tv DW News Deutsche Welle November 25, 2022 3:00pm-3:31pm CET
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i left all these things and more in the new season of the plot. come make sure to tune and wherever you get your pot class and join the conversation because you know it love manner ah ah, ah, ah, this is dw news live from berlin. russia launches overnight, attacks on the ukrainian city of harrison. it is the heaviest barrage today's on the southern city that ukrainian forces retail, 2 weeks ago. also coming up on the show to mark a un initiative to eliminate violence against women and girls. we follow some
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female activists patrolling the streets of mexico to fight sexual harassment at the world cup in katara, iran's national football team do what they didn't in their opening match, singing along to their anthem, and then went on to beat whales. ah hello, i'm clare richardson. thank you so much for joining us today. at least 4 people have been killed in overnight missile attacks on the city of her son in ukraine, south. and these are the worst strikes the region has seen since it was re taken 2 weeks ago by ukrainian troops. the targets included homes and commercial buildings, and a warning that some viewers may find images in the following report, disturbing. the damaged remains of another russian attack on
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ukrainian homes. like so much of his song, there is no power here and the latest deadly shelling came during the night. emergency lights help reveal the devastation to residence while paramedics rushed to help the injured li live with officers fill. these were shells in blue at the key. lieber howling cookies, curry, and there were a lot of spar like viola, rush and missiles. rain down right across here. san holmes court fire sending ash into the air and littering the streets with shattered glass. here sun is on the front lines of this war. just 2 weeks ago, ukrainian soldiers forced russian occupies out of the city and across the dani pro river dollars russian soldiers, now escalating this, shelling on her son's homes and infrastructure. any celebration of
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the city's liberation was short lived. it's tears and good byes for these families . as they leave some having withstood 9 months of russian occupation with the buck of school, full bombs fell right next to our house. and it's too dangerous for my daughter or so i'm taking her to safety and poland. work through school or thorazine is urging residence to leave the city if they can, to help ease pressure on badly damaged infrastructure. aurora, they are taking revenge. they want to turn casts on into a new mighty or poor. we didn't do anything wrong nearly in here. only half of ukraine's energy needs are being made after the latest russian strikes with no heating wind has become a weaken. as supplies and infrastructure continue to be pummeled by russia's shelling ukrainians, embracing for more dark days and heat as get across the board for us on a nic connolly in the ukrainian capital civ. nick,
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we heard ukrainians preparing for dark days a heads. what is the situation like there has power or water been restored in some parts? so we've heard new authorities here that energy generation and distribution is back to 70 percent of the normal level, but that is very unevenly spread across the country. so it is getting a lot better than it was just last night. but if you're in one of the reasons still struggling, that's not much used to you and they're definitely still all kind of unplanned blackouts. there's no kind of time table comp, people can't organize their lives around some kind of certainty, as was the case before this latest strike. and yet look, space is still without heating. is real worried that if the kind of centralized heating system where you have like a heating plot, sending warm water through pipes across city, if those get damaged and the frost comes, the basically you have to rebuild that infrastructure will be wrecked. so lots of worries. a lot of optimism though, that ukraine can still kind of manage somehow. we have with lots of improvisation,
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lots of a, of an ans standard solutions bring some kind of normal t normalcy back. but the major problem are the spare parts. basically, all of ukraine's stock of spare parts are now used up. and anything that has to be fixed now is only going to be possible thanks to new bits of kick coming from a broad as is recent attacks. also led to some nuclear power plant being forced offline. he tell us what the latest on that is so we understand that they are now back online. this was a kind of automatic safety procedure that when the grid is just it's kind of so unbalanced. they switch themselves off to prevent some kind of overload. these are crucial because of the right now in getting coal or gas or the kind of fossil energy supplies into ukraine is very difficult given the logistics of these new capacities are crucial to ukraine's kind of survival in terms of economic economic situation. keeping this country going and then you know, there are, there's the big past asian, the biggest position in europe in the parisha that is current in russian knocked by
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churchy, where we have concent worried about things going on there because it's being shelled. so definitely a danger situation, but one that for now seemed still to be on the control. and just before i let you go now in the list as ukraine, the fighting continues. how are things looking for these newly mobilized rushing trips? we're getting thought of heavy heavy russian losses there in the east is that the russians are desperate for any kind of when, after all these ukrainian pushes forward. and joe are taking big risks in terms of people's lives. there been lots of videos doing the rounds of newly mobilized russian troops telling you that wouldn't on social media, that they basically had no training given very no shoddy equipment. and basically with a couple of days being taken from their lives back in russia or funding selves on the front lines. we lots of lives lost as a kind of mother soldiers, mothers movement brewing in russia. lots of anger there and kind of ran really can open challenge to vladimir putin criminal. this is something that was a big deal in the ninety's during the chechen war. so a lot of fear,
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seemingly in moscow that this could actually turn in something difficult for them to deal with. we had that important day meeting with women. he claimed were mothers of souls fighting crane. there's lots of skepticism in rushes, independent media about who these people would if they were really, the cit, the people he needed to be talking to. but a sense that russian government is trying to defuse something that is really going wrong than there are correspondent in the quarterly report frontier. thank you. has always a key of his calling on germany said to livermore patriot missile defense units saying they are vital to help combat ration attacks. but the pressure is exposing fault winds among nato allies and tensions between germany's coalition parties. d w political correspondent, matthew more explains, it was an offer made in good faith. no, it's turning into a fiasco. at 1st, germany offered to send patriot meso systems and euro fighter planes to poland. after a stream essay crash killed 2 men. it was meant to close gaps and polish air defense
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on their eastern flank. initially, poland accepted the offer, but then war saw proposed sending the patriot mess, so directly to ukraine. it caught germany off guard and triggered an unwelcome debate. sources and bare lindsey poland is playing politics pandering to a domestic audience. not least because any decision to st. patriots would be a decision for natal, not germany, is a patriots sent these patriots a pat of nicholas and the offense. that means they are intended for nato territory and if they are deployed elsewhere, that has to be discussed with nita ls in advance. and almost as for here, mid donato aunt, meeting ali ethan, which floor and then nato's chief, however, sees it differently. the specific decisions on the specific systems or national decisions sometimes throw in the user's agreements and all things will the need to consult with although
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a laws are. but at the end of the it has to be taken. the boy of the national governments to add to the german government's headache, one influential member of the governing green party backs. poland. it should to follow. i think that poland to mount to deliver the patriot massage to ukraine is absolutely right. they don't need them, as poland rightly points out again to be clear, we have already delivered arrestees, and the patriots are a good addition. so why a western contents have sent high tech defense systems, such as that as the irish t now sounds a hawks mitchell. allies have resisted coals to same patriots for fear it would mark an escalation. that's because the highly sophisticated kit is embedded in the tooth integrated defense systems. it could be perceived as offering ukraine, defacto nato protection. for some in the needle community. this is a debate, it should be kept private. one thing we have to remember the russia wants to divide the support. so let's don't do that deal. we will play each other against each
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other. and as russia steps up, it's aerial bombardment of ukraine, this is a discussion that is only likely to intensify. and an episode that may make berlin think twice about publicizing offers of help in the future. as maggie more reporting there now, we can take a look at some other stories making news around the worlds. china has reported a nother record high of daily cove. 19 infections when new cases exceeding 32000 authorities have imposed fresh locked downs and closures in almost all major cities . in line with the countries controversial 0 copay policy. germany could make it easier for immigrants to attain citizenship. interior minister and nancy phaser told reporters that in the future, foreigners will be able to become germans after having lived in the country legally for 5 years. instead of 8. the children of parents who have lived in germany for 5 years will receive citizenship at birth. and eli moss has announced that suspended
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accounts on twitter will be granted amnesty starting next week. these social media giants, new c e o has already restored suspended accounts like that of donald trump and fears over content. moderation at twitter have been growing under mosques, tumultuous leadership. while 5 days after a deadly earthquake struck indonesia, hopes of finding more survivors are fading. the country's disaster agency now says $310.00 people have died since the magnitude $5.00 event hit the island of java. earlier this week, 24 people are still missing. authorities have sent in heavy machinery, helicopters and thousands of personnel in an effort to find any remaining survivors . d, w. 's sharon assume along has been speaking to survivors on the island. 6 year old asco was pulled from the rubble after spending 2 days trapped under debris, without food or water. his uncle tells me that he was very quiet when they found
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him, and his still under shock dba nay. both our gun yo, but a gun yo. were married, he was found in his room, already burned on the 2nd floor. huh. on the concrete and rumbling waterbury up with a copy, protected him and saved his life. i love you. i'm not in there for 2 days when his father and i had the feeling that oscar was definitely still miserable and of new variable. and that feeling was right. how do you feel more than 2000 people were injured in the quake? many of them children who were still at school authorities warned that time was running out for about 40 people who were still missing as rescue workers face dangers. after sharks and tropical rain, tens of thousands of people have been moved to evacuation centers after their houses were destroyed. the challenge now tells me this psychiatrist is to provide not only food and medical help, but to prevent long term psychological damage to bailey. it any time up and being
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had and then the trauma experienced by the victims should not be taken lightly and up some up. and this is just as important as the physical injuries we separately have. it's not visible now, but it will be in a year or chair and can even cause that disability. are those affected could be unable to go to work or to go to school promising. get them not as cas drama will also need to be addressed. he lost his mother and grandmother in the earthquake west. java will need time to come to terms with a true skill of the disaster and money to build earthquake resistant infrastructure . something that has so far been largely absent in this densely populated part of indonesia. well i'd like to chantelle a very important issue that d. w has been covering across the day. gender based violence, according to the united nations. every hour 5 women are killed by members of their
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own families. today is the international day for the elimination of violence against women, and the un is launching 16 days of activism aimed at raising awareness of what it says are alarming rates of fem aside, where women or girls are murdered just because they are female. the went as 45, a 1000 women were killed by family members last year. as you can see, the highest number was in asian countries followed by africa. but it is a threat that is facing women around the world's sexual harassment in public spaces is also a problem for women and girls around the world. including in mexico, women. there are also frequently subject to coerce of control from their male partners. in one district of mexico city activists are getting organized with st. patrols to raise awareness of these problems. for over a decade, rosario husband controlled every aspect of her life. her finances when she could leave the house, even which clothes she was allowed to wear. the abuse almost drove her to suicide.
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her story is all too common and mexico were 3 out of 10 women suffer psychological violence, mere buddy and see if he got them in what it even affected my physical appearance at regular. i didn't care any more how i dress, or if i bathed, because my husband would ask me why i dressed up why i took a bath to me. he was very jealous, is many symbols. rosario went to an official refuge for survivors of violence in mexico city where she lives. the local government is built 13 of the houses, which have helped over $8000.00 women in the past year alone. but it's not always easy to ask for help. some women are afraid, their neighbors will see them enter a safe space and mark them as victims. this district organizes daily st. patrols to discourage stigmatization and raise awareness of institutions that protect women. the environment is also part of the problem with the authorities of
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improve street lighting on several main avenues to create safe path for women. nearly 3 quarters of all harassment and other sex crimes happened in the street on, on public transport. almost half of mexican women say the fear of sexual violence has made them stop taking walks, visiting relatives and friends, or even going to school can be assumed they missed them. one man was masturbating right in front of me at all sunny others brush up against you. when they walk past people the most, we can ask for help, but no one does anything. no one knows another way, but i the faces at one time i became paralyzed with fear. and now i can't take the subway by myself. i'm afraid i could freeze again at any moment. we were lit up with that. violence against women is recurrent and wide spread. but rosario is using her voice to fighters. so her 12 year old daughter can live freely, nesbit,
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so they came and got thrown out. for more i'm very pleased to welcome anita bottle . she is deputy executive director of un women and joins us now from new york. thank you so much for taking the time. according to a recent report that you've published, the biggest threat to women is post by the men that they know well, it's often the men that they live with. what needs to change, so that men stop assaulting and killing the women in their lives. well, as you know, to most perpetrators of what we call intimate violence. so actually we have to start with them in and we have to start educating them. but more importantly, we have to start to change attitudes and cultural norms and behaviors which normal life the issue is that society has a very high tolerance for violence against women. so unless we change people's attitudes and they begin to see this for the crime, that really is nothing much changed. so how do you go about doing that and what
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would your message be? for example, for the men who are watching this interview right now? well 1st of all, i would say it is a human rights violation, so violence against women. any gone to violence, actually not just abuse human rights by nation. so if you are indulging in that kind of behavior, violating woman human rights. the 2nd thing that i think is really working is that we have to keep advocating for the importance of tackling suspicion as a public policy priority. the problem is that most government isn't a big enough priority. yes. on days like the international day to end violence against women, you will have public figures speak up about today. they speak up about it over the next 16 days because we have a campaign for 16 days. but it is actually got to be something that's the stuff in government, in cabinet. and it has gotten rise to the level of the national priority so that there are resources allocated to it. and it is something that is viewed as
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a universal problem and not just an individual household problem that has to be faced by the woman who's the victim of abuse. and the un has recognized that the overall number of feminist sides has remained largely unchanged over the past decade. what is going wrong there? well, there were a couple of things happening 1st, as i said, society has really normalized violence against women. people are no longer shocked enough about it. you want to take action. the 2nd thing that's happened is that during the pandemic, there was a huge exponential right in violence against women. and it became visible during the pandemic. all 3 generally called it the shadow pandemic. but pul spend, it makes those rates of violence continue to remain hot. and the 3rd thing that was happening the last couple of years is that the number of conflicts of the work and
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the number of countries in the world where there is a huge pushback against women's rights has gone up. so whether it's what's going on or iran, or what's happening, but the conflict and ukraine, you see women suffering because they aren't the front lines of the conflict or protecting against oppression of that, right? and so that is associated with, right? right, right. okay, so these are intertwined issues requiring urgent responses. anita about. yeah, i want to thank you so much for joining us on the w need to speak about the message . thank you. well, delegates at a global summit on trade and endangered species are to decide on proposals to protect sharks. the initiative would add, many kinds of sharks were list of species requiring protection. the proposal is one of the most disgust at this year's summit in panama, but other kinds of wildlife trade are also in the spotlight. like rhinoceros horns
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or elephant tusks, hippopotamus teeth apprised his ivory, the jewelry, all nice handles. illegal hunting is already believed to have wiped out hipaa populations in some african countries in response to 10 african nations at the convention in panama, have tabled a proposal for a global trade ban on hippopotamus products. species protection is an urgent task with scientists warning of the danger of a new period of mass extinction. the last time, such an event happened was 66000000 years ago. ahead of the convention, the e you issued a revised action plan, stepping up its fight against wildlife trafficking. but the block was sharply criticized roots, rejection of a full commercial ban on hipaa product. other species like last frogs, raise and sharks were luckier. 60 species of sharks will be shielded by
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international trade regulations if the decision is signed on friday night. so far, few shock species have been singled out for protection. the animals are hunted for their fins and meat and are traded internationally. several species are critically endangered, already threatened with extinction shocks and res plan, indispensable role in marine ecosystems experts say a global pact to protect them would boost the health of the world's oceans. and so to the man's world cup in katara, where just a short while ago, iran stunned wales with too late goals amidst ongoing protests in their home country. their ronnie, a national team sang along during our national anthem prior to kick off. the players had refrained from doing so in their opening game earlier this week. loud and displeasure was heard from iranian supporters, as the anthem played with the team singing quietly. and fans said, as security had prevented symbols of support for the protests from being taken into
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the stadium. so for more on this end, the match itself. i'm very pleased to welcome that he has a book from the other sports, but he has aaron's team singing their national anthem before this whale, this game against wales, despite not doing so in their opening game earlier this week. why do you think they've had a change of heart? yeah, exactly right. so massive back with from their 1st games the only the players. so for i know why they did that, but they were adamant during the week. they were obviously asked why they didn't thing in the 1st match and they were asked if they were going to do it in the 2nd one and the players didn't really get a conclusive answer. but what they did say is we are under no pressure from the iranian government. so just to throw that rumors out for them. if that's to believe or not. yeah, i mean that's up to interpretation, but we can say is before the world cup, they have met with iranian president ibrahim, right? you see, so maybe there is a hint right there that there might be in contact and that there might be some added pressure on them. what you can say is the spotlight is on the plays
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a lot because in front of every game, we're talking about the national anthem rather than what happens on the pitch. and what we can also saying, we are worrying developments is in front of the stadium. there were some clashes between anti and pro government protest us. and we have to really hope that that doesn't continue. ok. and what about the game itself? i mean, this was our real upset with iran winning as magic as wells. absolutely. so iran going down $6.00 to $2.00 in that in their 1st mention, well, it's getting a point out of that. but in this one, iran was really dominant and that to the surprise of many, including myself. so there were dominating the entire game. it took until the 8 minute until the wells goalkeeper got a red card and then there were 10 minutes of at a time. and we can see here in 90 plus 8 and then 90 plus 9 when wales really had to open up the game, their score the to late goals, but it was nothing less than they deserve. so surprisingly very dominant performance. vermont puts them into 2nd place right now, and then every chance not to actually progress to the knockout stage would,
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would be a surprise to many. but as we see a like in this report right now, they're really deserved it. and wales. yeah, very disappointing display today. they on the bring affected them the welcome. very early. tough one. i do want to ask you another big topic in this world cup has been the treatment of l. g b t t plus fans in katara during the tournament. there were reports already that fans even had rainbow items confiscated from them as they tried to enter the stadiums. well, can you tell us about that? yes, so very, very many, many reports on that one and wasn't only fans, but also journalists who have their rainbow colored clothing and heads and everything confiscated. so this one was a very, very interesting development here because the famous welsh hats that they wear to the games there were confiscated in front of the 1st group stage game. and the wells football association was obviously really, really unhappy with that sort of a intervened with the governing body. and then just a couple of hours before the game, the fif, i actually put out this statement that we have confirmed that fans with way bobo,
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bucket heads and rabble flakes will be allowed entry to the stadium for the match against iran today. so this is only for this game, what that remains for the other game. so if this could be a general shift in approach remains to be seen. but i think that's a really good sign for everyone trying to and to with rambled color, the clothing. and today we saw many of those hats in the stands and it was a really, really beautiful view. and just before i let you go, can you talk to us briefly about brazil, they are one of the favorites to win this tournament, but is it true they could be moving forward without their star name or unfortunately unfortunately, yes, it was a very dominant display. last night and they showed why they are one of the favorites, but name i got caught up in a really bad tackle by one of the serbian defenders and twisted his ankle. and it's a very, very tragic story because if we look at it, name up with the world cup semi final 2014 because he got injured in the quarter fun against colombia. so the famous $71.00 of germany against brazil, he missed. and 4 years later,
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he also got injured into the world cup and didn't play a big role. so this like very unfortunate story might continue here. he left scans later. it's a day and i thing for the sake of football, we just hope that it's not so severe. okay, thank you so much for that. that as much is from d w sports with that update. that's news update at this hour. you can stay tuned. 40 dozen, his age are coming up for a short break, or of course there is always more on our website, dw, dot com and more social media accounts at the news. i'm quite richards, and thanks so much for watching with with
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