tv DW News Deutsche Welle July 13, 2023 9:00pm-9:31pm CEST
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a see from rome. to also coming up tonight, jo buys and hills neither unit t after in summit with norfolk leaders with an eye on moscow. us president valves over whelming americans support for the alliance. and the united nation says a mass grave has been found, ensued a local people were forced to dispose of the bodies in a mass grave to 9. those killed a decent burial, but you incense at least 87 people were killed in a massacre in west star for blames a paramilitary good. the hybrid golf is good to have you with this parts of southern europe are baking under and extreme heath way. temperatures have stored above 40 degrees celsius in parts
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of italy, spain, greece, croatia, and turkey. in southern italy, millions are sweltering under the heat. the island of sardinia could reach 47 degrees celsius in the coming days. as about a 120 degrees fahrenheit. in degree capital athens, high temperatures could reach 45 degrees on saturday. threes are urging residents and tours to be cautious. extreme temperatures are likely to continue into the weekend. so i have to say that droughts, heat, 12 fires and other dangerous weather events are becoming more likely and severe across the world due to climate change floods in india, spain, and parts of the us wild fines had been raging in canada since april. more than 9000000 heck, to as far as to found more than 150000 people have had to flee their homes. at the same time, heat waves have been scorching europe,
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particularly spain have one of these umbrellas here. and if shop owners allow, you can stand in front of the entrance, there's some cold air coming out and we just drink a lot of water. we have no other choice. i really thought this is climate change. and we just have to get used to it. and somehow it's a crisis that has long since become a reality across the globe. not and made climate change is making extreme with more likely. yet not all extreme weather can be attributed to a heating, planets. for example, according to climate models, the heavy rain and northern italy earlier this year, one more and 10 so likely due to human induced warming. it was actually unimed streaming, rare, and fierce weather event for the region. on the other hand, extreme heat waves and northern africa in southern europe last april, with temperatures up to 20 degrees above normal,
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with different they would have been almost impossible at this time of year without the climate change. so when it comes to visit the flooding that had pockets done in 2022 models, such as the global warming increase, dividing full intensity data by 50 percent. the event affected 33000000 people and destroyed 1700000 homes everywhere. now i'm joined by elizabeth michigan. the chief executive of the royal media are logical society leads. it's good to have you with this again of are we correct when we attribute all of these extreme weather events to climate change? i mean, is that what we're seeing? yeah, so most of the heat events that we've seen, the rec codes being broken around the world tends to be attributed to climate change. and we, we have a method that we can do to, to, to scientific a look at how we attribute these extreme events. so for example, we brought in models with all the human and just greenhouse gases that we have put
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in the atmosphere, and we see how likely these bends. these events also happen. we also good models. we've out those greenhouse gases that we have puts in the atmosphere and see what the likelihood is that, you know, the world could produce these kind of events we've out those human induced greenhouse gases. so we get these figures of things being a 100 times more likely all twice as likely to happen because of these studies. most heat events are attributed to climate change. many of the flooding, if i can solve it, know, sol, as you say, there was an interesting study from the recent floods they know of, and they tell me which ones attributed to human injuries, climate change, but many of and it's a, it's a suddenly a growing area of science, but it allows us to really science. if we look at a particular extreme events and the impact climate change is happening. we saw last week, these new record average temperatures are being broken one day after the other. and now we're seeing record highs here in europe. when do these high temperatures?
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when did they become life threatening? when should we be talking about deadly new record todd's while they are already. and so if you look back to the heats of items that we have last summer, the heat wave events across europe, winowski and scientific papers being published, a recent paper in nature, shows that they were over 60000. expedite acts across you of june, the heat waves in 2022. so we can actually look at the dates of the real thing. so it's actually, that's the people from the sea, but even june, the heat wave went pick, you know, you know, people that, you know, there was a, a, some, a gentleman, a full 2 year old mom died in albany tally. he was out working in the, in the extreme, he eats and unfortunately at, you know, both he takes ocean and himself passed away. so we see it happening in real time. but we're getting these studies that actually can, you know, look at the, the, the number of extra tax because of the extreme heat events that we've been seeing
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this year. and last year, these extreme weather events is, you know, they, they're becoming the new norm. it's almost a regular pattern now that we're having to live with. are we prepared for this to be? do you see national governments taking action to adapt to this new norm? are there? yeah. so there's a couple of things here. i guess the 1st thing is, is, is government action to actually try and limit said the woman. and we know we, we talked about this regularly but, but there isn't enough action now at the moment being taken by governments of businesses and by ourselves as individuals to mitigate against climate change. i'm, we're seeing our climate change and around us. so we have to become much more resilience and adapts without changing employment. i'm not 6th street in the challenge and because a lot of the time it requires a large investment into the infrastructure around is because infrastructure was built on the climate that was probably 30 years ago, not to come in climate and certainly not the future climate. and we have to adopt
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for our health as well. so you know, it pops up know when you were not used to these kind of extreme heat events up buildings a, a backs key because we're not cool. and so we have to think about how we, we manage to manage and keep ourselves healthy and fix it even to process something positive you that way. you know, they do get heat, spend some time time, they don't see these kinds of extreme temperatures, life threatening temperatures, and you've got a red heat, helpful going out across many countries across the southern you, if at the moment. so you don't go outside even between 11 and 4 o'clock, don't go outside, stay in air conditioning buildings. that's how dangerous it's. yeah, and of course is that is if you have air conditioning and we know particularly in northern europe, most people don't. elizabeth with the royal media, logical suicide lives is always we appreciate your time and your insights. thank you. it's to hear some of the other headlines from around the world. this
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hour in germany's cabinet has approved what amounts to a new foreign policy for china. you may remember china, it's driven his biggest trading partner, but it's also a potential geopolitical rivalry. so the new strategy urges german companies to the risk or to reduce their dependents on the gene without cutting off cooperation highlands. front runner to become prime minister has failed to secure a parliamentary support. peter lumiere wrote in russia was the only candidate, but it was blocked by the military back, members of the senate. a 2nd vote is expected next week. peter has pledged to reform strict laws protecting the monarchy in to reduce the militaries influence the hollywood actors union, representing more than a 170000 workers is likely to announce a strike. after talks with film studios over a new contract collapse, the entertainment industry workers have been demanding a raising their pay and better working conditions. to you,
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as far as anybody has reaffirmed his commitment to nato, his newest member of finland, as he wraps up his visit to europe. and i was speaking in helsinki. i'm from 500 and said today that the us in finland are working in lock step for a more secure pass for the world. he says that the nordic summit, which also included sweden denmark iceland in norway addressed challenges including clean energy, regional security as well as the technology. the talks came on the heels of this week's need of summit in look the way the with the war in ukraine high on the agenda bite and said that he's hopeful that negotiations will bring the war 2 in there. i don't think the work is gone for years, for 2 reasons. number one, i don't think that they russians could, could maintain the war forever. number one, in terms of the resources and capacity. number 2,
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i think that there is going to be a circumstance where eventually present food is going to the side is not in the interest of russia economically, politically or otherwise to continue this war. but i can't predict exactly how that happens. my hope is an expectation, as you'll see, that ukraine makes significant progress on their offensive and that it generates in goshen settlement. somewhere along the lines of the morning, i want to pull in joshua shipments and he's an associate professor of international relations. he joins me from college park in maryland. it's good to have you with this. you as president biden has come. busy to finland, an incredible asset today to talk to me about what finland and other northern nations, what they bring to the nato table or right so, so they do 2 things for the airlines. number one, finland,
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sweden also were longstanding neutrals in europe. there was always a leading positive. ready idea of them joining the alliance if a russian behavior became truly a for him. and of course, since the russian in the region of ukraine, it has done so. so this, the number one, these countries joining the alliance for their indicates are russia that it's the strategic plan, the strategic gains from the horn, you credit back bar, that really iceland. that's number one. number 2, of course, nato expansion to feline's further and further eastward in putting into the baltic states. one of the questions the alliance face for many years was how do you defend the baltic states? now this is still a very near run, very hard to do issue by virtue of having finland and sweden in the alliance becomes reasonably somewhat easier to possibly find ways of defending the most extensively over the politics it. finland shares a board with russia. that is more than 1300 kilometers long. do we know how the,
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the sense of security in finland has changed? now that it is a member of nato, as you know, it's a, it's a wonderful question. finland is going to be very hard to i mentioned the 2nd ago that one of the reasons for bring finland in used to help defend me, those eastern slang. the problem is now the itself is a very long border with russia. and it's not very clear how this border can be maintained. and now that students in the alliance, any tensions that neither has with restaurants are going to be transmitted to finland itself. it's not clear to me that the finish people, the finish government has really fought through the risk that results. so i expect over time we're going to see a simulation finished concern over what need a membership really means for their own security. visa be most scale because now of course are implicated any meat of rush. retentions is going to be a near run thing. do you think that there is um, uncertainty about how nato would respond if there were a russian attack on finland or on lithuania lab fee, or for example of need?
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is there a lack of clarity right now? well, there's always been a lack of clarity because need those article 5 can't guarantee that attack on one is an attack on all, only requires the other members, it was wines to render all assistance deemed necessary. that's the need to charter sits. now the problem is for many years this is understood to apply a willingness go more. i think when it comes to the baltic states when it comes to finland, there is not a question over whether the rest of the allies will go to war. but whether they will do so in a way and a time, the timeliness that resolves the military problems these countries face. so i don't think is a question of the alliance responding. i think is a question of what that responsible. you know, our viewers may remember the last visit of the us president to helsinki. that was about 5 years ago. um former us president donald trump, when he met with russian president vladimir putin in the finish capital. i mean,
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the contrast between then and now it really could not be great or could i know it is a start night and a different and, you know, we, we can easily understand it. right? number one person been president, trump came in for legitimate criticism over he is very friendly relationship with the president, putting the pressure i think many members of the g o. p in the united states, many members of party. number one, the number 2, of course, the russian invasion of ukraine has totally transformed the political dynamics of european security. and so the prospect of a sending us pressed the needle leader meeting and being friendly, being chummy with the russian leadership is really kind of off the table right now . there was also on the talk today about climate change and the nordic countries. they're talking about cooperation before we let you go talk to me about this cooperation, and if it can make
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a real impact on mitigating climate change. also, nieto is not really an alliance well suited. the type of climate change, the military, the security. but i think over time, because there are, have been longstanding concerns out of russian, but dependency upon russian gas or recognition that climate change is creating those 2 problems video lines. you know, the alliance is beginning to take action on the climate front. i don't think me those actions on its own are going to solve or you can meaningfully contribute to the climate change the risk that's out there. but i do think the action on climate change by the alliance might actually help solve some of the alliance, a strategic international relations professor joshua shipment, and we appreciate your time and your analysis tonight. thank you. my pleasure. i'm sorry, it's down to other news. the united nations human rights office says that it has found the evidence of a mass grave in see dance west dar for region,
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at least 87 people were buried there. last month, the you in the office says that it has credible information. the break away rapid to support forces parent military and their allies carried out. the massacre of it says many of the buried people belonged to the non air of ethnic muscle. each group, their bodies were dumped into your shallow graves, near the city of l dash. and now ethnic violence has escalated in recent weeks with rival military factions at war for months. now save my going go as a spokesperson for the human human rights office. and i, roby. we asked him for more details about the discovery in west star for as well, which 2 witnesses will have the flag to reason, although, can i know the condo, who could i, english, go for region towards a charge. and they gave us consistent, uh, uh, 50 monies of um, the delivery, his probation officer,
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barrio of most of the month to sleep. uh, people in the symmetry email. can i email you? as you know, there's been a lot of fighting, a tax on cbs and getting enough from the reputable forces fund, fucked up by the a musician. and made any buffing cute. but when they, when people up in cute, they also have christmas presented from being buried from it in the cemetery. and that will contain and that, that's how it is. now the end of the tech is forcing the village us to, to store them in these beaches. and so we found this critical evidence of this one specific must graphing which at least 87 people have been up in bar. and that was, is a little while ago speaking with this earlier, large areas of columbia are still controlled by armed groups. despite
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a peace deal agreed to by the government and the biggest rebel faction. fork authorities estimate the 10s of thousands of children were forced to fight for these groups during the decade before the peace agreement and many continued to do so. the w is fully pay about donna, on that 2 young men who managed to escape from their captors. we have changed their names to protect their identities and a warning. you may find some of the images in this report. disturb. ramona, not his real name, is now training to be an architect. at 14, he was suppose to take victims of any legal plan to secret locations where they were tortured and dismembered. as lawyers, hardship is, you'd see michelle ease and the x is covered in blood. and the most, most of those who did is, would come out with the overalls also covered in blood. on the generals on,
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you'd hear the screams from, the clan falls through them onto the present. it was a test of character. as are you hungry, you'd have to watch the hall just as if you were watching tv or barcode until it gets to the points where they say, you are ready now what all? and they tell you to go and kill someone who's got google global. another boy will call, julio, was forcibly recruited when he was just 10. he's now studying to become a civil engineer. the 1st year was horrible. i didn't know what was happening. they gave us rifles the same type used by the army. a k 40 sevens and grenades. they gave us
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a strap which held 3 grenades. they were used for attacks co, what's called a special justice for peace known as the j. e. p. was set up to deal with the often mazda of the conflict. only on groups involved recruited, mine is the law. he knew that he says he owned the forest recruitment is one of the most difficult things about the armed conflict in columbia use. his will, 9, this kind of, it was a war fight in part by children. and that is one of the most regretable aspects. when i get the fox good, the group was among the policies to the conflict which made the most use of child soldiers. these children fall from home. what crudely treated by the groups. they sent the most ignorant to carry out the attacks. the ones who didn't even know how to get the safety pin off of their need. okay. i was on,
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on this as if they protected the strongest and put the weak ones in the middle. the ends of new the 1st year boy is expendable the decades of um, conflict may be over the trauma for the children, forced to take part, may never end residential vision in a refugee camp in the occupied west bank are repairing the damage after israel's military launched its biggest rate, they are in more than 20 years, 12 palestinians, and one is really died. israel says that the operation was successful in destroying what he calls terrorist infrastructure. but many, including the head of the you when say the destructive raids in jeanine could end up fueling even more violent, dw use rebecca rivers reports trying to put a life back together when he as well, he rated jeanine camp. the fired family were given just minutes to evacuate. no
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time to pack the longings or even their identity. documents to honey shows me what they found when they returned. this can they broke everything. i spilled the oil show that they broke the jobs, the windows, the doors, i didn't recognize my house. they've vandalized it. old. i'm still suffering. this is painful icon. go back to my normal life that, oh, this is the same across the whole. muhammad shows me his brothers flat. this one will take much more effort to repair the web, searching for live in. so says leslie looked at it as i saw, he says there's been no help from local authorities assistance with the spin or something up. i know about the most of the assistance with the, the tv, from the logins, from the us in the cities of the villages on sunday night goodness is
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according to and run the agency charged with assisting palestinian refugees around 900 houses in the camp of being affected home to at least 5000 people. the cam certainly health center was destroyed beyond repair, and many schools were damaged to the full cost of reconstruction will take time to assess and just who will leave that reconstruction is another uncertainty. this latest ride further expose the lack of palestinian leadership engineering, which is perhaps why palestinian liter mackwood have boss made this re a visit specifically his foot over a decade. it's the absence of the palestinian authority that often blamed for growing militancy in the camp. he's rouse me, latrice says they were successful in reaching out militant weaponry and infrastructure. but militants, we spoke to in the camp, say they are under the hood. vision had the situation to look into them until
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people keep patient and if we die, others will replace us. we will keep going until the end every find to he says they have 10 more willing to replace them. the we keep going, we don't get sound. we have no emotions anymore. happy for the mountain in 20, come to replace it. we keep going. the younger generation and the old want to get a little bit of this family. meanwhile, is trying to find a will to rebuild even as a specter of move on and hangs over their lives. a sorry to this news now, and a lena is lena is dream run ad wimbleton has ended in the semi finals that ukrainian wildcard was beaten by another unseeded player marquette to find you so that the check republic finds your silva here. certainly for the match made the white work of her opponent at one stage winning 7 consecutive games in
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a 6363 victory. she becomes the 1st seated female, finalized since billie jean king in 1963. in she'll be the underdog, agibbs 6 seated ons is a more to beat a re not. and so, but lincoln in the other semi fine. but the check player is just happy to be there after during a miserable 2020 to take it was either the employee for a 6 months last year and uh yeah, you never know if you can be had that level again and i'm just so grateful to be here and to be house or you know, to play them and so again, so yeah, i was the last day of watching my best i'm playing qualities for the cost on so it's a, it's a change both um just very grateful. gratitude. well, it's an easy job where i had a much tougher time interest in my final, against her hard hitting opponent from bella, ruth's of the silver lake, and take it to the 1st said after each i break,
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but shall board sell quote, back taking the bible for the 2nd consecutive year and she says she's learn from last time when she lost, after going a set of learning to transform the, the bed energy into a good one. so the, the anger that i had the from this versus i tried to stay focused, you know, some, some things i have no control over, you know, she can h, any time she can hit the big serve, even if i have a break points. and that's frustrating a bit, but i'm glad that i'm not accepting it them and the dig in deep you know, to,
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the others, some of the products are showing unity strength. but you cranes, presidency lensky, left disappointed, and we also need to know security for you crate the just the other day so much is happening all at once. we take time to understand this is the day in depth look at current news, events analyzed white experts against critical i think yours not just another show . this is video weekdays on dw,
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i'm not i love mastering. i've loved her since the beginning because of her character because of her courage and how she thinks most rain. so today, wise mother annoyed for nearly 4 decades. she's for peace for me, for brace of freedoms in their homeland iran, in spite of bob barry's government to tries or children should not inherit science from us the an income if you look into the nice just the dots, july 29th on t w. the day so summit in villa is was towed as a some of those products. it's showing unity on spring. but how united is the alliance really that's been doubts about that lately. natal wants to be prepared to
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