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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  March 6, 2023 1:00pm-1:31pm CET

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a documentary series about the future of food. with the great debate this week on d. w. ah, [000:00:00;00] ah, this is the w news live from berlin. one month after the earthquake disaster that had turkey and syria millions are still impacted. we report from near it live in northwestern syria, where thousands are too traumatized and fearful to return to the damaged buildings
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that were once their homes. also coming up a massive blades least thousands of ro hingham muslims without shelter. and cox is bizarre, southern bangladesh. we'll hear about how it'll affect life in the world's biggest refugee camp. and the head of russia's wagner militia says that his troops are running out of ammunition in the fight for the eastern ukrainian city of bock moved . president lansky says his troops are facing a painful and difficult battle to hold on. and i remember equipment. i remember how much effort to spend make and all those d w here is how the war on ukraine has hit its industry and how russian air strikes have become part of working life. plus in german bonus, think of football wolf's bergan, frankfurt traded punches in
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a gold filled encounter. but neither side man a knock out ah, i'm sarah kelly. welcome to the program. it's exactly one month since a massive earthquake hits southern turkey and northwestern syria. more than 50000 people were killed in the worst natural disaster in modern turkish history. the quakes epicenter was near the turkish city of ghazi, untapped close to the syrian border. now millions of people have been affected. they've been injured left homeless or are lacking basic facilities. anchor declared a 3 month state of emergency for the 10 provinces that were most affected. the government also arrested contractors suspected of shoddy building that may have vastly increased the death toll. after years of war,
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the situation in northwestern syria is harder to evaluate. the cities of aleppo and it live were among those badly hit and a powerful after shock and the following weeks triggered new fears. d w. as mohammed al refi reports now from it lip at nightfall, the 44 year old m r. a ead fills his car with blankets and drives to the outskirts of it live far away from the cities crumbling residential buildings. he spends the night here with the sun. since the 2nd earthquake struck, northwestern, syria and turkey. hundreds of families are afraid to sleep in their own homes, for fear of being trapped inside. if they collapse with as is after all the earthquakes, my son and i are traumatized and that you didn't, you didn't, we don't dare stay at home because it's not safe. there was he and we haven't bought
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a tent. the intense cost between $2400.00 and we can't afford wanted her to have decided to stay here with her. i medina horny, the earthquakes that struck northern syria and killed almost 6000 people. also destroyed thousands of structures. after the 2nd quake, nearly 200000 people were displaced. families abandoned their homes as aftershocks made the initial damage from the quakes, even worse. many moved into tents in front of their houses, or in other public places. a son, a relief organization based in germany, says the challenges are numerous. a minimum, what the law, the most crucial obstacle to expanding refugee camps during the to accommodate the enormous number of people displaced by the earthquakes was sunny is that the communities were not ready to build such facilities and lockers. and there's the
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challenge of providing enough tense, donnelly, with that i 2nd earthquake curriculum, or even more people abandoned their homes that are the fall. and that because of the trauma they experience chevy dealer shovel in the 1st one of his other a well near the city of id live will homage with carney offered shelter on his farm and swimming facility to people who have lost their homes or the families who are afraid their buildings will collapse on them. the nest villas, as after the 1st earthquake, we received 20 families who lost their homes of sunny jana. and after the 2nd one lamb many more came here because they were afraid to stay in their buildings over. this will, although, as you can see, tom is difficult to meet their needs are thomas muster. for thousands of syrians, the choice is between living on the streets or living in fear. and for more on the situation in turkey, we spoke with alexandria saya, head of humanitarian policy and advocacy. at save the children international. we
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asked her if aid is reaching those who need it. most. 8 efforts have ramped up, but what people are telling us is that they're still in survival mode. they're not able to plan for the future. they're saying that even thinking about recovery is so far away for them because they're, they're telling us that they're still looking for durable shelter. they're still worried about access to water. they're still worried about access 10 sanitation facilities. they're still worried about their next hot meal. the destruction that the earthquake has left is so massive. you walk through the city of antonia and, and not a single building is, has was on top, was left untouched. almost every building is either damaged, destroyed, or completely collapsed. and the heartbreaking thing is that for many, many people they're, they're still so afraid tilted be sleeping indoors. children are telling us that
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they don't want to sleep in doors because they're afraid of another earthquake. and they've had to endure so many shocks as well over the past, over the past month, it's been relentless for people. and it's just, it's so far from over. given all of that, what are the biggest challenges to getting people the a that they so desperately need right now there are so many challenges in the 1st thing is that the, the needs are just so massive. and also the situation is very fluid. families still don't know where the, where they, they want to set up their lives either so many things that are impacting people's decisions. many families are still grieving, loved ones. ah, some families are still waiting to retrieve the bodies of loved ones from the rubble. i, the situation is extremely fluid and it's just it the discharge las so massa, for many people to cope with. what would you like to see what more would you like
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to see from the international community? well, the international community now has an opportunity to show solidarity and for to provide support. the flash appeal for to kiya is, is, is, is greatly under funded, less than 10 percent of the funding i needed for the response has been committed for to cute for trickier isn't abysmally low for a disaster of this proportion. so we really need the international community to show solidarity and show support by committing funding to the response. in march later this month, the you and sweden are going to be hosting the donors conference to support the humanitarian response in both to kiya and syria. and this is the, this is an opportunity for the international community to really show that show that they show their general, their generosity and show solidarity with people here. alexander,
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say from the save the children chapter and ghazi, untapped, thank you so much. you brownie and a massive fire has destroyed makeshift accommodation at the world's biggest refugee camp. more than 2000 shelters have burned down at cox's bazaar in bangladesh, but there were no reports of deaths or injuries. the facilities house, hundreds of thousands of fro hinge muslims who fled persecution in neighboring myanmar. for 3 hours, a massive fire burned through section of cut to palm. the words largest refugee settlement by the time firefighters and volunteers were able to put it out to blaze had destroyed around 2000 shelters, as well as dozens of mosques and schools. the camps here are home to most of the, nearly 1000000 rowing refugees in bangladesh, which shelters made of canvas and bamboo,
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crowded next to each other. the settlement has suffered hundreds of fires in recent years. oh, fact, you know what? i had taken my mother to see the doctor. when i came back, everything was on file. we couldn't save any of our belongings. yeah, now i have 7 children. when the fire broke out to be a part of it, i couldn't find them or, and i you had when i went to search for them, but i couldn't find them all here. i don't, i don't work on a returned home on what things were burned to do on loan, and i haven't if nothing left for them with your good as i would've the rowing a are mostly muslim minority who fled a brutal crack down in me a more dep began in 2016 attempts to send them back. have failed. after meeting fierce resistance, you an agencies called me and mars persecution of the ro, hunger, genocide and ethnic cleansing. while staying in the refugee camps may be safer than
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returning to me and mar. it's still full of risks and not just from fires. days ago, he funding shortfall forced to world food program to reduce aid to the rowing your refugees who are already at risk of malnutrition. a devastating blow, especially for the estimated 12000 people who lost her homes in the fire and to find out more on the situation in the camp and the future prospects for the ro hinder refugees living there. i spoke with mandy, wendy mccants, the director of the norwegian refugee councils office in bangladesh. show as you recall service thing and just a quick fire and a few hours that started in the middle of yesterday quite quickly. but it's still, you can see the destination happens within next few hours and does over 2000 and
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shelters are being sent to the ground and 90 facilities as well. so things like hospitals, health centers, education facilities, learning center centers. and so it's not just what people are doing and during the day the good land that you can see that on the screen is just been to the ground. at the moment. there's a lot of coordination happening. assessments have to start out to see which, which the greatest needs people have on the grounds. and of course as shelter that food is water and some of the health services that people with needs. as you mentioned, there's not been report to casualties and i think that that remains shoot. but of course, there's always an option that someone might come in later. she's been good or damaged. the images are devastating, as you've highlighted,
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and it's been more than 6 years after these individual started fleeing me on mar, what are their hopes? and it can get a little bit depressing. think about it being fixed. and they're saying that they've been trying to manage themselves income, a lot of money to come in and buy the best has been very generous and getting the land. but what we really need to look forward now is long term solutions. we understand that there are challenges in ration side issues about what can happen about relocation, for example, just country resettlement. like that, the hanging living at the moment on. it's really not a long term solution. what we're trying to find is supporting at the life and but also looking to that long time trying to access lands. so example,
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income generating building so that is something that we really are trying to to push in, in our conversation and more of a longer term solution. wendy mccants from the region refugee council in bangladesh . thank you so much. and here are some other stories making headlines. authorities in pakistan say that at least 9 police officers have been killed in a suicide bombing in the country. the southwestern baluchistan province reports indicate officers were on a routine patrol. when the bomber approached them on a motorcycle. no one has yet claimed responsibility is sonia center, right. prime minister kaya kal is, has won an election dominated by the war ukraine. she is one of keith's most outspoken supporters and is said to remain in office despite an economic crisis.
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her party $137.00 out of $101.00 seats, putting callis on track to lead another coalition. russia says that defense minister sergey show who has visited mar, you pull in eastern ukraine. the ministry says that he met with senior commanders during his trip. and awarded metals to military personnel, the city and the don't ask region was captured by russian forces last year. after a month long siege. ukrainian president volota mer zalinski says that his troops are in a, quote, painful and difficult battle to hold on to bach. mood of the situation on the ground in the eastern ukrainian city remains uncertain. on sunday, the head of the russian back mercenary wagner group warned that his troops could be running out of ammunition and a method on the groups. telegram channel. wagner, chief give guinea pro. goshen said that russia's front lines near bock, mood could collapse, of his forces,
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did not receive ammunition promised by moscow last month. the w rush. analysts roman gun to ranko, told us what's behind the wagner chiefs call for more ammunition? well, it is not the 1st time that his calling from or ammunition just a few days ago. he made the same claim saying that he is not receiving enough. well, i think this is reason number one, because we also see that russia has reduced its airstrikes on ukraine. so there is obvious a shortage of ammunition on all fronts. and the 2nd reason we could speak about is that power struggle between mr. free, goshen, and the russian defense ministry. we saw several messages from him in the past months or weeks criticizing the russian army saying that his private company is performing better than the regular army. and that is why i think that russian abbey
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might be tempted to somehow pull him back a little bit in the media and, and the front. but, but the fact is that his troops took solid on it, a neighboring town in baltimore, and is now about to take both mood. so it looks like progression is winning, and he's trying to secure his victory. so given that realm and how can we expect moscow to react to progressions calls or the last time are we heard such claims, boomers to prejudge the russian defense minister, denied them and said that there were enough a supplies of ammunition. i think we might see something of the kind this time as well. and then regarding a few, a few weeks ago said that the situation was was getting better. but obviously it is not of, so we still have to wait and see how this time a dissertation will be resolved. but if you watch russian media, russian state media,
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they say that they already control about 40 percent of baltimore. and it's only a matter of days probably until the city is completely under russian control. meantime, on the ukrainian side of the question, the big question that has emerged is how higher price ukrainians are willing to pay in order to keep that city are those reports of divisions over how to proceed in the battle of back motel. it's a little bit more about what's going on there. well, the ukrainian side and there are reports about differences of opinion between president lansky and ok in chief or chief. come on the commander valerie's allusions. and the loosening are reportedly arguing in favor of pulling back from the sea to leaving the city and, and, and pulling back to our, to another defense line or just a, just behind baltimore and prisons. lensky is reportedly for harold has been favoring arg, keep keeping on fighting because this city of bomb, what is very symbolic for ukraine. of course, it's a, it's
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a bigger city than and russia has been unable to, to take any ukrainian city, a bigger city such as bach mortar for a very long time for months now. and you kind of probably was expecting to keep your keyboard until weston military supplies, including main battle tanks, including infantry fire fighting vehicles would come. but that didn't happen, or ukraine still has to wait for those supplies. but the situation in baltimore is devastating an hour by the hour. so are the observers probably wouldn't be surprised if ukrainians pull back from baltimore in the coming days. roman contra ranko r d. w reporter. thank you so much for bringing us up to date with what the situation is right now in the battle for luckily for she had it and it is estimated that a year of war has shrunk the economy by half in ukraine as russian attacks devastate energy infrastructure disrupt production and block ports,
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but work goes on despite those attacks. he w, nick connelly has been to me, people in the nipple regent who are keeping ukraine's metal industry going, despite the airstrikes. ah, it's a sound that means one thing. time to head for safety on the ground. no matter how many times you've heard it never stopped being unnerving when will began seeking shelter, also meant stopping work. the urine and production of this metal block continues regardless. thanks to this improvise set up a little more than a few computers and internet connection people down here and keep the machines running up above. their boss shows us his emergency supplies. if needed, he tells us they could survive on these provisions for days or even weeks through so far, this talk hasn't been hit with russian troops to less than 100 kilometers away the risks. a real li britney be rented. this is war and no one can possibly know what
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will happen tomorrow. so just go through that. we can't afford not to be prepared. a decision is with us. i pray will never need any of this with. but other ukrainian companies have been less fortunate to russian missiles a few days apart it this production cited in the pro, killing 2 people at the 1st strike not come on the weekend. that figure would likely have been far higher. it's lottery, i to lotteries are broken, can time can come any time at any place. it any house at any facility. my 1st time here i sold the pictures. they did a one to come because i remember the equipment. i remember how much effort to spent making all this and that's russian russian world. it came to my a plant that how it looks like we visited other vicious loves factories. it's still going, but it's struggling with the effects of russian attacks when ukraine's power system
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. yes, that the power build on what we have a we'll get learn the last couple of months. when there is the wrong in the learning, i turned off all the electricity and that happens. i'm ridiculous. never, it never happens. we will lose around a 1000 years. you know, one minute, the material inside they cannot lose the temperature, went to like the temperature, the brake and the brain generates is made all the difference. workers can now prevent uncontrolled shutdowns, buying time to buy pin natural gas that stabilizes the temperature until means electricity returns. way before they would lose days of production every time the power went off. now it's down to a matter of hours. the power isn't the only problem they're dealing with here. ukrainian firms operating against all the odds are increasingly finding that many
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customers in europe don't want to work with them. they're afraid that will prevent the ukrainian supplies from delivering more i will die than everything was at. and i'll admit greenberg learn will die equating everybody fighting. and my job is to make sure that the vectors are working able to getting salary. i can help the soldiers, i can bike with them, but not every business can role with the punches like this one bitch slap tells us that at least a quarter of his competitors have already got out of business. and the bankruptcies keep coming. from the resilience. i'm show ukraine's economy is still in free for leaving this country. and it's all me ever more dependent on international support and here is another stories making headlines around the world. skirmishes have broken out in the georgian parliament over
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a controversial new bill aimed at cracking down on what the ruling party calls foreign agents. critics fear the government will adopt a law modeling on a similar one in russia. protester is also gathered outside of parliament in an effort to block proceedings. university classes have resumed and afghanistan after the winter break, but only for male students. taliban authorities banned women from attending higher education in december. they accused women students of ignoring a strict dress code and rules requiring them to be accompanied by a male relative to and from campus world tennis number one. novak joke of it has withdrawn from a tournament in california because he is not allowed to enter the united states. the serb is not vaccinated against coven 19 joke, which had applied for a special permission to compete. and next week's indian wells,
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competition in the buddhist league of frankfort travelled to wolf's burg, looking to pick up their 1st away when this year. but the wolves refused to leave the pitch empty handed. and in the end, both sides had to settle for a 2 all draw wolf's bergs last time in front of a home crowd, didn't in well for the wolves. they were all bark and no bite. in this one, all eyes were on frankfurt most dangerous offensive weapon. this season, randal colo milanni, the league's only player with double digit goals and assists. but it was the wolf who started this back and forth gold getting a fair. oh, more mar, mooc. hopped over goalkeeper cabin trap to poke it in the empty goal. wolves up frankfurt took to the air to level randall colo milady with his 11 goal of the season. a few minutes later,
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evan indicative found the ball and fired in to put the eagles ahead to wood. it was an absolute rocky oval gold wolf, berg's young gearhart gotten paid back before the break with the mere post header wolf, bergan frankfurt, share the spoils to, to the final score. in spite of the lack luster. second, have both sides could leave the pitch with pride after this one. and in sunday's other game by our labor cruise in coast, actually for one victory over here to berlin. jeremy from hong was the man of the match. he scored labor, cruise and 2nd goal, 10 minutes after their 1st. it's the 1st time the 22 year old has bagged both a goal and an assist in the same game when both slave of business chances of qualifying for europe next season are now to an endurance challenge with a difference, mexico's carbajal. blanco. ultra marathon,
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one of the world's most challenging long distance races. o competitors set out at dawn through the canyons of north western mexico. the race pits runners from all over the world against the indigenous terra homeric people described as modern day spartans. the people count among the best ultra runners in the world. many races, race and sandals, known as who are rochester, made of discarded car tires. and with that you have to date on dw news. i'm sorry kelly and berlin, thanks for watching. ah,
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