tv DW News Deutsche Welle January 16, 2023 8:00am-8:30am CET
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of its worst plane disaster in decades after flight from cub monday crashes while trying to land the nearby tourist town. and a woman who once served as a member of gun stands parliament has been shot dead by unknown gunman. she was one of only a few female lawmakers to stay in cobbled after the taliban took part. ah, i'm glad else as well come to the program. the death toll from a russian missiles strike on an apartment building in the ukrainian city of ne pro . this week and has risen to 35 rescue workers are racing to find survivors in the wreckage. people have been gathering in front of the ruins, hoping for news of loved ones. 2 dozen residents are still reported missing ukraine's in sodom is lensky has said,
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russian citizens who fail to condemn the attack a cowardly. meanwhile, and parts of ne, in ukraine, that have been liberated from russian, occupies police, are facing an uphill battle when it comes to restoring. rule of law are corresponded. max sunder joined to police team near the russian border and has this report on the difficulties they encounter on the job. a school caught in the crossfire. the war is creating extra problems for police detective alex boy. he said anti tank grenades from this site found their way into the wrong hands. this footage shows their operation, confiscating them from a civilian. if you lose the course, me old. mean, was it just say people have changed during the war? there were certain that, that the sure now almost anyone can get any weapon they want other without any
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trouble with, with it, but as good as all the boys, bro, you're a similar case. so you had a tragic end to make each other but a holistic as a group of in the with of the most of that time. the man gave the military, almost all the weapons. he had found a lot of a lot, but kept one grenade for himself her with him or her know after you experienced some health problems, he wrote a farewell letter to his mother was for leslie. he left it with his documents melissa, and then blew himself up at home. it was of some of them. alex says he and his colleagues are seeing morse with science, and they're becoming practice collecting evidence of new alleged crimes. as we're about to experience, we had north to the off chance area on the border with russia. we have to cross the river infants. and so we've just been asked to turn our phones off and that's because we're moving closer to the russian water right now. the russians are known to be monitoring phone signals in the past have used them to pinpoint their targets
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. alex and his colleague carina, are here to investigate a strike. it's basic police work in a war zone. to take up much 60 centimeters, deep blue gathering evidence. keeping a record that the owner of this field was making herself a cup of tea. when she heard the 1st impact she hit in the cellar and avoided injury. the evidence will be sent to a lab to determine what it was that hit, but the case seems clear to them. civilians were attacked. it was a war crime. we go virtual, where you can see for yourself that except for the yard of the local civilians. my god, there's no military equipment law, no military personnel, nickel, and the mom is not even critical infrastructure that the russians love so much give, or the model of it with. i don't know. maybe they were just aiming for a cornfield only what your facility. so good holds in islam models. richard is in
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the blast also damaged her house. you don't think yet he seated wooden. the push was in the eye dock. nobody's in yet that the house is messed up. he thank god that was where i was because something went inside the house. something smashed the window and hit inside. it is full of glass. glutton bloom, 30 day. her living room becomes a makeshift police station. yeah. have him have a good neighbors make statements and shall the officers documentation. every one has losses, which need to be recorded event. the officers jurisdiction ends at the border, but they're doing what they can see when you will, the old, the guilty will be brought to justice. see every single one of them to the much. it'll be unavoidable after all. victory put him on the info. another, if the time comes argue with alex and his co detectives will have evidence to offer
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a court can use multiple r correspondent amongst sand a file that report and joins us now from key. if maxine accompanied these police officers for several days, what are the biggest problems for them regard. so above all this, this area, the off chance carry a very close her on the russian border. pretty much a was an impoverished area with lack of logistic structure even before the war. now even more so now these police officers, we accompany their, they to force such as dealing with a lack of officers to investigate crimes. they have issues with the gist takes a cars, for example, to move around to patrol the area and then you have these concent power outages. so processing electronically, processing evidence, a witness statements that kind of stuff makes police work really hard at the moment . and above all, you have the attacks from the north, from perpetrators that you cannot apprehend, that you cannot do much about that the moment um, just to give you an idea,
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it's not just military that's being attacked. we saw the civilians being attacked, but even the police officers themselves as we were filming, and the police station we heard. and in the evening we heard a number of of shells coming down more to strikes in the direct vicinity. and an administrative building had been heads on this incident. and this just 2 days prior to filming had been the make shift, the police headquarters that said the police officer just had moved out to just to give an understanding of what the situation there is on the ground. now that the police officer in your report, alex has said that he is convinced that all the perpetrators of war crimes will be brought to justice. but how likely is that really? i mean it's, it's, it's a, it's a difficult uh, conversation. and you probably need a lot of faith to do that job. that's for sure. i will. these more if you talk about the specific incident from the report will these specific mortar crew is be brought to justice? that is very hard to determine at the end of the war in many months or many,
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many years. perhaps these truth may be somewhere else or they may be not alive any more, may not be able to apprehend them. but what they can do is they can collect as much evidence as possible, determine what exactly happened there, and then connect this evidence to a bigger picture create a bigger picture. there have been cases during the sworn ukraine, where regiments and individual commanders could be tied to individual war crimes. so the hope is that this can also also be done here. and then the judge that the arm of justice or the justice has a very long arm. so to say, so you have this evidence, it does not go away. and then perhaps, in some years time this can be brought to a tribunal and be used against, against the perpetrators. somebody may eventually be, go, may eventually go to jail for this. now let's come to a to the war as such. what's the latest news that right,
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so we had some on some of the heaviest attacks in recent days or just this weekend . there. as you know, there has a apartment building and the new pro has been hit. now latest figures have suggests that the death toll there has risen to roughly 35 people right now. search and rescue operations are still underway, but almost 2 days have passed now and given the freezing temperatures here. it's not, it's, it seems unlikely at the moment that many more of the $35.00 missing will be rescued alive. so this operation is likely turning into operation of recovering bodies at the moment. the ws mox sunday, they're reporting from keith. thank you very much. marks to nepal dowell office officials say both the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder. i've been found at the site of sunday's plane crash near the city of full
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caught up. such efforts have resumed, well, there is now little hope, the finding any survivors the yet he ap allen's plane was carrying 72 passengers. when it crashed into a steep gorge, moments before the crash, the plane was trying to land at the airport of the western city of pohardo. but it blanched, endured irvin. i'm out of local residence immediately coined for help and while endeared to feel life. on m willard, i called emergency services at exactly 11 a. m. no one had come there yet. we carried water in buckets and poured water from the road. later the police came and we rescued 3 injured people with the help of the police. on the little one, it'll get shot gilbert had gilbert, we heard a loud explosion and went out on our terrace to see what had happened. lucky as a game of luck, we saw a lot of smoke and realized it was a plane crash. and we rushed to the site that i, i stayed back my with my friend,
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went down the hill to look for survivors and took out at least 35 bodies. ugh, debug her. the plain burst in my flames. after long down to the rescue, workers worked with the ropes and stretchers to get the bodies out of the 1004 deep gorge from tried to put out that eating fire. fire fighters took bodies to the hospitals. some of them burned beyond recognition between engine 80 r 72 aircraft was flying from the capital, cut pan due to the tourist destination for hotter in a flight. that usually takes half an hour. the ball is popular to his destination for clambers and track of. but it's airline industry has been heavily criticized for it's poor safety record. and i've gone to santa formula. my girl has been shot dead at her home and cobbled lisa marsan. i was
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a da and one of her guards were killed in an overnight an attack. police have not given details of the silence and i was a doll was among the few women parliamentarians who stayed in cobble after the radical islamist taliban took over the country. she is the 1st lawmakers from the former afghan government who has been killed since then. and earlier, we talked to journalist ali the chief in kabul and asked him whether he knows more about possible motives. no, there are no actual new details coming out and to be quite honest, you know, in these kinds of cases it could be any number of issues. it could be a personal issue, could be something tied to money, mafias, all sorts of things. there's the potential of it being so called di ish forces, but really there's nothing to say that, you know, there is any specific motive or that it had anything specifically to do with her
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being a woman or was her being former parliamentarian. you know, as were there any unsolved murder case there could be any number of potential leads . do you think we're going to have more clarity at some stage room with the investigation proceeding? unfortunately, targeted killings, you know, are very common and have honest on, you know, they were extremely common during this long ago public and they come, come in during this on the camera as well. and, you know, both governments promise investigations. but as within the past, you know, we have to wait and see if the government actually does a full investigation and actually releases the findings of that information. if history tells us anything based on former public, i highly doubt that you know, the public will get any clear clarity into what happened to her. so what does this homicide say about the security situation in the country, especially for women whitening the security situation is that for everybody
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and you know, and we have no real information to know whether she was targeted for being a woman or for being a lawmaker or for anything of the sort, all we know is that she was killed, she maintained in kabul, which meant that she probably felt safe enough to stay. you know, she was able to have a guard with her to have a driver with her to live in a fairly well to do a neighborhood in town. so, by all accounts, she seemed to have a normal life and felt safe enough to say so. so, you know, the security is bad, but as i said, we have no real information to say what the motive for killing was. thank you very much, journalist allie. let's see if you the and couple let's look at some more headlines from around the world. oxfam says food companies making big profits, while global inflation is soaring, should be made to pay windfall taxes. that's one of the recommendations in a report issued by the charity to coincide with the beginning of the world economic
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forum, which begins in doubles today. one person has died after the car, they were driving crushed into a column on berlin's famous brandenburg gates late on sunday night. police said there were no other people in the car and no other injuries at the c. please in western germany, the have removed all but to climate activists who have been protesting, a planned coal mine expansion and the village of notes of art organizes of claim police used excessive force. while police say the activists attacked officers with fireworks and stones. it's images like these of saturdays protests that have spark debate, police using baton and their fists to prevent demonstrators from forcing their way into the village of literate. the climate activists claim that dozens or even
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hundreds of protesters were injured at a press conference or women, referring to herself as a medic, made serious allegations. yep. i voted, they targeted all areas of the body. we observed fractures to all parts of the body . there were even head injuries, so these werent isolated cases. so when you put it, i have, i don't, if the police deliberately struck the activists in the hat activist and not the listing slack police rejected the allegations of excessive force, the state interior minister supports their stance. we filed with what's excessive is when protesters are no longer demonstrating for a cause but attacking police instead, throwing raw to shooting off fireworks. i would say they are the ones responsible for kill susie. officials say 70 officers were injured after being attacked. some twisted their ankles in the mud on sunday, police removed the last activists from tree houses,
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but 2 are still hiding and tunnels. energy company r w, ease fighter fighting unit is now responsible for them. the son of i not, i don't find that is now a mission for rescuers because we as police are not able to rescue people from such underground structures. i wouldn't fuku on for it. even though police have succeeded in clearing the area, the climate activists have announced new protests for the coming week. united states government has lost a new online system for people seeking asylum at its border with mexico. from now on only those people who've registered on an apt and who could show they have a sponsor in the us will be accepted into the asylum process. did abuse carolina shem roy. and in st. paul traveled to the mexican border city of reynosa to find out what this new policy means for thousands of migrants hoping to enter the united
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states. the new immigration policies have created a dramatic challenge for these migrants from heidi. thousands are stuck here on the mexican side of the border. trying to understand the new. a pastor tries to explain, but many questions remain. lee, you works for a refugee and g o. he to is trying to understand what the new u. s. requirements mean for mike, have se if it, well, i'm here to see what it's about, like is it that and how i can help? i think it's through an app as i understand it. okay, okay, to stay for marian applica. your next stop is a storage place at least 3 times a week. he picks up warm clothes for the refugees. the nights are cold. this time of the leo tells us there about
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10000 people in the region right now. this camp, he's greeted with joy to day, he distribute socks for the children alone go get worth it. is that all i can do is help the people here in that's all i can do in our market. even if it's only a drop in the bucket at me that i leave that in that awhile for most migrants here . figuring out how to register on the new app is the biggest problem. grady rodriguez who flat on doris has no smartphone. they will look yell up with e jointly and i'm stuck. i understand the us with their new laws, that's fine better. but here in camps like this, there are many of us who don't have money for a smartphone, but i went to live on a great is frustrated. he doesn't know what to do next. before president biden was elected, he promised to pursue
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a more humane migration policy. now, in the middle of his term, there's little sign of it. quite the contrary. many fear that the new course he announced make things even worse. desperation is the prevailing mood at this table where migrants, excess, a power supply wasn't available. i can't get into the up because everyone wants to get in, get in to let them pause. and the good thing, i'm gonna limb uncle in love like i feel i have a problem with the app. he does, i go into it then the and the app sends me emails rail. but then when i, when i can't open, no look i'm in via a light number. when i get a sudden, i tried to get in this morning to get an appointment this month, but i didn't understand anything. grady has lost hope. he just wants to be back home and leaves the camp for a good without knowing how to pay for the trip. turkey
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is gearing up for presidential and parliamentary elections this summer. opposition parties are hoping that can bring an end, so president ross absorb ad wants to decades of rule. his approval ratings are suffering, ours is party continues as crackdown on political opponents. meanwhile, soaring inflation is making life difficult for many and turkey. for the last 10 years or hung noonish damo, chas owned a small restaurant in this trendy quarter of his turnbull where he's lived since his childhood. he always worked hard and always kept his head above water even through the pandemic. but high inflation means he has to raise his prices twice a month. potential customers look at the menu and just keep walking. it's too expensive. getting in this weird chance. we're angry of kiddies. we're uneasy and at worship at home. when we play without children,
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we don't know where this country's going. it was you was a little my live alicia. can. the restauranteur feels responsible for his 10 employees and their families. as a businessman, he feels he should expect support from the government, but he sees only bad policies. that's why he's hoping for a change. but he says opposition politicians and critical opinions are suppressed. on the little fussy, what keeps the government going is fear. it tries to maintain its power, the fear almost little more than it and the other parties feel that to, for example, the pro kurdish h t p. they've just launched their election campaign. the 3rd strongest party in turkey's parliament, they're now threatened with the ban. accused of working together with terrorist organizations on their suboxone, the government is influencing the election campaign with the help of the constitutional court. firstly, our state campaign funds are being blocked. secondly,
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they're taking legal steps to shut us down. the government is also taking steps to ban the popular is turnbull met a crim? him all lou for insulting government officials. now he faces a possible prison sentence for alleged bribery in my morlock contests. the charges that sorta sorta, i asked the interior minister, why has they never been an investigation into the a k p city administration? that's a question he couldn't answer to that. yamaha that emmett away president and no one wants to win at all costs. he's been making some extravagant election promises, but a massive national death than incompetent to act together. many in turkey are worried about the future, even if there is a change of government, or hon. goodness, almost like many of his friends is wondering whether it's time to leave the country . some sports is now the australian open tennis tournament is on the web. and
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one of the favorites for the women's title is world number 2 on suburb of tenicia. and she has twice come, tantalizingly, close to winning a grand slam. finishing has run her up at both wimbledon and the us open last year . if she triumphs in australia, she would be the 1st arab woman to win a major. she was 12 years old in tunis, clearly with something special. 16 years later court owns jabber is the feature court at the tennis facilities. your board called home in her youth. and coaching bill malika is training a new crop of young players inspired by the countries. in fact, the arab world's best ever woman player kenneth. and i remember and as a child, she had a fire inside her. she never stopped moving, which made her stand out of gas through ballasa jabbers hitting partner in her teens. oh, mar la beaty, knows well,
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the own schubert that the tennis world is now coming to know though i'm either lou on that. what you see of ons on the court. the warrior, the fighter who battles on every point in arm on this has always been her character of them. let me go look at it later. the warrior, the fighter made a global impact with 2 pro, 2 victories last year in madrid, and then berlin. and then she rolled into the final at wimbledon, her 1st grand slam final, only to lose 2 elaina rib akina in 3 sets. she was celebrated as a hero, back in tunis, her family and compatriots, proud as could be jabber continued to win in every round of tour tournaments except the finals, including the next major. the us open, lame and goal, is to now lose any more finals. that was tongue in cheek, of course,
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getting to any final is a major accomplishment. but your bore has been there, done that time. she thinks to take a title in yes, i like this kind of pressure. i'm going to put more pressure on myself because i feel like sometimes you just need that enough to to be one of the top layers. the fire inside, as described by her 1st coach is still there. those who know her best are rooting for major title soon. you're watching. the dw news is a reminder of all top story rescues in the south eastern ukrainian city of ne pro say it's unlikely they'll find more survivors after a russian missiles strike on saturday. attack destroys an apartment building, killing at least 35 people and wounding. does that fit from me and the news team coming up next? our environment show eco africa, including
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a report about people in nigeria using boats to avoid traffic. and remember, you can get a lot more news, ant analysis, sports and business news. on the d, w dot com, that's fine. with instagram handled areas ab d, w news, i recommend you follow us there. if you don't already have those in early and i'll be back at the top of the blue with
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like i don't have any reason school, but there's no reason that's moving for me that yeah, believe something great is coming very, very soon. and yeah, can we learn more about love when the story in for my grand reliable news from my gardens, wherever they may be a bit lifestyles of bull then day people require a lot of energy to produce that energy.
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