tv DW News Deutsche Welle April 17, 2023 10:00am-10:31am CEST
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put, dw meets ukrainian civilians weighing up the risk for staying in their homes on the front line of the war class in the one to see the fryeburg for behind in bremond back to battle back to playing a crucial wind. as they chase a place in the champions and all that and more coming up in school. ah. hello, i'm christine andre. it's good to have your company. welcome to the program. we begin in sudan where heavy fighting is continuing between the army and rival paramilitaries. clashes have spread from the capital cartoon with the military also battling the rapids support forces for control off moreover, and its international airport as well as the countries main. c was caught sedan.
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the 2 sides were supposed to match, but are locked in a power struggle. at least 97 people have been killed since fierce fighting began on saturday. a brief ceasefire to help people caught up in the conflict for a little less up in the violence. courtroom residents gather food and supplies during a temporary cease fire. urban battles paused by wounded fighters and civilians are evacuated. sedans, army and a powerful paramilitary force of turn, their guns on each other. just months after sending a deal to restore the country to civilian rule and 2021, the 2 sides to the in the army, the rapids port forces were ora sir joined. forces to seize power from civilian prime minister, abdullah hom doc. an uneasy era of power sharing began. as army chief general abdel fattah oberon became sedans de facto ruler. while general
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mohammed hummed under gallo better known as a medi kept control of yourself. military rule was met with frequent protests as to dan's economic woes worsen. international aid, dried up and fuel and food became scarce. activists marched almost every week in cartoon to demand a return to civilian rule and a restructuring of the military. by the end of 2022 am eddie and albert han signed a deal with sedans, main pro democracy group to establish the civilian transitional government. but the 2 generals couldn't agree on a timeline for a merger of their forces and negotiations stalled. it was another blow for pro democracy advocates at an emergency arab league meeting
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representatives press both sides to hold the fighting youth all above the bled. gimme al, my country's delegation urges all sudanese parties to immediately cease all armed clashes to prevent loss of life and ensure the safety and security of civilians as well as preserved the potential of the sudanese people who had that on men hold off either we caution against the danger of escalating violence in sudan ways on the unpredictable consequences that may ensue both domestically and regionally and whitely me. the r s. f and army forces blame each other for starting the conflict. both say they won't back down with a short cease far over a no clear path to peace. the conflict continues earlier i spoke to christine rose, who is currently in autumn. she works there as country representative for sedan with their freakish ebay foundation. thank tag. i asked her about what the
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situation was this morning. good morning. this fighting is going into the same day now. during the night, at least in our area, it was calmer than last night, but the sound of a tillery and then also aircraft over had started again around 4 am in the morning . we're fighting in at least 2 areas around us, but from friends and colleagues and via social media, it seems that it is going on in more than these 2 places. this remains extremely worrying, of course, because this is still some sort of urban warfare with little this, with little regard to the lives of millions of civilians in this biggest city of the country. the fighting is playing out in front of people's yards and roads where kids go to school on squares where people would shop. but nearly all of the normal life is is halted at the moment. chrissy, we're hearing that both sides are in the conflicts are claiming to be in control of key points to the presidential palace state tv the what it cetera is it any clearer
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from inside the country about that not at all. i mean, we are civilians, as most people in the city, and we hold up at home and we rely on kind of private intel being forwarded on phones or, or by text messages and what steps as you're trying to puzzle together the picture from this. but if you are, if you're, if you're looking at what the warring parties are putting out, this is mostly propaganda. it's about who has one was and this is very often contradicted. in the next minutes by the other side. the 2 generals responsible for the fighting, they blame each other and neither of them for starting this fighting, neither of them have indicated that they're willing to hold talks. could this escalate further? christina, perhaps even spill over into other countries in the region. there
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are strong concerns and, and we have been seeing of course messaging from regional leaders international leaders, also local leaders who are trying to mediate that there is a prospect of us. there's also a prospect that this might inflame more groups here in the country. this is a multi ethnic society, politically multi, multi polarity here. so are at this point, some may say we already got a civil war. this are saying it may become one when will say call this entering the conflict. so they're so booked mediation attempts going on behind the scenes trying to activate civil society and others to diffuse hard line rhetoric and to prevent will taking sides and feeling obliged to, to start to fight, to take up the fight. right, that's christine around the country, representative for sedan with the free jewish ever foundation. thanks tanka she's talking to us from how to appreciate that. thank you,
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christine turning now to ukraine way. every day. life in the front line, cities is a gamble. civilians are regularly and a fire from rockets and artillery shells. every decision to leave shelter to get food or supplies could be your loss. but there are people who are staying and their reasons for taking that risk or complet. c, w max center joined and evacuation team of ukrainian police, as they tried desperately to persuade people to leave these guys ukraine the saying reach, it seems very clear how people here feel. and yet confronting towns like this, we find stories that are complicated. these men are trying to get people to leave kanadi and to me throw belong to a police, have accusation unit nicknamed white angels. sample court the mildly and i was, i was, i was a leak. i'm really got a new quest for this. and this week,
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i wish it was more know about the bits off through and they bought 3 mother bought on the bus this was home to more than 32000 people before the war. bombs and shell still fall in this ruined place. the russian forces are making gains still about 2000 people choose to remain a resilience point. there's t, electricity, and company. my guess is that a life insurance special needs, you know, you get a good reference going for you, which you don't get, you know, model kanadi. and dmitri have been asked to visit one particular couple,
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the man's daughter, asked the policeman to get them out. they have moved underground was her, it was her lanka, and legislative level video of us. but a fellow so papers down leo. proper previous doctor, those up to wishing him was your name of which the point at north east and that gives you that will flow there. more home i do watch. in addition to bits of mine, a lot of nicholas hathaway could chill no huddle which was polluted. those gifts supreme, it was no ago, but she woke up with your head there was coverage for those who records, but it fear is what's keeping them. i'd say when you yes. yes, yes. was you not? they don't like that body lesson yet. yeah, i've been there by, you know, you look us. this was done. we have so much to switch it for police officers can't force people to leave me enough. and russian propaganda has left some scared of the
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ukrainian authorities. my moral i am la via marcela rose leukemia. lou jim lake, we was on lebron, you're one of them. i really the book raska there a for him, which will on paris, a former princess for me for solice symbol dinner over summer. we have to stop filming and seek shelter. yeah. but i am. would it be more likely as soon as it's safe, we go to where the bomb hit it's. well we're, we're just finishing up with that lady in the basement. i'm just a few 100 meters away. we heard a big bank. and this is the aftermath of the north. it impacted here just a few minutes ago, literally and took this whole place apart. that's every day last year and this was the town's market. this woman came to sell household goods when she isn't hurt,
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but you can see she's in shock. of these go was a frontline city long before the russian full scale invasion of 2022 frontline not only in the physical war but also in the fight for people's loyalties. brushing back rebels were in control for a brief period in 2014 before the ukrainians. took it back. not everyone here is happy about that. lazar lee, i think here we brought k, a kia a year to a coach. tags on the horse go home, myrtle. i mostly lou urgent for my to roster soon to is boring extra credit. you may yet like your re booking, always or 3 more. well this was what was working. graham took you through the year . the keycard. oh, got dora, her misery. misconceived. or were you in the play store and you are all the to the officers of the white angels can offer a way out of town for those who want to take it. well,
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and i have joined in the studio, mcculloch max and a who has filed that report you just saw in just has just returned from east and ukraine. max it's, it's good to be talking to you and really some incredible reporting over there and a very difficult conditions. i have to say, i'm, we're seeing these people in your report, people who are choosing to stay in in frontline towns. we can see the conditions you, you spend a lot of time talking to people. what's your overall sense about who these people are and, and why they're deciding to stay? right, so just to give you a little bit context, christine, so these 2 towns are we're featuring the report that's of the if go and just if you are they a prior to the war they had a population of roughly 32015000. this population went down to 2000 and roughly 1000, so the majority of people will have left. and the people we met in these towns were largely mean each and every case, each and every stories different. but you see a lot, lot of old people are pension years, there are people with disabilities,
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lots of people don't have any financial means a, as in they're quite poor. so lots of these people cannot leave by themselves on their own, or they have reasons not to leave and they do not want to. right. i mean, we saw the, the conditions that they were living at. right. and now you're describing to us of these elderly people, many of them with disabilities. i'm just, how are they getting by what, what, what's, what is the sort of notification? right? so um, this is the question we try to ask everybody there and what we would get a lot of the time. i'm a 1st answer would be i lived here all my life. i was born here. i had my family here, my parents are buried in my garden and if i die, i want to be buried right next to them. people just simply cannot imagine, probably couldn't even imagine before the we're moving somewhere else. and especially now with all the, with the situation going on with, with the,
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with impacts, with bombs going off all over the place. they even feel probably this place is still safer, their house that they're been living in or their life than, than, than the, than other places. once people do not have the money, some people told us they would leave, but they cannot afford to start a new life somewhere else. and then also, what you would hear sometimes is people say they are being treated poorly in western ukraine. that people from eastern ukraine or russian speakers perhaps are being taken advantage of for being to deploy. this is largely due to a russian propaganda russian misinformation. but overall, you also have to think about the trauma that all these people are enduring. you, you spend the time you, the time we spent in these towns and there was not probably not even 2 minutes or a minute where we did not hear an impact here or there. and these people have seen other people die on the street. so up, everybody is traumatized in this adds to the situation and to your rational thinking obviously. yeah. i oh, all critical. good. yeah,
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you met how it humanitarian goods getting to these people? yes, so there is a military administration operating in the cities. there are a forty's like these police officers operating in the cities a lot. depends on volunteers, though, on ukrainian volunteers, and one for volunteers that bring in donations for donation. so they'll bring in the past or lentils as we saw. so on the report, drinking water, medical, good, salutary products, that kind of stuff. and they do that at great risk. so they do it by road. the and volunteers in the past. i've also been targeted and vultures also have been killed while trying to provide for these people who decide to stay in the styles. well, let. so again, thank you for, for your incredible reporting in the story. helping us understand the complexity is really off. the people who are on the front lines of this war that is next under dw correspondence. now the prominent russian journalist and political activist
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vladimir cut him would say, is facing charges of treason and spreading this information about the russian military. if convicted, he could face up to 25 years in a rush and labor camp adam was a denies the charges and has compared his case to the stolen era show trials, a so called strict regime labor camp in russia. that's where state prosecutors hope what america mooresville will spend. the next 25 years of his life. the dual russian british citizen is one of russia's last prominent opposition figures. he's been behind bars since april 2022. russian authorities arrested carter morsa after he denounce russia, so called special military operation in ukraine. during a speech to american politicians, he was 1st charged was spreading false information about the russian military than the russian. prosecutors added a charge of treason, the son of a soviet era journalist carter motors has worked as
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a journalist and political activist. since he was 16, he served as part of the coordinating council of the russian opposition and the g o . open russian days. he was also widely seen as a protege of murdered opposition leader morrison himself, who was gun down near the kremlin in 2015. carter more so also alleges that he was the target of political violence. twice narrowly surviving what doctors described as intentional poisonings. long an outspoken critic of latimer putin caught him, was a remainder fine during his trial. seen his proud of his statements and looks forward to the day when the people who unleashed rushes invasion of ukraine are recognized as criminals. and joining and out to talk more about this trial is need of news for the muscle beer, a chief theory risha to who joins us now from rita. as d. w is banned from reporting in russia. it's good to be talking
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t a uri. so vladimir, karen would say he is comparing, he is prosecution to one of joseph stalin. show trials just how fair is this trial? what is the evidence against him? well, the jamaica morsa was charged with various charges, including treason and spreading false information about the russian army. this is a one time censorship law that was introduced shortly after the start of the russian. why against the granite which has been used to silence critic voice across the country, so called the deliberately spreading false information about the russian army can attract a 15 year sentence. we know that a few weeks after the war began, caramel czar gave an interview to the cnn, in which he haughtily, harshly criticized russia's government and a short time later we saw it in the report he again spoke critically, bother were openly at the other charge is treason, according to the investigator, as kara moser was paid to help organizations from they too had said countries from
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the 2 countries undermine russia's national security. let emer caramels are however, denied all charges uri and he is facing 25 years in a high security prison. and as, and the prosecutors themselves described him as an enemy of the state. and why are they demanding such a harsh sentence? well, look, cameras. i asked all to the court that he stood by all of his political statements . and he said, you mentioned the cheese prosecution room, sampled one of joseph stalin, shaw trials. i think she recognized exactly what the authorities are aiming for, namely, to punish him so harshly that no one else there is openly criticize the gramlin. a crime owes us said he was proud to that boris named south brought him into politics . them talk was of the rational position of politician who was shot dead near the ground in moscow in 2015. that same year. and then 2 years later,
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kara morsa survived. alleged poisoning attacks, rational authorities, deny any involvement. it occur bizarre, however, decided to leave and stay in rush, and until the start of the boy, he was one of the few remaining opponents of president putin who were not imprisoned or lived in exile. now this last prominent opposition politician should obviously get silence for a long period of time. all right, that is uri rochette, her reporting for us in read that. thank you very and let's have a look now at some of the other stories making years around the world. at these 4 people have been killed and at least 20 others injured in a shooting in the us state of alabama. authority say the violence occurred in the small town of danville during a teenager's birthday party. g 7 foreign ministers are meeting for a 2nd day in central japan talks at the 3 day summit are expected to focus on the
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war in ukraine and china's growing pressure. anti one, the meeting comes just days off to france as president emanuel cron said europe should stay out of the tensions over the island. emergency crews in the spanish region of catalonia are battling a wildfire which jumps the border from southwestern france. although he say the blaze is under control, but not yet extinguished. much of the region is still in the grip of that trial that fill devastating forest fires. last summer. a court in hong kong has sentence pro democracy act of his justs were 123 months in prison. he was found guilty of reaching a ban on releasing personal information about a police officer during anti government demonstrations in 2019 the 26 year old is already in jail. after being convicted of multiple charges, amid a crackdown on opposition and a breakaway group of columbia's disbanded falk guerrilla movement said,
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it is ready to hold peace folks. the e. m. c is one or 2 factions off before which rejected the landmark. these agreement in 2016 prison, gustavo petros government, has not officially announced any talks football now and in the seasons. bundis league fryeburg have been one of the quiet success stories, but their form has suff. it lately christian strikes, men needed a when in bremond to get their champions league bid back on track, and they had to do with the hard way. after the host struck, 1st brim and fans were hopeful, their team would finally give them something to cheer about. after 5 winless games in a row, and the task was big, a win for fryeburg would see the visitors get within one point of the champions league spots. after an uneventful 1st half,
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the host didn't waste any time in this 2nd. for i books, defense was seemingly still in the changing rooms. no, not a bit and cold said maximilian philip, an easy task of to 46 minutes. 20 minutes later fryeburg demonstrated how simple football can be. 3 touches from the own box into the bag of freeman's. net rule on sol ivoly to home to school fry books 1000th bundis league ago. just 4 minutes after the equalizer lucas, who las pinpoint had her about the visitors in france. a moment of genius from the german leaving you sheep of lanka, no chance in the bream and go to one for fryeburg truth to be the font old school and brandon's windlass. drake extends to 6 games. fryeburg good christians, try steam secure, an important 3 points in the fight for the champions league spots.
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how unknown villain fail to continue their strong home form as they were held to a one or drop by lowly fo hm. union took the leads on the brink of half time through a beautifully struck free kick fruition international. joseph john, which curled the ball perfectly paused the keeper, but that lead wasn't enough. as bolton knitted a 2nd half penalty to take an important point in the relocation vessel. when yawned, remained bird in the table with 6 games left to play. and by a live person have been the leagues informed team they traveled to. val spoke, looking for 6 straight win as they mount their own champions, league charge. but sada, as most effects of shot against the crossbow, was as close as they came to a window. the game finished golden leaving level cousin, 7 points or 4 plays,
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and both coaches looking a little frustrated. and today we in the show with a wildlife and count of which came just a little too close to comfort david open. i'mma was relaxing as his home reading a book when an uninvited guest walked in. it's hard to sell who was more surprised, the bear or the reader, but happy they both emerged unscathed, from the chance face to face in the us state of north carolina. and here is a reminder off the top story we are following for you at this hour. the army in sudan appears to be stepping up its attacks on rivals, paramilitaries witnesses, se, se rights have pounded bases used by the rapid support forces. at least 97 people have been killed and 100 small booted in 2 days of fierce fighting and
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civilians living in ukraine's frontline towns faced the difficult decision to leave their homes or state. but in the east of the countries, special police teams go door to door, trying to persuade people to evacuate up. next bold stories looks at how russian schools are teaching children. the invasion of the print is justified. the more headlines you can always get to our website, that's d, w dot com. and don't forget to follow us on social media. on our channels at d, w dot com, we're on twitter on instagram. i'll see you at the top of the next hour. there for training and about ah, with
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you decide what really matters to you? shift next to on d w buddha in africa. my name is enough below the bill. my chinese name is other. enoch grew up in a buddhist orphanage in malawi, neal denied, and i was so afraid when i arrived, and we'll feed up man, because i'd heard rumors that the chinese eat a yak, torn between the teachings of the far east and his native african culture. in 45 minutes on t w. o, and this is to float, did you do the food? i think to channel fantastic. ah,
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she survived outfits. thanks to music. he was the nazis favorite conductor, is morally degenerate to musicians under the swastika, a documentary about the sounds of power, inspiring story about survival of the home and go get the tennis. i was the only one. what lies english music in nazi germany, watch now on youtube, d. w documentary. ah, a kite that transforms wind into energy, a vacuum cleaner, that pull c o 2 out of the air and jones that plan, treat digital innovations that combat climate change. our topic today on shift ah, she needed to limit global warming to a maximum.
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