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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  February 18, 2023 7:30pm-11:30pm CET

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a documentary series founders belly quoted africa to meet the founders, empowering their continent through digital innovation, a transformer, working and living conditions in their country, and inspiring world with their ideas. thunder valley africa. watching out on t w documentary, this is d w as africa with a special program from nigeria where an upcoming election could set this country on a new part. in the face of multiple crises and among nigerians is palpable. so could this vote to pick a new president, awaken the giants in africa as big as economy the race to replace muhammad to bori
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is focusing in on 3 candidates. nigeria needs fixing, so who among them can get the job done? mostly, and people have registered to vote in this election than ever before. we will hear from the youth which could decide this election and the escalating cash shortage will be the most immediate challenge for the new president. the prices has triggered. i'm risk what people protesting and burning back. now you cannot fix your money. i thought it was kind of got me think. we all agreed. we're all on weight. well agreed with the votes that can be bought in this election will tell you who was selling them and at what price? a hello from city gates in. i'm christine mando. it is good to have your company. now,
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jerry's election on the 25th of february. could be a turning point for the country, we will be hearing from people about what is at stake for them. in this vote, mama de bori is leaving office after 2 terms and he hands over a country that is on the brink. the economy is under performing and employment and inflation, or soaring with millions, living in abject poverty, security remains a major problem. islamist insurgents are waging terra in the north and criminal gangs, or kidnapping people, including school children for ransom. this is africa's biggest oil producer, yet it suffers feel scarcity. so who thinks they're up to the monumental task of fixing nigeria is problems. officially, there are 18 candidates, but only 3. have a realistic chance. here's my colleague for our shaquilla was more oh,
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the governing, apc is fielding bala. i met cinnapool. he is a former governor and political godfather of nigeria commercial hub lagos. he points to his record of shaping the regions or ban development and economy growth, but he's also been accused of corruption claims he denies sinner who is pledging to continue. many policies of current presidents were ha, medical hurry, like big government spending and a clear focus on industrialization and agriculture route. ah, ah. the main opposition pdp is running with attic. who are backer? a former vice president he selling himself as the man with the most experienced,
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but he too is subject to allegations of grass. he's proposing a lean. gov means any private sector driven economy that would focus on boosting small businesses. he also wants to strengthen national unity by devolving power. original london will decide not to remind you to know what one man could yet provide nigeria with a political upset, pulse put former governor peter will be up among the front runners. a 1st for his labor party, obese, promising spending cost investments in agriculture reforms to restore trust in the police and 0 tolerance for corruption. he denies media allegations of secrets business dealings. his tapped into must've support from young people who said they are tired of the stacks of school. oh,
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oh. oh. oh, whoever wins nigeria most contested election will take on a challenging job with my gerry as worsening economic and security problems at the top of the least one of the most pressing challenges is the countries shortage of hard cash. the government decided to replace the local currency with new bank notes, leading to a scarcity of money, and triggering violent unrest across the country. i went out to see for myself what impact the lack of cash was having on daily life. i am outside a bank in central, a boucher people have been doing for our was trying to withdraw money. you'll see crowds gathered outside virtually any 80 m that is dispensing cache. some people are even sleeping outside of bags just to be 1st in line. now if you do get a turn,
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you can only withdraw a maximum of 10000 niagara. that's about 20 us dollars. and b, c r o want optional. so for i don't know. i know mom basra going to have drunk or low drinking water. i had my new market while i blah blah for to reduce money. the shortage of cash came after the government introduced newly designed notes of the local currency. the narrow, the central bank, what you see behind me said the measure was mentor. flash out fake money from the system and to tackle inflation and corruption by reducing the amount of money held outside of banks. so initially people were given a 6 week period to deposit their old notes in the bank off to which those old notes would no longer be accepted. the problem is it's very difficult to get your hands on the new notes because there aren't enough of them in circulation while some people are able to make receive payments using mobile many transfers and
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digital banking 1000000, small con, 6 in 10. nigerians don't have a bank account now at places like this. vendors who trade in the informal sector have told me they mostly rely on cash to conduct their business. many people have got to have gotcha your money did rituals. so as know why that does this, although jackson president mohammed dubois, he promised to sold the crisis but wheat sun, and the situation has own the worse it. now the countries highest court got involved in the matter. it rolled that the old notes could still be used as legal tender even past the deadline that was given by the central bank. but traders won't accept the old notes because they are losing value. and there's a black market where you can buy the new notes. but you have to pay a premium. ah, 3 years ago in 2020 young people fell the streets of nigeria, furious at police brutality and poor government. this place, unity fountain in
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a butcher is one of the places where people turned out to protest. they were protesting against the notorious police unit hoard saws. the protest went down in history as the end saws movements to day, the grassroots movement has been mobilizing to encourage more young people to vote, and 10000000 new voices have registered. as most of them are below the age of 35, this could be a game changer in the selection. deeds of news for arshebra met one of the organizers and take a look at how young nigerians are turning political. ah, this is new. a political riley full of young people, infuriated by named jerry as failing economy, security, health and education, our systems, they are calling for fundamental change. and as elections approach,
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these people c, b, t, r o b is the right candidates for the job. this is mark, you know, segment out it all out. own routes are those who are born. we had no marston and the to work a country to go like it was for the gun like put a new face that change we really want in the country. yes. going to be done if you are guy those and are we are finished. job in this light is going to is gone for this is where the fresh political engagement is rooted 3 years ago, people field nigeria, streets with fury at police brutality and back governance. the rallying cole, i and sans in a torrijos police units. the mass demonstrations attracted all ages. i show you so full says she took part for the next generation. i want the nigeria of to de been i
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did a youth of to day to be able to have the, the nigeria that i say you wanted to how, but i never got an hour off i despite the live the spice for my children, i'll ride that puts my life on the line, do all that i need to do and show like i get the country that i need to get. what did i just sitting down? i'm doing nothing. and then some years from now my to don't be the ones having to fight for the most basic things like don kilos or do any. i know she has risked her life with her act to visit this picture of her and kneeling in front of young protest. us in a blue jack as police fire shots and see aghast became a symbol for revolting against spot governance at the time. that's the police were coming out to outside. then i came to the 4th and i said to the police, you feel going to school in the old, but you have to put up will let you me. she was not injured, but armed men, shots,
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and cute protest, as at the lackey tall gates in league roofs. it stunned many young people, but a so full says she's delighted to see young people steal, engaging in politics, and ready to vote. it's such deprived happiness. i'm elated at what is happening right now because this is the 9 today youth taking ownership of their country and coming out to say that they matter. and they're going to ensure that everybody gets it loud and clear. no matter how pizza will be performed on election day. youthful says the fact that young people are making their voices heard means they have already won. watching d w, news africa. we're looking ahead to the election here in nigeria. let's get some analysis now. and for that, i'm joined by matson over know he is a political analysts, as well as the human rights lawyer. thank you for being on the program martin. we
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know that more young people than ever before have registered to take part in this election. will young people make the difference? young people can make a difference in this election idea will definitely make a difference in this election because most of the things happening, nigeria affects them onto the, the transfer of aggression from n, 5 and the suffering and the employment. that's good news effects in them. and so i see that this election is going to make a difference because they will definitely come out. and if you look at the statistics of the highest number of votes in terms of the move, i mean, what are the terms of how this model number of registered in terms of demography. you see that young people actually have more more in the register. so the election definitely be determined by young people who feel that's nigeria hasn't given them what they really deserve this. there's a lot of excitement around peter. oh, be specifically among the youth. is he the knight in shining armor?
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that many people think he is. he looks like he's a mattress. i know most of the elections, however, but in terms of debt, you know, this candidacy does not put through that kind of depths, especially in terms of to find proper economic solutions. when you listen to him talk, he tells you i'm going to change or transform nigeria from consumption to production . but the problem, the question is how they know how to work. that when you ask him about insecurity, the level of insecurity nigeria and how he hopes to, you know, prevents insecurity code insecurity. he tells the stiffness, these chess doesn't want to let it sounds. well, that's not how it works, right. you tell people how you want them to vote how you fix the situation. so for example, if you want to fix a carrier 3 major, it took about division of the most major police department in engine on police. and curious as to the police in the may, june. and the proof the police force including the niger and equip intelligent godwin, decided, thinks issue fits your lecture for them to know. you don't tell them that you're
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keeping it to your test because it isn't the new. so for those who have depth, they are looking at this month. i see if he's not the person, he doesn't have the right solution. as indirect question, he doesn't have what he really takes to fix nigeria and he doesn't have the population to make the elections. we understand that nigeria has a lot of challenges right now. taking over from mama jabari is going to be a monumental task in terms of piecing this country together. what's it going to take and can these candidates, any one of them actually live up to that? the 1st 2 things. anybody who is going to in the election was due, will be to 1st of all, give you a sense of belonging to unity of purpose. you know, once you rename it, we'll see unites of the country to come on propose and go. you'll be able to get the country, you'll be able to give them hope. you're able to fix the economy, you did with 6 security on 6 the rest of us. so currently defects and the most
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important thing is to let every nigeria and feel like they're doing is picking this country. unless you do that every single phone, especially the economy on the security situation. i want us now to look specifically at the issues pertaining to the actual vote. now martin, the authorities have introduced a new system in undertaking the election. will it help to take care of the issue of both the forward? yes. is going to help the credibility of the elections because it's held to capture the people who read the star who are credited to fully units. it also helps to check the credibility and the integrity of elections in terms of also the biometric . that is the method that is needed to identify who is within and who is not. and also is going to help in terms of transmission of results. you know, so when results done, uncomfort, you did the last, you know, for me it's
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a will be taking a picture of it should be picking a transmitter to the so yes, you're going to help a lot in terms of mentoring the credibility of the election do you have any concerns about the integrity of this election. will this election be free and fair election for me? i can see that the election will be free, unfair, because there's been a lot of steps that i've been ill offsets. i've been sick into it from uncertainty credibility of your election. for example. we now have the biometric system of accreditation and also the electronic transmission of results. however, that's the power that the government has to do. what is right. but then how about the real, you know, on the day of elections, i didn't really willing to conduct a free election, but another question we are supposed to we are asking. and then the 2nd question will be do logistics in terms of, you know, conducting the election. so it will, i may be able to trans ports and transports materials at the right time to the right places at the right location on fame. be able to also carry those materials
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back to read the ought to be safe without interference. so decide the question. how big is the risk of violence breaking out around the selection because of the nature of the election? definitely violent file and so flashpoints in nigeria. and i can see that, that some of these flash points will be in areas where they see us cost a contestation. so for example, illegals where people would be making c as in susan from the, from the christ and companies. and also young people. there will be an attempt to try to suppress is with us i'm, he would react, there will also be some level off of the flush once invested. for example, where the pdp comes tits. gov nor is fights in the presidential candidates, and he supports in another pot to cliff were for co, semantic philosophy. so there would be some level of fights on in that's in reverse it. i'm somewhat puzzled the countries ah martineau, thanks very much for your time. ah,
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with so many struggling to get 5 people are forced to put up for sale, whatever they have and that includes their votes. dw, a mce acoya traveled to a community in north east and nigeria, where people are offering their votes to the highest bidder. much he also met one man who is trying to persuade them not to the says, no man in animal estate in nigeria is north east. where volts buying and selling is an open secret. political agents bring money, which trickles through a system of fixes and organizers to individual voters. with them, clara is the community leader who says, vote buying and selling happens a lot. so you give this people money on the last day. agents, once you have agreed to give them vote, the agent will last signal, maybe if you, maybe you avoid it or not. i did process of letting you go on to print you gun. tom,
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prince de passing. you like a deposit of fall lint, the ballard paper. you secretly sure the isn't. so did you see what your, what did for the new, signaled they become vasa and old peer. your money digest. what dish of tenable indiscriminate many people are poor and this. so what they can include in devotes. this man is one of the few who will admit to eats, but as an integral act. so we have concealed his identity on the when this either a cobra or something that i need that i don't have if i am given it what i can change my mind and vote for the person. i didn't intend to vote for initially. because i need money. see that that is what is happening in my polling unit. no, that doesn't benefit me because mostly they'll give me 200 nearer for me to sell my vote. it last in the last election. i was given 500 nearer. that's the amount i was given and that's the highest i've gotten me. oh, i do know saburo is
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a teacher here. he says politicians exploit and poverty by by votes ignore us under we pronunciation of poverty by doing political it. but people are very poor. knows on people and sometimes it would believe that there would doesn't the of what's doesn't count. no disease believed that even if you know what, they're cygwin to give the person that they just feel like given for these, what is causing all this. and so if you will just let me just call it my share and let me just go i know to do so people do so dogwood forest lost 200 nearer and desired. i because i remember during the last and log of men and how much village on that was conducted here. people sold your votes for us last 200. no, right. so 100 narrow us what a votes. cough here. at that price, i could buy 3, both from this lunch, gary, and go to mit. it smells really great by the way, but by it seems to be widespread here,
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although it's impossible to see how come on it is in other areas of the country. we them class says he has sin the practice, impoverish his people, and stop the community moving forwards. he is trying to persuade people to use the avoids. not so them. we're trying as much as people, much as possible because we're going to tell from neither community the youths there my jealous as also where sensitizing them to linda is long time for you not to senior what, but to follow your conscience, go over the right candidate and when the passing you want it, we them, claire is determined to make people see the votes are what more when used, rather than sold as many. and my jerry is feel the pinch off a high cost of living and a lack of opportunities. thousands of them on leaving in search of better opportunities elsewhere. those abroad don't have a ballad, but they have already voted with their feet. dw is shown in the wild look sad.
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nigeria is brain drain and meets one young express. now living in berlin. if things were different by whom in nigeria, emanuel says he would never have moved to work in germany. the software developer is one of thousands of skilled workers leave in, in the biggest talent drain nigeria has seen in decades. insecurity is a major reason. a nurse friend of a friend are got cute, all of the sort of just so on. sweeter escape was that nigeria would not and me and the next news was like you was shots, you know to sucks. you could be me. now he finds life easier. basic amenities like in, in nigeria, like a reliable power supply are abundant. here. you also think about the pioneers themes should also acquire wilds of in so think of all your electricity, the fact that outs lake by a few think of generator and elsewhere by the fog not swim for
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a few like owns like walk on the road. i would walk on to run, i'll miss campbell the far going ones like chickens like drinkin soon. but the biggest issue is jobs. most want to move to the u. s. the u. k. and canada. in the u. k alone. what visas reminder, as have doubled, says st in 19. the wave of relocations is triggering concerns about the future of nigeria workforce. young people have even coined a term for the migration trend. jacquila a, you're a by word that means run away. it's a hot topic in the elections and lead in candidates have from his change. but can reform candidates like be to o be convinced people like emmanuel to return. sounds like looper, cinda is actually seen, wants to do something. i don't really think is like extra, i mean, i don't know so much about i just always, i don't think of you as a always actual super own gordon county did my job expansion here in europe or elsewhere cannot directly change the situation back home. nigerian law doesn't
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allow people to vote from outside the country. so once people have left, while they can do is to encourage the people back home to register and cast their ballots. that's what dr. b from j. peg bow ultima. lou is doing from the you. hey, she says getting people to register, he's only one part of the task. another thing is just reminding people of the track record or he can dks what the, what she's, we made them reveal where the previous traces, let them monday, yet happy with those choices. she hopes these elections will lead to urgently needed change well already in trouble. we've been in trouble for a long time. all health care professionals are leaving and they're leaving juice back in berlin. emanuel connects with his friends, he says he makes his home. but moving back is far from his mind. in fact, his friends want to move to one's one like wilson. me as does what you do in
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a school, buses, sean, whoever wins the election, they'll struggle to convince people like you man will to believe in that country again. ah, that is it will now be sure to check out our the stories on d. w dot com, forward slash africa. and now we'll leave you with pitches. i'll be election campaign here. nigeria, we'll see you next time. bye bye. ah thank
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it fits with ah, ah ah, ah, business did all the news alive, phone berlin leaders condemned russia aggression at the munich security conference . german defense minister, orest mysterious accuses russia, imperialism,
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seeing its contempt for international law, must be met with issue or false for the us, vice president, a strong warning. but it doesn't think he can wait us out. he is badly mistaken. time is not on his side of harris says russia is guilty of crimes against humanity and ukraine and justice must be set on in the bonus niga once and got back legally this by in unit with just the 2nd defeat of the season. and the result was never in doubt stage room for more sports, the home a blue i am eddie micah junior. welcome to the program. the war in ukraine has been the focus on the 2 of the unix security conference, the german foreign minister,
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and on the not bad book said the walk would end when russian troops pull out of ukraine. u. s. secretary of state antony blank and confirmed washington's commitments to nato allies and looked ahead to a safe, unstable future for europe and ukraine. germany's defense minister or his mysterious emphasized the need for collective action. russia must not, and will not succeed with its imperialism, and its contempt for international law and that international peace architecture. and because neither diplomacy nor tough economic sanctions have made put in change . cough our show of force is the right response, dw social's is that them, you execute a conference. i asked her if western leaders had succeeded in send in moscow a strong message. yet it was it greatly about a show of force, a unified shell, a pilot for us. both of these things are important,
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showing that the west is unified and that they are willing to stay the course and to provide ukraine everything it needs to win this war against russia. and, you know, you showed this panel with the u. s. foreign at the usa, secretary of state and, and alina burbock, and both of them, were given the same message. now this would have been unthinkable years ago that the german and usaa foreign ministers are, are giving exactly the same message about how ukraine needs to win the war with europe's help. and then you have ukraine standing by and saying, thank you very much. we'll take all of that, talking about strong messages. we had the u. s. vice president carmella harris, formerly accused russia crimes against humanity in ukraine. let's listen to what you have to say. i did say, has formerly determined that russia has committed crimes against humanity. and i say to all those who have
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perpetrated these crimes and to their superiors who are complicit in these crimes, you will be held to account terry. we had come to harris saying that those responsible will be held accountable. but how yeah, that's a very difficult question. and everybody. a knows it, they can gather all the evidence they want. they can even issue subpoenas for people. they can ask for them to be arrested, but russia does not extradite its citizens. we've seen this in, for example, the m 817 case. but in the meantime, the international community is trying to put together a system where you could try war crimes against russia. and one of the ideas is to try the crime of aggression which has a lower threshold. you have to prove that
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a national military was used to create, to create acts of aggression and the international criminal court in the heck is already setting itself up to potentially tried these crimes. and there's also talk of setting up another special tribunal for this. so the international community is very definitely trying to make those perpetrating these crimes believe that they are not going to get away with it. but it's expected that it goes all the way up to president putin. and that, of course, will be a difficult, a difficult one to bring in to justice. that was also a lot of talk about more support for ukraine after all we had from well leaders. what could that look like? i think the biggest take away that i have from the conference on speeding up support for ukraine is the new attention to actually getting ammunition production scaled up quickly. and we heard various suggestions here coming from no less than the president of the european commission. ursula vander lion,
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who said that she wants to try to create a system for, for, with sourcing ammunition the way they did with vaccines when everybody thought. 8 it would take a lot longer than it did to come up with a vaccine and to get it to all of the e u member states. she says the same thing can be done with ammunition. and this is something that is being met with a lot of approval from ukraine and also from, from european countries who are, are able to do this as single country. so i think we are going to see some initiatives that actually start making a difference on the ground in ukraine when it comes to scaling of weapons production and ammunition production. in particular, the $1000000.00 question is if ukraine will get exactly what they want pressed and zalinski, i said that he need fighter jets long range missiles is unlikely to happen any time soon. we haven't seen any sign that fighter jets are on their way any time soon, but nobody blamed the ukrainians for asking for them. they were also told they weren't going to get a modern tanks in the beginning and those are supposed to be on the way. now,
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so i think that what, what nato allies have talked about when it comes to, to fighter jets is that this would be part of a longer term plan to help ukraine secure it's territory perhaps after the war is over. perhaps after they get russia out of off their land. but you know, it's not going to go away and ukraine is going to keep asking. okay, tell schultz valona you next to the conference. thank you. now the battle for the eastern ukrainian sea to your bucket loads rages on russia's wagner group mercenaries claim to have taken control of a village north of the city. the faith of buck notes has become the longest running bottle of russia's war with staggering casualties. for the wagner forces leading the assault, pounding away at their rush, an attack is fending off the relentless, sold on back moot. he's a wagon group leader yevgeny. pre goshen has claimed his troops have taken
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a village just outside the city. but ukrainian soldiers make clear how the russian advances here have come at huge cost and there they're sending a lot of troops. i don't think that's sustainable for them to keep attacking this way. they're just there, there are places were there bodies, i just piled up there the, there's a trench where they just don't evacuate their wounded or killed and they just leave them there and send more waves than waves of people. the u. s. says the tactics are all part of the wagner groups disregard for its own men's lives or so next week i do want to say this about divine group and it he, in particularly with respect to back move. i mean, again, they're treating their recruits largely context as basically as cannon fodder, throwing them into a literal meat grinder here in human ways without a 2nd thought and will ukrainian soldiers have been defending the shattered city
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for months. now. they say west and equipment like these bushmaster armored vehicles provided by australia is helping government, but that more is urgently needed. narrowly did the way the budget give us more military equipment, more weapons, and we will deal with the russian occupier, but we will destroy them. and as of the but a more hill, modern western tanks all set to arrive soon. ukrainian troops already learning how to operate these german made leopard twos here in poland. but for now back moods defenders will have to keep working with what they've got with more than 45000 people now known to have been killed in the at cliques. which struck taking sylvia nearly 2 weeks ago. authorities are struggling to deal with a, grew in humanitarian crisis. millions in both countries remained displaced people last week and outdoors and living without food, water,
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or toilets. many survivors left syria for turkey open to find better conditions across the border. but some are now returning to the out water homeland with whatever belongings the managed to salvage extra crossings have now opened to allow aid to move from turkey to syria. but journalists, kristin, help access much more needs to be done. it is by far not enough. what we're hearing from north and syria is the clinics. and hospitals are really running out of medical supplies. there's a leg of baby baby powder in the region. what we've seen so far, what 14 trucks by they go and crossing into north of syria for a population of almost 4000000 in neat. so this is not enough. and we having a via hearing some assessment reports that are saying that 88 percent of the student elk baked victims live in the opposition had territories by 12 percent live in the regime her territories. but on the other hand,
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it is 90 percent off the international aid that is going to the regime. so it's a quite unfair distribution of 8 ah, found a german bundis league out by and munich troubled to barouche. i'm when she got back with the familiar face and yes starts and 11. for mark lab by goalkeeper young summer, i just joined by and in the winter transfer window. got back my now staff for my captain hadn't lost the barbarians in 3 competitive games. they were open to, and by and only the us 2nd, last the season. and they did insta, subpoint the home vance. go out by fans were dressed for a carnival, hoping the poles could keep their own beat, run versus buyer and ally buyer and help goodbye by hurting themselves early in the match. in the 8th minute, they are equal mckuddle. what player in play i went down, the sal didn't look that serious, but player was the last man, which meant red car. the buyer now to 10 men. what bar were quick to strike?
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the handball or law, a free kick, deep in byron territory. enlarge didn't don't get the rest to sin the crowd into a frenzy. he didn't take very long to equalize though. speed from alphonso davis in the phyllis from air to him. okay. but the high fives in chest bumps wouldn't be there for buyer to the break. yon is hoffman from inside the box found paiger to retake, to leave for god above. not the best shoeing from yon summer in novels men had enough. blackbirds advantage continue to show marcus to ra needed a 3rd goal, adding some push into the early bird one back through mathias tail. but the match was already lost. buyers 2nd defeat of the season could knock them off the top of the table. if you knew on berlin when on sunday,
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that's overlay of the boat before the formula one season gets under way next month . seam alpine has added a legend to the aero star, friends, world cup champions and agency ban will serve as our pines brand. ambassador, sudan was considered one of the greatest football as a ball time had been without a job since stepping down as rural moderates. coach 2 years ago on use of sudan that pairing up with alpine cost quite the stair with one excited friends driver. thing again compares you down with the god right. it there is our friends god. and that is just incredible driving as an ambassador, i've been huge fan of him since i was a kid. and i played football when i was 5 and 11, and it has been a huge icon for, for the entire country, not only in the sports world. now, here's something you don't see often at an m. b all stevens, he play,
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i made waves by guaranteeing his game women shots before going on to nail it. new orleans halligan's guard was the arbor as media bet with the cleveland cavaliers. spar donavon mitchell seen here, citizen caught sight, alvarado told him he'd next again. when i this is an edith mitchell plans to honor his that's and by alvarado vienna as a quick look at some other stories on the world of sports canyon football, a christian not sure has been found dead nearly 2 weeks after he had quakes. that struck turkey and sylvia, she had been playing for texas club just for the city of takia. his body was recovered from the rubble of the collapse building where he lived english committee club, man, just the united could soon have a new owner cut out that she just him been hammered out. bonnie is offering to buy
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out the current us owners. a family of bonnie is the chairman of one of the biggest banks. the woman's football woke up trophy is troubling to all 32 countries taking part in this yes tournament in australia on new zealand. and when a nation will take charge of the cop in august for about half a 1000000, much tickets, i've already been sold. and that's all for me for now. starts and shortly. conflict zone asked what's next for ukraine? stay tuned for more news and talk about a real time on social media. if it's in the propaganda war for ukraine. russia's war in crane one year since the invasion began
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in february on d. w. as the war intensifies in ukraine conflict zone is that the munich security conference to off what's next for ukraine brit allied. and for most just security's western support for kiana is nato in danger of tracking down in the face of nuclear blackmail to moscow. and how might this war finally come to an end? in the last week, nato has run a very loud alarm. bell, president putin. it fed is preparing for more war. just as the west seems to be running out of the ammunition and weapons that give urgently needs. so just how dangerous is the current situation where might be conflict? go from here. to discuss these questions, i'm told by senior political figures from across the west of alliance, montana,
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smyrna skis, prime minister of poland, capital in color. now who's foreign minister france alexander cooper. cough is you can in deputy prime minister for restoration. mitch mcconnell, republican senator, for the state of kentucky and senate minority leader, i carry you also the longest serving senate party leader in us history. i think sandra co broke off, let me start with you. we had a very impassioned plea from president zelinski today to speed up supply speed up, weapons deliveries. how critical is the situation? i think station is always critical, and i think our, our life gay mistake. if you asked me what i'd like to change, i think for the full bill was like trying to catch up rush on some fits and up agenda when situation become a critical receive. and until like when you receive that, i'll feel it in the standard 155. and then again,
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we're trying to catch up and receive an error different than, than exam. i think the president absolutely right. when his dry and thrift, i tried to say that speed is critical because during this period the family illusion people, our, our best people, as he said, lived if depends on speed. absolutely right. just 2 examples. if i questions regarding flight and just like complicated critical, but why we can start putting in program flow pilots at this moment to be strong signal for actions for everybody. again, more complicated questions russians they use and each day plus that one, you some force for some nation each day. again, it's complicated, but our people then in bottom one, almost, you cannot resist this to this when you sent to the paper from when you why we can use it. i mean it's, i what that it, that it's understand how it's complicated over conventions,
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but we can use to resist exam on our to do to use such i'm when you show you our complex life us, my, now's a comparative. they have millions of rounds of such type. why would a and again, wait, wait, wait, and firm in one day probably we will receive such type of formulation. but again, the lesson is when it comes with thousands and thousands of people in time to add to the sense of alarm, the washington post reported this week, the senior us administration official had raised the issue of limits to what america can supply this war. we will continue said the official to impress on the ukrainians. we can't do anything and everything for ever you find that worrying? i think right, well like technically limitations on the 10th of future order. thousands of 1000 rounds. they use in each day and we are, it's even more from another side from the russian side because they have future to
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deal with. they have iran on their side, the have some other competence. they can use the money, they prepare it to this for, for many years. so we can assume that probably some technical limitations, but i don't believe. and i still, i still believe that our life, us all over but from there. but in order to provide required williams mateusz motor of the sky scene for more, so does the west, does nato have the will and right now the capacity to give you what it needs to win, what i hope so, by the way, done by this logic of you know, we've given enough and then let ukrainians do their job well, they're actually dying on the front line and they are doing this for their own sovereignty and freedom,
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but also for our security and peace in europe. so if we want to have, and we do want to have all of us to create a long lasting development, climate and peace, we have to change the logic. we cannot say, well, the ukraine cannot be defeated and russia cannot win this war. this is wrong. we have to say, russia must lose this war, and ukraine must win this war. because that's a, that's, that's, that's a change of mind. you ask about the united states. well like if united states want to stay a superpower and they already are friends from america already and counted some defeat in gunnison, they cannot allow for yet another. ready defeat in failure in
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ukraine, so i think that ukrainians, ukrainian soldiers and government prisoners skewed they are doing all possible to, to win this war. and we have to do all of our and to support your trying to win this war. will you supply the f? 16 fighters, i got your president isn't here. we have, we have pretty few of them. we have not, not too many of them, but we, we did. we do agree on delivering jet fighters other type of jeff to find just read the which are in our possession together with the other parts of natal decision by the way, paul, and deliver to ready to come to the 50 tanks. and on top of those, we are going, going to deliver 60 quite mother nice tanks. and on top of this pyramid, we're going to deliver 14 lippard tanks. so probably the highest, the biggest numbers of armed v cars and tanks. ready was delivered from poland.
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kathleen collar. now, how long do you think the west can continue to supply ukraine at current and projected levels for ammunition and weapons? as long as it takes would be my on for you hold on my call today saying that we would like to see the school going on for so long. but we are ready to support a plan, as long as it takes it to do what this is not to do what we're doing that it when or that has defeating russian aggression. suppose i'm good to go. what the prime minister side and doing what we've been doing since raphael's day, helping to clean those by the can we were giving him and tell you name it now so many aspects and military and we just decided altogether to do more and to do it swiftly so we can really be side by side with the current. so again, not only resist this aggression but succeed in the military search we
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expect to see in the near future. however long that may take, i don't know. no, i'm sorry, your commitment is for however long that may tell yes because there's no end point to that. as far as you're concerned. mitch mcconnell, when president biden says the u. s. will stay the course with ukraine. what do you take that to me? well 1st i don't know who that quote was that you started this discussion was from the washington post, but that's obviously a person who doesn't know what they're talking about. so let me just tell you what the people who are actually elected office and who actually becca decisions about how long america is committed to this. think russia has to lose and your credit. and we can't put a time limit on it. but the one thing we can do to address the problem that was
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raised by our friend from ukraine. speed up the decision making, get the weapons there quicker. the whole defense production throughout nato is under stress. there's no question about we're providing a lot more an issue weapon systems and we were anticipating but we need to speed it up to cut through the oxy. get you the weapons you need as soon as you need them . so you can win the war. joe, as far as i'm concerned, i think i can speak pretty thoroughly for most of the members of my party in congress, were in this to win because losing is not an option. imagine how much it would cost all of us, all of us if russia want. and what about the implications in the far east when prime minister japan said the single most important thing you can do is send
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a message, a president, she is a b, and then ukraine. you know that this has worldwide implications. so we need to change our thinking about gates, who is one of the great secretaries of defense in the united states. i served under both bush and obama, said that after the cold war, we all took a holiday from history without we're never going to have evil on full display. again, everything should be just fine. well, evil is back and peace or strength is the only way to deal, and i don't know what the present but with the future. can we talk? can we talk a little bit about the prospects one day of peace negotiations? who's the cobra cough? president zelinski says this war will end only when all russian forces leave ukraine. when your territory integrity is restored. the special tribunal is set up
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to try russians accused of war crimes. do you think that president putin will ever agree to those conditions? it doesn't matter whether he real or not. i think we have to deal with that. if we have to restore our bullet or have to bring my laptop, our company doesn't matter who put in or not put in a little bit fun, but instead of him, we have to blow a joke. as i well as there is, i have to lose. but you're saying there will be no diplomacy ending this war. this is worse, war ends on the battlefield starter. just as far as you're concerned, catherine calona. should ukraine be fighting and talking piece at the same time? was that possible? not for the time being. now there is
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a road to peace and presidency as always been looking for dialogue and looking for peace. enjoying recently with us at the 1st time, he's talking about daylight and peace included with the tank point piece point presented at the g 20 in november. and there were 2 piece, according to me is paved with a few my stows. the 1st one is unity and it is important that from this conference comes a message of unity, unity and determination to go. busy on as not as needed a 2nd, we must make presumptive realize that it did make a mistake. this happens. it did make a blatant mistake. things didn't work the way so the would care didn't fall in 48 hours. a kind was about to back control from gifts on and again and again. and nature was about to be enlarged. the europeans have been united, i could go with a long list. and thirdly,
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we have to make clear that there would be something after the war and i think that kind of looking for it. but the precondition to that is for this aggression to be defeated as a precondition to any possible in evolution to a 2nd phase. there will be a 2nd phase war to an always, but we still unfortunate the 1st phase where there must be something visible. so hopefully a 2nd base can be started. mitch mcconnell, the chair of the u. s. joint chiefs general mar, millie said just last week that he still believes this war will end at the negotiating table with neither side likely to achieve their military aims. how widely do you think that view is shared in washington? well, it's always difficult to predict exactly how it was going to end. what we have here
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is a clear case of one country and waiting another and until the ukrainians have a contrary view. my view as they ought to determine on what terms the war ends and at least at them. so far. what i hear you saying, and what i hear you're president say is that when you get your country back at 200 and so i don't think we ought to be negotiating a solution for the ukrainians that they may not be able to live with. i think our goal particularly immediately get them what they need, get it to them as rapidly as possible and give them every chance to win. and the ukranian stay in the driving seat when the negotiations start. if the negotiations look, i think the definition of victory ought to be left up to those who are affected
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but the most. in other words, i'm not in favor of all of us ganging up, enforcing a solution onto the ukrainians that they may not be able to live with. so we have to focus on right now, getting them what they need to win, divide the cash, whatever sky zalinski is, but he demands on the table. we mention some of them from poland. vantage point of a realizable, i believe. so i think thinks which were beyond the imagination of the beginning of the war, started to realize they will do it doable. at the beginning of the war, there were countries hesitating, the se, sending helmets or, or bullet profess to, to ukraine. then we sent the armored vehicles and then left part tanks and the pattern patriot systems are now in the ukraine. and now we talked and you asked me
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about fighter jets. so i think that everything is possible. and even you know, the, the, i can imagine that the actual race, accelerated path for ukraine to, to the european union is also very important for a requisite for, for not only keeping kept hopes for the ukrainian nation and soldiers. but also providing ukraine with a longer term strategy and vision of ukraine being part of the european union. so yes, and while i was on the com, the echo senator said about the potential scenario. so getting out of this war, this is all apt to ukraine. how to define victor, victor, in how to define the scenario piece. you talked about ukraine's application to join the you and, and it was to join nato as well. of course this,
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do you think these applications should be fast tracked? i think so. well, like what we, if we want, if you want to be part of the stable system of free world and europe in particular, we don't want to ukraine to be a buffer zone zone of clash between different systems. and for this to, to happen, we need ukraine as part of european union and as part of nato eventually as well. and from our point of view of the creek or the better during the visit last week to brussels, president lansky told the european council president shall, michelle. he wanted accession talks to open this year, saying it would motivate the country in the army this year shall when i say this year, i mean this year 2023 coupling color the message get through the message is getting. so the reality will be that the commission will make as it is
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planned and agreed and assessment this spring then delivering to a paper this fall. and that we shall see. we really opened the door to the air recognition of the status of it being candidate to can i think trans played a key role then. and forgive me for reminder that we were chairing the rotating presidency of the conceal of the e. u. a prisoner my call travelled to keith's just a few days before the commission delivered his opinion on that accession. then we have to follow the pass. it is a long term marriage based pass, i think because i was a risky and knowledge that refers must be done and that we shall see down the road . what this assessment would be in the fall and see from that was a, this could take years through so on out, you know, depending on the marriage is the only rule we have to follow. but doesn't it bother
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you at all that while the, you acknowledges that ukraine is fighting and dying for things that you're a believes in. at the same time it's telling present the landscape that's all very well. but we have our rules, enough bureaucracy, and you have to follow that ukraine is fighting a superpower for its very survival. shouldn't it get fast track membership just for that? it's not for everything else. forgive me to disagree with you. it has nothing to do is bureaucracy and everything to do with accession process that everybody is aware of. and that means that the country wanted join our most welcome to join and we did open the door. i repeat as to do what is necessary to come closer to us and then jain. everybody knows that this is the rule of the game mr. maria ski wanted. when i lose my i think that we, we now observe completely in your situation around us. there was no and a full scale war, sees the end of the 2nd world war in europe. and this should lead
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us to think out of books. and here, there is a lot of red tape, lots of red tape in brussels and you know, business issues, what type of considerations with regards to the accession process. whereas i do believe that we have to be brave. today we have to go on this accelerated pass because things which are happening can ukraine of our, of extraordinary nature, what is happening there? we'll, we'll shape the future of europe for, for d, case. and we cannot pretend that this is norma conflict us. many of them were before in europe. this is why i was happy, like i was saying in march let, let's give candidate status for ukraine, which several countries set definitely not over. might that but it hopefully it
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happens there after quite soon, because in june 2022 we have accepted the section. this candidates now did they start to satisfy, but today we need to have very accelerated pot. mitch mcconnell, what about ukraine? joining nato? should that be an accelerated past job one is when the warm and let's go back to the point. you know, this has implications far beyond the current conflict. huge implications in asia. we all know the p r c covets taiwan. so just for a moment, let's take a look at asia our secretary defenses, recently in the philippines, negotiating new arrangements with them. the japanese, much like the germans,
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have completely changed their post forward to view of the role that they ought to play in the world. in a positive direction, almost like an unofficial member of nato out out and in asia. so this saves here or, or even beyond just europe. and even beyond just the future of your country. this has to do was standing up a mechanism, an alliance to deal with the biggest threats. and they're basically china and russia talking of high stakes. putin is already rattled. the keys of is nuclear missiles in the west has stepped back, anxious not to escalate the war. and push booting into pressing the button. has it been right to do that? is that not giving into nuclear blackmail? well, how many times the threatened to do things since the war began?
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you can't make the ukrainian strategy or the note strategy dependent about what click potent claims he might do, and he's determining how that war is conducted. i think we're with all due respect all of these hypothetical or interesting discussions. but for those of us who are actually voting on these matters, i think we need to focus like a laser on what's needed right now. and it's getting your great answer weapons i need as rapidly as they can. because winning is the answer to this. winning is the answer very briefly because we're running out of time. can we just look to the future? cutscene calona. how does france think this war will end? how yell. by a discussion. whenever you kind is ready of the terms that a clan decides to put on the table and we are here to help you kind of be in that
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situation where all of us can envisage that we reached that phase where new cycle begins. i repeat. but in order to have that escalated political perspective, strengths is needed, strengths is needed and this is why was spinning up what we're doing. and we need to deliver what we have to deliver swiftly. and we need to focus on those elements that kind of nice. i mostly for the time being correct me if i'm wrong. alteri, i, munitions, and defense. the debate about the rest can be there. it is not exactly what it needs full time and we need to be there in due time, so the can build on what that will help we give and visitors 1st that might change the focus and my change maybe the view that mr. berman has
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a recent situation or a poland warned for years about russia's aggressive intentions, and no one listened in your view. has moscow's appetite for expansion been stated or stimulated by the experience in ukraine is put in still a threat to poland, the baltic states? absolutely. so it depends. the answer is it depends on the outcome of this, of this work. we want to hope for the best features, wrap it, defeat of russian truth. not we have to be patient. we have to count with long lasting conflict. and this is why i'm a bit unhappy when i hear voices off, you know, calls for quick negotiation process to be finalized by ukrainians. they know best what it. ready what it means for. ready their future, but i, i believe that the public opinion in russia is different than our public opinion
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for it is different and they have lots of patients. we have to have lots of patients in terms of discovering. unfortunately, this means that for a long time, we have to be able to deliver weapon and more with more supply, more humanitarian aid. this is what would be my my thinking in the near future. alexander co broke up for kind of ukraine. do you see emerging from this war when it finishes? i think 1st of all we need to win this war. we have, we have very complicated when our people suffered and but again, i'd like to the mindset of ideas regarding the negotiations. we already have this experience and will use to be took to be the strength of the adamant to produce more rounds work on and to start again. so we won't agree, and we have all researches also with their showings, with 90 percent of our people that are in again to fight to feel then before we win
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before interval after, after the war we will be claim will be part of european union and the think our army will be one of the most brilliant and strongest out of my reach will be part of later after the war. and you think you think you'll be living in a much more dangerous world next to russia after this. i hope that the to be different for business business and other people in russia. right. run in russia for i thank you very much indeed. and we're going to close that part of the discussion. now i will take will take some questions. i think the swedish defense minister has a has a question. if we can get a microphone to him, please. thank you very much and thank you for the fascinating discussion, sweetness currently holding the presidency rest assure our top priority. see says
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support for ukraine. economic political for monitoring militarily. now i have a question for, for the prime minister of poland. thank you for your leadership in supporting ukraine and also for hosting the training mission human ukraine. that's good. now the challenge we have is that we're all digging deep into our stockpiles and our military resources are not unlimited. so i'm wondering how potently, thinking about how, when, when you come to be replacing the military capabilities that you're sending to you . great. now, due to the pressure on the european defense, industrial base, thank you. well, like the thing, thank you for this question. first, let me express my happiness from the point of view of sweden and finland joining nato. that's quite a change for nato. it's put in with not expert attack that i think they will, but that's, that's, that's quite a change from the point of view of all the stockpile and all the weapons which we
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have delivered. we are changing our industry. we are creating new technology lines to replace the weapon, which we would have sent to ukraine with new weapon. good example is garbage, us cut up, which we've sent to ukraine. they are very good on the battlefield and we have our salary to production of them domestically. we are buying new ones from south korea and we have put even more orders. ready in the united states, companies to deliver hi, maurice and other other type of weapon. but in all i know there are shortages of munitions shortages of lots of weapon. and this is why collectively in europe and in the united states and in japan and the other 3 world countries are we,
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there's lots of, you know, waking up from the political slumber and creating new options. new possibilities to produce more. i'm a nation, each weapon of different kinds and this is what we are doing. and we got some kept feelers of on replacing this type of weapon which were sent to ukraine. this is race with time to some extent, so it's a challenge. it's a challenge for before poll on this well, but we do want to be generous and quick in delivering quip onto ukraine because this is where the fight now happens. here. the questions 30 here in the front in the front. thank. thank you. could find some european council on foreign relations. i'd love to take a little bit deeper into this question of you accession, because prime minister, you said we should be brace. this shouldn't be business as usual. well,
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i understand that this isn't about the commission picking up the phone quick more quickly and answering to emails quick more quickly. so this is about real concessions in the accession process, right. could you point to things that we, in your opinion could actually do without and could abandon? what are, what are the compromises that you would really need to make on the kind of accession steps? because in the french 4 minutes a pointed out there are, there are certain rules and there are certain chapters that one needs to open and to close. so what exactly are you pointing at that we could do without? thank you. your crime is fighting today for the most critical, most important values. european values, free world values like freedom, independence, right, to live and those type of values. so we cannot confront this. what is happening in
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ukraine. we the normal or almost normal process of accession. either we start thinking in a, in a new way out of books these times are, it will live live through the turning moment in history. and we have to change almost everything in europe. we have to therefore create a new process for ukraine. accelerated path is synonym for this, but what, what, what made look like i'm, i'm not so sure i'm, if you ask me if i was in favor of abandoning the normal roots on to accession. my answer is yes. of course. yes. because the what is happening before our is this is something completely on strategic and extraordinary. and we cannot let this country ah negotiated as if it was a normal ah,
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candidate to. ready european union just i am an addition maybe to why the prime minister said, i think it is out of scope and out of reach to abandon, you know, a precondition. and he says it in scale would support me in saying that reform is needed, whether it is, you know, the legal system, that gestures judicial forgiving system or the fight against corruption. somebody thinks. so the question is not so much to lower the level and do i sort of a mini accession, but i am happy when i am in agreement with the primary south talent to do what he just said we should do. and when you are not doing that is accelerate, help, you know, had become to come and join us as well. and this is partly what we're doing with the european political community. in the 1st meeting was an tobar. the 2nd meeting
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would been june in java, and part of the idea is not a to be a group of $44.00 countries. and the look at the map is interesting. but to design some programs, that could be exit writers or, you know, pre accession programs or whether it is energy trussville. so you know, things and this is a big way to help. and i think this is part of the reasons why you come from the very 1st day supported that idea your reaction to that. i think we're in a complicated sit in parallel fight in. ready feel to his rock and trying to implement to it's in the way to just speak all of the city forums and, and the think, i hope that the relations this here will be positive and we will open this process
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how question to mitch mcconnell. mathematically, our military already defined jointly with american partners and other partners. what is needed for going to win. what kind of equipment is needed to win? and militarily, it is important to have more than fighter jets without more than 5 fighter jets to be are not able to win. and without taking back crimea, we are not able to win an absolute majority of ukrainians, one to get crimea back. moreover, world foot security depends on capacity of ukraine to get that crimea and unblock black supports. so it's the fake, not all new ukraine, but of 350000000 people who are in hunger have ever in use of your hearing that present by them said no to f. 16 and the were publications know, do you claim in the military even thinking now to take that crimea?
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when do you think center this opinion in the u. s. will change? well my answer is i said earlier, i think the ukrainians are best able to determine what they can live with and there's no question the crime was taken without much of a conflict. but in the end, i think the parties to the war auto, the terms upon which door and so your grands have to live in ukraine and as long as you're willing to fight for your country. and it's not costing a single american soldiers live. and what we're doing is providing listen to the money that we've sent to you so far. is point o 2 percent of our g, d, p of our g d p. in order to give you
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a chance to live in freedom and to prevent the russians from being emboldened by a successful outcome in ukraine, which further emboldened chinese which are an enormous threat to us and to all of you. so i'm not here to dictate the terms open, which this audit and i think that's up to you and your government to determine what you can live with. and the end question was also about the f sixteens. why don't give them the f sixteens. ugh, give it up to me. oh, good. oh, thank you very much. my name is alina pacola. i'm the president and ceo of the center for european policy analysis in washington. and thank you for everyone's comments and thank you prime minister for, for your leadership. and what concerns me is that i don't hear the western alliance
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speaking in one voice. i've heard the prime minister say that our goal, our policy is to when i've heard the center say that we need to aim to win. i don't hear that clarity from a lot of other allies in those direct terms. and i think what we see now as a result of that, and beauty is that we haven't actually given ukraine what needs to win. but we're telling them we want you to win. but we're not going to give you patriots because is escalate tory in march for 90 more. we're not going to give you. hi mars because it's s glittery. it'd be anywhere but 90 more. so i don't see why our actual policy is not a polish policy. but what is the western vision for ukraine and why can we not hear every single ally say our goal is to win? because if our goal is to win, then we will give ukrainians everything they need. now,
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while we're setting ourselves up, now, i'm sorry to use the word is a forever war because we're given them just enough to survive, but not to win. and i think this is a problem that my ukranian colleague was pointing to here. so i would like to hear everyone on the panel respond to that sort of to michel. yeah, i could, mcgruder more eve said it better than i could. they need to be given the weapons they need to win. i think we have all the united states and europe and allies have been all to tentative in reaching decisions. give the ukrainians the best chance to win, which is what we all want out of some vague notion that we're going to provoke, bladder married, ladies and gentlemen, he's provoked, right? he's provoked and none of these efforts. it where we sort of pulled our punches in
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hope that he would somehow change direction. have had any impact at all. so i agree with you. i think we're to be given what they need to win the war as soon as possible when president landscape was in washington press conference with president biden. president biden was asked, why don't you just give the ukrainians the tools to do the job? and he said, i don't know, i've spent hundreds of hours with our allies, and i don't know if we could hold the e, u and nato together. if we did give them those tools quite an admission for, for, for europe. but it seems to me you don't have to be too smart to figure out that we all benefit from these guys, winning and winning quickly. and that's been a problem in my country. and other countries in no toe the way to win it quickly. as you suggest, with your question,
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to give them what they need to want it as soon as possible. i couldn't agree more with senator as well. i. my job is also to move the pendulum of imagination of my partners in western europe to persuade them to deliver more. so i think that the quicker and this the sooner and the more we are going to deliver to ukraine. ready those ukranian soldiers who will fight by the way, we lie on the hearts they are, they are going to prevail eventually. but the modern type of battlefield is requires lots of a munition artillery. this is, by the way, the lesson of this, of this war. and by the way, this point 2 percent, which was spent by the united states, partially, or was spent on american companies producing those weapons for
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ukraine was. so i think this is, this is all. ready interconnected and with great leadership of the united states i, i do believe that we will be able to deliver enough of weapons in particular hi mars and this type of work when we just critically important on the battlefield for ukrainians, the troops to, to win. okay. all right, i'm afraid we have to leave it there. thank you very much to the panel. thank you. home . light breezy and full of life creations by african designer, doreen less eager. i can tell the story than with her fabrics,
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patterns and colors. compositions for an endless island summer. tap re max in 30 minutes, d w, with someone else who t v highlights selected for you every week in your inbox. so describe now a good push to me today was yes sir, this is the consequence was for those folks i'm to find out because she's a willing and conflict in ukraine. but european war intent, voices rushes, warry ukraine in one year since the invasion began. we
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take a little back and into the future in the new money flowing in february on d. w. ah, ah, ah, this is new news alive from berlin. leaders condemned russia aggression at the munich security conference. german defense, minnesota bar, as mysterious accuses rush hour, imperialism. seeing it's content for international law must be met with issue or from the u. s. vice president is strong wanted,
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but it thinks he can wait us out. he is badly mistaken. time is not on his side. as best russia is guilty of crimes against humanity and clean injustice must be set last ukraine. also in the spotlight of this. yes, berlin film festival press that button. residency is the subject of the new film by us. sean penn, who put the ukrainian lead up before and after the russian invasion. correspondents on the red carpet i studied. ah, i am eddie micah junior. welcome to the program. the war in ukraine has been to focus on day 2 of them, unit security conference, the german foreign minister,
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and not even a bad book said the walk with. and when russian troops fall out of your brain by u. s. secretary of state anthony blanket with washington's commitments to its nato allies and looked ahead to receive unstable future. will you, on your crate? germany's defense minister forest mysterious, emphasized the need for collective action. russia must not, and will not succeed with its imperialism, and its contempt for international law and international peace architecture. and because neither diplomacy nor tough economic sanctions have made put in change, cough our show of force is the right response. did abuse terry shoulds is that the munich security conference? i asked the if western leaders that succeeded and send in moscow a strong message. yet it was greatly about a show of force, a unified shell that force both of these things are important, showing that the west is unified and that they are willing to stay the course and
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to provide ukraine everything. it needs to win this war against russia. and, you know, you showed this a panel with the u. s. foreign at the usa, secretary of state and, and alina burbock, and both of them were given the same message. now this would have been unthinkable years ago that the german and the usaa foreign ministers are giving exactly the same message about how you pray, needs to win the war with europe's help. and then you have ukraine standing by and saying, thank you very much. we'll take all of that, talking about strong messages. we had the u. s. vice president, pamela harris, formerly accused rachelle crimes against humanity in ukraine. let's listen to what you have to say. i would say, has formerly determined that russia has committed crimes against humanity. and i say to all those who have
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perpetrated these crimes and to their superiors who are complicit in these crimes, you will be held to account terry. we had come to harris saying that those responsible will be held accountable. but how yeah, that's a very difficult question. and everybody knows it, they can gather all the evidence they want. they can even issue subpoenas for people. they can ask for them to be arrested, but russia does not extradite its citizens. we've seen this in, for example, the m 817 case. but in the meantime, the international community is trying to put together a system where you could try war crimes against russia. and one of the ideas is to try the crime of aggression which has a lower threshold. you have to prove that
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a national military was used to create, to create acts of aggression and the international criminal court in the heck is already setting itself up to potentially tried these crimes. and there's also talk of setting up another special tribunal for this. so the international community is very definitely trying to make those perpetrating these crimes believe that they are not going to get away with it. but it's expected that it goes all the way up to president putin. and that, of course, will be a difficult, a difficult one to bring in to justice. that was also a lot of talk about more support for ukraine after all we had from well leaders. what could that look like? i think the biggest take away that i have from the conference on speeding up support for ukraine is the new attention to actually getting ammunition production scaled up quickly. and we heard various suggestions here coming from no less than the president of the european commission. ursula vander lion, who said that she wants to try to create a system for,
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for resourcing ammunition the way they did with vaccines when everybody thought. 8 it would take a lot longer than it did to come up with a vaccine and to get it to all of the e u member states. she says the same thing can be done with ammunition. and this is something that's being met with a lot of approval from ukraine and also from, from european countries who are, are able to do this as single country. so i think we are going to see some initiatives that actually start making a difference on the ground in ukraine when it comes to scaling of weapons production and ammunition production. in particular, the $1000000.00 question is if you green will get exactly what the want percent zalinski, i said that he need fighter jets long range missiles is unlikely to happen any time soon. we haven't seen any sign that fighter jets are on their way any time soon, but nobody blamed the ukrainians for asking for than they were also told they weren't going to get a modern tanks in the beginning and those are supposed to be on the way. now, so i think that what, what nato allies have talked about when it comes to,
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to fighter jets is that this would be part of a longer term plan to help ukraine secure it's territory perhaps after the war is over. perhaps after they get russia out of off their land. but you know, it's not going to go away and ukraine is going to keep asking. okay, tell schultz belinda. you next to the conference. thank you. the battle for the east in ukrainian c. t o buckled rages on russia's wagner. group mercenaries claim to have taken control of a village north of the city. the fights of buckman will tossed become the longest running bottle of russia's war with staggering casualties. for the wagner forces leading the assault, pounding away at their rush, an attack is fending off the relentless, sold on back moot. he's a wagon group leader yet jenny, pre goshen has claimed his troops have taken a village just outside the city. but ukrainian soldiers make clear how the russian
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advances here have come at huge cost and there they're sending a lot of troops. i don't think that's sustainable for them to keep attacking this way. they're just there, there are places were there bodies, i just piled off there the, there's a trench where they just don't evacuate their wounded or killed and they just leave them there and send more waves than waves of people. the u. s. says the tactics are all part of the wagner groups disregard for its own men's lives or sounds weak. i do want to say this about divine group and if he in particularly with respect to back move, i mean again, they're treating their recruits largely convicts as basically as cannon fodder, throwing them into a literal meat grinder here in human ways without a 2nd thought enroll ukrainian soldiers have been defending the shattered city for months. now. they say west and equipment like these bushmaster armored vehicles
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provided by australia is helping government, but that more is urgently needed. narrowly did the way the budget give us more military equipment, more weapons on we will deal with the russian occupier, but we will destroy them. and as of the but a more hill, molden, western tanks all set to arrive soon. ukrainian troops already learning how to operate these gym and made leopard twos here in poland. but for now back moods defenders will have to keep working with what they've got. let's look at more stories making headlines around a world. thousands of these are these. i've joined what have become weekly, protest against big. i mean it's, you know whose rights when government opponents, crit, slice plans to give the administration more power to appoint supreme court judges. they see that changes on attack on democracy. the government says it needs to rein
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in on over my teacher dish. every he does have gone down to north korea launch in the long range ballistic missile into the sea, off japan. you're a secretary of state on sunday, blinking along with police from japan and south korea, countries to enforce existence functions against north korea. the young says the launch is in response to military drills in the region. first, teams in tacky. i found the board, your former guns, national football. i question that you on the equal last building actually went missing in the city of i'm talk. yeah. after the, at creeks nearly 2 weeks ago, the 165 cops on helped down. i reached a 2015 africa, a couple of nations vinyl now, one of the films in the sport light berlin film festival is shown parents, superpower, the u. s. and his production team, when ukraine, when the war began to follow below them, as well as these journey from canadian to precedence to con, unexpected town you'd have your report up,
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alida about told me more about the phil. well, let me tell you about the premier super power. it did get a very warm reception from the public and did receive a standing ovation. national pen used to the occasion of the premier to once again who on us president biden to send long re precision weapons to ukraine, something which he repeated the press conference earlier today. let me tell you a little bit about this film. it's almost 2 hours long, and it consists of critique of pen and co direct to aaron coffman traveling around ukraine before the invasion and later the frontline. it also has what with exclusive interviews with the landscape. but i have to say there is nothing really new to see here. there are no real new insights. that's very little original footage that we haven't seen before. and the response from critics has been a little bit less favorable. the word on the ground is really that there's
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a little bit too much. sean, penn, a lot of kind of ducking, hero worship, has been described to self aggrandizing even. and one cricket went so far as to say that if you just woke up from a coma and you had no idea what had happened and you saw this film, you, you might actually could be forgiven for thinking about showing pam was as instrumental as the lensky in the ukranian response to the russian invasion with the press conference on pen was extremely emotional when he, he did say that after the invasion, the landscape decision to not allow himself to be evacuated to stay put, made him feel. so emotional that it was really 2nd only in his life to witnessing the birth of his own children. so food exercise in activism, but no media, groundbreaking documentary. ok, sounds very has what some people have said about the fail, but tell us what else is going on today?
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well, just by the terrible weather we had today, lots of right. you know, we have had, am demonstration on the red carpet to behind me in front of the palace in honor of the human rights process in iran, which is of course, another focus of this edition of the festival in our home is about a 100 you iranian filmmakers were joined by jury president, kristen stewart, and also the directors of the festival. and i held up plaque hearts. they chanted some slogans and had a phone call. elsie to draw attention to the answering machine protest in iran. yeah. actually a lot happening over there at did of the reports. are alida barrow, thanks lot for the updates to sports now by in munich. travel to bruce. i'm also glad back with the familiar face and yes, start. and 11 for mark lab by gorky by young summer, had just joined by and in the winter transfer window got back, hadn't lost it. bob ends in 4 competitive games were open to hand by and only the 2nd last, the season. blood bar vans were dressed for carnival,
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hoping the polls could keep their own beat run versus buyer and alive. buyer and help, blah blah, by hurting themselves early in the match. in the 8th minute there people mckuddle, clock player in play. i went down, the fowl didn't look that serious, but player was the last man which meant red core, the buyer down to 10 men. what bar were quick to strike? the handball or law of free kick deep in byron territory. enlarge if you're ready to send the crowd into a frenzy, it didn't take very long to equalize though speed from alphonso davies in the finished with. with the high fives in chess bumps, wouldn't be there for buyer. after the break. you own is hoffman from inside the box found pager to retake, to leave for god above. not the best shoeing from yon summer and na guzman
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had enough. black vas advantage continued to show marcus to ra, made a 3rd goal, adding some cushion to their li buyer and pulled one bag through mathias tail. but the match was already lost. buyer's 2nd defeat of the season could knock them off the top of the table. if union berlin went on sunday while stories is up next, looking at how russia has spread in provo, ideology, and it's just a statement from the one use of the tone phobia. ah, what people have to say matters to us. ah, that's why we listen to their stories reporter every weekend on
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d. w. but i wish i could have done more save, you discover stories that me just a click away. find out best documentary on youtube. yeah. really good morning. see the world as you've never seen it before. describe now t d w l came in change ah, this week on world stories. indonesia fights against climate polluters. a dispute over brown bears in poland. but 1st,
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we go to russia, where schools are being ordered to run special lessons justifying the war and ukraine. any one daring to object can expect the police investigation for body angelica music is the best way to unwind, to forget school and trouble with the police. a few months ago, or thirties labeled the 11 year old as problematic. they suspect her family as being anti russian and pro ukrainian ever since that day in october last year. when police questioned valia and her mother bulls thrush, my 1st i was afraid to call the police officer was sitting right across from me because she was tall and she stared at me through her glasses. what did it i thought which, what does he want from me? i had never seen her before. it no more enjoy a ladder of bread by us. yes. reserve tidily. various alleged crime
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was that she had refused to attend a new course on patriotism at school. in the mandatory class, cold conversations about important things, students are told that the russian invasion of ukraine is just an act of liberation . even worse in the eyes of the authorities, various cellphone profile photo was an image of an alms toting virgin mary displayed in the ukrainian national colors. the school principal suspected subversive behavior and alerted the police threats, interrogation, and dramatic rate on their apartment, followed as of arias. mother yelena recalls. she says it was a nightmare that lasted weeks. i need prosper. they really cause me and my daughter, a lot of pain. the interrogation alone lasted for hours. last offer we were confronted with strange questions about politics. fighting and about my daughter vania, and about what kind of a bad child she was
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a wider equal grandma higher. various story is not an isolated one. shortly after the start of the war, russia passed a law forbidding what they called the discrediting of the russian armed forces. for example, any one who called the war a war rather than a special military operation, as the authorities dictated, risked long sentences. hundreds of russians who openly protested against the war and criticized the kremlin, have been taken to court. some have been imprisoned in the jolly cause apartment. the authorities tried to find evidence that would prove that they had broken. the law says very as mother yelena, they found nothing, even so the jolly cars remain under police observation. yet anna says her carefree life is over. she no longer feel safe. in short that it was another the 3 years ago. i couldn't have imagined anything like this happening and russia,
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a sophie to day, i no longer identify with the rush and stay in unless it just the child, the state is causing us too much pain in my children and me. i see it. i don't think we can expect anything good in russia, and the next 20 or 30 years will help when my children will become adults. and that's why various family doesn't want to stay in russia much longer. it's just a matter of time before they move abroad. she says, rodya has ambitions to become a great musician. free of any worries about the police. ah, her hoary island in indonesia is a vacationers paradise. with long, sandy beaches, turquoise sea and palm trees, but pari could soon disappear into the ocean. for fishermen are battling to save their home. these roots hold the future for pottery island.
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us money earned her friends are planting mangroves. once mature, the trees will serve as a natural barrier to sea water erosion and reduce the risk of flux. on the $42.00 hector island, which was just off the coast of jakarta. yeah. i don't wait until we think safe, perry island. that is their message and it's a message they have now go to court as money as one of 4 residents of perry island who filed a lawsuit against cement, giant, wholesome, in switzerland, over its contribution to climate change housing. at the minute ma'am, is it that it was ada? i'll sim is one of the world's biggest contributor cecia to emissions causing climate change that impacts our island? i mean, they still have declined. the seasons are unpredictable unless it at the sea level is rising. the peniman must hold halston responsible for these consequences of
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climate change. but of any kind of in this field where the women of the village are planting vegetables is one of the few left that has not been flooded by sea water in recent years of age. wherever you go on the island, the struggle against the encroaching sea is obvious. many houses are flooded at high tide, but i re foot gentle. one of the plaintiffs is determined to stay out of the re. okay. i'll ask her since the constant thudding began in 2019. it's been difficult to get clean water. we used to rely on this fresh water well, but now it's even unusable for dishwashing elmira, and look at them with the latter that the local environmental advocacy group. while he which specs the islanders alongside a swiss and a german and g o is optimistic regarding the lawsuit. a similar environmental case against shell in the netherlands has recently been one. but they are preparing for
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a legal battle that could rack on for years of uncle cancelled on the whole shim won't go bankrupt. we only demand 3 things come, mitigation adaptation and lossing damage. and this means that we want to provide corrections to the existing production mode, not to bankrupt it. the for islanders are suing for $14000.00 euros in lawson damages to be shared amongst them a comparatively small amount. but for fishermen must act, fearing it would make a huge difference. far yourself. so that's almost the america, but only up that they should be led by their conscience, monica, and take responsibility for what they've done. feel they reap so much and profit that they are blinded. by it owns the land, they don't see that we are bearing the brunt of a climate emergency. i don't, i think mike, i thought but that, that for adam on lying with a rapid reduction in the company's carbon emissions, which the law suit demands could make a difference in the long run. the plaintiffs are also demanding better slot
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defences and more mangrove restoration. the fight against lucy and global injustice on pari has just begun. our last stop is pulling where brown bears are once again living in the forest on the carpathian mountains. animal rights activists are delighted, but forest owners and timber producers are annoyed. do the bears have a future here? here in the forests of southern poland, bears can still feel at home. the towering old trees offer the beer shelter and protection. but now the forest has become a source of contention. josefina and jakob are conservationists. they take stock of the ancient trees, tall ones like these are marked for felling,
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which could have serious consequences. animals have a place to hide. at the beginning it may be smaller animals like fox and later on it can become even bigger and it can become inhabited by burn. the red dot marks the tree for felling a decision made by polish forest authorities. these trees are not standing in nature reserve. that's a problem for the bears logging interest take priority here. that limits the spaces where beers can live undisturbed. forest authorities, warren visitors, not to get too close to the animals. but that rarely happens anyway. the department has an open air exhibit with an overview of many of the local forest animals except the beer. any special protection for the beers would be unnecessary, says the spokesman for the regional state forest them as a half decent gibbons as did you something local. we saw the 1st bears here in 1950, ignorant of his of the sky. if you don't even to show them by the 1970 is,
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there were 20 bears onions, viji, and now we've got 200, hold the hostile, that's quite a big increase. so the last hunter, mushed polish forestry authorities are more focused on logging because of russia's war in ukraine. lumber prices are high and fuel is scarce. was now going to zip code of lim, sleep. not listening it if a or if from time to time a view of the trees worthy of protection fiddled, which are the ones that could be natural. monuments that are cut down. vincent deep in the forest, far from civilization, a few forest activists have set up a protest camp taking a stand against loggers. not every one is happy with their protests. a car near the camp was attacked and the conflict gets heated. the 4 as active as don't live in this region. but in warsaw or other major cities,
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yackel josefina and raffo don't intend to back down either the strung out jimmy kip of them we own. i see the massive destruction going on here for somebody, the pulled up now and her and her. and i don't condone it is good enough. those are both or curve. those are starving. sure. i want my daughter to be able to enjoy these old forests in the future. these a butcher wong, starter la sir. some perhaps still see bears too. of course, if all the old trees are chopped down, the animals will move somewhere else. they may even enter areas populated by humans, which could be dangerous, but his problem will certainly can become a problem in recent decades to does ship incidents with bears where humans get hurt or increasingly common. one person even died for the community. so people in animals of the region have one thing in common. their camera shy.
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many people here work in the timber industry on signs. they don't man's words about how they see the activists. there are equal terrorists. but josefina and jacobi believe, many residents don't realize how close the relationship between bears and trees is you can quite easily imagine how it bear that is a big animal of 200 kilograms. could actually fit inside the tree inside this tree . not now, but in the future, if this to you will become hollowed out. i think the whole family of bears good said. they've often asked authorities to police old, rotting trees under protection. requests that have almost always been denied. ah,
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a light breezy ally, creations by african designer doreen mercy. i can tell the story. all exams with her fabrics, patterns and colors compositions for an endless island summer. camp re max w. conflicts with tim sebastian. it's almost 3 years since russia invaded ukraine with no p. storks or c spire of any kind in prospect. my guess is we put a former army officer from former director of the county moscow center,
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which was shut down last night. why did moscow go to war just as the west could begun, the dialog continues been demanding with love and banning away. but i'm not going to have to work my own car and everyone with later holes and everything today. just getting, are you ready to meet the german can join me, right? just do it on d. w. or those kinds of plays of space and one of africa, the largest art gallery has, is not a pushing boundaries, an odds and design the evarado read. i get to read the. 6 location to bring you, i think a bit in fast food and divide we find out how the citizens around the cow has become the monica of
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a young woman here. and we also travel to london. and then how and i fear and designer brightens up public spaces. i mind if i were to and this is abby megs. oh, oh. the prize and telephone congo material comprises of anything from illustration to abstract originating from east africa. the fabric is culturally significant and was often given to women on this occasion. fashion design, i read must be got as a model that kind of telling a compelling story through her. she creation i just look at nature, nature, never. can i be yellow? can i grow a bit taller?
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you know, so it's just like the universe decides in nature during my sheeka is one of the most recognizable residents of the island. zanzibar profession brand of the same name is inspired by for healy culture and the sights and sounds of this beautiful island that she calls home loans. unless i'm today, i will buy a sample. i love them maybe tomorrow or the day after. i can come and pick the rest . i decided to set the sheik in the hottest towns and because number one, it's whole number 2, it's american ford of different cultures. and it's been definitely this a sense where i really draw my inspiration from either from local people or even tourists who visits beautiful island. then to buy the land of many contrasts, old and the new traditional and modern coexist side by side and nonchalant hominy. this wonderful island is the perfect backdrop for doing vibrant and colorful
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designs. i always look for those 3 thing, history, culture and heritage. and you will see that in our designs, that we use the very famous fabric known as conga congo designs always uses the mode of communication in the past. and even today, you would see that, you know, there's some congress, as you saw, that you know, some of them are quite fast the, you know, and some of them have words of encouragement. for example, the congo that i was actually working on today has something to say about, like, you know, it, talking about, hoping that this will becomes peaceful. so it's really sometimes about the moment we represent africa to the world by assuring that we stay true to the textile and its origin and weight comes from. so for example, you see in our design we kept the wording of the congress and it brings back,
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brings the conversation wherever i go, because 1st of all is for healy. and people ask me, why do have these words and i tell them what it means in our culture, in that is used as a mode of communication, especially for women. because in some parts of my society and women can be very vocal. so when you have a message on the congress, it's a way of maybe telling something to your neighbor or your husband or your mother in law. doreen design spare a signature island feel. they are light breezy and a wash with color and print. they pay bold homage to her african roots. i can tell the story or zanzibar in fashion, so you would see that sometimes we would incorporate some handwork that is very popular here. you'd find it maybe on the fisherman boss kid. and i also take color with me, but it also takes the congo print with me and express it where it's on the born
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and raised in times a near doreen machine, lead to spend time in switzerland studying and working. she is now part of a going home bound african diaspora actually started from switzerland where i used to work in private banking. and i was involved together in a team that was into luxury good. so i was already exposed to the designers, the west, and we went to milan, had the chance to meet that time, the creative directors of good, she, you know, and all the sessions in okay, let's try and fall this very quick and see what it looks like because i always like to wear my clothes, like i just stay with short sleeves, it's very hot in volleyball course. the patent mixing pot of unexpected colors is the most effective part of design effect on to me, it's fun and simple,
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but i can understand that to others is complicated. i would really like to percival inspire more and more people to be very bold and go out there and do what they want, whether is fashion or ours. but we would like to make sure that we have a wider footage in the continent. and of course, also around the world, re imagining spaces and turning them into playful, provocative. aquatic sash is what you get. you, laurie specializes in, inspired by his childhood stories and nigeria andrews. we caught up with him to take a look at his recent legs. this colorful installation is called implants. we trust the work of british nigerian designer inca laurie can be found in london's mayfair district. he laurie had a mission but wanted to throw in chris that was
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a safe space place of let reflection meditation using plants and green greenery. so come here, sit down from conversation, reflect, read whatever you want to do, but just been around in our green space, the london and loves working with bright, vibrant colors. his installation called happy street in south west london. brightens up a gloomy space under her railway bridge. he wants to bring more positivity to dull urban spaces. when i create an installation, i'm in a studio as it gets my i have ownership at work when it goes into his face. that has belong to going and what belongs to the people from that in they are able to kind of in a crate, their own narrative and any of the fabric of that were, becomes of the, one of one of the community. and also it kind of gives those people sensors you know, belonging and was successful proud of their environment. he's produced countless
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installations for art galleries and events like this playground for adults during the 2019 con film festival link is always bursting with new ideas. when we look in the public work asked us, well, i like how it is so on and why i love to in most because i get to sort of design and leave it. and then just seen people's reaction to reach this point. inga, the son of nigerian immigrants launched his design career in 2011 when he reinvented 2nd hand chairs, giving them a multi colored make over. much of his work is inspired by the stories and west african fabrics from his childhood attorneys. it's kind of, it's based runs of who i am, i think as a kid of always full. i was living with 2 license, you coaches in a british much urine. and, and i love both got both with coaches. but how do i celebrate? and i think the best way with me was to do it through furniture. so take those
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narratives to i was kind of, you know, told what i was young on and on. i love trying to re tell them in my own way. you can can. i jumped up these crockery designs in 2020 during the 1st quarter in a virus locked down. my obsession of colors is definitely some that's been inherited from my mom and dad. i was wondering when my mom, whether she get her inspection, california was oversee from her mom because it's been passed on to, to mom over on his passions. me. hello just yes sir. it's something that's just yeah, it makes me for positive and good positive feelings in the urban jungle, whether by day or night in lori makes london more colorful. and that is something many appreciate oh, the latest addition to the ever odd reads gallery is this impressive building. so we are close over into the streets of children. and he had some music mark to
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find out more about this wonderful space. ah mark, what odds are defeated? yeah, i and i never knew easiest name to remember talking to you because yeah, exactly. no missing? well, just to a slightly bigger picture is the way the world works for me as a contemporary art dealer, is that sometimes i chase and sometimes they find me and where i and if it's in some strange place between the 2 in there, i've been aware of his work for a long, long time with quite frankly, was too nervous of it. much of the. yeah, yeah. i can understand why his subject matter sometimes is extraordinarily tough. and i thought that that was probably an area that would be best undertaken,
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but of the galleries. but i kinda decided years ago that no, that wasn't the way it was going to be. he was going to come here. and so finally, towards the end of last year, he said these come to my studio and destro tagging in a studio. ah, and i sat down in front of it as i still do with the 3 here. and i was ready to speechless. and i said i, i get it completely. you need to show in this building, he wanted to show in circuit circuit. this is aisha structure. it's really good for pushing powerful objects, concentrates to energy on, on central objects on big pictures is why fi to this particular odd?
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when i think that ah, not only what we perceive as being a cool, contemporary art and whatnot. art is a, is a window into the soul of any nation or culture. if you look at the ancient greeks, we know how they felt, and we know what the se, through that, ah, it's the same as with the addictions. we know more about the egyptians through the art that they created by far than any other media and all the way through the renee song. we know about the tragedies the fall nations such as the demise of spain as a world power because of the artist like el, greco velasquez. we know what it was like to be
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a french person in the court of louis the 14th through the arts of the era. art is more than de cool. art is a very clear window into what the people feel about the country, whether it's the sense of confusion with confidence, essential, pleasure. all of the above shows in the, in the us, in all day. the contemporary off of south africa. in your opinion, why is it important that space is like this? this is a special building, and we've been careful about the program here. it's not a, it's not a factory where we have short shows and lots of them. exhibitions on for a long time here and we try and have it is a distilled collection of what we perceive as being the front rank painters and sculptors of this year in south africa
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food, a great atmosphere. and i think it's design. what more could you ask? for one of kenya's new. * spots is doing it all and adding kind of us into the mix and then we'll take on the journey to show everything that is experienced. take a look. this is definitely the place to be welcome. tonight will be located in the heart of kenneth capital. in the western neighborhood, this unique space is much more than just one of the must experience places in kenya is no real big kitchen. it much. just some of the best known sheets will concepts from across the world into
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a thoughtfully curated local and social wouldn't. aerobic kitchen has done it has brought international food and drink to our doorsteps. not only making it accessible, but also creating a love around international and exotic food options. i am unwilling remarks and obie telling you exactly what the hype is about, and why you should be visiting this beautiful state. come in just opening in june 2021. this would market over the variety of trees, both for the eyes and the pilot. welcome gave me your last name. but before i have the food, i have to check out as will be still can style. i am now going to meet pfizer who is the general manager at narrow kitchen and also one of the brain behind the conference. so let's go the
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unwelcome today. did you think you are making exactly? yeah. revenue growth. yeah. for sure. so far, so good. outside the cooler. yeah. come in to see what's inside. okay, so here we are in. what is the street market section now over the kitchen is the brainchild and project assistance from i will be elliana and lisa and they had a vision to create something here. and i will be, that was an offering to this vibrant, beautiful color for you that we live in moving, you know, less formal direction. so that's why we have 7 different seats. we market concepts which of us so service. so in the, in want to, it's a way to interact with people who are talking to you about how we've tried to of cycle recycle, reuse materials, and what we've created in the face. so this all can be we found it behind and go, you know, i'm the person's object here was another story for another day. the margarita can
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be an old volkswagen bus hubs. go to an old. my talk to the local is in an old 1950 leyland bus that we food from the industrial side of nairobi. if you see the bars covered interest that uses because yet another thing that we have tried to do in the creation of procedure is to make this space and the building more than just food and beverage, but also a platform for the as you come in, there's a space which is a designated gallery for artists. you can come and hung pictures. i'm thinking this building should be able to develop those things of a space where artists have an opportunity to read some still hungry up to so much need to time to go back to shifts that we have our very own specific bit all the queens. i love the,
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the normal us. it's normally coming over the ship to differentiate it from the rest of the people. how long have you done this? by the way? i've been doing pizza for the last 7 years. so for this bit though, we use our dream, our cream cause, it's basic eloquent gallic do some. well that i let you do the muscle the bit that takes a 5 minutes, it will be good. thank you so much stomach coming to try this. now we can get any special truffle. yes. done. get ready? oh, the i don't think i'd like, i didn't think i'd like to leave to but after the love is fine with selling,
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i need to definitely do guys my conclusion for an escape. if it works a visit, especially can you like to explore something the great player i said is not a mirror house after 5, but rather hammer with which the shape in like many of the pieces. yeah. how much this away so south between tradition and the world through tracking us with most of them to pick think the growth strength and transformation of cause. the title of my work is 123, block myself. it comes from a game, hide and seek, basically leads to play when lead maternal grandmother's house. my name is cow, cow, mass, i'm a sculptor primarily but a multi discipline, limpopo born and raised in time to come as, as
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a contemporary artist specializing in sculpture. she depicts religion, culture and identity through her work. from the big tribe, she merges the modern with the traditional and works exclusively through the symbolism of the sacred cow. my name is actually call hello much about my c low birth given name. my mom called me call call when i was younger. so the car port kind of back to me when i was all that decided i'm going to go in with the call. later on, i realize that spelling a, c o w was a problem because i'm a female and naming myself call even though it had nothing to do with the they're all good. so connotations that i put on the call. nobody could call me back because i was a healthy called in, and the spots on my face didn't matter because cause of blood and the size of my family know didn't matter because the big nose. but it was also my question to reclaim the name and have it as my own. so i fully embody call. and after doing
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that, my experience and being in the world calling myself call, that kind of fizzled into my art making. what stands out for me is this how prominent that is within our practices, within the slaughter family gatherings, bringing people together and the most significant being the how the cow is the bridge between the ancestral plane and our through cow. metaphors commer tried to situate herself between traditions and the contemporary world. she creates these is listen, they take that and cultural work to move, combining various fabrics to teach me. i have been working as an awesome, supposedly just under 10 years now. i think it started off as a longing to be more connected to the culture. so i pulled some very nostalgic objects that out from my grandmother's house and things that reminded me of home.
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and in essence, reminding me of my culture as well. so we have a saying one which means god knows. and for me i think that embodies just how powerful the call is within the, within our culture. all my processes are very pizza. and the meditative pod starts before the actual sculpting or the putting to get off the word. i use a variety of materials, but pacifically, synthetic ca hides various synthetic fibers. in the beginning, it was because i felt that i was removed from a cultural space. the being a go that grew up in the suburbs, it felt as if i couldn't use a real cowhide because i'm maybe not as connected to cause as my cousin who lived in the home. now i think that now this is derek material. so developing into a thing of showing how culture transforms and how it isn't stagnant, even though the potency of it is kept. and the ritual of a discount is
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a change that happens that is developing with the time by exclusively using black and right as a color palate. calling to innovate black from negative color perception to take his rightful place as an affirmative color. in my work, i use that a lot. the other for me speaks to a very gender and part of the call. not only does it represent the old providing this of the car and how it's only giving symbols, a woman right to always, giving always expected to at some stage. this is a new me and i've recently started learning how to use when i found out during, during the that my grandmother used to make met using a type of machine. and somehow it connects me back to my culture and the ways that my grandmother used to do stuff. how the techniques in her works and meditative mrs
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. are a means of self contemplation, healing and finding a sense of belonging. her pieces have rich african history and each piece tells a great story. recently, her modern and contemporary recreations have attracted the international market good. i'm at and i rock sculpture park where i have displayed the specific work was in response of the title, good neighbors. and what the idea of good neighbors is. so what came to me was a memory of my grandmother's house. so with a call comes back again into the ideal, the slaughtering that happens. and the function is happening when your neighbors come around and everybody gathers within the same household. so i have this vision of the cow skin hanging on the, on the washing by and at the back of my grandmother's yard. so for me that was almost as if the skin is capturing the images of the whole environment. and each, each watching binder presents a family. and in that way,
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representing neighbor plex to each other called mattias work on the part of the realm of existence. the war washing lions tend to be quite a public space. there's something interesting and exploring what is a common space versus a private space in this modern day. my work as well as my physical appearance, or is that big both tie in together in being own version of a culture that is told there, but just inspired by culture but also there within itself. most african cultures continue the expression of cultural beliefs through the odds. african art has played a significant role in shaping the culture and history of the world. how much is getting her word internationally recognized while staying true to her baby? thank you for joining me as the so case,
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the latest modern upper in from all over africa. don't forget to hit us up on social media for more on today's so goodbye. ah ah ah ah ah with
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ah, who conflicts with tim sebastian? it's almost a year since russia invaded ukraine with no free stalks or c spire of any kind in cross. but my guess is we lost a former army officer and former director of the county. he must go center,
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which was shut down las vegas. why did moscow go to war? just as the west had begun, the dialogue who tended been demanding. go with john dar searches for the truth again. this time, a turkish journalist meets sped latino sky, exiled leader of the opposition and bellow route. of course i'm tied and tied physically and tied morally is too much on my shoulders, but i have to hold this weight because i'm responsible for the future of our country for the people far behind the boss gardens of trucks. in 60 minutes on d, w. o in the munich security conference, 2023. this year's meeting is tasked with a total order brushes. log scale,
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more of aggression against ukraine has been going on for one year. now the main question, not the top level meeting is what will prevail? the strength of the law or the law of the strong bucks topics such as the climate prices in poverty are also on the agenda. the meaning security conference 2023 brought to you all platforms on d w. so i was just rescue it from a farm. this one this body go with i found it like this and i couldn't just leave it there. ah, this is such a great burden. it was so dirty that cleaning it, turn the entire bathroom into a mess. this is the water birds 1st. well, one of the most beautiful moments i've ever experienced with a donkey series about our complex relationship with animals. well,
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i think i will live long enough to witness the factory farming the great debate this week on d. w or ah ah, this is the w news alive on berlin. lead has gone damn rochester! aggression at immune executes a conference, german defense when to stop our risk. mysterious accuses rush hour of imperialism and saying it's contempt. my international law must be met with issue a force from the u. s. vice president the strong wanted,
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but it thinks he can wait us out. he is badly mistaken. time is not on his side. come out of high recess, russia is guilty of crimes against humanity and you claim and justice must be said on the end. that one does the guy more than glad back to serve need need as by and munich with the 2nd defeat of the season state for more sports nato on the program . ah, ah, i am eddie micah junior. welcome to the program. the war and ukraine has been the focus on day 2 of them. you execute a conference, the gym on foreign minister and the number of books that the walk with and when russian troops pull out of ukraine's. u. s. secretary of state anthony blank and confirmed washington's commitment to its nato allies and looked ahead to a safe,
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unstable future for you. and your grand by letty. germany's defense, when a stop are as mysterious on precise the need for collective action. russia must not and will not succeed, with its imperialism and its contempt for international law and international peace architecture. and because neither diplomacy nor tough economic sanctions have made put in change cause our show of force is the right response. it abuse terry shows is that the men executed conference. i asked if western leaders had succeeded in send in moscow a strong message. yet it was greatly about a show of force, a unified shell that force. both of these things are important, showing that the west is unified and that they are willing to stay the course and to provide ukraine everything. it needs to win this war against russia. and, you know, you showed this a panel with the u. s. foreign,
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the usaa secretary of state and, and lena bear box, and both of them were giving the same message. now this would have been unthinkable years ago that the german and us foreign ministers are giving exactly the same message about how you pray, needs to win the war with europe's help. and then you have ukraine standing by and saying, thank you very much. we'll take all of that, talking about strong messages. we had the u. s. vice president, pamela harris, formerly accused rachelle crimes against humanity and ukraine. let's listen to what you have to say. i did say it has formerly determined that russia has committed crimes against humanity and i say to all those who have perpetrated these crimes and to their superiors who are complicit in these crimes. you will be held to account
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terry. we had come to harris saying that those responsible will be held accountable . but how yeah, that's a very difficult question and everybody knows it. they can gather all the evidence they want. they can even issue subpoenas for people. they can ask for them to be arrested. but russia does not extradite its citizens. we've seen this in, for example, the m 817 case. but in the meantime, the international community is trying to put together a system where you could try war crimes against russia. and one of the ideas is to try the crime of aggression which has a lower threshold. you have to prove that a national military was used to create, to create acts of aggression. and the international criminal court in the heck is already setting itself up to potentially tried these crimes. and there's also talk
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of setting up another special tribunal for this. so the international community is very definitely trying to make those perpetrating these crimes believe that they are not going to get away with it. but it's expected that it goes all the way up to president putin. and that, of course, will be a difficult, a difficult one to bring in to justice. that was also a lot of talk about more support for ukraine after all we had from well leaders. what could that look like? i think the biggest take away that i have from the conference on speeding up support for ukraine is the new attention to actually getting ammunition production scaled up quickly. and we heard various suggestions here coming from no less than the president of the european commission. ursula vander lion, who said that she wants to try to create a system for, for resourcing ammunition the way they did with vaccines when everybody thought. 8 it would take a lot longer than it did to come up with a vaccine and to get it to all of the e u member states. she says the same thing can be done with ammunition. and this is
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something that is being met with a lot of approval from ukraine and also from, from european countries who are, are able to do this as single country. so i think we are going to see some initiatives that actually start making a difference on the ground in ukraine when it comes to scaling of weapons production and ammunition production. in particular, the $1000000.00 question is if ukraine will get exactly what they want pressed and zalinski, i said that he need fighter jets long range missiles is unlikely to happen any time soon. we haven't seen any sign that fighter jets are on their way any time soon, but nobody blamed the ukrainians for asking for them. they were also told they weren't going to get a modern tanks in the beginning and those are supposed to be on the way. now, so i think that what, what nato allies have talked about when it comes to, to fighter jets is that this would be part of a longer term plan to help ukraine secure it's territory perhaps after the war is over. perhaps after they get russia out of off their land. but you know,
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it's not going to go away and ukraine is going to keep asking. okay, tell schultz belinda and execute a conference. thank you. the battle for the east in ukrainian c t o voc moves rages on russia's wagner. group mercenaries claim to have taken control of a village north of the city. the frightful back mo tasks become the longest running bottle of russia's war with staggering casualties. put a wagner forces feet in the assault, pounding away at their rush, an attack is fending off the relentless, sold on back moot, a wagon group leader yevgeny. pre goshen has claimed his troops have taken a village just outside the city. but ukrainian soldiers make clear how the russian advances here have come at huge cost there they're sending a lot of troops. i don't think that's sustainable for them to keep attacking this
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way. they're just, they're, there places were there, bodies, i just piled up there the, there's a trench where they just don't evacuate their wounded or killed and they just leave them there and send more waves than waves of people. the u. s. says the tactics are all part of the wagner groups disregard for its own men's lives or sounds weak. i do want to say this about divine group and if he in particularly with respect to back move, i mean again, they're treating their recruits largely convicts as basically as cannon fodder, throwing them into a literal meat grinder here in human ways without a 2nd thought, anvil ukrainian soldiers have been defending the shattered city for months. now. they say western equipment like these bushmaster armored vehicles provided by australia is helping government, but that more is urgently needed. narrowly did the white the budget give us more
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military equipment, more weapons, and we will deal with the russian occupier, but we will destroy them as of that, but a more hill, molden, western tanks all set to arrive soon. ukrainian troops already learning how to operate these gym and made leopard two's here in poland. but for now back moods defenders will have to keep working with what they've got. just a got more stories making headlines around a wild, thousands of israelis i've joined. what have become weekly protests against bang? i mean it's and yeah, who's right? when government opponents criticized plans to give the administration mall parts while point supreme court judges, they see the changes on attack on democracy. the government says it needs to raining on over mighty judiciary. lead us up on damned nautica. we offer launch in the long range ballistic missile into the sea of japan. us secretary of state down to the blank and along with leagues from japan and korea as countries to enforce
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existence functions against north korea. gang says the launches in response to military drills, and the region is a clear violation on that seems in tacky a found the body form are gone on to national football at christiana, you left building at you went missing in the cc up and talk. yeah, i thought he had nearly 2 weeks ago the 165 cops and how can i reach the 2015 africa, couple nation spinal now, heavy snow in pakistan controlled kashmir has left some areas completely cut off. that's reason, fears that supplies of food and medicine could run shorts. even us more snow is expected expense. the climate change makes extreme weather events like this. more likely the needham valley is often called a piece of heaven on earth. the snow covered mountains and homes make the place
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look even more severe. but the unusually heavy snow hath left nearly 40000 residence in death. barefoot cattle her shot to her is what it the lack afforded good. meek, his sheep thick. well, with all about of the other end of you, i get because of the unexpected, heavy snow were short of animal feed, but keep it like that, but roads are blocked and we can't get any surprise. $1190.00 ball that is also a threat. the wild animals could attack our lives stop. i got another like tigers and bears. yeah. not a commodity nearby and, and the launch has blocked the road leading to the hospital. this father has come to an at that down 8 kilometers away, carrying his thick chide on his back loaded bull. we came here for treatment of her when we get some medicine, i'm going home with the snow means there's a danger. i could slip our load. we've heard that some roads are blocked while i
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was glad that there were 4 people here. fetching water and daily tasks have become much more arduous. thank defi, climate change is increasing the frequency of extreme better events, badly disrupting people's life. and is in milwaukee. snow is affecting the livelihoods of the people who live here and will go live soccer ball. the other is killing their livestock and damaging their crops. we're especially in the upper parts of the valley and beg for her how many potatoes grown there. and it's the main source of income, huddled people who but the harvest is now much smaller. we're well with us on we're pakistan sees it less than one percent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions. but it's people here are experiencing that just the consequences of climate change. first hand a sports news fine. when i travel to boucher,
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i want to go back with the familiar face and you're start and 11 from our lab work . go keep on summer, just joined by and in the went to transfer window. glad back minus the former captain hadn't lost the barbarians in for competitive games. they were open to and by and only the 2nd loss, the season. glad by fans were dressed for carnival, hoping the foals could keep their own beaten run versus buyer and alive buyer and help god bought by hurting themselves early in the match. in the 8th minute they at google, mckuddle caught player in play. i went now, the fowl did not look that serious, but equal montana was the last man which meant red card. the buyer now to 10 men glut bow, we're quick to strike the handball or live by a free kick. deep in byron territory. enlarge didn't don't get the rest to sin the crowd into a frenzy. he didn't take very long to equalize though speed from alphonso davies in
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the finish from eric to the motel. but the high fives in chess bumps wouldn't be there for buyer after the break. yon is hoffman from inside the box found pager to retake, to leave for god above. not the best showing from yon summer. and now guzman had enough. blackbirds advantage continued to show marcus to ra, made a 3rd goal, adding some cushion to their li buyer pulled one back through mathias tail. but the match was all ready, lost, fired. second defeat of the season could knock them off the top of the table. if you knew in berlin, when on sunday, now before the formula one season gets under way and next month, team alpine has added a legend to the arrow. stop conceding already friends,
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well kept champions in it in sedan will serve as our pines brand ambassador, sit on louis considered one of the greatest football as full time had been without a job since stepping down as rail moderates coach t. yes ago. you are now up to date coming up next. our technology shows shift decide how far people presents the our real self on social media. i know i tried to present myself bus. we'll ask camby. i am eddie micah. julia, thanks for watching. stay tuned for more of our program with people and trucks injured was trying to flee the city center more and more refugees are being turned away at the border. families, please. all the reason for these credit don't agree with people fleeing extreme around
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ross getting 200 people in around the world. more than 300000000 people are seeking refuge. yes. why? because no one should have to flee. make up your own mind. d. w. made for mines. ah, just be yourself a wait, scratch that be the coolest most interesting and ideally funniest version of yourself. at least whenever you pause on tick tock or instagram, but seriously whose real life actually matches their social media is authenticity even possible? that's our topic and see the name. ah,
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it seems authenticity is all the rage right now. just look at the success of the up . be real here. staged folders are discouraged. instead, users are prompted or the random time each day to snap a photo of whatever they're doing in that exact moment. no filter pictures really look pretty per se, but maybe that's not such a bad thing. many people are fed up with seeing perfectly curated lives, splashed across their feeds. the recent study evaluated more than 10000 facebook profiles and found that people feel better when they paused. what they actually care about. psychologists and romance explains why. if you think about society at large, again, this way of us interacting with one another and also looking to each other for what is normative for what is desirable. so if we compare it is real version of our lives to the idealized version of what everybody else looks, lives look like on social media. essentially, you kind of have this comparison that makes us feel pretty bad us about ourselves.
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and so this, this notion of, if we start posting more than likely as a collective and as a group, that would reduce some of these comparative bias as i like the sound of that. but how many people are really willing to pause their real unfiltered lives online? well, one way to share the mundane part of our everyday lives is with humor. take a look at the stories. this influence from ecuador tells she has gained a large following by being true to herself. ah, nancy resort gifts. her followers glimpses into her daily life in ecuador, in andes. ah, her mother works on a farm. and her neighbors in the fields. her candy reflections on facebook and instagram have found a huge audience. she has around 9 and a half 1000000 followers across her platforms. commitment. i love his life as an influenza. i love you. all. her videos are playful, imaginative, and funny. the simplest,
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the way i've always been focus more on committee and making people love. i really like comedy that people laugh and we're happy. little necessarily. i used them was phyllis is a stunning backdrop, a great sense of humor, and total ease in front of the camera. it's a winning combination ah, fiddled. i'm certainly blessed at the moon in ocoee, but simply being authentic doesn't ensure success. they like this kind of constant combination of like, what is it that can do on your side to reach audience and to appeal to something that isn't out there yet, right. so maybe that's a point, a perspective on the world that hasn't been captured and, but i'm sure that just as she is now very successful. there's probably a lot of other people who had like a similar story that something very similar. and they were just not picked up by the algorithms. i think it's a combination of offers something unique. and then also just have to be a bit lucky ah, confidence and thick skin are also important traits to have. so as not to be
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brought down by negative comments. it is either we'll just go in by received many comments like that more at the beginning when people made fun of my appearance as an indigenous person and things like that. your mouse is a little, you know, looking, but i responded with human to show people that those comments don't affect me is less than i can turn them into a joke. this a level which is a nancy russell, strives to be her authentic self and do what she enjoys, regardless of what others say, joy, man, analia, and morris. so i should, than ever because all this was filling another one of my dreams to have my own runway in my own style is below. ah, no matter what she does next, nancy resort will stay true to herself. i love her attitude and have videos have definitely opened my eyes to a whole world i might have never seen otherwise. ideally,
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these kinds of authentic live experiences from content creators all over the world can enrich our global understanding. this example from bangladesh does just that. with holly cartoon is a cook in a small village and bangladesh. she is also something of a youtube stuck together with other women. she regularly cooks for the villages $1000.00 or so residents. they prepare a huge portions. people from around the world, watch them on youtube. the cooking channel has more than 4000000 subscribers, or am i going tell? it's great that so many people love our videos that we're proud that even though we're poor, we're reaching so many people in cooking for our village gives us a sense of great accomplishment. i'm a medical ballet, la. ah, the channel became popular through this clip of a 3 year old making fish carry. the video now has more than 93000000 views. cooking in front of the camera has now become the norm. but i'm on the land. it
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doesn't make much difference to me whether i cook here or at home. we're all one big family, home loan. but the biggest difference is that with these huge portions. and i can't just ask them one if there's enough salt in the food. i mostly what i have from this is, oh, let me come back i. there are things the very quiet in the village until about 6 years again, then mohammed hussein's nephew started making videos of the fish market. the idea grew from there with blue, which had at the time i wanted to film the villagers eating together at a picnic, new york where every one gets some food. we started with small amounts of rice overall, then more and more villagers came to share meal time with others. rugle elias. so many people around the world drawn to these videos, the psychologist sandra months has one explanation. it's just something that might be nice to watch is like outside of what you typically do during your day. and it's almost like this cognitive refuge that you can go to. and,
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and let you also know is like, this does collect of experience focus like once you have a 1000000 people watching, as it suddenly becomes part of something larger. the turner pays off financially to add revenue amounts to more than $1000.00 euros per week. something the whole village profits from it's great with stories like that, go viral and then directly benefit the people who tell them. social media has opened up new opportunities for women, especially whom marizza is one example. she's been sharing a live as a business woman and the influenza for 10 years. she was a trailblazer in pakistan where women previously at little visibility online. hi, my name is america. i'm the social media influencer. i ran a you give channel and, and instagram blog. and i also have a platform and forecast by the name of happy tip. um that is our producers, both videos and podcasts at her company. she uses
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a few different studios for the productions and employ several people as a fema entrepreneur in pakistan. she set herself apart and found success. so when i get this instant i'm blogging wasn't even a king in by august i just started, there was a lot of things that were missing on the internet. the. they were hardly any 1000000 going to have the dime. and i think i'm very proud of myself. to have been one of the 1st few women to have be exactly and to normalize the guy as that name. it was art. today i'm not as i is empowering women in her home country to find their voice inviting them to speak on her blogs and tasks. and men and women work side by side in the studio. somebody must not so common in pakistan. i think one of the things that i'm eligible in my own place and position is that i need to inspire young women to think outside of the box and king beyond what dipping, dipping with every accomplishment. i'm not as i shows how she balances her career
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with being a young mother. her husband is supportive of her work. her ability to juggle her family life and manage her business has been an inspiration to some of her followers. one thing i would want the younger generation or younger women to know in order to pursue their passion is that you're gonna wait for the right circumstances or the right time with one key to success seems to be standing up for what you believe in doing so can inspire others to ob, do, to re, from docker has done just that by taking the initiative to make his neighbourhood more beautiful on sundays up due to re takes to the streets of his neighbourhood and duck. hard to campaign for a cleaner and greenness city. boy, lassie,
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dwayne at day, settled in my eyes. civic engagement as something individual. everyone can do their part to keep a space in front of their home clean, sweeping, planting, trees, planting flowers. i don't think that needs a nationwide campaign to differ blah, son, hipaa, the mobility to nathan ego. over the years, his inspired his neighbors to join in that of do to raise on a mission to change the attitudes of people far beyond duck, are in synagogue. the saw and many young people have joined the green neighbourhood challenge in africa, which we've got members in about 15 country. all these people come from different places, burkina, faso, togo center, goal. and chad. my message is to say to others, who did you can do the same. the samples we've seen amazing, but let's not forget these are the exception, not the rule. the fact that i even became aware of them came down to algorithms and
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the whole lot of luck simply being authentic does not automatically guarantee success. and there can be a negative side too. well, if you are someone who kind of really nicely fits into what society thinks of as an as an ideal, it's very easy to be authentic self. if you're part of a marginalized group, that is much, much harder to do. so i think we also have to think a little bit about what are some of the limitations of authenticity and maybe by placing a lot of emphasis on his notion to be authentic. we're putting a lot of pressure on people who are probably having a hard time we call it psychological safety. if you encourage to, if you're current people to bring their full authentic selves to work on to wherever it is to search media, you also have to create a space where this is. this is possible and i think that's something that essentially does have to do. one of the things that i would love to do is
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essentially kind of have a way of putting content out there without necessarily everybody being able to common right away without the ability to see all of these likes and share it like shares maybe. but the essentially kind of take away some of the pressure, i'm just putting stuff out there and that is popular and without the pressure of necessarily getting this constant feedback. and whether that's good or bad. not a bad idea. after all, comments can often be destructive. in order to keep authenticity as a positive thing, i think we need clear rules like robust community guidelines. what do you think? that is? no. as offered to day. bye bye. ah . ah conflict with tim
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sebastian, it's almost a year since russia invaded ukraine with no peace talks or cease fire of any kind in cross path. my guess is we must go is a former army officer and former director of the county moscow center which was shut down last april. why did moscow go to war? just as the west begun the dialogue who tended been demanding with john din dar searches for the truth again, this time i exiled turkish journalist meats, svetlana, tihano, sky, exiled leader of the opposition and bella roost. of course i'm tired. i'm tired, physically, and tied. morally. it's too much on my shoulders, but i have to hold this weight because i'm responsible for the future of our country for the people far behind the boss gardens of truth. in 30 minutes on d w. b, we've got some hot tips for your bucket list. ah,
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romantic corner chat, hot spot for food, and some great cultural memorials to boot d w, travel off we go. it's all of the year since russia invaded ukraine with no peace talk, so cease fire of any kind and prospect. and yet, president putin insist the war is showing a positive trend. my guest this week for moscow is dimitri training for my army officer and former director of the carnegie moscow center, which was shut down last april, with tens of thousands of its soldiers killed a little progress on the ground. the criminal is taking its own survival on the outcome of the war in the mines of pool. and i think a lot of people around him. we are in a go on,
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in which russia is very existence. is a state. but why did moscow go to war? just as the west of the gun, the dialog putin has been demanding and has moscow now move the world once and for all from nuclear, to terrence, to nuclear blackmail for me to change. welcome to come pick, go. thank you very much. it's a pleasure to be with you. we've had almost a year of war in ukraine, tens of thousands of people dead, many thousands more injured, mass destruction and misery. what good has any of this brought to russia? ok, there's no good. that that's not so obvious. the issue is there should have usually been prevented, but it wasn't. and that makes it a real tragedy. as russia now bitten off more than it can chew.
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russia certainly confronting a most difficult issue militarily, politically, socially internationally. something that i think very few people bit thought that it would have to come from. but it's coping it's learning. it's improving friends, but it's hard. it's going to be hard for, for quite some time. i'm sure you say it's coping and improving things. what should we read into all the changes of command desperation, kremlin anger at the failure so far? i think it would be very superficial. certainly, any amount of anger, you can imagine, although much what's happening on the ground in various places. but i think you should read into that and move to a streamline the chain of command and to prepare for i think,
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more decisive action. a lot of people in russia were complaining and are still complaining that russia is fighting with its hand almost tied behind its back. and that may change where they a new structure. and i think a new strategy that lives behind it. moscow has been attempting to stifle criticism with the threat of up to 15 year jail sentences for discrediting the army. and yet the chechen leader runs on career often you have, gaining pretty, goes in front of boot in and had of the wagner mercenary group. they haven't meant that was have that, is it one law for the elite and one law for everybody else? well, i would put it differently. there's, i wouldn't call it one law, but there's one approach to the people in be call it bakery
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arctic camp. and another one for the people who openly critical not only of the decisions by the commander in chief of the war of the war effort. russia is a country at war this time, even if it's officially a state of war, or martial law has not been declared in russia. but the reality is that russia is a war. so no effort is being sped. i think to make sure that this war with all their probations, misery, tragedies, and, and all that does not lead to any serious in terms of the stabilisation and people on the other side are certainly working to instill a measure of large measure of destabilization into the russian social subject. yeah, but if even the patriotic crowd saying things about russia's commanders,
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like all these boston should be sent barefoot to the front with automatic guns, you tend to wonder how wide spread in moscow is that discontent with the way the war is being handled? well, i think you should appreciate that very few people even a few years ago. imagine that there would be anything like this war for russia to fight. 10 years ago, the russian defend russian defense minister declared, basically that europe has ceased to be a potential theater of war for russia. and now russia is fighting a war. just imagine that where the country, whose population is believed to be officially believe to be in russia, but at the same people with russia it's, it's just mind boggling that russia has been able to,
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to fight their weight as it has fought over the past 11 months given the relations between ukrainians and russians, given the relations between russia and the west. so you know, i'm not surprised that they at the level of anger and mutual recrimination. and so what surprised it is, it's still held in check, but they're still very wide latitude that people enjoy people on the right side if you like that, that these people enjoy when they discuss things on the battlefield and discuss things at the head for us. it doesn't limits. the whole thing is not limited to just the need to amend your mention. but the whole array of walk our respondents using the freedom. freedom of speech to the hilt, i would say. but what's left of it in tongue you'll get
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on the free press hasn't been a huge well look i wouldn't want to to engage with you in a discussion about the freedom of the press of the media. i have a very but say critical you of that, whether in russia or outside of russia, i'm not talking about that. but if you, if you were to read, if you were able to read russian and read a telegram channels that are both available to all citizens of russia, you'd be surprised that how much criticism sometimes justified, sometimes unjustified. you will hear you will read actually on those telegram channels to retreat, trying to house russia underestimated the west determination to help you crane or is it still claim to the idea that in the end,
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nato will lose interest and leave ukraine to its own devices? well, i think that the initial concept of the special military operation was very different from what has been unfolding since may be early march of last year. and had russia been able to achieve its goals? were there a couple of weeks, a couple of months there and i think they would not have been that much that their west would have been able to do to support kids. so this, this really supported k f that it couldn't achieve its goals, doesn't that? well, not really. i think that the, again, i don't know what the original concept was, but it looks like it was, it was more of a special operation than a military one. and that i think was be,
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was the cause of what happened after that, but this is water under the bridge. i think that certainly one thing was not anticipated that there westwood steel colette freeze on band confiscate. russia has currency reserve in, in, in western currencies. and that, i think was not appreciated, that the west would be able to do that because that was thought to be, you know, over over a certain line that the westwood would do. and that that money was but not hold back before the start of the operation. so that's what. busy what did they expect the west did? they just complain a little and forget about it. to use whatever means where their disposal to show that for the cam. russia was causing them. if you go back and
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read what was written in the western newspapers at the end of 21 and early 22, when there was a lot of discussion of an imminent russian attack against your grade, people didn't go nearly as far as what we're seeing today. people, but talking about switching off switch for russia and things like that. it's interesting that maybe the west was sort of lowering russia. ukraine by professing to do intend to do too little to help your grade. i don't know. well, this is a joke. i still, i just don't think that the west at that time, that intricate the strategies of the russia and your grade. but russia get on the west, a big boost and in particular, it's given nato a big boost, hasn't gotten what it didn't want out of this up around so far. yes,
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that's true. that's true in a way, but not in a very big way because just frankly, russians have long thought russians. i mean, those russians make decisions. those russians who are the russians who run the place. those russians have long assigned western europe, or all of europe outside of russia to, to the u. s. camp. mr. book called your pm countries battles of the united states. so there were no big surprises, except maybe one that germany was shooting itself in the form by revising its energy policy and ruptured energy links with russia. that's, that was perhaps the only surprise that people that people match in this. this done . you tell people on february the 24th so long as the war last, i won't say or write a word, but good harm, the russian army, its leadership,
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or the commander in chief. does that mean you repudiate all the critical views of putin that you express before february 24th? well, i spend by everything written before the 24th and after the 24th. i got your record as telling the spiegel correspondent rushes intervention to support the dumbass rebels. was the most serious mistake of putins foreign policy. do you still think that? well, let me, let me tell you this. i'm sure that mister pooty believed that i was not working for russia. when he made that decision there was certainly a need to do something about. busy about your brain about don bass. busy and i think that was coming to a decision, but the,
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the original concept of the operation, i don't know what it was, but it seemed to me was flawed. and i think this is something that a lot of people today in russia ship. but as i said, this is water under the bridge. this is not the time to criticize the the, the, the commander in chief where we faced the situation in which the west, the combined west, as you said, is up in arms against stuff. and well, in the proxy war against the united states and its nature partners and some other countries. and that's the reality in which you operate. i'm wondering, to what extent russia could have avoided this war if it had wanted to. in january last year, you told comments on that a dialogue with the west was underway for the 1st time. you said since talks on german reunification,
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the west has agreed to discuss european security with russia. the united states and nato have been negotiating european security with russia. so the security rest on 2 pillows rather than one. why launch a war then? when the process the russia had wanted and demanded was actually on the way. well, i sent for mr horton and for the russian general stop. the key question was whether the west word entertain and that say decide on the idea of know natal membership for ukraine and no need to present in ukraine. that was chief of been keen for both, but, but in your view, before the war started my, my, your well, in my view and i expressed in various ways,
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including in a book that was published a couple of years ago that i believe that russia is both soviet foreign policy, 2 things were damaging, were good, could, would qualify as, as huge mistakes. one is the russian policy toward ukraine, which essentially was no policy and reliance on money essentially. and your connections with a few people which again to me the did not amount to a policy. and 2nd, the the preoccupation where nato enlargement, in my view of the best way to to respond today to enlargement would be to, to oppose the united po, to, to what the united states of the same position of perio that russia would be put
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due to nato enlargement, but just to be clear, but just to be clear on that, if you, you were saying in january that you didn't believe nato expansion was any great threat to russia. where i said that i would stand by that today. but it, let's say, in historical way, we are worn out in prior to 24 february. well, they're not at war. and a lot of things could have been done differently, including, and i think primarily by the west, which they were not. and again, my point, you know, was no threat and which the freedom of discussion before decision mistaken. and now that a national decision has been taken. your abide by that decision because it's everything that happened before of 24 february was over
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a different of a different value after the 24th. but my point is that all the reasons that russia has given is given many reasons for why it began this war, including nato expansion. don't hold water to that. that was the charge. the ukraine was engaged in genocide. that's what putin said. he said, what's happening in the dumbass, today's genocide turned out to be a full sac is ation. did that the case went to the un highest court? the i c, j was thrown out last month. the court said it had been no evidence to support russia's claims. russia ignored the ruling, bears a tragedy to a major population. in 962, the united states was ready to go to war, to nuclear war with russia. soviet union then over show the missiles in cuba,
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although you would agree, i think with me that mr. crusher was not planning a nuclear dock against the united states. wrong few about positions, he was only looking for a balance over the past year. i think you raised the nuclear issue over the past year. russian officials have kept up a pretty constant drum beat about rushes nuclear weapons. does russia really want to move from deterrence, nuclear deterrence, to nuclear black mile? well, i wouldn't call it nuclear black mariel because you make all deterrent. she knew well, good times is black male in a way well this is, this is a much more dangerous game. this is do what we want. well, alice, isn't it, it's a new what else? yes, yes. but if you look at that from the russian angle, and again, i do not invite you to do emphasize where, where,
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where the russian. but just look at that from the russian and on to them. are war is being waged against russia and part of the territory that used to be russian. that is, but you, later by russia, people, many of them, it's not an excuse, is not an excuse, but we're not, we're not in a court. we will not sit in a walk if it's a thought, a different ball game. a lot of people would like russia to be sitting in a court. i know. i know, i don't think that they will see russia in the dark, but let them have their dream. do you believe russia is actively considering 1st use of nuclear weapons in this? let me, let me tell you this present. not so long ago. raised the question whether the russian nuclear
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doctrine should be revised to allow for a preventive use of nuclear weapons. he event dismissed it in his conversation in the same conversation. but the very fact that he raised the issue, i think, suggests that there's something done about that. it's the whole business, the whole war in your brain is existential for russia. and if you want me to quote book again, i will say that a while back almost 5 years back, one half years back. he said, well, we're not interested in a well without rush and in the minds of potent and i think a lot of people around him. we are in
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a zone in which russia is very existence, is at stake. so i would dread very carefully. i don't see why russia very existence is, is at stake. i can see why you cranes it if russia leaves the theatre of war and goes home, the war is finished. if you crane stops fighting, ukraine is finished. that they're the ones who are facing existential risk. not you, you started the war. well, you're done. i mean, suppose ukraine, which i think was written in the cranium doctrine. suppose ukraine just for the sake of argument and started a war of liberation against russia attacking crimea. and the park of don bass was outside of control,
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and ukraine would have said that we are not attacking russia. we're just finishing up the war that actually started back in 2014 over crimea. and now if you just change the optics, i look at that from moscow from moscow position. then here, where does she russia using the same argument? can we just come back to the present because on the subject of nuclear weapons? are you seriously saying that put in might risk the survival of the entire planet just to get his own way in ukraine? that's pretty close to a definition of madness, isn't that him out? or i'm not suggesting that your expansion of what but basically saying, so i think i don't know well where the. busy
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the high command, the commander in chief on those issues. but the country is data trying to win a war adjuster, nuclear stoopa, need to need to think about the potential of nuclear becoming, becoming used in that conflict. one way or another. i would have thought about you thought about it, but to comply that game count they when, when once you, once you go to nuclear blackmail, any thought can play the game content, you go from deterrents which is delivered certain amount to many decades of stability. and you move into a totally new and very dangerous game is moscow really think it will take us there? well, i would address the issue to those who supported your grains,
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anti rush and stance. those who gave her their support to your grain in 2014 and after that they were treading along very dangerous territory was not done. even though at that time no one in the west were seriously considering or giving your cray nato membership. no one was dead to sit down with russia and basically shuttle the issue without your grade becoming an age or country without ukraine. being a host to nato countries, forces and it started dory. this was essentially the gist of book news. i call it ultimate, i'm call a proposal, call it whatever you like in december,
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not 2021. and that was something that people did not wish to discuss. so they made a decision to risk it, and now they're risking it. how does this? and dmitri chan in ukraine, in whatever condition it emerges from this war, is never going to forgive you, never going to forgive russia for what it's done, the destruction and the death, and the war crimes that it's committed on its territory. i don't know how it will end that many options. i think up given the stakes that are so much higher for russia, i think that russia will prevail over the rest to meet your tenant. good to have you on complex. i'll thank you very much for your time. you're welcome. ah.
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ah, with
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john done dark searches for the truth again. this time a turkish journalist meets sped land at sea, hollow sky, exiled leader of the opposition and bella. ruth? because i'm tied and tied physically. i'm tied morally too much on my shoulders, but i have to hold this weight because i'm responsible for the future of our country for the people far behind the guardians of truth. coming up on d. w. robbie.
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a unofficial, i'm does things peninsula. one of the most beautiful coastal regions in the state of mecklenburg, western palmer rainy others. long beach is wild forest and cute little fishing town, a maritime experience, particularly in the new season. check in 90 minutes on d. w. one. the music security conference 2023. this year's meeting is tasked with a total order brushes. log scale, more of aggression against ukraine has been going on for one year. now the main question, not those top level meeting is what will prevail? the strength of the law or the law of the strong bucks topics such as the climate crisis in poverty are also on the agenda. the meaning security conference 2023
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brought to you in all platforms. on d. w. a. getting ahead. using tech. as our documentary series founders, valley, it's africa, meet the founders, empowering their continent through digital innovation, transforming work, health and living conditions in their country. and finally the world with their ideas. founders valley africa watch. now on d dugan documentary, how can journalism help us in overcoming divisions save the date for the d. w global media forum 2023 in bonn, germany and increasingly fragmented world with a growing number of voices, digitally amplified. where this clutter to lead. what we really need
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overcoming divisions into vision for tomorrow's journalism. save the date and join us for this discussion. at the 16th edition of d w's global media forum. ah, this is d w news, and these are our top stories. us vice president campbell harris has condemned russia for committing war crimes and ukraine. she also wore and russian president vladimir putin, that time is running out and said criminals will be held to account harris was speaking at the munich security conference, the world's most important international defense policy event. leaders have condemned north korea for launching a long range, ballistic missile into the sea of japan. u. s. secretary of state antony blinking
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along with colleagues from japan and south korea urged countries to enforce existing sanctions against north korea. pyongyang says the launch is in response to military drills in the region to clear up. search teams and turkey have found the body of former garner, international football at christian at sou, under collapse building at c went missing in the city of n. takia. after the earthquakes nearly 2 weeks ago, reports earlier this month said he had been rescued from the rubble, but were then retracted. this is dw news from berlin, you'll find much more on the website. that's d, w dot com. ah,
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justin is you're a good push to me today. bus yes, bus you. this is the consequence was $5000.00 foot. i'm fine. got a question. you can, you know, i was just a willing and conflict in ukraine. the european war in 10 voices rushes war in ukraine for one year since the invasion began. we take a lead back and into the future. in the human, slowly, in february on d, w. a war being fought him real time on social media and they had sent his instrument toward the people shaping public opinion. the key word here is the word fate. where are the right digital battle lines being drawn? the propaganda war for ukraine? russia's war in ukraine one year since the invasion began
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to take a look back and into the future. in the slow rain in february on d w. ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, march. yes. wow. by yet with she has been an unknown housewife and has become the leader of democratic bella, with the best to peace and year old girls throw freedom.
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india is so painful to see your loved in this small prison. you understand that he is up to let you know send to that he didn't do anything wrong. to face lucas shanker, the longest ruling dictates when europe she lost her old life and starts with a new one, is that they can be a great mother taking care of thousands of different things. at the same time, travel can govern a country and most most from okay. how can you turn into a politician when you never meant to become one?
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in, do you say again? i know that the slats who might not reach you as they are withholding letters from political prisoners. but still, i am writing so that those will put you in prison. can see that you are not alone in yourself. my name is john dunder. i'm a turkish jordan, his living in exile in germany. i was sentenced to 27 years in prison because of a story i wrote. after serving some time in prison and surviving an armed attack, i had to leave my country. ah, i met your wife's with bennett for a few more words the last couple of months, many times giving hope to the people. belarus who are forced to leave in exile. ah,
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just the image on what i was there not only as a journalist, but someone who lived through the same experience. i never had this why, it was important to gain her support to get into her inner world. but i must admit it was not easy to move. i remember me for most look. yes it is amelia avery, that we're following you both each of them. oh, oh no. pro slower will come to the wife when 100 to see it here with she was this than, than maybe test to the with the fact that i am a foreigner, ro, man, and that's a woman's story. the story of swift and latino scarce thoughts with her husband, sergey fiowski, m. y, at blogger,
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and businessman you'll see outdoor forces. sonya luxuries in again traveled the country, interviewed people and shows serious problems of fellows that nobody did to talk about rail. might you for sure, stay your google mute stroke goc was the shuttle or will it be okay at this deal? marshall lives in the dictates of lucas shanker declared him an enemy of the state. but for many people in the country, he's a hero of us. most with felix went from your home with him and that was logan loza wishing doesn't sound the russell you enjoy was with us is brownwood and i believe was bonnie wall. it's why you do not with your brother machine, but like everyone else, i thought for a long time that it wasn't worth getting involved in politics to some device. so i
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told the people who did just got arrested or murdered. they just disappear. but my husband has a strong character. if he decides to do something, he does a good deal. yeah, she'll get to criminals. key be levels. keep bringing martin. you boerger. they will ask for your money in, you will shaft the words, but his ideals get company of gretsch's beacons. you bought off. what is the deal when you i'm mm hm. cuz they're all pill was past the 1st time he was arrested. i was really a trainer, but not in the shop to that he was followed constantly. he had the really hounded him. was she stopping his car repeatedly? i can remember he was live streaming a tool in his car. one time when he was stopped by the police and taken some, what hasn't brought me with the gas, the child up a dollar the commute. i wanted to submit my husband's documents for him too. but when i arrived at the central election commission, they just laughed at me and wouldn't take them he knew,
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putting in the command commercial ah, on that a good deal. then in one night i put together the documents for my own candidacy thing. and almost, i never thought they'd register me for the election, but it was important to me to show said gay that everything he had done was important to me. i was just on d o as his wife, i one to suppose him in everything was from go to her budget. that was the turning point force with la, incredible story, hugh, she is a wife of an upcoming politician in a dictatorship. and then in a moment where she tries to stand up for her husband's her destiny changes and she, herself becomes a politician. ready ah, when was the last time you talked to your husband?
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after his detention i had the opportunity to talk to him once. it was in 2020 and they like allowed him to o phone me. i think that sir, maybe they wanted through him to get some information. and i dunno, but of course i knew that he is not alone, that there are people around him. oh my gosh. yes, sure. yeah, it is hard for those deserves shift to come in a would you say those are should with novice of us if you wanted me to be like him. but sir, i can't change myself immediately. many of the with the atlanta people know form. yeah. can be that open you bentley
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and it's leaky b. 7 0, when you follow twitter, latino scare, and europe today, you see wanting she got a lot tougher, and she's at presenting bellows in the highest level. so the president's the prime ministers, the word media are inviting her and talking to her listening to what she has to say, and she's not shy to speak out for her country. the voice o, o c rather um, when you are. ringback is we're in all the facets
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sir. in your small, this international, it was ish, vicious. remember there he is even less on the full energy. she never declared herself as the president of bellows. what part of the world receives her as such? madam president of fellows, as soon as we each gets love for interviews like 15 minutes is too little to reach the real movement behind her political image. i will be here in june.
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so you were in also the day before and often the yesterday and do the vietnam but slower in the afternoon. so i mean, so should unbelievable schedule. are you tired of it? of course i'm tired. i am tired. physically untied. morally, i don't see my children, the lord only may be on the weekends and, but i am so exhausted for during this weekend that you know, i have my children and we watch a movie together with them. i hope that strong leaders will see that be attired, but we are not stop in the end. they will not stop as well. politics is, is it shouldn't be comfortable. it should be always like her overcome challenges. i really relies it and it's too much on my shoulders,
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but i have to hold this weight because i'm, i'm, i will side to the older since are responsible for the future of our country for the people who are behind the boss with me here at the collector which so we arrived at the border at around 3 in the morning. did young it from the children didn't asked me where we were going down by. we said good bye to those who had brought us sharing a border official registered our names on them and we continued on forcing a greenwich think. i'm a partially dish. ah. able
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to now to our new yes. and then even you said grandma, is it true that mom is in prison? motion, but maybe we had mentioned this or talked about while he was around. we thought he was too young to understand when you might be under estimated him. so i said yes, digital vanya mama's in prison, and then he told his sister, nice job. then you said the nice jim, look good with web, which on that my daughter was an activist and an associate of 3 atlanta chino sky. she was collecting signatures, material, skies candidacy. that's why she was convicted and she's been in prison ever since you. she loves us ally file of papa sent more. i better
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mama, i am what you wish for for mamma and papa to get out of prison for mamma and papa to get out of prison. and for lucas, she got to die, and pu into ha, ha yang it as any particular testers. i've never regretted telling the children the truth can be here . i don't know how i could have carried on lying. the children know that they're mamma and papa a heroes tomorrow and that they're in prison still more my pop of jamia. ah, it is really unbelievable. being a kids and knowing that your parents are in prison without having done anything wrong. when you make yourself a target for dictator, your whole life, whole families being taken hostage. that's the unfair thing. you know little effect,
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your whole family and still you have to do it. ah . with theodore store for talked i think i just wanted to make fun of me when they approved my candidacy on them. stall they thought no normal society would collect signatures for a candidates like me just for new or elect a housewife for president. and he said, but i sport fishing and go sides of the maharishi. i knew you'd be shaggy. jimmy shouted stacy, me a possibility to a poseidon. huh. i thought i knew by due to me it was been i too,
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but give peter. oh, i wonder why she just want to stay with us. you know, that's we all star teams to leave asthma 3. marsha, veronica and myself, so we could be confidential financial yeah. i told them very honestly and clearly that i didn't see myself in the role of future president music. little guy who goes to like music. but together we decided to put me for it as a candidate. anyway, i spoke her plan was that if i should win, i would immediately cool fresh election to talk with us, which within 15 minutes we were agreed on our plan. then we began our campaign just
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traveling throughout the yellow race for got on with steve women from different gay crowns joined forces and started to awaken the country ah, showing at these for a summer long that political changes are possible as a democratic country in a life and freedom ah, with thunder herself transformed completely. together with her country. ah, i kaitlin mitchell. i remember a vest rally. it was in a small town. yeah. i was standing on the stage for the 1st time in my life and i was nervous. trashner. it is, i took the microphone this 1st time they'd written a speech for me because i didn't know what to say anymore. i knew our basic
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principles and i knew what i felt when i saw the wide spreading justice in our country. but i didn't know how to talk to people or how they would receive me. my i need to stay. i grew with the people who galleries levels and most can shipple trinity. but jim sion, illness ultra 20, says little one off bridge. the gym really draw, compress the jump will blow dollar global structure, which love all abolish procedure law. you push law. this the humiliation or for women is awful. who question come? he realizes that bill arose is change and there are some people i change and, and of course it threatens him a lot because he, for 27 years he built. but across in our conference he was sure that nobody will dear to how to say to live to the head up. yeah. was falla mall
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jack? yeah. was stella by? yes, son. oh. do a problem with oh, if you fight for democracy you are given places, lane might be important places old. ah
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especially european institutions like to do that allots handling out prices or consolation or support. but i wonder if they really stand up. will you take action for democratic writes, you up the comfort for free them? and if those awards will help with, well, sometimes yes. for me, missing items offices fill out democracy. crisis deck over the belief that it is at least possible to cooperate, to some degree even with dictators like lucas jenko may perhaps have made us too slow to access with respect to the bella russian regime. honda
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this gentleman tries millines not to me, and not to our trio. it belongs to all miller cents. daniel, watching the bill. i don't really like them. i have for you totally in the spotlight with everyone standing round you darling. i understand that you have to communicate what you want to say to people and everyone has to be able to hear. but to me it feels on naturally i need just soon think these are you remember that that went into decent neural gauze,
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but the real freedom in bureaus there were 2 piece in your lease fees for ukraine. ear land going to rooms room internal to know you're busy and i love being among people and talking to them. i'm just giving someone a hug crying with another or reminiscing with people of me. i like to be surrounded by people rather than talking before them and you know, for sure. oh, a with your husband's pictures always. then during the interviews is the political act or something personal for
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you? it is mostly personal, of course, because i have to feel my husband beside me all the time. and i, you know, when i hear some times that say something can not be done. you know, the situation is difficult. i always look here and i have to be persistent in my request because his life or his freedom in the same as for them. i. the 1000 people depend maybe on this conversation with the politician who must be missing him a lot. i missed him a lot of course and he spent already 2 years in jail in soldier cell and her okie. of course it's awful, you know, i but, but his bias me to continue and children who are asking me, where is the data and the overall in our apartment. we believe portraits of my
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husband to sit and watch and deal with. they did it for them and i told them not to forget because my daughter was on the for when she was social for the last time. what was your aunt's flew in diaz. where did this? i my children know that sir. they didn't you, my oldest son is 12 and he realizes that his father is here all and he is suffering because so for question can the regime my younger daughter, she's 6, she knows that her dad is in jail, but she handily understands what jail is thrust to your language so key that the course to run, they chose tours of trust me. michel morrison. this chip was that i need to reach the supplies due to resume the college. interesting. i bought a bunch colleen fortune to walk through the scene here. what i hear, this is
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a special ed so much in the she seen that it as lou badly nash this bizarre moon. i saw the letter, your wife and children go to your birth date, and i remembered my joy and said this when i read the letters from my wife and son in prison, sorrow caused by oppression passes from country to country from hand to hand, as if you will never lay res. so does that determination to struggle? mm hm. and she has the others that looking back, i realized i lived in fear every day, but the people were being arrested just for collecting signatures. i felt it was only a matter of time before they would come for me to restore the national book. as of the boy. ah mam.
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ah! gushing alexander wood shoes and you gotta go several. it should be the middle warner. shes thought it is sad to hear the chippy just advance it to you. eli horsham, you should, you know, i'd say, did you saw the bratfield? ah, somehow they forgot the people. especially woman took the streets and getting him
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warm in politics and then risking they free them in life. to fight for democracy will turn to south, which sla me on the morning of august 10th, we drove down to the central election commission, still blue. but that document that we wanted to make it clear that we did not accept the results because they were rigged on as i entered the building, 2 people were already waiting. liam miyoshi started bradshaw area. mm hm. they told me what awaited me in prison. the cock cami, i shut my children would face discussion a culture torture they claimed i had been lied to my know that marcia leslie cover was a secret agent. and that i was being use of an issue with a mr. from a psychological point of view. it was very clever allegation, and i was alone. neither marcia nor veronica. were there the but i was no one to support machine. you get a new king. ciocca told him,
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was up until i told them i was going to drive to lithuania, to see my children's school. they said i 1st had to record a video as a touch video. oh, my gosh, the news from did you go out? yes. haven't oscar? oglethorpe, vazo chest, general belin, gorbenko's. i wonder what that means to me and how they force you to leave your country by using psychological pressure by telling lies by threatening you and your family for a regime that is afraid of its opponents. forcing switzerland and many others out of the country or putting them into jail. the only way to stay in power.

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