tv DW News Deutsche Welle November 28, 2022 2:00pm-2:31pm CET
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a dozen people are dead in cameroon, after heavy brains trigger a landslide in the capital yacht. one day was at the latest. from our correspondence there and drowning and plastic, we all know about the problems plastic creates for the environment. now, countries from around the world are meeting to find a common solution plus at the world's cup and could tar germany restore some pride and keep their hopes for the next round alive. nicholas food groups, scores, they're equal lives are in a hard fought one all draw with spain. a germany still have a tough battle ahead to qualify for the knockout stage. ah, i'm sarah kelly. welcome to the program. security is being tightened in several
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chinese cities in response to large protest over the government's anti covered measures. thousands of people have taken part in the demonstrations calling for an end to china's locked downs. and in some cases for president chieftain ping to resign. such protests are extremely rare in china, where there are strict censorship rules. solidarity protests have also been taking place overseas, but china's government is showing little sign of backing down. in downtown shanghai, a heavy police presence has replaced the huge protests which filled these streets. police cars, trucks and offices are out in force. huge fences now in place to stop crowns. gathering. both parties here are working to remove all evidence of the protests, demanding these women delete photos from the fines. here they have reached one protein stone with police telling reporters the men didn't obey their
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arrangements. he's not the only one to have been detained. the social media footage shows a b. b. c journalist being arrested while protest is churned for his release. the b, b. c says he was assaulted before being fried chinese authorities say he didn't properly identify himself. the proteus are an extremely bria show of descent with many here reaching the limits. ballade, i think everyone has their own demands in this matter. i think it's good for the environment of the whole country to have such a space for discussion with for ha, rallies and solidarity with china's demonstrations have now spread around the world . large crowds gathered outside the embassy in london. and here in tokyo, calling for an end to china's strict coven restrictions. but
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chinese authorities are refusing to change course. you know, we believed that with the leadership of the c p. c. and the support of the chinese people are fight against coven 19 will be successful. there has been a slight easing of restrictions in the western city of odom. she were a deadly apartment fire last week, sparked much of the recent and reast. some residents have been confined to their homes for months, can travel on local buses from tuesday, some small relief, but far from the in to the government's 0 cove and policy that so many are demanding. and earlier we spoke with journalist for the encroachment in beijing for the latest. yeah, our to day. i mean it's really, it seems calm here also in beijing where there are several hundreds of not thousands of protesters together last night. but still, you see
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a lot of pro police not only in uniforms, on plainclothes, and you know, it could snap any time. and it's really to a tense atmosphere. and me as a journalist, i was immediately kicked out of the protest site. and just by standing there when they identified me as a journalist, am, so let's see how it will develop. i mean, in shanghai, what the authorities did, they basically fenced of all the squares. they fenced off, or several streets. but i mean, yeah that's, that's of course, intimidating. and yeah, we know that there have been several arrests, but i mean what they cannot do is, you know, to, to change the attitude. there were already so many protests out there last night and they achieved it. they did it and many people are saw it and they spread from word to word. and yeah, i think that has a big impact. tell us a little bit more also about how authorities have been reacting to the protest and how that reaction has been evolving. yeah, so last night he and beijing, for example, the reaction was rather cautious. i got the feeling that there were
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a little bit. i'm waiting to see how it develops in the protest. you were peaceful . there were very critical. i also against the government, but what they did not do this, they were not directly criticizing, seizing pinging or demanding to for him to step down. that happened in shanghai and, you know, that had huge consequences. there were a lot of arrests actually. and also today there were arrests and even, you know, one or foreign corresponded. foreign journalist was arrested and even, you know, physically harassed and but he has a british passport a. so he got a free and released after several hours. a chinese don't have that protection. i am sure are many of those who are protesting within the group our where political slogans are shouted. they faced several years in prison. that is really a very great risk. tell us a little bit more about the potential repercussions that you've highlighted there. yeah, so i mean you, you don't have a rule of law here. so basically if the police takes away them, i mean,
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it happens that you know, especially for human rights or, and quote unquote crime that people just disappear for several years. so am, i mean, you definitely don't have a legal protection if you are in a political protest and basically you could be em, sued for, am no subversion or provoking a trouble or always quote unquote. but i mean basically the state can just look you up and this is not only for a short time, it can really be for me, very many years tabby and catch me in dating. thank you. and germany's president france alta stein meyer, has given his reaction to the protest in china, expressing his hope that they remain peaceful the i live in on, on snow her. we all remember our own fight against the corona virus against the pandemic. and we still remember how much of a burden that was for many in germany the could. nora can only imagine how great the burden is for people in china. where the measures are much stricter,
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have been in place much longer and are still being and forces devising on to desert happy for them. the food is that's why i understand that people are expressing the impatience and their grievances on the streets. and as the democrats and what, i can only say that freedom of expression is an important public good. and i can only connect what we are seeing with the hope that the state authorities in china respect the right to freedom of expression, freedom to protest, to find my notes along that. and of course, i hope that the demonstrations remain peaceful. the students will to include lift flow, and here is to look at another stories making news around the world. at least 4 people have been killed as militant storm day hotel. in somali as capital mogadishu, security forces are trying to regain control of the building, which is popular with politicians. i'll show bob militants affiliated with al qaeda . say they carried out the attack. police in 6 countries have joint forces to
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bring down an international rang of cocaine dealers. almost 50 people have been arrested in europe. and the united arab emirates authorities seized 30 tons of drugs. rescuers are searching for 4 people still missing after a landslide on saturday in the italian island of its kiya authority say the death toll has now risen to 8 people, including a new born baby. the slide was triggered by a storm state of emergency has been declared authorities in cameroon. say that at least 14 people have died in a landslide in the country's capital. got one day, dozens of others are missing. the incident occurred on sunday. a crowd of people were attending a funeral when rain caused a soil embankment to collapse on top of them. rescuers are digging through the mud, searching for survivors. heavy rains have caused several floods in cameroon. this year. and fighting is far from over in the southern
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city of harrison in ukraine. though it's back under ukrainian control, russian forces continue to shell, the city from across the ne pro river. at the same time, people there are coming to grips with the past 8 months of russian occupation. he'd have his nick connelly met with 2 residents who survived weeks of torture. a warning, some viewers might find the descriptions of violence in this report. upsetting hearing for food, huddling around the few working why fi hotspots carrying on in spite of the shilling all around them. this is what every day life looks like, have san goldman keith was people to regulate 2 areas of power, water away from the russian guns. the new in victoria state put during 8 long months of russian occupation and not about to go anywhere. now. they might seem
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like old friends, the only mentioned september the seller of this on remarkable of his book as prisoners. i know that there's a violin forced their way into flat. my grandma started screaming, they let her off into the bathroom soon at a bag over my head. and they just started beating me over and over. who's your president, who's your president, you're coming with us and it's going to be a lot of fun till i miss. the neil had subscribed to a pro ukrainian chuck group on telegram enough for her son's increasingly anxious rush notifies to come off to him. victoria had been volunteering, taking food to people in need when a group came into suspicion for contacts in government control territory. even when the russians ready to home, they found ukrainian flags, army souvenirs and postcards. reasonable char, i guess that means your enemy, doesn't it? the interrogator asked me, i agreed with him, but what do people do to their enemies? he asked, i killed them. i replied that you are right. he said, but they talked to them 1st under which i didn't think i'd get out of there alive.
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you may want to come to my door, the new had no idea where it was that been kept. he there, he realized it's been told as weeks in the middle of have san and they recognized pictures of their basement shed online. we tried to go inside, but the police isn't letting anyone in the risk of russian mines is just too high. holden eel victoria ever saw was their self. as soon as they left it, there were captain hoods. the captors determined to remain unseen. but as little as they could see, they could hear more than they want to. 2 of us, the worst was hearing your screams. lightning i was the loudest in our basement during the interrogation. see of all the cells could hear yelping. i was unbearable . the men's shouts didn't travel quite as far, but when you started, all i could do was pray that they go easy. all you knew of was all quite up within the pat my last interrogation, my hands were bound. the pain from the electric shocks was so bad that i didn't even notice that i pulled a nail out. all of
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a sudden i could feel the blood dripping my hands. my trousers were they were all covered in blood. the lead path, which give the most terrifying moment, was still to come of 2 weeks without news. while the inmates was suddenly driven out to the city, the gods telling them it was time to say their prayers. on the side of the that they made every one record a short video. you had to say your name, your date of birth, and saying to the camera that you are alive and well, for a moment i was really worried. what do they need this for? what she was? did they need an alibi? and when you brush geffrey to seal them, they were told to close their eyes and count to a 100. but instead of the shorts that expected, they heard they're kept as driving away without them. yeah, with the bad, the likelihood the russian kept his blood faced justice, his slim, the torch, all the evidence as they left loose. one good thing has come of it, all retorted, tells me redone. being scared and with an increasing number of russian
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attacks on ukraine's infrastructure. many european countries are preparing for an influx of ukrainian refugees. the city of berlin, for example, has taken in nearly 90000 refugees from ukraine. this here, it's working on more accommodation, including huge tent facilities at a former airport. local church communities are also stepping in 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 on the road, off sca and her 8 year old daughter anastasio 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. really, a bell is good. i mean, i was so scared when people in ukraine said, you need to leave save your children because of i was so scared to go to
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a foreign country where i don't know 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 the uncover to tuten this officers presume we have space for 80 people here, 5 o 400 in case of a crisis and i think we're ready. i will give o old to help these people and take them in. definitely of him for of info with winter setting in berlin's government is in a race against time. for example, 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
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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. on that seal is this thus differ val don't, is where people stay in this temporary housing to be short from him so that we can offer people a place to move on to my off. i love the mental unbeaten kind will stand on not hanging on wednesdays, 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. saddam, which one milligrams do most of them, we're living here in peace and quiet in a wal nice place and they are there with the chest. we still feel like we are
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somehow in limbo, but i am trying to live in the current reality. i'm living here when the kids, i have to crate a comfortable life for them. lasers with the war. dragging on and winter ahead. you leah's family is lucky. even now. hundreds of ukrainians are stuck in a rival centers in berlin, hoping for a more permanent home and for many people, it is hard to imagine modern life without plastic, but while it's uses are endless. we also know that it's polluting our planet. that's why delegates from around the world are meeting in uruguay with their site set on an internationally binding treaty to help win the world off of its plastic addiction. titles, getting dangerously close to plastic bags an image that has become symbolic of the world's plastic problem. and one that world lead as the hoping to put to rest negotiate is from across the globe, a meeting this week to work on a legally binding agreement that is hoped will curb plastic pollution including
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that found in the ocean. plastic as a material and the pollutant is totally trans boundaries in the last couple of years. there's been this growing recognition that we need to have something at the global level, some kind of policy instrument that's going to re capture the whole plastic lifecycle. plastic is an extremely versatile material. it's used to package food to make fabrics for our clothes, and it's used in our cosmetics and beyond. while plastic was made in relatively small amounts, in the 1950s production has increased exponentially. and 201300 1000000 tons of plastic were produced to day that has grown to 400000000 tons every year. but it is also highly polluting, plastic accumulates as litter nature. much of it ends up in landfills. micro plastics or major cells concern. plastic is broken into small pieces,
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becoming micro plastics. they come from retires, i'm washing synthetic fibers. they have been found in the deepest section of the ocean in animals and even in human blood. recycling has long been proposed as the solution to plastic pollution companies market products on the basis that they're made from recycle plastic or can be recycled, but only around 9 percent of plastic worldwide is recycled. it, we're standing in the face of years of failed voluntary commitments. you know, the major, the major multinational companies that set targets for improving recyclable, etc, for reducing the amount of plastic a use up. there's absolutely no accountability to any kind of legal frame. what nations have pledged to reach an agreement on plastic by 2024. only time will tell whether it will be successful or just more plastic promises. and let's get more with that. we're joined in the studio by louise osborne from d. w's, environment desk. you heard her there in that piece i. she's joining us now to share a little bit more about this. why is the world to having such
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a problem turning away from plastic? well, let's face that. it's just so useful. it's um, difficult find a real alternative to, to use instead of it. i mean we use it to keep our food fresh for our clothes for everything. but we really do need to find a way to we nurse all of it to some degree, because it's a huge contributor to greenhouse gas emissions, for example. it produce a 3.4 percent of global compet emissions. and that is that to double by 2060 so it's something that we really need to get away from. not only for nature and the way that it looks and everything but also to me on climate goals. so how about just recycling it using alternatives also? i mean, but where did those option come in? well, actually it's a lot more difficult to recycle than you might think. it's also more expensive, so it's at the moment, easier for and cheaper for companies to use. new plastic than it is for them to
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recycle, which is obviously something that needs to be moved away from. and there is no incentive than for companies to use recycle plastics. although a lot of companies say that they are doing that and trying to move towards that. we've seen that a lot of it is green washing unfortunately. and there is also the infrastructure isn't not in place in some places. and it's confusing. i mean, here in germany for example, we recycle plastic, but not plastics can be recycled and knowing what you can do and, and where is, is always so difficult. how do governments and regulars come in here and that so the, the governments on that, you know, they could do something like binding plastic altogether. and, you know, in europe that has been done to some extent a single used plastics have been banned in europe. for example, um, but it's, it's not always so easy um they will be talking about whether there is the
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possibility of banning new plastics. for example, as part of the talks that are taking place. and financing is also going to be an issue just like with the climate and talks we'll have to look at how are they will have to look at how developing countries can afford to get rid of their plastic problems. and also find are the ways to move forward. and, but you know, if, if these talks go on the way that they're supposed to, an agreement could be as historic as the paras climate agreement or, or that's what's being said to anyway. ok, well that's the hope certainly for, for those who care about this issue. louise osborne, from deed of years environment. as thank you so much ah, at the word up in katara, germany restored some pride after their defeat to japan by drawing 11 with spain and groped e. that they still need to win their last game against costa rica to have any chance of qualifying for the knockout stage. spain show their intent in this game
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right from the start, danny. oh mo, coming close 7 minutes in. but manuel noir in gold and the crossbow both came to germany's rescue. has he flicks i looked most dangerous from set pieces, but sadly for then antonia roodick as header was rude out of sight. the mountains find between success and failure into the 2nd half in spain drew 1st blot out. barbosa had only been on the field. 8 minutes. a typical poachers finished from him as it inspired substitution by spain coach luis enrique. but anything he can do flit can to his super sub strike had nicholas full crew smashed in germany's equalizer with 7 minutes to go. raymond's full crew, repaying flake and bucket loads for his call up to the squad relief then for the coach will be hoping this doesn't turn out to be a temporary reprieve. and d,
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w spoke to germany, fans in katara after that nail biting match with many not satisfied after the 11 draw. i have mixed feelings. oh, i don't know. should i be happy? because we are down 10. i'm pretty much our the tournament or should i be sad because i feel like we could try to score in the last minute of them or get something from chances a score. now we i have to beat costa rica. now we have to figure out a way to get lucky, i guess, because of jap roger ban windsor, then we have no chance without efficiency, efficiency, they just need to score. i mean, for example, who's yellow, perfect dribbling, but he just needs to score. so if they do it, then they will just go one goal. they will do $34.00 goals. yeah. excellent. really . oh, was disappointing 1st. mash. good. believe it. we lose them over susan: oh. and there was big shock in group aft where morocco b belgium. to nel. substitute abdul hamid seberio opened the scoring when his free
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kick went straight in on 73 minutes and another sub zachariah. i will call made game the game safe for morocco, an injury time to stun belgium's collection of stars. and spar chaos in the belt and capital brussels where police detained around a dozen people after riots broke out in several parts of the city on sunday evening . dozens of soccer fans some draped in rock and flags clashed with police with water cannon and tear gas croatia have moved to top of group f thanks to a comfortable for one victory over canada who go out of the tournament forward andre chrome march scored twice for croatia, this was his 2nd goal and croatia is 3rd on 70 minutes. putting the game beyond canada's reach, croatia are top of the group on 4 points, the same as morocco. and finally, in maryland, in the united states,
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a small plane crashed into power lines on sunday night and ended up suspended in mid air. the 2 occupants of the plane were alive, but seriously hurt. they were unable to get out of the wreck, which hung on a steel tower, about 30 meters off the ground. as night fell, they were rescued with the health of a crane. and now for many of us dancing and perfect step with one other person can be hard enough. well, how about trying it with 2000 other people? that is just what these dancers and venezuela are trying to do, and break a guinness world record for the world's largest salsa dance. it's a way to casino casino, where couples formed circles, and they do patterns at the same time. the current record is held by spain.
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ah, and now with that you're up to date here on dw is coming up. next it is dw news, asia with my colleague there ashburn, energy. in the meantime, thank you so much for joining us. and here's a reminder of our top story protests taking place around the world and solidarity with those in china, demanding an end to cove. it locked downs can, may add pressure to chains of china's 0 co, that policy brush has all that and more coming right up. so do stay with us if you can. thanks for watching with ah ah
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stories with every day life with europeans fear and what they hope for focus on europe. on d, w. m. know we're interested in the global economy, our portfolio, d, w business beyond. here's a closer look at the project. our mission to analyze the fight for market dominance. if this is way ahead with the w business beyond shell, filled with a symbol of power,
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rebellion sensuality by royalty and icons like a magic wand to grounds for divorce guy with a colorful cultural history. the could latin, mistaken das december said on d w er ah, this is the dublin years, day shack, coming up to dave, china's antique cove protests go global demonstrations. i have the u. k. australia and japan against china. i was juno prorate measures how serious a challenge all the to shoot you being and the communist bought. these are polity.
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