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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  December 30, 2022 1:00pm-1:16pm CET

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a scoring we say they were about giving up sports life every weekend on d w. ah, ah, this is d w. a news coming to live from berlin. people around the world pay tribute to the king of football, brazil's former striker paler, dies after a long battle with cancer. millions more in the passing of the football legend also on the program, china is reopening. it's quarter,
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after nearly 3 years of covered 19 travel restrictions, but as the rules are relaxed, infection numbers are on the rise, making many other nations nervous and studies show the post breaks at trade barriers are harming the british economy. that doesn't mean the decision to lead you will be reversed any time soon. ah. hello, i'm terry martin. good to have you with us. brazil has declared 3 days a morning for the football legend pay like the brazilian striker who won. 3 world cops has passed away from cancer at the age of 80 to his coffin will lie at the stadium of his home town club santos. on monday, for fans to pay their respects, the burial is to take place the following day. healey found pain as a teenage whistles and became internationally known when he scored twice as brazil
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beach sweden in the 1958 world cup final. he won the competition again in 1962, and a 3rd time in 1970, where his mesmerizing play cemented his iconic status for many in brazil and around the world. he was much more than a sportsman, sao paolo, as albert einstein hospital, where football legend paley passed away, his fans gathered outside to bid farewell and mourn the loss of the man brazilians called the king. for samuel menache, i came to pay my respects. my good bye, come on. in fact, the king never dies. for me, he did not die. i came to pay my respects somehow managing it. people also came out to urban oh caldera stadium, home to pay, lace former football club. santos rios, statue of christ. the redeemer was lit up in his honor and tributes were laid
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outside mira canal stadium by me with both of you to the other. for me, soccer is in morning. we had our defeat, brazil lost the world cars, filica and we have the news of the death of our king that it was a deal, but lot goes on. a very sad vitamin, but pele was history. a legend thought on landon hello number 10, o is the football great. also inspired athletes in other sports orgy ice cream, but he had a great impact on athletes in general that everyone wanted to be the palais in their sport. it became a joke. i think i did a brazil is now beginning 3 days of morning for a footballer who transcended the game. earlier we spoke with david try horn, the director of the netflix documentary paley, he shared with us some of his personal memories of the footballing legend. yeah,
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i was very lucky and privileged, i guess, an honest to spend quite a bit of time with him. i originally met him 15 years ago, i think from holland, and filming, and then again, a few years later. and then we did a big film with him from netflix. lou terry was an absolute gentleman who consult with him. was a great player. i'm a great man and he was a great man. he would come into the room and in that period he was already a little bit physically incapacitated, but he would light up a room. he wanted to get to know every one he wanted to chat to every one he. i think he loved being the king. i had such a womb personality and that kind of warm way about him. he wanted every one to fill this wound he had was in china is reopening its borders. after nearly 3 years of covered 19 travel restrictions, the relaxed rules have led to a spike. and travel demand to and from china, but it comes as the country is experiencing
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a surge of corona virus infections. and that is making some nations nervous. a moment to remember for these passengers in china, nationwide travel has opened up again in the world's most populous nation, beijing's decision to loose in its covert 19 restrictions in early december was a welcome surprise for many years on cairo they should indeed open up and i'm supportive of this, everything including travel is getting more convenient and i'm going back to my home town now. finally, i can go home. it's great. you know, it says i am really looking forward to traveling internationally again because i haven't gone abroad to ski for a long time or i'm a professional skier, so i can't wait to ski abroad again a while of the rules surrounding international travel will be relaxed on january
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8th ahead of the lunar new year. china's busiest travel season. but a surgeon cove at 19 cases has prompted other countries to already impose restrictions on arrivals from china. the us, japan and south korea are among those now requiring a negative test. italy and spain have also introduced restrictions despite the use health agency saying such measures are a necessary chinese state media called the testing requirements. discriminatory with china, 0 covey policy winding down an infection. numbers going up, traveling like it's 2019, could be a long way off to catch up on a couple of other stories making headlines today. a myanmar military court is sentenced on small, so cheese to a further 7 years in prison. the austin civilian leader was convicted of corruption . it was the last of a string of criminal cases, leveled against her since the 2021 military coup. it leaves her with
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a total fail time of 33 years than ukrainian president. below them is lansky says, most of his country is without power. after russia launched one of its largest aerial attacks of the war, 3 people were killed and 6 wounded. in thursday's attacks, the damage residential buildings and critical infrastructure across the country. it's been 2 years now since the u. k. left the european union and the british economy is still struggling with the consequences. the country has so far failed to realize much of the promise economic gains from leaving the block buquet has missed much of the recovery in global trade. that followed. the easing and pandemic related restrictions. and loss of u workers has further complicated matters, particularly in sectors such as health, hospitality, and agriculture. british businesses, this has meant higher costs and lower sales resulting in part from new regulatory
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obstacles. even the arrival of the milk trucks makes the cheese make her feel a little wistful rex. it related losses force simon sparrow to sell the majority stake in his company. i feel betrayed and really rarely quite let down by a government that promised butch and delivered nothing. his small business used to deliver english chatter via mail order to private customers in the you. but thanks to breaks it, every single piece of cheese now requires a certificate from the veterinary office. that was prohibitively expensive. there's no way anybody's going to pay another $190.00 pounds floss all the paperwork that evolve nearby and the northern english town of crew. few ever imagined that breaks it would be so problematic, even in the breaks or heartlands like here in the north of england, people are reversing the opinion. polls show that a majority now believe that rec,
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said, was a bad idea. however, this does not mean that their decision to leave you will be reversed, at least not any time soon. ron jones imports rugs from belgium. he's also facing a lot more red tape because of brakes. it. it was never a good idea. it was never a good idea, but it was the will of the people who cannot get at one thing. but more and more studies show that post breaks at trade barriers are harming the british economy. and thank you for the lack of e. u workers has caused labor shortages. i don't think it was worth to swell as we thought it would. but we did want to bay ourselves again. ray lay the dylan, tucson stop coleman, you know, in the nurses there, you know, we've got, we are so down now we thought it would be an unmitigated disaster. absolute disaster. yes, sir. in the meantime, simon's barrel is managing to sell cheese and
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a profit into you again via the european hub on the new majority. shareholder the cheese maker would have never dreamt that breakfast it would have caused him so many sleepless nights. sh moore and how the u. k has been doing since leaving the ear. i'm joy now by d. w. correspond card now spun in london called watch actually changed in the u. k . as a consequence, abrego there have been so many changes. terry. some of those changes have been more visible than others, but as you saw in the piece, this is having a very big economic impact, especially on british small businesses, is just so much more difficult to do business with the you, their customs checks their inspections, delays problems with paying taxes, it has really led to a drastic drop in business between the 2 blocks. you have to say it's also more difficult for you businesses as well to import british goods to hire british
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workers to establish those relationships. because the e, the u. k is no longer in that e u. single market. all of this has become much more obvious over the last couple of years. and of course it's difficult to try to isolate the economic impacts of breaks it alone. but there have been some studies that have done that one of the most important coming from an independent government body that estimates rights. it did shrink the u. k. economy of the up i as much as 4 per cent. that is $100000000000.00 pounds per year. it's area different. oh, well, okay. we'll see. given that carl, how do britons feel about brags it 2 years and are they satisfied with their decision? yeah, i mean, it's important to remember this term of breakfast fatigue. very many people here. they simply just didn't want to talk about break that it's been such
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a long process, said back all the way to 2016 and that you referendum now. however, this year we've changed. people are talking about it more. you heard those complaints in the peace, you hear them if you stand in those long passport lines and you airports and british people talking about directed again, more reports in the media as well. when you see the shortages of e u workers to that all adds up to a big reduction in support for break that one. recent polls showing 56 percent of people here that leaving the u was the wrong decision, even more strikingly, less than a 3rd of people. now say it was the right decision, a big reduction in support for break them. and finally, carl, very briefly, are there still issues that still need to be ironed out between the u. k. and you very complicated. divorce. very tricky. break up for sure. there was a laundry list. the suggestion put forward by
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a small business bureau here in terms of ways to improve the current trade agreement between the 2 sides. thumb in the conservative party want to see a new deal similar to the trade agreement that switzerland has with the e u. but look, if you are one of those people that is holding their breath for a new agreement, or maybe even the u. k, rejoining the, you're not going to happen anytime soon. even the labor party has rolled that out. carl, great to see you again. correspondent carl nuff when they're in london. now, british fashion designer, vivian westwood, has died at the age of $81.00. her label said she passed away peacefully, surrounded by her family. she to she roast fame in 19 seventies by giving the poke movement it's trademark look. oh, a lifetime of rebellion, vivian westwood made fashion about much more than just clothes
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for more than 5 decades, the british design a used her creations as a platform political activism. she champion calls is from wiki leaks to what westwood described as a war for the very existence of the human race. tackling climate change in 1974 along with co conspirator malcolm mclaren who also managed punk band, the sex pistols. westwood opened the iconic sex clothing store on london's kings road from here, westwood showcase her designs helping set the style for punk and new wave in the early 19 eighties westward, went from punk provocateur to being britain's best loved fashion designer. she famously plundered history for inspiration. many of her ideas were immediately picked up by the main stream,
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unconventional and outspoken westwood twice earned british designer of the year and was awarded the older of the british empire by the queen. her designs and activism combined to spot cultural change. and i think my fashion give hewitt incredible choice in an age of conformity and it makes you look great, and it helps you to express your individuality. the school teacher, turn. god, mother of pung, leaves behind a lifelong legacy of rebellion. you're watching dw news business is next. i'm terry martin. thanks for watching with we're all good to go beyond deal with as we take on the world.

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