Skip to main content

tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  September 24, 2023 3:00pm-3:15pm CEST

3:00 pm
of the the, this is the, the news why from berlin concerns with the safety of ethnic or means in no. going to cover both immediate costs for a un mission to the disputed region accusing as a bygone, a planning ethnic cleansing. we'll look at the flight of civilians trapped in the enclave and nasa scientists get set to retrieve an extraterrestrial payload of rocks and rubble as samples of an asteroid, fault earth over the us state of utah. and if you get, she gets the $600.00 obliterates the women's marathon gold record with a stunning time in early in the details and supports this out
3:01 pm
the readings throughout viewers around the world. unlike look who refugees from the go in a car box have begun crossing over the border into a menia following azerbaijan. the lightning military offensive in the separate has region, fears or high for the estimate, convenience of living in the know go into a car box region, lead or shape thousands of ethnic armenians or without food or shelter. after the operation as a by john's offensive followed a months long road blockade, now badly needed humanitarian a distorting to reach civilians trapped in the enclave. people who are growing ever more worried about their own safety. the smoke rises always to find the guard. no, quite a box regional capital. it is a city in steel,
3:02 pm
fox and nearly deserted as people hide or flee. sponsored by john says the demilitarized vision of the brick of education is underway, vc, these weapons was seized from the separate tests. this is a close corporation in close corporation with the washing peacekeepers to conduct the immunization part also uh to meet the edition and also support the recipients, reach those that needs to armenian authorities. strongly disagree at the un. the one deposited by johnny violations that they say autumn, existential stretch for economic armenians, dash the international to move to shoot down to take all the efforts for an immediate deployment of from the interagency mission by the united nations, to not going to come up with the to monitor and access the human rights demand. so then the security situation on the ground. some aid has begun to arrive. the forest
3:03 pm
red cross going more to enter the enclave since the latest fighting began. bring some 70 tons of food and medicine. the organization says it was able to evacuate some wounded armenians. hundreds have sought shelter. does auction peacekeeping beef to despite and go as moscow, as they say it's peacekeepers did nothing to stop the author by johnny on slot. i'm not going to explain. we're not going to stay here now as displaced. armenians did not see a future in the garden or cut about anymore. his whole name, the good cool name was all we want to is for us or by john to give a safe passage a day in advance. to leave our whole month to answer about times that by some of those pos me, so wouldn't be realized. the armenian leadership of the region now says that most
3:04 pm
of the 120000 carter block our maintenance will draw the leave. the historic lands then live on the us or by john he had taught at d w. 's. maria cut a month is at the border between armenia and as a by john. she told us what she's been hearing from ethnic armenians in the no go, no, call her back region or so now we are in armenian, uh, city coordinates or uh, close to the check point of uh, break away. now gotten a car box region and armenia. we've seen some human to turn a passing, a huge rough cross minturn a passing by, as well as i'm doing since they're having to know gordon or carl box today. you. these are the humanitarian aid from red cross. reach the, i mean, i think communions that are in desperate need of food and water. they're also caught of the electricity, most of the times, the but we've managed to speak to some of them. and they are telling me that even
3:05 pm
though their reports about humanitarian aid, but still the situation on the ground is dia on the south. abundant by uh, by the west, as well as by uh, russia. they're saying that uh, the west does not care much about uh, i think our main use that are now being trapped in the blockade. so. so we've been hearing lots of criticism towards that. and yesterday i talked with the one local woman in the i step up step on the care to and she told me that the hearing lots of words words, but um not many options. dw is maria kind of months from college or near the border between armenia and as i by john a 7 year 1000000000 dollar space mission to bring asteroid samples back to earth is nearing its end. a nasa capsule is due to land back in the us in a few hours, carrying rock and dust from an asteroid called venue. scientist hope it will all
3:06 pm
see a glimpse into our solar systems early as history. this asteroid may be tens of millions of kilometers from us. but now a little bit of bend who is coming much, much closer. it's the end of a 7 year quest, vanessa. as a cyrus rex mission plows did off in 2016. with that cross spent 2 years traveling to the 500 meter wide space rock and then another to scouting the best place to grab a sample. finally, in october 2020 adopted in with its probe, touching bad news for just a few seconds and blossoming it with compressed nitrogen. to gather it's payload, a sample of rock and test it. spend the last 3 years bring this precious call. go back home. scientists hope the full point, 5000000000 year old rocks will offer a window into the origins of life on us. we'll be looking for organics,
3:07 pm
amino acids the building blocks of life, as well as evidence that there was hydration in the past and the new surface because all of these things are the sort of materials that were delivered to earth that helps life blur here. now the spacecraft has released the sample cap too far above the it's currently plummeting down to the surface wherever will touch down in the utah desert. or releasing the capsule, 100000 kilometers away from the earth about a 3rd of the way to the moon. and it has to hit a cord or in the atmosphere that's just about 3 miles wide. so that's like kicking like a $120000.00 yard foot foot. feel go on the football field or something like that on the ground. scientists will be waiting to rush the sample to a special clean room lab like this one for the study. while the space revel should provide insights into how life again, the mission could help ensure it continues as well. nasa ranks penny was the seller
3:08 pm
systems most dangerous asteroid bridge potential to some day hit us in the coming centuries. just knowing more about what is made of could improve our chances, offending venue, and all the incoming space rocks off. to. earlier i spoke to patrick michelle, he's a planetary scientist, a member of the cyrus rex team, and clearly excited to see the samples returned to earth today. absolutely head oh yeah, it's absolutely amazing. we will have to take the case for this to happen. so of course we're super excited. this is why we're doing the kind of of work and really i, i, the young generation should really envious and try to do this kind of job because this is amazing. it's extraordinary, you know, just moment to a go. i was talking to my producer about this and he said 20 years ago, this would, would have been the stuff of hollywood. but this is actually happening in real life when you're dealing with the extra terrestrial, no amount of planning can account for every thing. what so far has been the most
3:09 pm
challenging part of this mission. well, there are 2 things there for us to have. that's when we arrived at the yes we've been we you don't expect so many roxanne's associates and therefore the accuracy of navigation to and then don't need to you know, to take the sample. had to be entirely revised because of the accuracy was to your compared to the voters, we need to find a place which was a very narrow on the to read, which he had 300 and you don't, you don't make to away. so that was the 1st time energy for the operation team to revise your assumptions that we gave them to be able to find a strategy that arose lendy on such a very small area and then the attempting it. so if you go or ways are challenging authoration because it's or with the most, you are very far away and the spacecraft has to have the ability to, to identify dentures zones, you know, to, to touch the cell face. and then they nissan, the self, they do not have the reaction that we expected. in fact,
3:10 pm
if you don't have any reaction, like if we can turn into a fluid which was unexpected, but for the 2, because that's a road us to get to more than where expectations to give a regular lane. and, and by that i mean myself, some perspective here, why is the sample you're collecting? so important in how can it benefit humanity. okay, so we can benefit in just to also the, from the, from the question that we already have, where are we coming from? how earth was formed, how life image on earth? so these are such the question which, which have also pro phone fuels of frequent invitations, but more practical venue is one of these. but it's actually threatening us to read it as a very low, but not yet. 0, in fact will ability with the earth in about 200 years. so if, when it, it may happen, it's very important to know what it is made of. so that's we tend to design better issues and more efficient strategy to deflect it. then we have time. so the good news is that now we would understand the new and therefore if we need to do
3:11 pm
something, we had the knowledge to do it. so this is where you expect practical integration. well, i know it's a stuff of bond movies, but could this mission bring us closer to actually mining asteroids? yes, also because in fact the venue is rich and cabinet is a routine water. and therefore, we are trying to save the results on earth for us and now rooms the name of in space. and then this bodies like been who could serve, i guess, patients if you will, you know that to go further away and understanding what did you've made of how we interact with them, how they respond useful demo, cutting the, to be prepared to use and as resources which is no science fiction, but eventually to would have to happen. and i'm pretty confident this would happen . gas station somehow that makes it incredibly clear to me. many, many thanks for your time and particularly your perspective, patrick michelle in nice. good luck moving forward. thank you. this is the
3:12 pm
o because she gets a safe, it has bashed the women's marathon world record in berlin with a starting time of 2 hours, 11 minutes and 53 seconds, not over. 2 minutes off the previous record to make sporting history. 29 year old won the race last year in a personal best, but was almost 4 minutes quicker. this time around. mark meadows from the w sports, joins us in the studio to tell us more mark over 2 minutes off the record. absolutely sensational is, i mean, it's true that in berlin we've had lots of virus and little records because it's so flat basically, and there's no couples. i was walking the streets and building this morning on the cost and it also felt the right temperature. not too hot, not too cold. that's why they really in, in the, the old and if it did last week, then probably would have been too long. but still, despite all of that to not to minutes off, the record is quite staggering. it is true that it's complicated in women's medicines because they were kind of to records one way you don't with man as well,
3:13 pm
who tend to kind of back to face that as a mom. right? so we means only ways, but even so what she's done today is quite, quite staggering. for a 29 year old. and yeah, i mean, where can she go from here? i mean, to 2 minutes, it's just, it's a 5 little incredible. what about the legendary control guy? how did it penetrate him? i mean ahead of the race. most people are concentrating on him to see if he could be the to alamo. the great thing he's been trying to do that no one's ever managed before. he did do it wrong, but it wasn't actually in a proper race. so we didn't count officially. and yet we thought it was going to come close. i mean hopefully feed the race. he was on time for a will record and beating this to alamo. but he slowed down a bit. i think that's probably because he said in the week he wasn't feeding 100 percent, so he didn't manage it, but he's still in the race. a wrinkled face victory for him, at least 39 soon. so you kind of thing, that means it's didn't matter what was the late fee, but maybe the chance of, of,
3:14 pm
of tracking 2 hours is, is done there. and just to be clear, for those people who don't know who we're referring to, that would be ailey, it could control, get the legendary marathon runner. they were fears, of course, of a climate protesters disrupting things. how did that panel? they did this, the stopped, but it didn't really delay too much. they threw a orange paint down the head of the as a kicking off. and basically the police, the very quick given them altogether and then took them away. so it was okay for their own us to reading through orange page didn't this didn't too much. there's been lots of this happening. obviously, wimbledon was affected. lots of the sporting events have been hit by 5 it protests and building as well with the front of the gate was obviously it's made with pain recently and i'm what have you booked? said the police. that was it pretty well. and the protest is also made that point. mark meadows dw sports. many thanks is always mark we're going to ended there, but to stay with us, we have
3:15 pm
a documentary film coming up next that looked at nature's destructive powers and the volcano russian at lymphoma. does more for you always on dw dot com and of course follow us on social media where our handle is predictably at dw. so i'm like looking for being the team here. thanks for your company and bye for now the .

8 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on