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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  January 16, 2023 9:30pm-10:01pm CET

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oh, ready knows what kind of a hackers, paralyzing the tire society's computers. i know some of you and governments that go crazy for your data. we explain how these technologies work, how they can make it work, and that's how they can also go terribly watch it. now on youtube, me pro is not giving up hope following the devastating attack on an apartment building that killed 40 residents. the search continues to find the 29 that are still missing. under the rubble, the city is reeling after one of the deadliest single strikes of rush us bloody war
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. ukraine calls it a targeted attack on civilians, a war crime. but russia blames ukraine's air defenses for allegedly downing. one of its muscles over the building followed him. is the lensky, the ukrainian president denies the accusations and condemns what he calls the russian people's cowardly silence in the face of the attack. i'm nichol ferla, him, berlin, and this is the day. ah, innocent civilians including children, lost their lives or were wounded in this horrific attack. what it was, of course, we are fighting for every person. the rescue operation will last as long as there he is even the slightest chance to save life.
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intentional attacks against civilians or war those responsible for war crimes will be held to the prom. oh, also coming up. it's that time of year again, when the global elite descend on davos for the world economic forum and with it come warnings that the rich are getting richer at the expense of every one else. the wealthiest one percent of humanity is amassing double the wealth of the 99 percent of humanity. so that means one percent is taking so much. oh, welcome to the show. we began the day with a political shake of and berlin's response to the war in ukraine, germany's defense minister had long been criticized as being overwhelmed by the task at hand, an unfit for the job to day after days of speculation. christina lum,
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late handed in her resignation. her decision follows a series of blunders that damaged her credibility most recently and new year's video she posted that was widely considered tone. deaf chancellor off shaw says he will act quickly to appoint a successor on because this is not opposed and the government shells can afford to leave vacant for long. right now, d w chief, political correspondent, nina hasa, has more on the challenges facing the next defense minister. well, whoever it is, it won't get much of an induction period. there's a high level meeting of defense ministers on ukraine at a gum stein military base this friday. and before that, the u. s. defense minister is going to be in belin and we'll expect to meet his counterpart. so chancellor shows would be well advised to nominate someone who is a defense expert and especially someone who's a good manager with careers mom and somebody who likes the bundeswehr because the
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bonus bed armed forces they are undergoing massive transformation, massive reform, and they do need support from the person at the helm and, and then of course those ukraine and germany's help for the ukrainian army. but chancellor shows made it clear from day one that those big decisions ultimately live with him. and that's not going to change with a new person in the job. and a new crane itself, another heart breaking reminder of the human cost of the war. over the weekend, a russian missiles struck an apartment building in the ukrainian city of ne pro, at last count, the death toll had risen to 40 and many more still unaccounted for. emergency crews are working tirelessly to rescue survivors. residents gathered in front of the destroyed buildings hoping for news of their loved ones. the strike has been met with international condemnation, sweden, which currently holds the use rotating presidency, has condemned any intentional attack on civilians as
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a war crime. meanwhile, in parts of northeastern ukraine than have been liberated from russian occupiers, police are facing an uphill battle when it comes to restore a rule of law. our correspondent max sunday joined a police team near the russian border and has this report on the hardships on the job. a school caught in the crossfire. the war is creating extra problems for police. detective alex 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 position. lou, that the course mule is mean, was it just say people have changed during the war the course earth, the thought, the sure. now almost anyone can get any weapon they want it without any trouble with with it, but a school was all the boys, bro, you're
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a similar case. so you had a tragic end to make each other but a holistic has broken the width of 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, which emma no after you experienced some health problems, he wrote a farewell letter to his mother was for leslie. he left it with his documents, alyssa, 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 a 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 on foot. so we've just been asked to turn our phones off and that's because we're moving closer to the russian border 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. take up much 60 centimeters deep hulu, 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 ah no military personnel. nicole and the mom is not even critical infrastructure that the russians love so much give and them on the way to cook. i don't know. i thought maybe they were just aiming for a cornfield. homer, what you up with it with the self who could hold an alarm? little did the blast also damaged her house?
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you know? yeah. he didn't, the push was in the article. nobody's in yet that the house is messed up. 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 blue, glutton bloom for the day. her living room becomes a makeshift police station. yeah, i think have a good neighbors make statements and shall the officers documentation. every one has losses, which need to be recorded. the officers jurisdiction ends at the border, but they're doing what they can see when we'll do all the guilty will be brought to justice. see every single one of them for the moment it'll be unavoidable after our victory, or if we are both of us. if the time comes of yours, alex and his co detectives who have evidence to offer a court, ah, the only blog when we haven't won the war,
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we haven't defeated the mafia. but this was a case battle to win and it's a heavy blow to organized crime. to day is a day of celebration for me down here and early 1st of in me that was italy's prime minister george maloney, after the rest of the country's most wanted mafia boss mateo, massena dinero, he was detained at a medical clinic in sicily were he is said to have been undergoing a medical procedure, he's alleged to be the leader of the sicilian cosa nostra mafia and has been on the run for the last 30 years also. and we can now welcome on a 3rd g. she's a professor of criminology at the university of essex in london. welcome was 30. tell us more about mr. messina, dinero e. yes. met their mashanda, natalie, the last remaining of the bosses of the ninety's that essentially embraced or
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strategy that dictated and directed by former, both to the ina that led to the killing. for example, on the front corner, the judge was killed together with his wife and his bodyguard in may 1992 blown up in his car, in palermo or a blown up in his car with his body guards in july 1992 and 7. a lot of facts and bombings throughout the valley. messina, nato was very young, then he was only 30, which is by young for both. and it was coming from your family and he was kind of the protege of the arena. is being convicted of amount of theirs is being considered a very dangerous and ruthless man. and either rest is basically closure for italy in a way on a period that even though we can never really forget, we surely need to move on from white, you know, with,
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with friends. yeah. how was able to live in hiding for 30 years? well that's a big question, isn't it? i've actually looked like he was hiding in plain sight. he was in the non clinic because he was sick and he was receiving treatment in palermo. so in cecily, it did not have a surgical operation like many people believe that he changes space and his voice look exactly as we expect that and look for. so the question is, where was he and what did he do for years and how did he do it? it's a mixture between protection, by people, very close to him, family and friends of people who are close to him because of his blackmail empower, miss. you know, the now is believe to hold secrets in many people, including politicians, including entrepreneurs, including nie level. people that don't want the secret to come out. surely there was probably some corruption going on for law enforcement, the different stages,
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but 30 year in a very long time. so clearly in another way to look at this is who gave him up eventually because one of the people that he trusted was the one that eventually led to these rest today. exactly. tell us more about the circumstances that led to him. actually then finally ending up in custody. well then circumstances are re anticlimactic kind of circumstance in the sense that we need an expected there was not build up to it. we didn't really know, we didn't really know what it was, even real this morning. so the police describe this as an improvised operation, meaning that they received a tip the confirm the tape, and then they acted which sounds finally strange for a market. both has been on the run for 30 years. what kind of mistake could he have made or the people around him just gave him up essentially. so there is quite
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a lot of speculation on the stage of what essentially brought the police to this. and we'll need to wait to no more because so far we only know that eventually everyone was ready to walk this morning, basing on everything want to pick an authority from the university of essex and london. many thanks for that. thank you. still to come on the day new u. s. immigration laws, which force migrants to grapple with a smartphone up to apply for asylum. the wealthiest one percent of humanity is amassing double the wealth of the 99 percent of humanity. so that means one percent is taking so much oh, the same for the global. it leads to mix and mingle in the swiss alps. again, political leaders and theos of the world's top companies are and davis this week for the latest addition of the world economic forum. there will address the big
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challenges over time, a looming global recession, the war in ukraine and climate change. german chancellor, it will off shots and the heads of the i, m f. the european central bank and nato will be there though the leaders of china and the united states. well now the amount of a list are skipping. the meeting this year has many questioning the relevance of the world economic forum. and here to give us an inside look is our correspondent ben for sewland, who is ins apples, and has been getting a sense of, of the mood there been at. you've got the guest list who's there, who's not, and what does that tell us? on the coal, the chinese a back with the, a chinese being locked out last time or locked down. rather, the russians are not invited again because of their war in ukraine. that's no surprise. olaf schultz, the german chancellor is going to be here and will be addressing at the war and
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ukraine and as a huge contingent of ukrainians. officials, military leaders, soldiers, all drumming up support for more weapons and reconstruction funds. of course that reconstruction can go ahead yet, but it needs to be planned and a quick way to end this war. according to again salt berg in an interview in the hunter's blood daily to day. german newspaper was military support and that's piling pressure on the german chancellor will all be waiting to see what he has to say in his speech or the ukrainians. i've spoken to hear a full of confidence, and that's also represented at ukraine house, where a video installation in the window shows a live size, sister and brother, walking with pride and confidence through the streets of newly liberated has sun. and when you walk past, it feels like they're walking right next to you on the promenade here in diverse. it's a very powerful message. and it is indeed a moment of many crises. what
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a fake and of us. well, geo political and geo economic crises, a very delicate time in our modern history. and one that world leaders a battling from home on many levels are all i felt as the only g 7 leader who's going to be here. but according to the world's economic forum, it's going to be a tough year. the i m f says a 3rd of the global economy is going to go into recession, half of europe, and the high debt at the moment. the high interest rates, all of these pressures and meaning that climate change isn't addressed as the climate protesters would like oxfam says, one solution would be a 5 percent tax on the multi millionaires and billionaires of this world that would
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pull $2000000000.00 people out of poverty but you've got to convince the elite here among them this year will not be one of the rich kids, ellen musk, he's licking his wounds after going into the guinness book of world of records, as losing the biggest loss of fortune in history. he pays a true tax rate according to autumn of 3 percent. that was between 20142018. what do we pay? 50 percent in germany. so. 6 we actually have a sound bite from the head of oxfam, a right here. let's have a listen and then get back to you. but one percent is taking so much and the 99 percent in this moment of great prices are really not getting enough. so i think billionaires is paying their tax not hiding a deal. tax havens really contributing to society will make them be more of a part of this new phase that we can all move towards. and hopefully it been time
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to save our planet as well. and for some reason is still with us been the forums founder set out to quote, improve the state of the world. is that still was what devils is about in its 5030 year? well, a climate protesters would disagree. they call the world economic form a world economic failure, but there are some inroads that have being made. people are talking a lot more about climate change here and trying to come up with tech solutions. and it's also very interesting to hear the colds for greener economies. but how do you do that? how do you balance that at the same time of as a cost of living crisis, or there are inroads being made as far as female participation goes in an inequality on that side. 42 percent of female speakers across the board at the conference this time round. and i'll be hosting the 1st l g p t q i dinner i'm. i'll also be hosting a panel on the same subject on thursday. the 1st of those was held back in 2015,
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so there is some progress on that front as well. nicole, which is nice to see one active as i spoke to last night though, said the only thing that will make change here and of us is if there's change at the top, that's the only way of changing this beast. oh ben facility and i was seeing what happens at the top. thank you so much. ah. the united states government has launched a new online system for people seeking asylum at its border with mexico, from now on only those people who registered on an app and who can show they have the sponsor in the u. s. will be accepted into the asylum process. you know, we use quarterly, nancy moy and enos pulled travel to the mexican border city of reynosa. to find out what this new policy means for thousands of migrants hoping to enter the us.
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the new immigration policies have created a dramatic challenge for these migrants from heidi thousands of 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 toys trying to understand what the new u. s. requirements mean for michael, etc. ship. well, i'm here to see what it's about because at that and how i can help, i think it's throwing up as i understand it. getting okay to stare for moving up the christiane 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 are about 10000 people in the region right now. this camp. he's greeted with joy
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to day. he distributes socks for the children alone to go get with it. all i can do is help the people here in that's all i can do in other matters. even if it's only a drop in the bucket at me that i need 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. okay. oh, with e joy and the and i'm stuck in the i understand the u. s. with their new laws, that's fine battle. 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. grady is frustrated. he doesn't know what to do next. before president biden was elected, he promised to pursue a more humane migration policy. now, in the middle of his term,
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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 with the develop. i can't get into the up because everyone wants to get in. i was getting a little pause and the good thing with ally mcgregor in love like i feel i have a problem with the app. he does, i go into it and ab sends me emails mail, but then when i, when i can open them, look, i'm in via a light number for english and 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 good without knowing how to pay for the trip. in our washington bureau chief co author at this report,
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she joins me now in a more humane approach to migration is what the bind administration promised. now the gatekeeper is literally a machine. how does that go together? that unaware nicole, the wall trump's wall is replaced by this ab. well, you know, we have to be fair here. the situation at the border right now as it was before the new kind of law was in place. that is also not humane. it's, it's the opposite. people are on the road, some of them for years. there is no infrastructure on the mexican, a side of the border. they're waiting there that the drug cartels lead them over across the rio grande and other are kind of areas to go into the united states. so president biden is really in a dilemma he needed to change that very situation. but this app indeed brings very many problems for the people they are on the ground. workers walk us through
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the functioning of the app. how does it work, and what are the problems that people are encountering with? it may be beyond what we just on the report. right, so as grady said many, many a migrants, they don't even have a smartphone and you need a smartphone to be able to download the apps to be able to download the app. you need a good internet connection once you have it downloaded. first of all, you really have to understand how it works and i tried to download it myself. it's really complicated. it's not that easy. then they send you something to your email . so to make a long story short, the whole process is complicated. but once you are in the system, you can apply, you need a passport to apply, then the background check is taking place. and then on top of everything, you do need a sponsor and you do need to be able to afford a plane ticket. so basically, that means that only those migrants do have a chance who are well off enough to afford all that. joe biden asked migrants
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to not just show up at the border, but rather to apply for asylum from home and, and fly in the us. that's an unrealistic scenario for many escaping hardship and poverty in the rest of the america will that do much to discourage the thousands of people who embark on that dangerous track each year. well, only call that put out a pretty and similar program of his venezuela. some weeks ago to kind of test it, so only people from menace willa who played applied through this ad, but have a chance to a get into the united states to get a work permit and it kind of worked so of at least that's what the biden administration says fewer people left the country knowing that they won't have any chance at all to get into the country if they have not applied for through this ever before the end of the border. so we shall see if this really changes the mind,
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because as you just said, most of the migrants they don't come to the united states because they just want to have a nicer and better life. they are fleeing hunger violence, dramatic situations, deaths killings. so they have little to lose when they stay because they, many of them tell us they will get killed. hell will die of hunger or diseases anyhow. so up it be showing it as a leaving there is i will really die. we're running out of time and thank you so much and great reporting and that's our time chart to join us again tomorrow. thank you so much for a company. with with
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you, a movie is tied up in traffic jams. it's an ongoing problem in the canyon capital. a small start up with big ideas wants to improve the situation. electric buses to reduce
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they were about never giving up the most exciting sport stories about people, their passion and their dr. sports life every weekend on d. w. a land of contrasts of ambition. the the quality 75 years ago mahatma gandhi peacefully led the country to independence full of ideas with what is the remainder of his vision with what's the status of human rights and social justice in what's called the won't largest democracy. where is india headed?
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this is the moment to unleash on violet pass and re imagine these teachings or elements to gandhi's legacy starts january 28th on d, w. ah ah, the we news live from berlin, germany's defense minister resigns 15 alumni departure follows a series of missteps most recently and new year's video message widely criticized for being toned out also on the program.

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