attacks since the start of the war. 9 months ago. russia's repeated attacks on energy infrastructure. a, making it hard if adult is to provide care at those hospitals that are still
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standing here in hassan. they're forced to work by flashlight as they try to save a teenager whose hand was blown off in a russian strike without power for the elevator. he has to be carried up 6 flights of stairs on a stretcher to reach an operating room lit with only emergency lights. glover with bassy it's hard without an elevator hard without light to get the child to the 6th floor. no water, no heating. working in the dim light doctors amputate the teenagers left on his mother, weights nearby, inconsolable he give us, they shoot at civilians at children. we didn't call them hair and didn't kill any of their children. so why have they killing oz? but with russian attacks continuing and winter beginning to bite hess on residence,
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the facing shortages of water, food, and other essentials, many a, making a difficult choice. and joining the government's voluntary evacuation effort. boarding buses to seek safety further from the front lines with frontier des nick connelly gave us more details on the latest russian strikes which definitely seems to be one of those days of mass attacks across all of ukraine's territory. that the kind of normal pattern will be that the government is pretty st kind of sparse on detail. the 1st couple of hours, not wanting to give the russians to get an idea of how successful they've been in case that allows them then to focus yet more strikes on the a successful hit. but we do get a sense. this is, as has been the case all along in recent weeks, months attacked many on the power and heating infrastructure with having reports of
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a heating power plant here in key of hit also of a hit to a residential building where we're not sure yet if that was the rush massage itself, or if that was a mis a maybe that was shot down by ukraine's air defense. certainly. here and here we were getting a la carte. heard some very noisy bangs above us in the air here in central give em . it's very difficult, obviously to tell if that's a defense, if that's the missile itself. but if you could see everyone looking around quizzically, kind of question marks in the face, trying to work out what was going on, but not particular panic. that's important thing. now, after almost 9 months, will people here are taking their stride? this is something that they have got used to. even if you know this is basically affecting the entirety of ukraine surgery and not an ukraine blue. so neighboring mold over that has an energy network that is closely integrated with ukraine's. but even if your gradients are keeping a stiff upper lip, it, it looks absolutely freezing where you are neck or how long you think ukrainians can continue to hold up in the face of these strikes and temperatures dropping. let stephanie, i guess, be in the calculation in the kremlin that eventually people will just stop putting
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up with it. we'll start going on to the streets and protesting, demanding their government comes to some kind of deal with russia to give russia that crucial breather to renew its army. and to basically prepare for more war against ukraine. for now, i'm not seeing that happen. yes, people are complaining. yes, there is a lot of kind of dark humor, lots of gallows humor. lots of means. lots of questions about where you can put a generator. what kind of generator can you put in a balcony where to get the diesel for it? but for now, there isn't a sense that this is a country that is kind of beaten or that is kind of about to give up. there is this should the spare parts, then just them are not increasing having to come from abroad. the supplies he are running out, and there is also criticism that the western promised help isn't getting here fast enough. of the psalms are just much too small given the devastation caused by russia. but for now, you don't see people talking about actually leaving. going to western europe, we're leaving their homes here for now. there is a sense that people are going to keep on going in that up to our basically every time this happened, the ukraine is to be able to kind of rebuild within day to 3. let's see how long that resilience lawson, whether this would be possible of this round of attacks. thank you very much. that
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is our correspondent, nick connelly reporting from kit one. very pleased to welcome and at noon in the studio with me now. he's the head of the ukraine mission at the international organization for migration, a very warm welcome. thank you so much for taking the time to speak with us. your organization is dealing with millions of people who have been displaced inside of ukraine. i'm. can you tell me about what their situation is like facing a winter with these widespread power outages? yeah, thanks for having me. yes, exactly. i mean, we have around 6500000 a internally displaced. and the fear that we have is the longer that the war continues, that the, the increase of their vulnerabilities. we have around 45 percent of the of the id piece reporting that their homes have been damaged. 5 percent of those basically say that that their homes are completely damaged. we have more than 250000. they are sitting in or,
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or staying and collective centers. one of the things that we're very worried about is what we call negative coping mechanisms that we see being displayed. borrowing money, as spending less on health care alternating their, their, their, their source of eating. and the biggest worry right now that we have is the fact that more than 50 percent of the id piece of used of all of their savings. and so this is something that, that continues to worry because you know, the cost of heating the energy, the cost for them to stay where they are, has increased in such a way that, that they become much, much more vulnerable, especially during the winter time. so these are really serious ripple effects. i was had heard some ukranian officials urging displaced ukrainians not to return to ukraine in the coming months on the head of a ukrainian power supplier even suggested that civilians should leave their homes for a few months in order to reduce power supplies and demand on the energy network, it sounds like in the circumstances they her describing,
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would you agree that that is something that you would recommend for them to do? i wouldn't recommend as much as saying that i that, that it's, it's, so people need to find alternatives for more sustainable situations. there are people that have the ability to move to their douches, for example. now one of the things that we've also seen as, as ukraine, is becoming more developed that there's more urbanized populations in there. so dependent on the central heating as the reports of said, i think the ukrainian population is much more resilient than we see it. there's much more patience. and so we haven't seen yet this, this, this flow moving outwards, is i think that, that there's a sense of solidarity for them to be able to, to stay in ukraine and stay in their, their primary residence. even with this tremendous resilience as you, when i speak today in the studio, and we know that russian missiles are raining down around here. do you think that
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russia is deliberately seeking to make life harder for ukrainian civilians to make a cannibal? i can't speak to the approach that the russian federation has, but i can speak to the fact that the impacts are great, especially for the civilian population. since october 10th, we've seen such an increase in terms of attacks towards infrastructure that has significantly impacted not only the id p's, but all of ukraine. we've all have been impacted. every single person in ukraine has been impacted by energy, as has also been impacted by shortages, sometimes of running water. and so it, it is something that is a big concern, especially for the managed care and community in terms of how to we take a look at responding to the so the, those most vulnerable and those who really need as much help as we can provide. i want to thank you so much for taking the time to speak with me and eat up your news . that's on new n i from the international organization for migration you for having me appreciate
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it. with an increasing number of russian attacks on ukraine's infrastructure. many european countries are preparing for an influx of ukrainian refugees and germany as among the countries making preparations to offer them safe haven. the city of berlin has already taken in nearly 90000 refugees from ukraine this year. it's working on more accommodation, including huge, temporary tend facilities at a former airport. and one church community in berlin is also doing what it can to help. it was supposed to be emergency accommodation, but for around 30 ukrainian refugees. this is home now. the community hall of the marcus congregation in berlin. the church pays for the refugees, stay here. finding a permanent apartment in berlin is almost impossible and showed africa and her 8 year old daughter on us to see i found a room for a few months now. they had to come back. they say the dormitory almost feels like home on the fled with her 2 children from odessa back in march. william bell is
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good. i'm good. when people and ukraine said, you need to leave your children because i was so scared to go to a foreign country or dirt, or the language of the people the mentality. but here we've been treated so warmly . the volunteers here have been so dedicated to helping the ukrainian refugees that the church has employed. some of them to sort through donations and groceries and help translate several are originally from russia. but here it's support in hard times that counts rather than national boundaries. and the volunteers expect a tough winter bianca multitude and this ostrich presume. we have space were 80 people here, 5 o 400 in case of a crisis. and i think we're ready. i will give a old to help these people and take them in. definitely of him for info, with winter setting in berlin's government is in a race against time. for example,
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at this former airport, currently new arrivals from ukraine register and live here temporarily before they can be moved on within berlin or to other german cities. to heated tents at the old airport house, $400.00 people each, but they're almost full. by the end of the year, the city plans to set up more permanent housing for an additional $10000.00 refugees. well, that's the list this, thus def, i vowed own, is where people stay in this temporary housing to be short from m, so that we can offer people a place to move on to my off. i love the mental unbeaten can, will stand on not hanging in wednesday that but at the moment, people have been arriving faster than we can create places for them. either shuffle couldn't come back at the marcus church community. one ukrainian family has been able to move into a permanent separate apartment after months in a tiny room with 2 infants. their mother, eula is relieved, but feeling fully at home can be hard. many of the families, relatives are still in ukraine. the damage, or one of them's dues,
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much as we are living here in peace and quiet in a wall. nice place and they out there with the church. we still feel like we are somehow in limbo, but i am trying to live in the current reality. i'm living here with the kids, and i have to crate a comfortable life for them. what lasers with the war dragging on and winter ahead . you williams family is lucky. even now. hundreds of ukrainians are stuck in arrival centers in berlin, hoping for a more permanent home and meanwhile, the european parliament has designated russia a state sponsor of terrorism, pointing to moscow's repeated strikes on civilian targets in ukraine. european lawmakers voted overwhelmingly in favor of the no. but it won't have any legal ramifications, as you does not currently have a legal structure in place to deal with the designation the united states does have such a system, but it has declined to include russia to, to concerns. as such,
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a move could have unintended consequences. earlier i spoke to survey language in ski, a member of the european parliament for the greens and one of the many while makers who back today's resolution. i started by asking him what consequences the gesture might have? i think it does have consequences, but there will be outside of the legal realm because as you said, we don't have a legal framework which would define what countries are and what consequences it has. and at the same time, and that's why i voted for this resolution, it was an important sign via our ukranian partners, those who are now hit with a special wave of terror against their infrastructure and against civilians. on the one hand, on the other hand, herb is over russia because this gives a russia a very clear description of what they are doing and it is prescribed and
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described. there are number one, russia employs terrorist means in what it is doing. and russia also supports sponsors terrorists units. if you want to talk about wagner brigades or others, these are terrorist defacto terrorist units. ok, so this is an important sign of support for ukraine, but how will it help and the war while we are, as you know, we have a various, it's a whole array of different ways of how we are trying to employ pressure and apply pressure on russia. on the russian government, and this is one of this and, you know, european parliament is not just one and is not alone in condemning terrorist way of how russia behaves. we just had the nato, a parliamentary assembly who just yesterday agreed with the same definition. we had the parliamentary assembly of the council of europe. they all say the same,
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and we wanted to join those voices of international community who say russia, you are crossing the line. not only because you commit for international crimes and war crimes, i would also say genocidal crimes. but also because the way how you are behaving is also resembling, increasingly a terrorist actors. and i think this is an important point to emphasize. we never know what the consequences that would have in the future. for example, regarding financing the rebuilding of ukrainian states in the future. so does today's resolution and also signal that there can't be any dialogue with russia as long as you're pretend is empowered because certainly you would not negotiate with a sponsor of terrorism. i think this is precisely the thin line that we're walking here,
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but the thin line is important and it's also very careful. if you read the resolution itself, you would see that we would like to a severe the diplomatic discourse to the absolute minimum. but absolute minimum is also in under certain circumstances. for example, the necessity to have some way off talks, for example, regarding employment of certain weapons and kind of mutual reassurance or mutual information regarding using or not using certain arms. and under certain circumstances, it could be also about negotiating certain agreements. so the language of the resolution on that is quite a, quite careful. but even if the language there is careful, you're not concerned that this will will burn down those last bridges that may have remained between rush and you listen. russia is burning literally
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burning a few crane. but we are not able, are not capable to differentiate that much anymore between the bridges we want to keep or not, these bridges are being burned by the russian government. we cannot accept that a member of international community is being destroyed now that their citizens are being killed. tortures assured, tortured and raped, and we will keep silence. this is not what european parliament is for, and this is not how we behave so far. so now we are saying what is logical to say that this way is unacceptable, inhumane and outside of the civilized norm of the international community. okay, thank you so much for taking the time for speaking with us. that is member of the european comment for the greens survey they can bring you up to speed now with some
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other stories making news around the world. ah, the u. k. supreme court has ruled that scotland does not have the legal power to hold a new referendum on independence without british government support. it's a blow to the scottish independence movement which lost a 2014 referendum by a 10 percent margin. who is in the u. s. state of virginia say the gunman who killed 6 people at a wal mart store in chesapeake on tuesday night was a company employee. he apparently killed himself afterwards. according to a witness. the shooter was a manager who opened fire on his co workers as they gathered for a break here, but a 16 year old student has been killed and at least 18 people injured, falling explosions at 2 bust offs in jerusalem. the nail bombs were detonated about half an hour apart islamic militant organization. hamas has praised the attacks, but stopped short of claiming responsibility and workers at the world's biggest
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i phone factory and china, have been beaten and detained by police. after a thousands protested against coven 19 controls and working conditions, videos on social media show people facing rows of police with plastic riots, shields. about 200000 people, work at the factory. and indonesians have begun burying their dead after a devastating earthquake. they killed more than 270 people. authority say the search for dozens of people still missing will continue for another 3 days. the quake happened during the day a time when many children were at school. the earthquake has done to school building in the city of john jude into rapid students flight as the building came down. like thumb didn't make it. this family is grieving. the loss of that b toodle door, do vida really other when i saw her under she i left i couldn't handle it,
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but i'm not seeing my daughter's condition. her body and face all had injuries in a nearby boarding school. student early 14 shows the damage caused by the earthquake here and other students of forgot just his life while trying to fix his friend. one of the people, a lot of my feel really sad when of him. well, even though my house and my school are damaged, we can repair them. but if you lose a friend, you can't get them back. but i feel guilty so for cause parents and family. but the schoolteacher is also morning. i screwed deadly and their parents trusted us to take care of them. i should have protected them, but it's been very hard for me. i don't know what i could have done. john sure is one of the worst affected areas for destruction. dear. we take time to recover from
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and for now rescuers. and while india continued did relief efforts for people grappling with loss and tragedy. or course on an assurance, some along has been reporting from the quake zone. there she found an instance of neighbors helping each other in the wake of the disaster. but i am standing next to an emergency kitchen located in a say, marietta, the evacuation tent or were also set up. it's in the restaurant, in the district of sugar. now where it's located near to the epicenter of the quake that happened on monday. and as you can see, these mothers, they are preparing food the days manners of eg noodle. and also there, there is catch a chicken. and this will be distributed on not only to this evacuation spot, but also to other areas, and it will accommodate around $300.00 families or around $600.00 people. so during this time of crisis am i can see sadness, panic,
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a disappointment. but at the same time, i can also see hope and shrink and the, well it's destroyed by it. teachers hope that the quake would eventually stop at all and everything can return to normal. that was dw sharon's from a long reporting from the quake zone in indonesia. where heavy rain and after shocks are hampering rescue efforts. there were earlier asked indonesian red cross secretary general city mon. i ead whether his colleagues are making progress on the ground. yes. in the, the, the, i just when back from the la basin, i spend a little band is today and yes, at the end of the lead up that amy, but feel the, are trying to raise the and that's actually the one that the same with area. but,
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but i think they will continue and as long as the allowed them to me a little bit and then they will continue on. but anything to, to kind of find out if up with the victims. ah, but before the ball even got rolling, for germany's world cup opener against japan, the team had a message for fi, fi. german players covered their mouths during a team photo just ahead of kickoff. it was a response to fee for the threat of sanctions over the $1.00 love arm band as a symbol of diversity. and when a statement, the german football federation said of the arm band they were blocked from wearing . it wasn't about making a political statement. human rights are non negotiable, denying us the arm band is the same as denying us of voice. we stand by our position and on the pitch. it has been a bumpy start as well for germany in their opening match before time world champion
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last to japan who came from behind to win to one ill kaya going to one for germany . a head with this penalty came shortly after the half hour mark in germany's lead, held until the 76 minute when with so doing level, the score in japan didn't stop there. just 7 minutes later they struck again to my son who made it to one from a narrow angle. and after argentina's opening to feed the world cup its 2nd shot results. and the 2018 rolled cut runners up croatia in dirt. a frustrating start to this year's tournament to they were held mill mill by morocco inquiry to have the better chances in the game would star player luca, monterey. among those coming close. if we can see that again. but morocco did stand firm for a valuable point. it is the 3rd goal, the straw of the tournament, so far as these update office,
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our coming up after the break made in germany explores the climate impact of the world cup in coach hart. i'm clear, richardson in berlin for me and my colleagues working behind the scenes. thanks so much for watching. ah ah, with
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business is booming, edmondo, those only boards and it's boys for even further growth and important economic factor, but also be endangering the country. the port also transfer shipment from ukraine. how warranted our fears of a russian attack ah, made in germany next on d. w. ah,
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it's avalanche. are my welcome to my podcast, love matter. the i and life celebrities influences and expert to talk about all playing loud effect from day to and yet today, nothing's been left because all these things and more in the new season of the pot, come make sure to tune and wherever you get your pot cast and join the conversation to because your knowledge in love matters on d. w. or with my cheese ma'am, said, can i get the country i came up with an increasing number of women and less in america. i'm guessing federal. i need to stop murdering and depressing with fighting against thanks to them. violence and full access to
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abortion. pressure from the street has already proven successful. the opposition live on the rise beds off with menchie's daughter november 25th on d w. ah ah ah ah. it's been a football world cup like no other ma, many have been on the attack, accusing host casa of this.

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