tv DW News Deutsche Welle February 16, 2023 5:00am-5:16am CET
5:00 am
ah ah ah ah ah, this is dede on the news live from berlin, natal promises more military assistance or ukraine. the alliance says member states are stepping up production of an artillery shells where there is no agreement on increasing overall defense spending. also on the program. more and more mass graves
5:01 am
are being dug in turkey. following this month, earthquakes, most victims have been identified, but many families are still desperately trying to find their missing loved ones. and berlin prepared to roll out the red carpet, 4th, annual international film festival. aside from the usual glitz and glamour, major focused on global politics and human rights. ah, told me your logical all come to the program. nato leaders in brussels had made new pledges to provide ukraine with weapons and military training. allies have agreed to supply more ammunition and artillery shells, but there's been no immediate promise of more tanks and no advance on increasing overall defense spending is prompted an admission from nato secretary general young
5:02 am
sultan burg that more needs to be done. it's a show of support tank. the media would network eliza have to fight it to wrap up their weapons production for you cream. askan fans rise that ukraine is using ammunition much faster than the west is producing it. things are happening, but we need to continue. we need to step up even more because there is a big need out there and to approach an ukraine with ammunition. this is now becoming a grinding war or attrition on the war. attrition is a war or logistics on the, on the on. therefore, this is says so crucial for our ability to ensure that ukraine wins is able to retake santori u. s. defense, thicker tree light austin is optimistic at a bit targeted support. there is real chance ukraine could make significant gains
5:03 am
in the war for every system that we provide. we got a train troops on that system, but we're also going to give him additional training on, on maneuver on the integration of fires on sustainment and her in on maintenance. and so with that additional capability, better train troops are platforms that can perform a lot better. and in this environment, i think they'll have a real good chance at making a pretty significant difference on a battlefield. considering future security threats to thick dejan arched member countries to spend at least 2 percent of their g. d. p on defense at no agreement was reached on no targets for over defense spending by the net or a life. set it up you correspondence. terry schultz is in brussels and she's been following the talks. there are a lot of different things that nato needs to do, to speed up the delivery of what it's already promised to ukraine. and that's what
5:04 am
secretary general style sumburgh was talking about. although they have known for many months now that that ukraine was firing many more rounds of artillery bullets than then could be produced. they have yet to really ramp up production on the ground here in europe, or even in the united states to meet that demand. so now they're getting really serious about it. it's, it's, you know, a shortfall that people worry, could see ukraine actually running out of ammunition. and so each country is looking at what it can do to both generate more, more production in their own companies, and also joined together. they're talking about jointly procuring ammunition now to make the order is big enough to, to entice industry to, to change production pack practices. and make them more rapid, devastating earthquakes in turkey and syria more than a week ago. or the tragedy that's claimed so far more than $40000.00 lives.
5:05 am
rescuers are still pulling people out alive from under the rubble. this footage shows the moment when a mother and her child were carried away on stretchers in had a province. after being freed, they had been buried in the debris for more than 228 hours. a 2nd child was also rescued according to turkish media reports, and now all 3 are receiving medical care in hospital despite those incredible scenes, such rescues are now becoming rare and the focus in turkey's turning towards the millions of people needing urgent humanitarian relief. our correspondent, julia, ham, give us this update on the situation at a camp in the turkish city of a dana rescue efforts are coming to an end here in the quake hit region in turkey. and now of course, the focus is on the massive humanitarian crisis. hundreds of thousands of people, if not millions are now homeless. and although there have been huge evacuation
5:06 am
efforts to other turkish cities, most of the people have had to stay intense for the past week for the past days. here in this tent camp in the city of atlanta, people tell me they are receiving the help they need right now. 8 workers have just been distributing baby diapers snacks for the children, wet wipes. but there are areas, there are provinces that have been so much worse affected the city of i'm taco, for example, in the province of hottie has been almost entirely flattened by the quakes. people dare still have to stay outside in the open. they urgently need heating, shelter, electricity, but also sanitation, high jenny products. many people here in the area also need psychological help because they are traumatized here in atlanta and surrounding cities as the
5:07 am
authorities now encouraging people to return to their homes, to the buildings that are still standing and they have started inspecting these buildings. but many people here tell me they are too scared, too afraid of returning to their homes. now mentioned a huge number of people who died in the earthquakes in turkey. they have being buried in mass graves. that makes it difficult for their loved ones who survived to find them. and as you don't use, jack power reports, some grieves, are still unmarked. of you as might find the scenes in his report. distressing. ah, the unmistakable sound of grief. oh, these people have just identified the body of a loved one. at this yard on the outskirts of carol, mom rush in southern turkey. the stuffer arrives in search of his child has sent a letter, had sent a blush, him by the modem. i searched to hospitals for my baby girl. i am almost the autumn,
5:08 am
but i want to bury my baby. and to pray, rosalind, that's all i want washing machine. it's no legitimate yesterday. and nurses told me my baby had died. who's all that i get and that i should come here when they showed me a photo let. now i'm here to find the gravy of miss lot. we should bill on a good at she been recovered in this theory, been mr for goes to find his baby fans arrive here every few minutes throughout the day, each carrying up to 4 people who died in the earthquakes. the national police force is coordinating the operation taking photos and fingerprints of the bodies which they match up to a national database in coordination with the interior ministry and the office of immigration will eligible. joshua, that tish me to them, of them is jealousy. let him is when our processes are done, look, there is still some bodies which can't be identified. him a southerner for them would you do to avoid any confusion in the future? in our knowledge, we take
5:09 am
a biological sample for dna analysis. another which can be matched to blood samples from their family. slater missy up will up, you know, assist them as an estate to mrs. ala, missouri. wish you live? chelsea my up yours. there is 600 people working in this graveyard alone. each of the graves here has a number on it so that the families can come and find out exactly where their loved one has been buried. it is an extremely sad and extremely powerful scene. and the reality of this earthquake is that this is just one graveyard like this pretty much every city in the region has a similar one. around 95 percent of the buried have been identified for those whose families don't make it here in time. volunteers have come to treat the bodies before burial. gun miss dan. getter had you said i wish every one was alive. your system is still on, but we're here treating the bodies as they should be treated in the islamic way.
5:10 am
the brother? yes. give the families peace of mind. law michel clover is in the toronto. few places represent the horrors of the earthquake. more than here. and as more bodies buried, more families walk to graveyard to find their final resting place. as turned out to some of the stories making headlines around the world, li say one person has been killed and 3 injured in a shooting in el paso, texas. the incident happened in the parking lot of a wal mart supermarket were 23 people were killed in a racist attack in 2019 for you as court, hers and sentenced. a white supremacist to kill tan black people in a mash shooting last year to live in prison. cor proceedings were briefly disrupted after one of his victims relatives lunged at him. the shooter expressed remorse for the massacre saying he had been radicalized no racist conspiracy theories there had
5:11 am
online. nothing would like to thank you all for being dozens of migrants and missing and presumed dead. after their boat sank off the coast of libya, rescuers have retrieved 11 bodies are 7 survivors and hospital latest ship wreck in the mediterranean. one of the world's most dangerous migration who's here in berlin. organizers are getting ready to roll out the red carpet for the cities, annual film festival known as belin, ala on top of the usual glad glitz and glamour. there is a string of movies and events in solidarity with ukraine and the protest in iran. the berlin allah is back after 2 scale down additions this february. it's back to business for one of the world's biggest film festival. and one of the german capitals, greatest cultural jewels. the organizers are pulling out all the stops to get filled lovers of their couches and industry players out of home office artistic
5:12 am
director carlo shats the all says this year's festival received more film entries than ever before. maybe in the last 2 additions, some companies hold off their films, but it also may be during the result of the fact that after 2 years, many companies, many filmmakers wanted and want to be back and be part of this great celebration of cinema. hollywood will be well represented with actress kristin stewart, heading the international jury. she'll be joined by a host of stars on the red carpet. besides the glamour, the berlin ala has always engaged with the real world and this year is no exception . last year's festival ended days before russia's invasion of ukraine and lis, 73rd berlin. anna is putting the country center stage. sean, penn's documentary about president zalinski superpower will have its world premiere
5:13 am
here a to for the berlin ana. oh, so for me, this film is like the doors through which i hope the entire audience of the festival i can pass and, and then be connected without a documentary that may be less. or now we have films in panorama fiction documentary. we have him since generation, we have fem films in form that really provide a very wide diversified picture of what happened in cream and still happening during the last 12 months. the festival will also feature the european premier of iron butterflies. a documentary about the shooting down of malaysia airlines flight m h. 17 lawrence about the current human rights protests in iran are also reflected in the line up films. premiering include 7 winters into iran, about an iranian woman who was executed for defending herself against a rapist,
5:14 am
as well as politics and glitter for the next 10 days. all eyes will be on the gold . as 19 films from across the globe compete for the coveted golden bear and a host of other prizes, they'll be handed out a week on saturday and in truth, early in our fashion. any one of them could be a winner and revenue one. hello fear. with alec baldwin, looks set to hold on to his starring role in the western movie rust as filming resumes over a year after the cinematographer, after a cinematographer was shot dead on set. the u. s. actor has been charged with 2 counts of involuntary manslaughter over the killing of alina hutchings during rehearsals, with movie in october 2021. baldwin says he didn't know the gun he was using was loaded at the time. is a reminder of the top story with falling for you. nato allies meeting in brussels
5:15 am
of agreed to supply more weapons and military training to ukraine. member states will step up production of ammunition and artillery shells. when nato secretary general admits more, needs to be done. as for me, for now up next as a dw documentary survivors from a war torn ukrainian city, maria bull recount their traumatic experiences. i am told me on the ladder while many thanks for joining. ah was yes, pursued this is to consequence for certain folks anger from that conflict in ukraine. the european war and 10 voices.
30 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on