tv DW News Deutsche Welle July 1, 2023 3:00pm-3:16pm CEST
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the about visions and the people behind the verb and catastrophe. climate change starts july 13th on dw the . this is dw news lie from berlin. over 13 hundreds people arrested in a false knife of rioting in front. the unrest continues off to the fatal shooting of a teenage of police deployed $45000.00 officers to stem the protests taking place across the country. also coming up,
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the netherlands comes to terms with its colonial pos. does the dodge king apologizes for his country's role in the slave trade? we go to, i'm saddam to hear what people make of the country's troubles history. the . i'm going to jones good to have you with us. violent protests and friends continued for a full snyde following the police killing of a 17 year old night, and a young man of north african heritage. police arrested more than 1500 people nationwide during another night of disturbances as active as say, the government isn't doing enough to address long simmering issues of racially motivated police brutality. meanwhile, public officials, underworld comp, football style coal for dialogue and an end to violence to it was another night of
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chaos across the french cities. as people vented their anger. many were out to protest peacefully, but others set fire to vehicles in dumpsters and looted shops. tens of thousands of police were deployed in an effort to limit the damage. in non to the suburb of paris were a teenager now and was killed. the streets were lit by flames. earlier in the day, the cities may are asked writers to consider the communities they were hurting you for continuing to adult away, we must continue to support this family sickness. mother. cuba will be burying her child on saturday. the, if you don't mind don't, and at the same time vista, we have to express the sadness that these are the in desolation of hosting felt by the residents. you said in the face of the violence and damage to a,
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they're going to assume. frances interior minister said the violence was getting less intense, with fewer fires and attacks on police stations. but over a 1000, people were arrested overnight. the highest number so far, their average age, 17 years old. the same is now french football star, killing them by pay himself a product of a parisian suburb. much like known to join the course of voices calling for call. many of us come from poor neighborhoods and we shed these feelings of pain and of sadness plus on top of this suffering. there is also now a process of self destruction unraveling the time for abundance was cease to give way to thoughts of mourning dialogue and reconstruction. warners have left flowers and messages for niles at the place where he was killed. a place of sad stillness, amid the unrest and dw correspondence on your phone,
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the car is covering the story in non tear for us. here's what she told us about the latest developments as well. monica, i'm here at the milson monday. la square in on this is the place where that 17 year old to you tonight was skin this week. there is a mixture, some water in the right behind me with flowers and messages. there is a big, clean up operation on the way up to date in non pare the streets. so some of the streets aligned with, you know, kind of bundled calls and buses. but i have to say the, the, the mood yourdomain stains, we will earlier filming in, in the neighborhood of pablo picasso. which is where that teacher lived with his mother. and we would actually approach by a group of you to essentially asked us to, to move on and really get out there. otherwise, a cabinet would be broken. so there is a lot of hostility towards the price. it's not easy being visible. joining this and some of the neighborhood feel, you know, with a capital or notebook. however,
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we did manage to speak to some residents, uh, some of them who have lived in on pads for nearly all the life. and we can listen to some of what they have to say from i suppose, because it is, i think it was very violent with the police did was very, very violent. and it is unacceptable. that's because he was 17, they shot him in the face of it, so there's no excuse no way to validate what the police did. a bunch of bull valley deluxe. he left it. but as you did with the i am disgusted of the young man who was killed. it's unbelievable. i knew him the way he was killed if it's sad because he was not the 1st and he will not be the last is gets it. but on, yes, if i down you looked up, i'll say the french government is to blame. they've created the situation of poverty and deprivation for decades. do i belong to a generation that grew up that way? and i know poverty and misery or what and it seems we can't get rid of it. do diesel of the how's the hard they want to go lots of and go there. there is
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a real feeling of, of, uh, you know, and good police tactics and what people in these working plots, neighborhoods say, is real police uh, you know, brutality and racial profiling. these a lottery will control us neighborhoods, west 2nd and 3rd generation of immigrants of north african descent lives. and of course the town of dante today is holding a funeral. for the teenage of all the slain teenager, we're joining off of the large crowd of friends and family who have made their way to the funeral home. there would be a pre, a service after that after mosque followed by a burial on police here on stand by because of course of concerns that the violence could break out. now that outrage that you, uh, also they're just quote, a video camera they're speaking to people is not limited to don't tell all the great to paris region. we have a witness rides across from how does all that impact everyday life? so that's correct. one to govern. the violence is really spilled out beyond month. they,
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across cities in phones. and we've already seen the southern cities, you know, cancelling major festivals. for example, the cities southern city, a must see which saw some of the worst violence has cancelled its flight 3 that was meant to be held. today, we've seen nobody to consult in viruses. well being cancelled. we have of course the to the phone switch began to be emailed on screen and which is expected to make its way to fonts. on monday it remains uncertain whether that can go on. we haven't heard a definitively from officials, but there also can be concerns about how that to work and can't be carried out to you on the phone safely. you might just when you found the card dw correspondent in powers for us, sonya, thank you so much for that and telling us already. so i've just announced that president the amount of that amount caused postponing sundays planned states visits to germany due to the unrest in france. but the king villain alexander has apologize to his country's role in slavery. the netherlands has commemorating the anniversary of the countries abolition of slavery. speculation had been growing.
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the king would offer an apology on behalf of the royal house. last year, the prime minister macro to apologized for the country's involvement and the slave trade on slavery, but stopped short of offering compensation to defend himself in slave to people. oh, this is a pos, sofa. why direction then with colonial histories in the west that have been sped in recent years by the black lives matter movement. dw, correspond to interest in one's law, has more to have a conversation about it's a beautiful summer day in amsterdam and jennifer tush is taking us on a tool to see symbols of dutch colonial history in the city. the gable still shows a man named coordinator he has thrown. he wasn't admiral as the dutch fleets. and what's more significant is this black servant that's actually in the gables. still, he is holding the helmet of drum. we know he was a real person even though we don't know his name. this isn't a replica of an 18 century cargo ship. this was
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a cargo ship of goods. but the same type of ship could be converted to caring people as a cargo 700 people could be transporting the ship. the size of the century. such merchants both and shipped about 600000 and slaves. people from africa during the transatlantic slave trade, they would take them to caribbean colonies like serena, hans christian post when i'm still has traced his family, treat back to his slave, own us in the colony to the periods. and when you read the letters and the history of your own family, the central figure will say on the on to, to plantations. and together he had, i think, about $200.00 to $50.00 slaves that was in the 19th century. but the story is part of an era that began in the 17th century when the netherlands was a global power, and likely the richest country in the world at the time. the dutch half as far as
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the referred to this period as the golden age. now the use of this term is being debated, because it's description doesn't address the violence and brutality and slaves people in did induct colonies. there are different sort, it's not golden age. we are looking back to and is this in the periods. we said the best of times in the verse of the times, best most die for so few people and the verse of times for many people. adding this context to dutch history is also the objective of a new permanent exhibition in the trucking museum in amsterdam. fix the reason is called our colonial inheritance. we think that you cannot really understand during the day society, if you don't understand colonialism and how those structures worked. we believe that colonialism shaped the world that we live in today. and that's true for people
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here. many of the residents in this looking cause to borrow of amsterdam have roots in full in the colonies. generations later, in a policy still shapes their lives. we helped me things here and answer them se specifically talking about uh, what do we need when we talk about moving forward? and even if we receive a policy from the king, what does it mean? what people told us that the policy from the king will be a 1st step and what people really need is their children to have a professional education. there's children to get a job. the doctor with one of the last few nations to abolish slavery. and the king's apology comes later than that of other former colonial powers. the question is, what comes next? now, what indeed? our correspondent lucy, i show to isn't, i'm saddam, where she followed the king speech. lucio, what did you make of what the king had to say?
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to the 1st of all that estate bought, the king actually said, so he was standing here in front of all to a relatively big crowd of people that came you to listen to him. and he said, i sent to your ask your king as representative of the state, and i do apologize today myself. he said that you felt personally involved. and to understand this, you might have to, to look at the role that the dodge chrome was playing in the, in the slavery and the safe trade. there has been reports of researches that said that nowadays they would have earned the comparable to for the roughly of 550000000 years. so um, just to understand what we heard there, um and then his apology was met by a lot of applause and right, i mean, he's not the 1st to a, the 1st a leader in the west. if you want. uh who,
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who addresses this this issue and who apologizes for it? why is the netherlands confronting it's colonial path? now? are you today marks a 150 years of abolishment of slavery and to understand and therefore this is also the occasion for the speech and um, people who have been telling me that in the last couple of years there was an awareness, race of dodge colonial history but also what happened off to call in and there's and, and um, people are talking more about it. and i think you can really say adults, it comes um, it comes because of the black lives matter movements. and then that has been a raise of awareness and a lot of european countries also in the netherlands. and now people are telling me, here it is the beginning. and people really start to, to think about it more about what happens, learners in schools and do this or any, the beginning of a long process of feeling. now you said, let's see other people there who attended this event who are uploading. but what
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about the broad, the, a society there? how do the dots in general feel about the way the officials there are dealing with the issue here? i've been asking people, if i bought the government to do you and everyone, you said they should do more. and there is, of course, it is cash and that is lying on the this, which is the question of reparations. a lot of people here are saying that there should be a reparations for what has happened because of the routes of, of the netherlands nowadays, which also goes back to these events. but then there are the people saying, well, who do you give the money to you? it would be very complicated sir. as i have said, this is already the beginning of the process. this is what everyone has been saying . yeah. also that, that's king has been saying that he would invite everyone to create a world where they lived together without discrimination. and that this is that the healing can start. right?
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dw correspondent, uh, loosely, i shopped into a reporting for us from am. so them, thank you so much. thank you. and he has a reminder now of the top story of this, our, the fonts deployed 45000 police to contain the unrest has a spread across the country. full snyder provides so hundreds of people arrested in continued protests against the police, shooting off a teenager early this week. coming up next, we have dop film exploring the dock side of the food business. i'm going to jones for me and the team. thanks for watching the interest the global economy, our portfolio dw business be here's a closer look at the project.
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