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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  February 23, 2023 7:00pm-7:16pm CET

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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 dw news live from berlin, no less up in the fighting as the 1st anniversary of the war in ukraine approaches . we report from the frontline city of hath, on liberated by ukrainian forces, but living in fear of a fresh russian on sword. also coming up the united nations consider the 10 point piece plan put forward by ukraine's president laudermill. zalinski will get the
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very latest life from new york and the european commission tells it stuffed, delete talk from network phones. the chinese owned app says the band is misguided. our chief technology correspondent has the story. ah, i many pupils mckinnon. thanks so much for joining us. as the anniversary of russia's invasion of ukraine approaches, cities and towns on the frontline face more heavy shelling by russian forces. but residence of the southern city of hassan and all the communities on the front lines remain defiant. russian shells killed 6 civilians and wounded dozens. this week and that's on the city was liberated by ukrainian forces back in november, but cave and its allies are expecting a wide russian spring offensive. and russian president vladimir putin has restated
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his goal of taking full control of easton and southern ukraine. dw correspondent conley isn't hassan, and he told me earlier what life is like now in the liberated areas. why? it's certainly very, very quiet here and had saw no comparison when we were lost here in the autumn. in november when ukrainian troops came back and there were people just filling the square behind me, tuesday through z, as in the sense that life could somehow get back to normal. that has definitely not happened. their russian troops on the other bank of the new pro river, just a handful of kilometers from where we're standing now. anywhere in the city is within range of russian artillery. really basic cheap equipment of which the russians have big, big supplies. there's no need for complicates cruise missiles. there's a city that sees daily attacks and you see even people working very close the walls keeping uncover base, expecting things to happen at any point on either hand. when you going to supermarket, you can find 3 different kinds of almond milk you can find for mineral water. all the logistics are working, mobile phone or ox, back up, power is working more or less. there's only sensor lots people have left and
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they're just not believing that for now. this is a safe place to be. this is a place where people are still leaving and where you know, for the most part sellers keeping a very, very low profile. do you see any signs at all that a week the ukranian resolve is, is wavering. i mean, especially after russia started target sing civilian infrastructure within these massive airstrikes. in the last few months we've seen some pretty extraordinary resilience and the ability of the ukrainian infrastructure, kind of people in charge to keep things going. normally it's a matter of couple of days before power is restored, at least to pro household. so there's always a sense that somehow there's a solution, even if it's a temporary one or a kind of unorthodox one. but somehow there's always a way around the problems that are resulting only people at least behind front lines in this war. as for the can, psychological told people are open to talking about the fact that this is causing them exactly that it is affecting the mental health. lots of people say they are going to show that until they're basically in safety to deal with that and deal
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with these issues. if you look at the sociology of the kind of questioning of people through kind of professionals that the numbers are kind of extraordinary. it's over 85 percent saying they don't want any compromise. russia, they want to see their country docs apart in full. and that includes crimea and other parts of ukraine that russia is controlled since 2014 to certainly open. there's no, says the people are willing to kind of countenance in the negotiations on brushes terms, anything that would allow russia to dictate terms to ukraine. the one thing you hear, tom tom again here though, is give us weapons, give us more equipment. this will not lead to an escalation, this will allow us to do the job quicker and bring this war to an end with few casualties. so that's the semester here. time and time again. also it's difficult. see how country we population of 14000000 can compete in the lower m with a bigger enable at russia. but certainly that's the, that is off when you speak aaa neck. thanks so much for that. that's nick connelly, reporting from hath on the united nations general assembly is holding an emergency
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session to mark the anniversary of the invasion assembly is considering a draft 10 point piece plan outline by ukraine's president laudermill zalinski un secretary general antonio terrace, has repeated calls for the conflict to end and full respect for the un charter delegates are expected to vote on the resolution shortly through foreign affairs of hungry chimneys, foreign minister and alana bab has just spoken at the un. she says it's time to bring the fighting to an end each and every one of us here to day has an opportunity to contribute to this piece plan. by telling the aggressor to stop, by making clear that it's not peace. if an aggressor tell it's victim to simply give up, that it's not peace if an aggressor is rewarded for its ruthless violence. this
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would run counter to the very essence of our united nations charter t w's in his pool, is at the united nations in new york and joins us now. in s at you heard the german foreign minister speech, tell us what stood out for you. that was a very emotional of speech again of her and she dressed to stress the fact that this war is not only a problem for ukraine, it is a problem for the whole world. and there's just one person who can stop that war right in that way. and this is vladimir putin, he says, she said that there is no peace. if i go to see an aggressive tells the victim to simply give up. and why does she say that this is something, some nations one, they want this war 2 and a as a p as soon as possible. and they say that ukraine should rather give up some of
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the occupied territories. if this would make this war to stop. now, so i don't deny babylon tried really to reach out to them to explain again in a very, very emotional approach. how important it is to vote for this piece plan the voting on the resolution will happen shortly. do we have any sense of how this vote is likely to turn out? well, i had the chance to ask her right after she delivered the speech and she is pretty optimistic. she said it was a lot of work over the last a weeks to convince those countries who are little bit on the edge. we know that she talked intensely of, of leaders from brazil. she also talked over 3 years from south africa to convince them to vote for this piece plan. the last 2 words are they got 100 more than 140 nations to walk in favor. so. a or i think everything which is higher than
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$120.00 would be okay. but sure they want to keep this figure as high up as possible. why? because the void here in the u. n. is always kind of seen lager barometer of the sense of the world in the question, of course is if the un doesn't prove the resolution, what would it actually mean for the conflict in ukraine? you know, it's nothing concrete. i mean, the west will continue to support or ukraine with or without the resolution. it is highly is symbolic by that should not be underestimated because it sends a signal. and then we also have to be really fair here with the whole u. n. and the meeting of a general assembly, it's not about only about the figures and the outcome of avoid. what is also very important are all these bilateral meetings before, during and after the general assembly. the conversations high and politicians can have are with each other. the exchanges, so it's not only about the resolution,
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it's about this holy rent or bringing people, bringing nations together in this very, very difficult times. he dollies in his pulver pushing from neil. thank you so much . gonna take a look now. some of the other store is making headlines around the world. the european union has unveiled what it calls a game changing data center to collect and analyze evidence of war crimes in ukraine is expected to be fully operational by the summer. they are growing called for an independent tribunal to prosecute brush a full war crimes. police have arrested 4 people off to protest as painted a giant ukrainian flag on the road next to the russian embassy in london. the activists poured cans of paint on the road and then vehicle spread it in both directions. part of a huge, open cost coal mine and china has collapsed killing at least 5 people,
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dozens more. i'm missing. cctv footage captured the landslide in in a mongolia emergency cruise. we're searching for survivors. but a 2nd slide has now halted rescue operations the body of the keynote fast. those ex president thomas ankara has been re buried 8 years after was his. it was exude for an investigation, and car came to power in 1983 that the popular revolutionary leader and 12 others were gone down 4 years later in the capital y good to go. now this year's berlin film film festival, the berlin allah is in the home stretch with competitors vying for the coveted golden and silver bare awards. including a film called sumi, a japanese animated fantasy film. the hero with a 17 year old girl called sumi, who discovers the mysterious door in the mountains. when sumi turns the handle, she unleashes all the calamities. the portal was meant to contain other doors start
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opening around japan, threatening a population unaware of the looming danger. and it's all up to sue me to close them again. and joining us now from the red carpet is our berlin olive reporter her leader, a barrow. had he to tell us more about suby? well this is the 1st japanese animated film to be in the berlin are the competition for 21 years. so it is quite a milestone. now this is on an enormous scale. i think picks are feature in terms of the technical feet and also the story. it is absolutely stunning when they saw the hero is going, the heroine is, are traveling around japan. we see the city scapes. we see toko, kyoto, kobe, absolutely brilliant attention to detail here. and i was, she's trying to save the world from natural disasters, which by the way, were partly inspired by the fukushima nuclear ex accident. she is thwarted by and
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make a note of this, a satanic kitten among other evil forces and is also um, it's not just, it's not just to kind of sy fy found the adventure or with the kind of big backstory a bit like in order the rings it's also a coming of age or comedy as well, if you like. now i'm the director has bad no expense or here. and in order to make sure that it brought back brought back the money domestically, instead of hiring, voice act as he decides to get really popular. cinnamon t v. actors are from japan to voice the roles. he also hired one of japan's are biggest what bands to record the school, and it's a pretty great school and actually recorded it at the abbey road studios, the famous place where the beatles recorded. it sounds brilliant, london, to watch and just to see the satanic heathen, and if not, obviously the not the only film at the berlin. allah today tell us well to happening there while limbo is all so primarily today now the storm couldn't be more different. it's very quiet, very brooding. it's filmed in black and white,
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is from the australian indigenous film maker. ivan said, now this is the man who brought us mystery. rode the film and t. v series about an indigenous detective. now this time it's about a white police officer who is kind of hard and embattled drug, addicted tattooed am a broken man played by the actor simon baker. and he sent in to the community to reopen a cold case. a 20 year old co case involving a missing indigenous girl. and yet and basically he kind of awakens his own family demons. and that's not all what's happening. it is also the night of the german premier of the cate blanchett film. tar, and our cate blanchett in town for that now. she's obviously been recognized with a bafta golden globe and she's possibly going to get an oscar for that as well. berlin and i believe that there's a particular milestone being celebrated in the berlin ali and this week. that's absolutely right. so on wednesday evening, they handed out the burly, not
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a series of or now this is the 1st or the 1st series award from any major film festival or in the world for a series made for streaming or television. and they gave it to a british italian production called the good mothers. now this is based on a true story and is about a female prosecutor who collaborated with women inside a major mafia organization in order to nab the top bosses. and that's got a fabulous writer up and it's from disney plus d, w reporter her leader about a barrow reporting from the red carpet in berlin. thank you so much now and in the show in japan where the cherry blossom season is bursting into life, the town of a cow, a zoo is famous for its early blooms. although cold weather means the buds are a little later than usual this year. officials reckoned more than a 100000 people passed through the cherry tree channels on just one day this week, which he could call a blooming success. here's
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a quick reminder of our top story. as the no less up in the fighting as the 1st anniversary of the war and ukraine approaches, the frontline city of hassan has been liberated by ukrainian forces. the residents are living in fear of a fresh russian on stuart. we have time for coming up next and our documentary conflict and ukraine. we had 10 people tell their stories. i'm on your campus mckenna, thanks for watching 3 stories that most people of the world over information. they provide opinions. they want to.

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