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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  October 5, 2023 10:00pm-10:31pm CEST

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the the, this is dw news live in from berlin tonight in new crating, one of the deadliest attacks. since the start of the russian invasion, scores of civilians including children, were killed today in an attack on a village in eastern ukraine. also coming up tonight, a policy reversal from us president biden, who now says he will allow the construction of more barriers along the southern us border to reduce the numbers of people crossing from mexico and norwegian play right young fossa is this year's nobel prize winner in literature for what the
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swedish academy say, our innovative plays in prose that give voice to be on sale for the library golf to our viewers watching on tv, as in the united states and to all of you around the world. welcome. we begin tonight in northeastern ukraine. where at least $51.00 civilians have been killed in a russian attack, creating an official saying that a missile struck a village shop and cafe in the heart chief region in cranes. interior minister says that the victims had been gathered at a week following a funeral. so this small village, its tragedy steeped on so right around 60 residents had gathered together after a soldier's funeral. that we need to be hit by a russian strike. the village shop and cafe, where they'd go on to mon,
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reduced to rubble. dozens were killed in one of the deadliest attacks in months. the largest number of bodies was found in the area where there was a table where they want us to commemorate that the deceased with the rescue is clearing the debris. locals came to look for loved ones or to see like you could we, my son was taken out. we were without a head is moving with our legs. so without anything uh football us. but they recognize him from the documents or square of his driver's license. and they recognized him least. okay. do you my wife and sons, fiance, youth thought maybe they went to one of pa, to, i don't know. they are missing to remember, we're in the time center and heard an explosion. we were then told that something
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happened to her as a, and we know that my mother was here. man, few crane and officials say initial information indicates the cafe was kids, sign and scan to miss so one of the most accurate the weapons in russia's arsenal. presidents the lens, he condemned to strike on the village, moving 30 kilometers from the front lines as deliberate and brutal terrorist attack ukrainians. it's another bloody reminder that nowhere on their own soil is trudy. sites are corresponding economy. he's covering this forest from key if he gave us more details on this deadly attack, or i think the numbers you're seeing of casualties are down to the kind of missile use this, this kind of ballistic me. so these kinds of kind of sporadic attacks happen a lot, but it's like kind of song that it just facing russian positions within onto the range. but also, you know, to the racial isn't going to cause this kind of damage. but certainly in lots of
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places in southern this new crime, people leave the house is only if they really need to. there was looking somewhere for safety of all to hide behind. this is just going to, i guess, reinforce people's behavior and kind of sense of fear and unwillingness to communicate and to kind of engage with the neighbors. because even keep it up for a funeral. if this can happen to you, we've had schools and i receiving from ukraine's defense minister courting for more ad defenses, more supplies from the west, germany exchanging that a new patriot system might be on the way. but it's just not going to be enough. this is a kind of michelle that would only have been stopped by patron missile. and, you know, ukraine simply doesn't have enough to go around to protect communities like these. yeah, this village is the one that doesn't sit directly on the front line yet it was hit . we were talking about civilian casualties, new military targets here. nick we've, we've seen this time and time again, haven't i think it's just the case of hitting these targets because they can. lots of people will tell you that as soon as there is any group of people,
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any crowd be that for humanitarian aid being distribution of bus stop anything like that. as soon as there's a drone, seeing that there's some kind of intelligence, then that is a target. so usually people keeping distribution of some enter a secret they're making agreeing to meet at the last month. is they all just so scared of this? it's interesting. the rushes you such an expensive and high tech weapon for this year. we had hoped that it'd be in the textbook that these are so low with western sanctions on technology, but it's simply not working and rushed to see me willing to use these kinds of themselves for, you know, seemingly pretty minor targets become leave with at least an item keep nick, as always, thank you. i or ukraine's present volume is zalinski has urged european leaders to remain united in their response to russian aggression. so landscape spoke at an e u summit in spain today where he cautions against premature peace with russia, saying that the kremlin would focus on rebuilding its military strength. and if for any president asked for more military gauge,
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dressing the need for additional air defense systems and one after thursday's devastating russian missile attack in his country or in his speech is elaine ski warned that a revival lines. russia would pose a threat to the baltic states, or entrees, now considering various scenarios for the coming years. one of them is particularly dangerous in the or if there is some pause in the rest and against you dream. any freezing of the situation there will be in you critical moment to entertain t 8. the process is allowed to adapt. now, by the 2028, the kremlin will be able to restore the military potential that we destroyed. and digital have, you know, officer has to attack the congress, enforce overestimate expansion arbosso's bureau chief, alexander phenomena cheese in spain. and i asked her earlier earlier whether zalinski and succeeded in drumming up more than just solidarity at the summit. so
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while it leaves, he is not going back home empty handed spain. the host of this summit announced that they are ready to provide to clean with new or a defense and anti drawn besides to protect the countries energy infrastructure and harbors. and germany, as we just mentioned, is also ready to deploy in an additional patriots a system to ukraine and to, to protect it this way, to protect the ukrainian citizens from russian to tex and to why is it's crucial. we have just seen today and to and he's meetings on the sidelines of this. i mean, president zalinski was reassured by history repeating process again and again that the youth is ready to stand alongside ukraine as long as it is necessary. but will that be enough? if the us are going to reduce their health with the,
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the presidential election campaign about to start their soon, probably not. so that is what we heard from the you foreign policy chief use of burrell said that the rope is ready to increase its support, but they cannot replace the you asked without financial and military support at the moment they are even arguing under which conditions they wants to provide you quinn with the planned safety 1000000000 euros for the next 4 years. yes, so we've got the big topic of the war and ukraine is also the issue of migration. we know that's going to be on the agenda tomorrow with these the leaders there is disagreement on how to deal with migration. can we expect any progress tomorrow as well? actually we could ask why odd a. so talking about it and arguing, arguing because just this week, you countries of agreed to move forward with the crucial reform of the use of
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migration and asylum system. and that could change the face of the e u. a asylum and migration policy that would enable them to speed up proceedings at the external borders and so on to tough are the rules. but there are country who are saying, just like poland and hungary, that's not enough. we want strip tools and there are also countries such as easily in spain. and i think we need help right now because we are struggling with the, the increasing numbers of people trying to enter the you. so we definitely, we're going to expect. so we expecting a quite to a discussion tomorrow here in canada. okay. dw is always under phenomena tonight in spain. alexander, thank you. you as president buying it said to do something that he swore he never would bite and has given the green light to build additional sections of wall along the us and mexico border. this is a major policy shift. one that puts abide in step with his predecessor,
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donald trump. now this new construction will take place in star county, texas. along the border with mexico is one of the areas that has seen a surge in the number of migrants from latin america crossing into the us construction of bigger barriers to stop migrant. that was one of donald trump signature policies. well, when joe biden took off his, he pledge that no more us tax payer dollars would be diverted to build a border wall. today's announcement a 180 degree turnaround. so what is the current situation at the border, dw, and stuff on simon's reports tonight? from southern texas to the hydrated exhausted institute, still determined to cross the rio grande into the united states. thousands upon thousands are coming day after day, week after week here and you go past texas and everywhere else along the entire yours border with mexico. after a treacherous months, long journey,
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these refugees are giving themselves up to us customs and border protection or cbp on the us side of the river. cbp agents are being overwhelmed with processing the latest so called search before they say i mostly minister raylon migraines trying to enter the us asking for assignment in the city of el paso, in the south western corner of the state of texas. migraines have been lining up at the gate and the portable giving themselves up to us afford every single day. and full weeks of inmate, el paso had declared a state of emergency. now the city leadership says the city has reached a breaking point and it is not sustainable. we are getting better or more efficient and how we handle this. but we're just handling the emergency today. there's nothing being done to stop that flow. el paso quickly transformed a municipal recreation center into an emergency shelter capacity. 460 plus individuals press was given access to film inside shortly before migrants were
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placed here. already over crowded though, the city is now scrambling to open yet another emergency facility. this old middle school is supposed to house another 400 plus migrants, and 9 hotels are on the city contract to house, even more people temporarily cooperating with the city other organizations and some churches. they are equally overwhelmed these days. but the sheer number of migrants needing their help, there's a lot or need right now the sell thursday of the n g alls are all full. and we're trying to do a weekend to and still it's not enough, even though most of the migrants that arrive in el paso are just staying for a few days before heading to other destinations. we're not getting people who want us to and that's, that's, that's the normal see that we've seen through all this or just is the vast majority . i mean, over 99 percent of them are not looking for el paso to be their home, which creates another logistical and financial challenge with the city bossing
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migraines to other cities within the us. chicago, denver, new york city and los angeles to name just a few that you got the last day to go. i plan to go to the city of chicago and hopefully i can find work. i have a 17 year old daughter whose dream is to become a pilot. and i have this little one, and they just want to give them the opportunity to grow up and become good us citizens. the time serge of migrants looking for a better life across the border. it shows no sign of slowing down 42 s customs and border protection, nearly 40000 people across to el paso into the us in september along yes, our washington correspondents defined. so i'm is, if building a wall or more of a wall, if that will keep my grades from coming to the us, the scale afraid not because as you also heard in this report, and the migraines are by the thousands really,
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by the thousands are just lining up on the other side of this wall fence however you want to call it and then just knock on the door literally knock on the door, hands up and giving themselves up to us authorities. and there is of course, a lot of human tragedy going on. so us border protection agents are all hard pressed to just like to ignore that they are not, they can do that. so they open the door and let them in and process them. they become, in most cases a so called a number asylum for an asylum hearing for an appointment with a judge, which couldn't be 678910 weeks or months away. and, and then they go up, they go all over the united states. so the problem is not going away with more. yeah, definitely not with the authorities. if you saw on your report there in el paso, they say that they are at a breaking point um and what, what does that mean and how, how bad could the situation get?
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that means that they are told me over well, during terms of resources, they have no place is left anymore to put more migraines into, to take care of migrants and yours are over. around churches are overwhelmed. city the locals are over well and you know what? it takes also a poll on of control on, on people who live the regular residents, 800000 el paso, for example. they doing this not just for a week or 2, or 3, or for us for a report about this, you know, for here and there. and then on this now for months and months and months, this is not the 1st search of migrants for them is the 5th. the 1st one was last year in november, december and numbers were overwhelmed. me. so that is the problem, logistical financial problems. the resources are not there and that creates a lot of political pressure on the white house and for the price of it is the buy in speaking of the president of what his, his administration done or, or been doing it to bring down the numbers of people that are entering the united
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states. i mean beyond, you know, talk about more of all well, that's just the thing, right? you heard to use said today he goes, you know, yep, we're building mobile. the fact that his own administration is waving 26 last federal law, so it makes it possible to have had a few more miles of war at the border. he personally doesn't believe in, in the wall is that it makes any sense and i'm with him on that one. i think anybody who's was a, been at the border and is working on this uh the problem on reporting about migraine and immigration problem. you've with us, is agree with that. the problem is that there is really the immigration on the us hasn't been changed in decades of fundamentally and it just needs that a different approach to migration migration and immigration to united states. i guess i'm still the united states and politicians, so you have a big, big week maybe also the probably have
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a big problem to come around to that thinking still, stefan simons. therefore these are not from washington is defined as always. thank you. well, here are some of the other stories now that are making headlines around the world. a syrian official says that jerome strikes have killed at least 67 people, and wounded more than a 180 people in the syrian town of homes. and the city selves director said, strikes team just minutes after a graduation ceremony of a military academy. no one has claimed responsibility. germany's for write a f d party says that it's co leader has now been released from the hospital following what he called a violent incident as a campaign rally. the public prosecutor's office is investigating, but officials say they have no information that anyone was attacked at the event in southern europe. soldiers and firefighters are battling to control a wildfire on one of spain's canary islands. their work on the island of 10
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a reef has been hampered by temperatures just under 40 degrees celsius, as well as strong winds. thousands of people in the back you waited from tennessee . northern hearing to rachel flash floods in india have cleaned at least 14 lives. a 100 people are missing and thousands are stranded. a glacial lake verse. did you see right there triggering the disaster global warming have seen an increase in floods from lakes in the emulate. at least one person hasn't been killed any more than 300 injured in the strongest type food ever hit, southern tie won the island registered, the fastest wind speeds ever record. i see that i will type. it may have a company name. what type from calling new pack? plenty of bite as a tour through tie one with crushing winds of close to 350 kilometers per hour. southern pink don't count the amount of hardest hit the type boom, leaving
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a trail of destruction in its wake and hundreds of thousands of homes without power . or there was an outage, then another one, and then another one. then there was a loud bang. that's when the utility pool are fed. the window strong, very, very strong and identifying but it was orchard island were coined who really buried its teeth ripping homes to fritz and chewing through cars like choice. cities across the country on virtual walk down this road foreclosed school, should plains crowned it in fairies forced to dock despite the damage most escaped on harbor for it. he's counting just over 300 injured as coin and continues on his path. toward easton, china, the clean up begins likely just one of many as typhon pro tie one braces for a future of moist stream, whether fueled by global warming. but this years and nobel prize and literature has
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been awarded to the norwegian, author, you on for say, a follow me the announcements, he told norwegian media that he was surprised, but also not so surprised after his name had been linked to the award for several years the prize and literature for 2023 is awarded to the norwegian, off the young, foster for his and over to phase and prose, which gave voice to the unstable yon fossa is a 64 year old author, and dramatist whose work is among the most widely staged of any contemporary play right in europe. in addition to dozens of plays, the 64 year old laureate has also written novels short stories in children's books, as well as poetry collections and essays. the academy in stockholm described foster's work as deeply rooted in the language and nature of his norwegian
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background. a saucer told reporters his when wasn't totally out of the blue night, it was just so well, it's not the overwhelming, really low you got. it wasn't expected say, sure that much i can say. even though i've been in the discussion since 2013, almost the so i had no way prepared for it to happen of the current issue. i don't remember so no, but then 19 years of pause. and there was being a lot of talk about it, but no price was there. so i didn't think it would happen this year either. excuse me, not going to either. but it did. the most prestigious award in literature now belongs to a multi faceted norwegian who has been compared to samuel beckett. and who's writing garnered lofty praise from the academy. it is through his ability to evoke commands, loss of orientation, and how these paradoxically can provide access to a deeper experience close to the vanity that foster has come to be
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regarded as an innovator. not only in contemporary, c, a to you on foster, a master in spar, snorted, writing, now decorated with the highest literary honor. there is ever more now i'm joined by the literature critic white mason. he's currently a writer in residence at bard college in new york. mr. mason, i appreciate you taking the time to talk with us so, so tell us as someone who knows, literature writes about their, what was your reaction when you heard that mr. foster had been awarded the nobel prize and literature. i was thrilled, it came both as no surprise and no great surprise. there's so many authors whose work and the 20th century proves and the bulk of one know laurels from stockholm. so it's always delightful with a writer as rigorous, serious and to the degree that human human endeavor will. last i would say that to
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know the process is all right, or if the was produced, lasting writing will will be more widely read now. so that's the key. yep. and for people who maybe have not read his work before, what would you say that they should know about his writing the this we just academy . i've talked about him giving voice to the unseeable. yes. this sort of a wonderful catch all that you could say about pretty much every lo nobel laureate of the last 100 years. and so it doesn't really help us, does it? what makes faucet remarkable, i think, is less watches. people are saying that how fossa is giving form to it. and so anyone who picks up his recent symptomology, which is a 1000 page novel in 7 parts, will notice that there's one sentence that carries us through for a 1000 pages. and that sounds daunting, or to some people, it might sound like
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a gimmick, or it might sound lazy to someone else. but what's remarkable about fossa is manipulation of language. he's telling a very simple story. a painter is looking at a painting he made, and he goes for a drive, and he goes to supper. and that's pretty much the exciting plots. but the excitement comes from the form of movement of sentences, through the course of that 1000 pages. and what ends up happening is there's this extraordinary propulsion. as we move slowly through experience, he slows time down and the snow falls and suddenly we are with him in the snow fall . you could look at virginia wolf's novel from the early 20th century. the ways which is an experimental novel to play very much with this idea of time motion repetition fossa is taking that to another place which beckett doesn't prepare us
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for when it's compared to becca. i'm really talking a process 34 plays, which are completely alive with a big heavy and a static for me, what's most interesting about fossa is but normal, all his novels are doing something remarkable reform. and for the reader initially, it will seem and feel for him. however, very sweet. this is why false is not a writer for the so turn a community. once you've read 10 pages of foster, he's taught you how to read and on you go up and do discover new thing. yeah. one interesting thing. one thing in terms of the content that is remarkable is particularly in the, in the novel. serology, the, the engagement with faith, christian faith, even for somebody who's part of the secular world, is an experience of belief, faith and religious practice, which are found nowhere else in literature. fascinating, unfortunately,
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we're out of time, but i think you've given, especially for people who are not familiar with the author, mr. falls, i think you've given people um a great starting point that they can build on white mason writers, residents and bard in new york. mister mason. thank you. thank you. in the opening match of the cricket world cup of new zealand celebrated this particular victory thrashing, defending champions england by a mass of 9 wickets. the fixture was a rematch of the nail biting 2019 final, but it proved to be a one sided affair. this time around after the game, england, captain joe butler was under stated, when asked about the implications of his team's heavy defeat. yeah, just a pointed um not so completely out blake. um but uh, you know, the 1st thing that springs to mind is whether you do lose by a runner or defeat like that it is. it is one last the start of his item to him. um say nothing, that's what been causing everyone to, to remember. and he was
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a reminder now of our top story. this our at least 51 civilians have been killed in one of the deadliest attacks since the started approaches invasion of ukraine. ukrainian officials said that a missile struck the village of shopping cafe in the park chief region. you're watching videos after a short break. i'll be back to take you through the day. stick around, we will be right back the
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the kluge landfill in romania is raising a major stink. b e u has invested 40000000 euros, including a modern waste management system. but where has the money gone? our porter searches for clues on a dirty task. focus on europe in 60 minutes on d, w,
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the not just another day. so much is happening all at once. we take time to understand this is the day i'm in the look at current use events, analyzed by experts and critical thinking is not just another new. so weekdays on d, w several did and it's 3 missed the women's rights regression began as being helpful rate and burned in south africa as well with disabilities more likely to believe that job lack lives matter, protest china, spotlight on racially motivated police by the same sex marriage has been legalized in more and more discrimination. and
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we also because like, instead of the, the last month was the warmest of september on record, the latest in a series of record breaking months, including the hottest summer ever recorded in the northern hemisphere. but september, with special heating up by march, is that even scientists are calling absurd and mind boggling tonight. taking the temperature of our planet unprecedented numbers that will most likely make 2023. the hardest year ever. i break off in berlin. this is the day the.

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