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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  June 14, 2023 9:00am-9:31am CEST

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the the, this is dw news life from bell in donald trump, pleads not guilty to historic criminal charges for you as president tell support his he had every right to possess the classified documents he's being charged with me sadly, and promises to find the prosecution. civilian buildings under attack,
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again, they do frank, this time in odessa, 3 people die at least a dozen, reject the finding. a new grain is one fact that fueling the number of refugees, according to the when we look at why most people that have being displaced worldwide plus europe for pace to vote on the world's best sweeping rules on artificial intelligence. is it possible or desirable to cover the power of the i've been visible and woke up for you as president donald trump is pleaded not guilty in a criminal case that could define his attempt to seek re election in the miami court. on tuesday, we're coming the 1st full of a leader to be prosecuted by the federal government. the charges relate to miss having of classified documents,
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which trump and says she has the right to possess. his trial could run into the 2024 presidential election. the dates that you need the no other form i o 7 us president just had to make donald trump remaining hidden behind blacked out windows . as his medicaid made its way to the miami courthouse, the already the hundreds of trump funds waiting for a glimpse of the former president the the atmosphere at times like a festival in the high stakes legal case of the inner st with a just a wish and again, a candidate running for an office. we've come to show all the volatility tomba sees the are, but the price then, on the term where you go, totally unison. we're here to support the president trump,
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the real president. inside the court room with cameras with bands, the former president pleaded not guilty to dozens of federal criminal charges, including that he broke the espionage act by a legally stashing sensitive defense documents applied to officials who tried to recover the are you ready? are you ready? for everyone, but if he's feeling the pressure there was little sign 77 that they celebrations kicked off a day early in a cuban restaurant. the. this late is control this, the doing little to dump in from supports to become the republican presidential candidates in 2020, full and late to the fundraising events such as new jersey go cross. trump, again insisted that he's done nothing wrong under the presidential
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records act, which is civil, not criminal, as i had every right to have these documents, whatever documents the president decides to take with him, he has the right to do so. it's an absolute right. this is the law, and that is something that people have now seen and it couldn't be more clear, they go to drop this case and mediately it could now be a year or longer. before trump trial actually begins plenty of time to ramp up his campaign to retake the white house. always hold on is a professor of political science at bod college in bo. then i asked him about his takeaways from trump slight his speech. i think nothing very surprising of what he said was to be expected after what reset them the last 2 years. we have a 47 last years really. so basically portraying this as a political,
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which i'm very clearly addressing by them directly as the instigator of what he calls these fabricated and stake allegations. and so yeah, this is nothing surprising. i think what's important though is that it shows the dilemma that the political system of the west is in which is that from the white this looks like a website for like a, a, a system trying to persecute a former president from the left. it looks very much like the institutional balances and because it possible checks or blunt. and so i think there's a major domestic crisis that the system has on a test table. what if a either side believes, how strong would you say is the case against trump? i mean, it's one case among 4 cases that are currently being discussed, 2 of which started out because of the money that was paid to the store mcdaniels a while ago. and there's 2 other potential cases that are coming up to the,
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about the interference of the georgia election with the, the, the attack on the capital. and it looks like this is, i guess there's a combination of these cases. and that's the 2nd, the least compelling case i would suppose in terms of the charges. obviously there is historical context that this has never happened before. but i think trump is very much using this politically and it looks like he's playing for time. this will probably not be decided before the election and whatever happens once he might be the president, again, roommates to be seen. and he seems to be using this to uh, to his benefit. i mean, is he managing to use it to fire off that boat a base of his and get even more people on board this it looks like it doesn't harm him because his polls have been very constant over time. have even increased at
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ports and he's, he's using this job, we have a very polarized system that is being talked about again and again. and it's obviously showed that the perception of off politics is just pulled right as well. and so yes, he seems to be able to, to use this run percentage of with his main competitor releasing the tape primaries has back to me on this point. so it looks like it's rather playing into his cards before. so i want to ask you about one thing, his defense team, some key players have left in recent weeks. that's right, that's what of some have decided to, to leave his team. she's been scrambling to find a new lawyers, a new defense strategy. it seems like obviously some of the points are very serious the obstruction of justice. but when we think back up the to impeachment trials in
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the system like this, where you have a strict conversations between the 2 major parties at a position also that is reflected in these other institutions. it's very difficult to come to some common terms of what is just and what is right. and it's very difficult to maintain the democracy under the circumstances. and just one last thing, what if the case drags on past next use elections? how could that affects uh, both the election in this case? i think that's exactly what's going to happen. no, there's a little of attention for the next 2 weeks or so. then probably we'll get started talking about these other cases that are still to come. he will, every time that this will pop up again in a be just this course, he will use it for his own to mobilize his own base probably of. well, i'm not going to make any predictions, but to do that because we,
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what we want to do that i the thank you very much for being on the show and great to get your analysis as always bars full on thanks a lot. ukraine says russia has attacked civilian buildings in the southern port city of odessa, killing at least 3 people and wounding bulls and a dozen others. you can't, emergency services released photos of the blaze. they say was caused by a russian nissan of attack. a ukrainian military combat, as is rushing, besides, launch from the ship and the black sea damaged a business center of shops and a residential building in the city center. ukraine said it shut down 2 of the 4 me sounds at talking at the desk. for the latest from ukraine over to l. correspondence on your phone to tell us more about these attacks on odessa, a little bit been the that southern port city of odessa seems to have been targeted overnight that we read the notes ahead of that. of course, i know we hearing off of bio um, as you said, a party single fire,
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things are broken out. your business center, all sorts of weird halls off of a retail trade. the thing a residential complex. there's a lot of shops in the sense that happened a targeted um the forty's a 3 people because they seemed to be employees off that warehouse at these 13 people injured and, and talk to you saying the rescue operation is still going on. they feel that people may still be trapped under rubble at, at some of the sites. and this really seems to be part of, you know, russia is kind of long term campaign to over. well, ukraine's a defense isn't good or you kind of attack it cities this, this attack and do this a comes just to be off to me, to attack in the central city of k to be the there the deck told has risen of 40. so, you know, 12 people are now going to died or the put the injured that attack, you know, a hit, a warehouse and the fight story, residential building. the city, of course, is the hometown of presidents lensky. and it's set to hold a day of morning today. we saw
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a big rescue operation day yesterday with the governor of the regency last degree. less people who had been to sleep in their beds crap, under the rubber. and of course, this latest attack in that central city of tv is just the latest tragedy to, to hit the city. it has also been massively impacted by the destruction of the whole go down. last week. the city is about 100 miles from the front lines in the east, but earlier this week we saw a forty's, the urging residents to really kind of cut down the water consumption because they was saying, you know, water supplies were running low. the whole saddam of school supplies of drinking water to most of the new equipment. this is something we're seeing really playing out along many places now in the salt with a 20 so you can get a water for full irrigation as well as drinking is now turning out to be a big problem. and of course, the mobile aspect of this is the situation and in the russian occupied eastern areas, we don't have a clear picture of what's happening there. but those areas are located on much lower innovation. so we understand that many of those terms and conditions have
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been affected by extensive flooding. the united nations has now said that, you know, moscow has still failed to give, provide security guarantees of for it's 8. what because of so they are unable to get into those areas. the w correspondence on your findings, in case you can, continues to say it's making progress with it's kind of offensive to retake territory captured by the russians. moscow projects the claims alleging that keeps forces of self and catastrophic losses. gooden fire i made claims of victory as ukraine's counter offensive gets under way. all that one the one the problem, kyle: we representatives of the 100 and 37th battalion of marine infantry and the 35th brigade of the marine infantry which is that the cause have liberated the village of montgomery. it's got embedded in the region from russian troops to they won't be able to retake this village. they are fine reading as you can hear with artillery
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motors and tags. we will hold on, laurie to crane. key saves it's counter offensive, has read captured villages image on net skins, upper region regions. but the russian defense ministry released these pitches claiming that they had repelled counter offensive attacks by ukrainian false. as president putin described opposition law says as close to catastrophic here the shelves, if you all the bumps of the control rumbles on the city was one's home to 12000 people for the few who remain for her little information is guess and it loose with this means that admit that we don't have electricity, your internet is you. you came here and told us that the counter offensive had already begun to the fact that we are here walking around and wondering if it
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started. this doesn't really seem right to continue the new teaching of ukraine save it has liberated as many as 7 villages on its front lines. 3 of them was the 3 days ago. the russian forces were still here. so we changed them out from the scrooge. mia. with laurie to crane, this village was under russian occupation for one and a half years or more things or ukrainian lands. give them little things that may be optimism over the pots of gains. but beneath the blue and yellow of ukraine, slog by the bodies of those killed in the fight. the united nations refugee agency says the number of displaced people worldwide hit a new bank or the last year the u. n. h. the honest as a 110000000 people were forced from their hearts ross is born. ukraine is the main
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reason for the rise of our 11000000 ukraine against flight defined last year. it's more than a quarter of the population. also, there are more african refugees living in the funding source and the number of venezuelans crossing into colombia and peru as being revised upwards christmas is the senior spokesman in germany for the united nations high commissioner for refugees. what's the most significant part of this report? us, what is the tense time that we have the rise and the numbers and as you have mentioned, it's not 110000000. so this is 113 percent, all of human kind that is the uprooted. and um, make no mistake, we're talking not about about migrants, people who are looking for it, but a live over stopping is something we're talking about people who are really forced out of their homes by violence by 4. and this is,
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it is off to actually for, for you. and so what is the un refugee agency calling all governments to do what we need this now support for the, for the refugee and for, for it. right. and she some funding to the space person's seventy's, 76 percent off the, the refugee living in states and countries was low and medium income. so there is a rich parts of the world. and also taking the ash, at least the support of the host companies. on the other hand, of course, with the political solutions, because most of the refugees just from 3 countries from ukraine, from syria and from of gone this time and need piece. we need to know if at all we need to safe environment for these people. so that they can, we try and how do you get richer countries to take on more refugees or a fair share while to the end of the year,
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we will have the goal directly to you for them. and i think that would be a good stage again to me to find solutions. on the other hand, we have good examples. let's take germany, for example, germany use the 4th because of the country. and at the same time is also the 2nd because don't know the next she are. but of course there are many big and rich countries who are probably could do more. how do you convince governments to be multi to i'm talking, i'm showing them what uh, what is possible um what, what could be done? i'm showing the world that it's in the interest of that. um ready cheese can go home and cheese find a solution and also show them probably positive examples. yes. 110000000 people are displays. on the other hand, more than 6000000 people could go home last year, especially in terms of the, the space to person. so this whole, the awesome sions,
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but we all have to work on more and better solutions. it's also what debate about the bureaucracy, isn't it? i mean, processing these refugees, uh, getting them homes, getting them, uh, jobs as well and uh, integrate them into into workforce is to see that the can also be a benefit. this is indeed the case and of course we're, we're asking for a flexible solutions. on the other hand, of course, the states have the, the right and the interest to, to make sure that everything is in that interest. and, and so everything is going mall is smooth, but yes indeed. sometimes we think that some kind of is the good is the, by the way, not only for the benefits of the refugees also from the benefits of the states, for example. because as um, as soon as it ready, she could find work integrate itself. it's also
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a big class for the society. exactly. it's being given that opportunity that's important. chris, most of the united nations refugee agency, thanks very much for being on dw some other news making headlines now. at least 2 soldiers have been killed in the shooting as a japanese army base. police say an 18 year old recruit, open fire and other soldiers during a training exercise at a firing range. the suspect is being arrested. authorities say they're looking into his boat at or around the president. abraham by you see, has begun to read diplomatic tour of latin america and venezuela. he signed cooperation agreements with me, the nicholas venturo declaring that both countries have common interests and database. by using schedule also includes visits to decal, ragwall and cuba. the south american country of ecuador is suffering from the biggest surgeon crime in recent history. last year, the motor rate almost doubled with mold in florida,
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half 1000 homeless sites. drug games are increasingly using port cities to ship cocaine, to bridge conference residents of bearing the brunt of the vines. this is linda, and this is what's left of value does house. it was blowing up last year in a bombing attack during a gang dispute. part of the battle for control of why i q 5 people were killed on the spot. alinda now lives at a friend's house. she lost an eye and some of her hearing. she's still struggling to regain her mental health. she lives in fear. and you can see that it go to the i don't even want to remember anymore. well, i think that those days were quite sad for me of the the truth is that i didn't expect what happened to me like that. i didn't expect it. the only way going to have you, but i think god that i'm alive, and i'm fighting with my family to support me there to be on the host. let me find
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me. look in the except for you. newspapers are full of headlines about drug gangs, brutality. ecuador recorded a record, 4600 homicides in 2022, making it now one of the most violent countries in latin america. cocaine from neighboring columbia heads north through the port city of why i q impoverished neighborhoods like this one are home to gang fighting for control of the drug trade . poverty fuels the violence here. the government has declared a limited state of emergency bringing the military onto the streets. soldiers are even stationed in front of schools or some gangs recruit children. really not uh, because the human rights activist. he does not believe that militarization is the solution. instead he says, social measures to reduce poverty,
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but also reduce crime lab. your linset gotta say that yes, prison violence is transferred onto the communities executive especially here and why keith had. this is a place where the state had already withdrawn. daniel context during the pandemic. yeah, a lot and then, and these communities already had precarious conditions, a big on one thing that i'm doing now. and they weren't in band and you got into the hands of criminal organizations, a manual, the a or the answering equity. mean alice, nowadays crime scenes like this one have become a common sight in via kid. you're watching dw use still to come high flyers. the swans addicted to pumping seems slovakia and the conservation is forcing them to go cold turkey. the 1st empowerment is set to focus on starting told to approve the world's 1st rules on artificial intelligence. like chat, g, p, t the
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a is to prevent hum. while encouraging innovation, most of labels are essential. but there's disagreement on how strict they should be, as whenever computers do jobs. the previously required human intelligence, we speak of artificial intelligence, i crops up and many phones, from the algorithms that decide what we see on social media to programs we use to generate text or images or software that helps doctors to spot cancer and x rays. but it can also be used to supercharge this information online, or enables surveillance on an unprecedented level. so many countries are looking to regulate artificial intelligence. europe is leading the way. there are fundamentally 2 sides to the debate. many i developed as a concerned about having too much regulation. we need to make sure that we don't override your rates right now, because that will hinder innovation as awesome as water that helps found the german,
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hey i association, which represents some 400 companies, is never good about the same algorithm can be used to boost type of offer as well as do cancer detection. so it's all about what does the use case the eyes use for and who is using a lot of the innovation comes from small startups. and so the more regulation we put, the less the innovation of and see from the small companies. but while the opportunities of a i a vast. so with the risks, and that's the other side of the debate. digital rights advocates want to top rules to mitigate the risks, the artificial intelligence, machine learning, and all these. let's a complex complex algorithms and data sets. are jeff placate the biases? that's the humans have a systems used in recruitment, for example, have been shown to be biased against women. facial recognition technology has been proven to be less accurate for people of color with people being arrested for
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crimes. they never committed, and algorithms used to by public authorities have wrongly accused thousands of families of welfare fraud. so, you know, make, is a seeking to balance both sides of the argument. their answer regulate a i systems according to their level of risk when the risk. so limited, like when a high is used to fill the emails for spam, only a few rules apply, but for potentially life changing applications like deciding which students qualify for higher education, the rules will be strict to some applications will be benz completely. the aim is to reap the benefits of a i while limiting its risks. a drugs crisis doesn't typically involve swans getting high. but that's the situation in slovakia, $200.00 sponsor being grazing on a poppy field months now. it's like many of them addicted. others have died. it's also cause tens of thousands of years of losses for us to lock in finance and
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intervention. to rescue these swans from themselves after the birds go to taste for puppies. a funny, so the, the, the movie, they are designed to read. this one's lives, muscle mass, and then they just crawl on the ground. hundreds of swans 1st arrived in february when heavy rain formed a lake in the field. they've since returned over and over again droned the addictive puppies. some of the swans became so high, they couldn't fly or even walk swans or protected species in slovakia and it took full months to gain permission to remove the ball. but we assume they would just fly away, but they didn't like you to rear case in slovakia, so we didn't have any experience as you hopefully will be smarter in the future. conservationists, i've taken the swans to
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a channel far away from the poppy field where they going cold turkey, as they so brought out a reminder of our top story for its former us president donald trump. hesitate of not guilty to historic criminal charges in a federal court. the leg told simple has he had every right to possess the classified documents he's being charged with was handling a leg fee, legal bank over is expected to follow. that brings you up to date on all the world news on the dates as well. and i'll have even more for you to fix down by the
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can climate change be hacked? advocates of new technologies claims science can stop global warming, the wheels smart ideas,
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save the planets. what's the real story behind c o? 2 capture high tech fixes for the climate or on d w. you go in the sand, a crucial resource for the construction industry, but also for the environment. for years and illegal sand mafia fried on the moon or river endangering del these main source of drinking water. is there a sustainable alternative for this precious resource? in 60 minutes on d. w. the guardians of the truth hesitates,
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almost every price of the mutual in the country like turkey taking all the powers that be they risk every thing dar needs active as journalists and politicians living in exile the way to which they move for their mission. what drives them? people need to know what is happening that our series guardians of truth watch. now on youtube dw documentary, the giant's c o 2 vacuum cleaners nearly cooled us in the fields. algae funds in africa. hi tech efforts to stop global warming and say no, i'm 10 years from now is to.

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