tv DW News Asia Deutsche Welle December 13, 2022 3:30pm-3:46pm CET
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puerto tracks down the arctics. major players with lucy rouse, begins it dangerous game. people overseas that yeah, we are here. we're patrolling the area now, the cards are being re, shuffles, and has the best handed. russia is a quite active economic in the arctic. if you see something that looked like james bond, it has to do with the military. it starts december 23rd on d w. this is the dublin years asia coming up today. new tensions between india and china. troops from both countries clash at a disputed border. re igniting memories of a deadly crash 2 years ago. what prompted the recent fight, and what does it mean for bilateral ties moving forward?
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and using cities as what a spawn, just to fight extreme weather events. the new idea of taking root in some chinese cities. ah, my british manager, welcome to did up the news asia, glad you could join us. indian and chinese troops have clashed along a defacto border on india's eastern tip, resulting in injuries on both sides. india defense ministry said the clash occurred last week on friday, along the so called line of actual control or l. a. c. in the long sector in india or not for the state. china claims the entire state as part of its territory. both india and china have their own perception of where the l a c, the defective border between both countries lies. it's more than 3000 kilometer disputed border that extends from anata physician,
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the east turkish me in the west. the l a. c has been the scene of intense faceoff between india and china after troops of both countries engaged in deadly hand to hand fighting in an area called galvan in june 2020 the himalayan border between india and china is one of the world's hottest flashpoints. since the war between the 2 nuclear power, in 1962 has been a fragile peace along the demarcation known as the line of actual control. here people's liberation army troops faced soldiers from the indian army in an uneasy stand of a research in china as flexing its muscles in the region. there are fears this could crank up tensions with india, which is about to overtake china as the world's most populous nation. you daily wants to prove india has the military power to match its growing economic strength in both countries displays of strength in the border, dispute go down well with
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a domestic audience. no. there are long standing agreements forbidding the use of firearms along the ill defined border one. when the 2 clashed in 2020 troops thought hand to hand with spears and clubs in the gall one valley of le dak. these 20 indian and 4 chinese soldiers were killed, prime minister and to render mode. he said india would stand its ground. the sean part up shanty dot india wants peace lake in. but if provoked, we are capable of giving an appropriate response. ha, ha ha. may yet hold the last week's incident. so up to $400.00 people's liberation. army soldiers clash with indian troops in a run. the child pradesh. china played down the tensions between the 2 countries. you know? yeah, the china, india, florida areas are generally stable and the 2 sides have maintained smooth communication through diplomatic and mandatory channel. and but overall relations
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between india and china remain tense. beijing is particularly upset about india's participation in the quad security dialogue, which also includes the u. s. an american allies, japan, and australia. and jeremy now for more context is jumping to jacob. he's a china analyst and associate professor at chivon. other university. professor jacob, that has been somewhat of an uneasy. com at this dispute of border for some time. what prompted this latest clash? well, you know, anyone's guess what the bunch of reasons is. first of all, the winter, usually this is not a time when the 2 side come into contact us. so it clearly indicates that there is some thought we wouldn't do you know, such a clash at least from the chinese site. so, i mean, if you look at it from just the bilateral context and in context, so maybe
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a couple of reasons on the bilateral context. i think, you know, we've just more or less, finally come to some sort of a disengagement. the section points that were generated after the 2020 trashes, but there are still some larger issues. i mean, some other areas in the doc itself that are still on the, on the negotiating table. but these are long standing or what they call the legacy issues. off chinese transgressions that need to be sorted out. i think one of possibility here could be that the chinese are putting pressure on the new negotiators by opening up your front so that these are the issue that not which you know, they have been in which i'm pretty much gone in favor of china for a while now on the other sort of a larger regional interest context would be that the americans and the indians
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recently had a lateral metric size in the state of iraq on which is a border state along the sea. so the claim that the the violate their boundary agreements, which is not entirely true because the price is not violate any of the specially losses. all the, all the to treat the treaties between the 2 countries. in china. the chinese have been extremely concern for a while now about the growing closeness between the indian and the american media that the americans. so a one point you talked about this bilateral point and about the point of disengagement because china and india are both been attempting to disengage from most part of the us in the sea for the better part of 2 years. and some disengagement has happened. but overall, it's proving problematic. does china not want to leave these positions occurred? india claims it has occupied i think that is pretty much the message that the chinese are sending, that you know,
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we are in control of what we are in control. and there is no question of us in these places, but this specific points of this engagement, i mean, these are specific points rather than last tracks of area. so those ideas, you know, that ended up taking their time disengaged from so clearly the message seems to be that, you know, the chinese dictating the pace of whatever happens along the sea. they come in and transgress and then when it's time for and then even the negotiations to actually walk back from the transgressions are a huge pain. which makes it really, you know, which uses up a lot of indian entities and time. and the tradition of sort of seems to be that, you know, you're pushing yeah. as much as you can keep the distracted and signal also that, you know, these are ways in which china communicating to india that they have a strong bar on the sea as well. as you know,
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that the other part that he has to deal with and america is too far away for india to actually depend on the line. and the signals are, you're a control the de facto border between both countries. but just staying on the border in foreign minister, there's junker has said in the past of the state of the border will determine the state of the relationship with china. what does this relationship look like now after this latest incident? well, it's just that the india has to constantly be alert to new or new areas you when i did a concentrate on along the sea, you know to the story. it's been seen that the line of actually controlling the western sector. busy is much more accessible, which is a lot talk about it is much more accessible book industries in the 2nd are not to
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produce that. that is much harder. even if infrastructure is better on the site, i still eat quite hard for both sites to access every point. so the feeling was that this was not so easily, you know, prone to crashes and conflicts, but even saw that have been up points along the eastern sector as well, where classes. but this is probably the most time that i've been actually physical injuries. and the numbers, i think what's particularly unique about the situation is the numbers of the chinese deployed in this particular operation to place the money on a very cold december night. for the number, the police didn't seem to suggest a fair degree of planning, a fair degree of a sort of a mission from the higher echelons on the chinese side to do something like this. i mean, we don't have that much time sort of interrupting your reference time,
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but could you look in your crystal ball and think, is there something that can potentially do as a confidence building measure potentially to try and resolve the situation? i think what to suggest is that others building measures unilaterally from the again said, have failed. i have anything. oh, what the problem is precisely though the chinese keep expecting the indians do sort of walk back or to negotiate or to come up with the next set of confidence building measures. and that jenny doesn't be taking advantage of this. anything the solution now seems to be a no, it's not at and light like responses. and that's again we're in. busy you know seems to be holding back, but for how long it will hold back it really what he's guess. we're lever bear with it. i mean, thanks so much for joining us today. a job in jacob ah, in china, some local governments are warming to the idea of building sponge cities, but is building water absorbing infrastructure in cities as
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a cushion against board, floods and droughts. extreme by the events that china has itself experienced in recent years. a sponge park and a chinese city of non chung it's not made of sponge is it works like them. the $126.00 acre park now serves as a reservoir for the cities, excessive rain water. and when it gets to dry pipes and channels can transport water from here for plant irrigation. so the whole park is like an ecological bank chosen high or an ecological collecting against another which can collect 1000000 cubic meters of rain water from surrounding areas in extreme weather conditions. a bottle when the rain water is collected here, one of the higher parts of the city will be safe. now. i shall not. but what makes this park spongy? lays of porous volcanic rocks plus a mixture of soil and fly ash the residue of coal combustion. it's part of patients
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incentive to transform metropolises into so called sponge cities. landscape architect, yukon. joan is the supervisor of the sponge park project in non chung. he believes much of the modern infrastructure in his country is being built based on ideas imported from europe, which he says ill fitted for the monsoon climate in asia. and he says, innovations are essential for sustainable future idea. responder said, it is to cover the cover give want to more space, give a river more. lisa lucy, keepers, a city more open, brief, you know, be a, was a city will be able to brief, instead of paved or the concrete or that water gold on the, on the panel off pump out of doing your flat. so se useless. they will fail. and continued to fail,
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but experts say such parks cannot withstand extreme downpours which have become more frequent due to climate change. as weather events, gain intensity, such water absorbing infrastructure will be constantly put on the test to see if it can become an example for other cities. that's it for today, there's mo, from the region on our website. and as ever, you can follow us on facebook and twitter to tomorrow, with every journey is full of surprises. we've gone all out to give you some tips one day in the course of the great people and i'm in your northern most count
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please. ah, 3 times along. still very much alive, dw channel, your guy to his essential her thoughts in germany knew it recognizes where exactly it was fun. i learned a lot our culture history, all their d. w. travel extremely worth a visit with ah, it's a corruption scandal that has a rock to europe, allegations that had tar has been bribing e. u. officials for positive publicity have sent shock waves across the continent will take an in depth look at the gulf states ever deepening business tides with europe. over coming up from the scrap heap to the guys as air travel demand surgeon
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post pandemic. the $83.00 ac passenger, jess is staging a nature to come with is dw business. i'm kate ferguson. thanks for joining me here in europe to allegations of bribery and corruption within the highest actual on of law making have sent shock waves across the continent. the rest of eva kailey as senior vice president of the european parliament on suspicion of accepting money and exchange for giving cat tar good publicity has raised questions about just how much influence the gulf states may wields on the continent. it has also shawna lives on the country's business tides with europe. so let's take a look then at that relationship last year, could tours exports to the e. u. amanda, to almost 7000000000 euros. the vast majority of that on surprisingly with gaff going the other way, the e you sold goods.
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