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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  June 20, 2023 9:00am-9:31am CEST

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the, the, this is the, the news coming to live from berlin. risk years. rather, sorry. time is running out for 5 people give a summary. deep in the north atlantic rescue crews are searching for the submersible use to take tourists to tie comics rec, also coming up secondary talks for china is premier in berlin to visit names to
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reset the ties between the 2 global trading 71. plus as a reminder of last week shipwreck reunited with his brother. now the u. n. is calling for an investigation into greece is handling of the disaster. and sciences raised the alarm for marine life as ocean water temperatures break, a new record to the hello. i'm terry martin. good to have you with us. i'll research a search for other search and rescue operation is underway in the ocean, atlantic ocean for a small submarine that went missing while taking torres to the wreckage of the titanic. its fear the vessel could be trapped at a depth of nearly 4 kilometers rescuers believe it has enough oxygen to keep its
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pilot and 4 passenger will alive for 3 more days. a race against time to find a stop like this one. and the people on it, it lost contact during a dive to the side of the titanic, wreckage off the coast of canada. it is a remote area, and it is a challenge to conduct a search in that remote area. but we are deploying all available assets to make sure that we can locate the craft and rescue the people on board ocean gate. the company responsible for the expedition takes people to the titanic for prizes, starting at $250000.00. once at the site, passengers climbing to a stop and to send to the bottom of the ocean. the british passengers ship famously
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sank in 1912 on its maiden voyage. after striking an iceberg, killing more than $1500.00 passengers. its wreckage has been extensively explored since it was discovered in the mid eighties. these expeditions to the titanic direct side generally include archaeologist and marine biologist. but the company also brings people who pay to travel along british billionaire. hey, miss harding is believed to be among the missing passengers. the deep submersible diving is very dangerous, but it is uh, its height check, you know, any so you chair goes by, the equipment gets better, that technology gets better and so on. so i'm very hopeful a very positive, i mean, i wasn't the solve for 12 hours. we have our own breathing system on board. and if that's maintaining properly, like changing your filter and your so you go to the scrubber,
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you can stay down there for, you know, quite a few hours. the u. s. coast guard estimates the craft has enough oxygen for 4 days . chinese delegation led by premier lee chung is in berlin for talks aimed at recycling relations. reset the relations between the 2 trading giants. germany economy minister hold with how back has met with jang sean g head of china is top economic regulator to kick off the day of discussions, climate change and economic issues top the agenda, but germany is expected to also raise more contentious issues such as china is closeness to russia and the countries alleged human rights abuses of the visit to berlin is premier lee jones and 1st and foreign trip since taking off if you know how, how you done, how smooth, whenever you. so in order to hone with us for more of that's bringing dw as chief international editor, richard walker has been following the story closely for us. richard, germany says it regards china is both a partner and a systemic rival,
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which seems slightly contradictory. what or towards the transfer all of sholtes as priorities going into these consultations? yeah, well, i think terry he, he wants to really kind of juggle this, this evening offices in a way that it doesn't seem like 2 contradictory. and i think essentially what he would like to do is do 2 things at the same time. on the one hand, demonstrate the gemini and china can work together on, on issues of a mutual importance and the jam inside to be unsafe. they, this is, they want you to really focus the consultations on the issue of climate change on, on ways that gemini and china can cooperate towards fighting climate change. that obviously self, evidently an important thing for both sides and also an important thing for the world. so wanting to shows that despite this sense of systemic rivalry between the 2 sides, that they read some things that diplomacy can meaningfully achieve. so that are on
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the one side, but, but at the same time. so it's in the government here also want to signal that it's not completely so the fact to the business as usual, the decades in the hof in which germany and china became incredibly close on the iron glove, macro soaks, is predisposes german sounds less so they will so want to signal that it's not just completely back to the old days, which i'm nice, a relationship with china was all about making money. and i think some of the signals were seeing that all the fact that there's no large mutual statement expect to talk to these tools of which had been a feature of 2 weeks in the past. so that's the line, the sholtes he's trying to work here. they've been calls richard for germany to decrease its reliance on china. the risking is the buzz word at the moment. how far is germany prepared to go in that direction? that's right. de risk ingles and diversification. these are the kind of buzzwords
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that arrived there at the moment. and suddenly everyone can agree that the diversifying supply change is a, is a good thing. risk sounds bad, right? so we want to reduce risk. the question is, what is the risk and what is another risk in that you can have a significant room for debate. so while the general government and all the west and governments and japan, for instance. so these kind of democratic allies around the world come together behind this idea of the risking. i think what we're going to see in the months ahead in the years ahead, in fact is different interpretations of what that really means coming out in the wash and our understanding of all i felt in particular. he has a pretty narrow view of the risking really focusing on wanting to avoid gem and businesses and jeremy as a whole. being too dependent on chinese sources of t will materials that are important for german industry. it's worth noting, of course, that berlin is the 1st stop on the chinese premier, his 1st poor and trip since taking office, not washington, not russell's. what's china hoping to get out of these discussions? richard? or?
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i think really, china is biggest priority in his relations with germany, but also europe more broadly, is to try to keep germany and europe as far apart from the united states as possible. china is essentially decided that this relate relationship with the united states is fundamentally broken. i think that's probably not going to change in the fundamental sense of to the positive signals we saw from tiny blinking us exist state a in a badging of the last couple of days. so china, once jeremy in europe, to be as far apart from the us as possible to try at least to, to avoid too strong a united blog in coordinating a relations against it. obviously, the jam inside though is, is aware that this is what the chinese ones. so they're trying to avoid being sucked into. what they might see is kind of chinese diplomatic gains, which you thank you very much. a chief international editor,
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richard walker. they're just catch you up on some other stories making headlines around the world today. funerals are being held in uganda for 42 people killed in a school massacre. police have arrested 20 people suspected of having links to a militia group blamed for the killings. some of the victims were burned to death, others were shot or hacked with machetes donors by the united nations conference of pledge, nearly $1500000000.00 to ease the humanitarian prices into done. some of the money will help neighboring countries post. refugees fleeing the fighting un says more funds are still needed. as more of the sedans population, the require a jail, russian opposition leader election. a bond, a has gone on trial and extreme is in charges. the could see him in prison for decades. the trial is taking place on a maximum security prison where the kremlin credit has already serving a 9 year sentence for alleged fraud. investigators now accused him of financing an
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extremist group. a 9 man had pleaded not guilty to people smuggling at a court in greece over last week's migrants, ship disaster, at least 81 people are known to a drown after the boat capsized, as many as 500 are still missing. it's here in a small greek town of mounted castle where the survivors of last week ship wreck being held in a migrant come on where relatives of the missing coming hope of finding the loved ones. then last night i don't have any option. i don't want to come and i want to come here by dr sir, why was but today we are ready to go. i don't know. he's a lie or 22 year old
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a t outside. he'd survived in holland but he's on the co show here on a relative phone. he's one of the 100 still missing that it's more of the setting that i'm going to now and i'm looking for an audit. and his name is abdul. as side of the month, i called on all the tardies to help me find him for free. and now the european bold and coast cod agency released these pictures showing the vessel hours before we capsized. greek officials are insisting those on board were refusing help by the united nations, as called for an investigation into how authority is handled. the disaster among the stories of despair. a red moment of joy. assuming an teenager who supplied the shipwreck,
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these were united with his elder brother in an emotional embrace. well, hundreds of people are still missing following the tragedy, and many of them are believed to be from pakistan. the families there are in limbo as they are waiting anxiously for any news about their loved ones. as it started getting tragedy. hundreds of migrants, joan in the gap sized boat, i believe, to be from blackest on. the new was passed and shock. fee of students here in buckets on administer gush me according to local media. and he's the $100.00 of the microphone on board for from this area. disaster has left families here in limbo. some still cling to the belief that the young men from the village we'd be found a life on the got the old guess. when children are not found to die,
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you can understand what a parent goes through. what is happening to us. we have no information was they were alive or did we pray to allow let us see them. good. yes. it'd be in. i'm in the to on most a 100. let me just a we in the down to for me under district died. government officer is losing hope that his 25 year old son may be a nice local travel agent. took $7600.00 from him to transport his done to your, to with the promise of finding way being work. instead, his son was stuck in libya for months before boarding the over crowded fishing boat over and on. and it'd be under a providence and they took him to some place, some aaa in libya. there is a neighbor, according to my son, many young men to being kept for 2 to 3 years for the way the head was a grain and in some cases for lifeline and i bought it around, there was no one there to look after them. we'll give them food into the number of robert and they didn't have money to get them back to pakistan or deposit. and when
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i heard this, i told my son to drop everything and come back, go totally on me. i called the agent and told him to send my son back, so i'm gonna call you but he did nothing for full months and it's already my, i'd very new off. i'm very new. i see that on their job. my name is out of the they cannot make political and climate crises is pushing thousands of young buckets on these to feed the country by legal or illegal means, even if it means risking their lives. on. for more on this, we're joined now by our reports are beneficial job. it's been a this is a horrific story. tell us more about how people in pakistan are responding to it. i tell you this is this over whelming sense of grief in the country. bach kasanya reported this estimate that around 300 families have been affected yesterday. it was an officer deal morning in the country of pockets and has also formed the committee to investigate the incident block if any media was at the homes of these families talking to them. and then there have been editorial stricken that how such
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a large number could be lowered by human, drastic goes to take such a dangerous journey for data is definitely a lot of sadness, but also on good and pressure on the government. talk to us more about that question, why it helps understand, at least to some degree, why young pakistan is decide to undertake such a dangerous and uncertain journey. bach hassan has been going to multiple crises for a very long time, but different has been hit by a wonder if it's the worst economic crisis. and i think this tragedy to me, reflects the frustration and the hopelessness that young people in focused on have . we've saw a be seen in the report that one of the 250 is missing is fun of government officials. so basically they have proof of where the heck they have food to eat. but it's the hopelessness, the desperation,
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and the frustration of what the future would be, and that is driving young people out of the country. people are selling the property, the jewelry of their family life, stop digging noise, stupid poses of yours to human drop because just forgot their children's gone to even though they know that district journey will be dangerous. or they are willing to take this risk. just the hope that there would be if in that, in europe they would have a better life, they'd be able to support and provide for their families. and i think that is the heart of the problem, the hopelessness that be seen the young people we heard and report the about the price that these people are paying to, to get themselves smuggled into europe like the other. no legal means for people who have that kind of money to get into germany. for example, it is extremely difficult to even means to apply for jobs. it's, it's a complicated problem. you need a high level of skill,
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high level of skill set to apply for these dropped his competition from the entire world. and therefore the people are picking these kind of fluids, illegal fluids being human, drastic goes to apply for these jobs. and even through legal means, if you see that box and have to wonder if it's worse, brain drain, and re send us people even are playing a trying to exhaust all the legal options. they have to leave the country. so it's real desperation is driving them. what are authorities in pakistan doing to stop the human trafficking? the results of this kind of tragic soapbox on the part is they, they have a distinct from suspects. they believe odd and work in human trafficking, but i don't think that is the solution to the problem. it's a very sophisticated network of human trafficking. traffic goes up, but i think in the region that our people don't only from both different but also from of gone has gone from india, from bangladesh that are being traffic. and often these look it up. but it does
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fill a group of migrants to other update this. so if that has to be a successful cracked or non human, just because it has to be done at the international level. but i think the focus on has to create opportunities and jobs for its people. so they are not motivated to leave the country because no matter what happens, how many human draft that goes out of this, that there will always be people who would try to capitalize on people the streets finish. thank you very much, reporter, finish job it. now scientists say that over the past 3 months, water temperatures in the north atlantic upset new records. it's not only created problems for marine life in the region, but is expected to affect air temperatures worldwide. this is the north atlantic where temperatures have searched for more than 3 months . along the coast of the u. s. europe and africa off the
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coast of texas, shoals of dead fish that died from lack of oxygen. i'm worried about the warming trend that we see the ocean right now because the, the warming is linked with less oxygen in the ocean, which means that the fisheries industries will, will be impacted by that. and so as well as in a more i, c, h ocean will lead to the things i, colorado bleaching, and this is very rewarding for the future. on june 11th, a temperature of 22.7 degrees celsius was recorded. that's half a degree above the previous high set in 2010. 1 factors dustin sand, global warming has weakened trade winds from the sahara desert in africa. so this, this from this already, it was it that on the surface of the ocean and this,
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this dust used to kind of cool you think because it's reflects solar radiation vector space. on top of that, el nino is now officially underway. el nino is a natural climate pattern that happens on average every 2 to 7 years. if fuels tropical cycle loans and boosts rainfall as well as flood risk. so video is happening while the world's oceans pretty much everywhere warmer than average. that's not normally something that we see those warm waters combined with el nino and and already hot atmosphere are expected to bring record temperatures to the world. this year to of more we've got dw climate reporter, louise osborne, with us, louise, we just heard that the world's oceans are warming up where they are experiencing record ocean temperatures. is this something we should really be worried about? well, it definitely has scientists concerns, at least the oceans,
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a very important not just in terms of supporting the marine life that we need for livelihood, some things like that. but also in terms of absorbing carbon dioxide, vast amounts of carbon dioxide that we're pumping into the atmosphere and also absorbing around 90 percent of the heat that is out there. so it's very important and keeping the climate level um, some scientist worried then that this booming that we're seeing on press them to the woman is making or, or making it look like climate change could be progressing faster then we had anticipated. but they also worried that it means that the capacity for the ocean to absorb this heat and the c o 2 could be coming to its limits. what sort of impact could all of this have been in practical terms? louise, what sort of effects can we expect to see? what we've already seen over the past couple of weeks, a dead fish washing up on the shores of texas for example. and this was the result
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of a lack of oxygen in the water, which happens as a result of rising a c ton purchase. so we could see this kind of threat to marine by diversity coming more often. this would in turn then affects livelihoods, people who are obviously relying on the ocean for their jobs, for the food. it would also have an impact on the weather and the boat to evaporate smooth quickly. and so that feeds to most like clones b, u, case metra, a mess office, for example, has said that that is likely to be more psych loans and, and maybe some more tropical storms as well. and it also me is higher sea levels. the water expands as it gets hotter and this could affect the coastal regions and also low line items obviously. so what do we do now? good. anything be done to restore the equilibrium in the ocean springs of
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temperatures down. i mean, we need to be doing what we need to be doing in terms of combustion, climate change and way of reducing our carbon dioxide emissions drastically and very quickly and not means stop paying from burning fossil fuels. this needs to be done as quickly as possible. it wouldn't have an immediate impact on the ocean temperatures, but it will help in the long run. the government full for need to look at protecting or putting in place protections for marine and coastal areas. so that of these areas and, and the space things to move resilience to any of this change that is happening. so action needs to be taken by governments and that needs to happen quickly. we thank you very much. clement reporter, louise osborne reporters without borders says a record number of journalists are currently behind bars. despite this journalist around the world continue to put themselves in danger in the name of media,
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freedom. one is just receive the freedom of speech award a t w's global media for him in boeing, honor for his role in combat in violence and corruption in salvador, and leading groundbreaking investigative journalism in latin america. in his acceptance speech for the dw freedom of speech award, journalist oscar martinez spoke about being targeted and mr. villans campaign. but it's a little bit on the link though. salvatore, where i come from and where i'll head back to after receiving this award enough as headed toward as a full fledged dictator sort of clean. it's no longer a democracy alone that my news platform, l fargo. one of the $22.00 individuals, including myself, were targeted when we were gathering evidence of the president's secret agreement with the criminal gains on media. freedom is increasingly under threat globally. this year, a record number of journalists are behind bars in every corner of the world.
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according to data released by reporters without borders, even in countries like germany, where in 2023 journalists were targeted by a record number of cases of violence and arrest. we have seen despicable cases of violence, unfortunately against reports has in our country, especially at demonstrations. go school, which pressures invasion if you crane has further aggravated attacks on media workers and is fueling a spike in fake news and missed information on social media. ladies and gentlemen, it cannot be which image is manipulated, and by whom, which information can i trust? as these questions are, rising more and more frequently date you've done isn't. thank est crackdowns and free expression are also putting journalists at risk last month 3, you going to passed a law for pressing the i'll do be due to community that also criminalizes reporting
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on eligibility to topics. so unfortunately, we only have this even even reporting on fox on your gun and media about the age of the community is, is it possible media? how does know a very careful mean hosting any discussion on that? because then they low may catch them at promoting of homosexuality with society increasingly polarized. leading during, let's see their role as more important than ever. you're watching dw news coming to live from berlin. just reminder of the top stories reporting for you this . our search and rescue operation is underway in the atlantic ocean for a miniature submarine went missing while taking taurus to explore the wreckage of the titanic sphere. the vessel could be trapped the depth of nearly 4 kilometers, less than 3 days worth of options. and a chinese delegation led by premier lee chung is in berlin for tom. same to re
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settling at re subject relations between the 2. we can only partners german economy, minutes of, of a topic has met with the head of china is 12. you can only regulator, chang shut up next chick. goal is taking a look back at the best highlights and the, the story lines or the season just gone. i'm terry martin for me and all of us here at the w and is thanks for watching the, the, the
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a pulse, the beginning of a story that takes us along for the ride. it's about the perspectives culture
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