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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  October 24, 2023 6:00pm-6:30pm CEST

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the, the business dw news line from 5 and one of the hostages released over 9 by her boss, recounts how old deal. i see 5 year olds, you all should have added this to said she went through how she was bundled onto a motorbike and taken into what she called a spider's web of tunnels. today of gauze as hospitals are forced to shut down, that's the emergency service they struggle to cope under these really bump autumn and dr. se shortages of fuel of medicine. now putting increasing numbers of lives at risk and the power of music to bring people together.
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the academy founded here in the environment and conducted daniel baron, boeing unites young musicians from age royal, on the pallets the landfill. okay, well welcome to the program. one of the hostages, released by how mass overnights has been speaking about audio. there should be a diff shift, so i told you unless she was abducted on a motorbike and forced to walk through columbia just of tunnels. despite this be 85 year old said she and her fellow hostages, were treating gently by the captive who provided medicine and food issues, talking about that traumatic not. you know, i was lying on the motorcycle here. i left my body on one side and my legs on the
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other end. the guys beat me on the way they didn't break my roots, but hurt me very much. and it made it very hard for me to breathe. there were 5 of us and each of us had someone who guarded them. they treated us well. they took care of all the details. there were women there who knew what feminine hygiene means. they made sure we had everything that the toilets were cleaned. they cleaned it, not us. i should say they were very gracious. they kept us clean, kept us spent. we had the same food dated peter bread, cheese, bought the cheese and to cover that was the only meal each day, but corresponded tanya crime. a niche of roosters told me more about what you're sure if it looks, it's a hard time the one and she said she was
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a treat as well under the circumstances of course. but she also said that she was going to ho and she said as well that she felt they were not protected at all. that it was very easy for those militants in this initial attack on october 7 to preached as high security defends that was not those so long ago to see also the gaza strip that they came in and overrun the keyboards, which is very close to because a border and a killed people and the 2 people hostage, i like uh they did with her, and her husband who is actually still held in garza. she also said interesting a that there was walked into a system of tunnels, which she described as a spider web that they were working for a very long time that you both in house in a room with other hostages. and that is of course interesting information because them, you know, is really officials, i've always said there is a concept beneath garza and that this, this uh, this uh,
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these tunnels that are under constant. so that also shows, however, how difficult it will be to locate those hostages and to, to potentially rescue them. there are $220.00 hostages that are held and gaza. that has been confirmed so far. uh, from the uh, is really ami and uh, mostly the comedies and relatives said no, there is less than some relatives of that that will have listened. certainly very carefully what you have to say. and this was the 2nd release of hostages. how was this arranged? for from what we understand, it was mainly done through the mediation with katara and egypt. these are traditionally a countries that maybe age between in directly or between how most and as well. also, when we look back at a previous fours when they were a cease fire being a mega to the know we understand how most referred and the statements to cut her as
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a broker of this or maybe a to and the prime minister's office is really prime minister's office, referred to egypt and thanked him for the health in mitigating this, these hostages, the last 2 as well. they were released on humanitarian grounds as the most put it. so it seems there was nothing and nothing given in return. but we also understand that this, their international effort, so they might see other stakeholders behind the scenes that then goals because some of the hostage also do have a dual citizenship or a foreign nationals. right. so for i think, uh, hostages that have been released, this must give people hope that that more will follow well, somehow, but there's a lot of uncertainty, a lot of speculation. and also, boom is, and it's very difficult, you know, in the circumstances there's an ongoing war and to get, you know, the information,
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all of this happens behind the scenes. so there has been this, i mean that is the expectation that is really popular and also pressure, obviously by relatives and families of those hostages. that israel will do more to get those hostages. a back that has been reports in the is really media that this talk about 50 hostages, that might be released, but we don't have any confirmation on that or, or means to know, uh, you know, where the, this would be confirmed anytime soon. we just have to wait and see the different scenarios also that are discussed here. among all the military correspondence and is right, you know what it means is a ground defensive of what happened if there would be a rescue mission or what are the incentives for a mouse? you know, you see more and more civilians being code also by is, was air strikes in gaza and what they want in return. what is rarely is prepared to get to all these unknowns. it's very difficult at the moment that is a bit of hold because for people where no release, but nobody knows, you know,
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what will be the next step in, in this ongoing war as well. thank you for that time. you kind of interesting well, he went, security council is meeting to discuss the hostages on the conflict between israel . i'm homeless militants, the us is expected to put forward a resolution in support of israel in the next few days. demonstrates as have gathered outside the un building in new york chanting, bring them home and show a message and showing pictures of hostages seized by i'm us, the data of these in his pole is that welcome in this i would have demonstrated has been telling yeah, just as can you explain or just mentioned also here in the united states here in new york right in front of the headquarters of the united nations parents and friends. and i'm just supposed to is we're protesting and trying to send out the
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message to the delegates. please do everything you can to bring home our family members. let's have a list of what they told us. and it didn't work any better for getting their faces are tearing down the coast to try and forget because they don't read the valley, but it's real and people need to take your child. if it was your sister and it was your brother and your grandmother, you wouldn't, you would part and save that. right. and you should feel that way about anyone's children. that's my, that's all of our children that are, that are expensive. was really right. and you're not home, we're not seeing the big, not safe, and they're not being taking care of i'm not, you know,
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that we're not right now. we're looking for the to help she's in so we can see feel the emotions are really high here, especially when some parents past 5 pair is also a kids being held hostage. they are speaking with delegates here at the un headquarters. so it is a very, very motional, understandably emotional and set situation here in new york right now. uh and its last week for us, vito is a resolution on this crisis, claiming it was too late to ask for
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a pause. and now it's on the verge of proposing it. so what has changed, and is it like me to go anywhere? well, for the most definitely, uh the, you know, i did say its really one to do everything to work with the, the diplomatic tablets. and they saw indeed that it might have been a little bit too early to push this resolution through because it is facing some obstacles. some a security council members don't support the sentence that the is road has. the right actually has the obligation to defend itself. they also not supporting the take, the 2 states. a solution is the only solution long term, but what we're hearing now is that the united states are going to propose and next another resolution over the next days. that means that they might think that they, they have more support on that than they had
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a couple of days ago. having that said they're so countries like russia which enjoy all the k, don't k o as a and the difficulties and the devices is going on in the un security counseling. they definitely, uh most likely, really not support a u. s. resolution. and how much leverage does the security council actually have on this issue of the well, the law alone is over the last 2 years with the war and ukraine, the down limits. uh, because uh, countries like rush or have rights to be to so does, by the way, uh, the united states. but through what other body is out there, is there another place in the world? the leaders from all around the world can come together and uh, the bates, uh what of possible ways out there of this conflict in itself. so one can produce size uh that they are not as powerful as someone might be useful. but again,
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it's the only place that people buy political leaders, at least in one room and listen to each other kind of stuff. and as soon as pole in new york will research as a warning that the conflict is likely to cause a search and mental health problems for years to come. even if a finding was when to model, as i say, many people would still suffer long term emotional trauma. israel's 1st night the michelle had song, cosmetic, with the balance helps of some of those who have been killed or taken hostage and shameful. but mental scars can take longer to have that physical injuries. she told that dw, more of us have consent. i don't 3 of these things, sweet grass, the, the gravity of the entire situation. we're not used to such numbers to such a magnitude and definitely not to the sites that we've all seen. and
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i think, you know, the ones, the physical ones can heal. but the song will take much longer time. and that is why this is an issue. i've been dealing with the issue of mental health and helping people in need is something us been doing in regular life and pre war times. and it is something that comes much more seriously into the as rarely being we'll talk to who should love as a clinical psychologist and trauma therapist as to why the people underestimate the likely long term effect of the conflict on mental health. totally agree, i don't think anyone can even begin to imagine how long it will take all of us and the whole world i suppose to, to jump out of this horrific terrific situation
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where very small children and insurance or, or growing into this horrible, horrible world with all of these events, and we need to find ways of culture balancing all of the horrific events and helping people realize that at least for the moments some of them are relatively se a and n one to focus also on the resources that they may have available or can be developed to help them deal with this forensic trauma. and what sort of mental health issues of people is the country is society likely to face if these at troll most, if there is no intervention? well, without immediate stabilization for those who may need is,
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and there are many and also the other interventions that are like short term interventions close by to the events that happen without that kind of, of, of focused intervention. there is of course, the likelihood of p t s d. um, you know, uh, being very prevalent even more than it is today with everything else that has been going on over the years. so early intervention is, is like crucial. it's cheap. so somehow decrease the likelihood of pete's yesterday for anyone who is involved as far as you can tell, is that is that early intervention being provided? well, to some extent, yes it is. there are specialist who who, who work in this area. but of course, there is such a wide spread needs that i think the government will, will need to a location,
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you know, a lot of resources to make possible of the ongoing care that people need. whether they're very young children, children of all ages their parents and professionals in the fields, 1st responders, cetera. you know, and have you, yourself worked with people directly affected by these attacks. i yes i, i am in touch. i am currently working with with 24 and students who were here in one of the cube scene on the massacre of october. the 7th where they were um, you know, rudely awakened from what they were doing at the time. it was early morning and, and they were attacked like 3 different times into 3 different waves by tears
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on their 2 books. many of them died in front of the friends who survived to tell the tale. some of them were injured, some of them may be still in hospital, and they really were totally unprepared for anything like that as any of us were. i mean, who would expect on a sub this morning and holiday to have hundreds of terrace coming in to ones homes . i'm attacking the whole neighborhood. the whole. she boots the whole every cultural community. um, you know, this is like a horrible nightmare that no one wants of them as people are dealing as best they can. and it's, it's very, very hard and it's important to focus on, on the fact that there is, there are moments of relative safety and that the event is over for now. and that they survived, and they just the best they could under the circumstances. right?
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so we have to focus on themes of, of danger and of responsibility and of guilt and deal with these important issues. we factor for talking to set through that. so clearly a clinical psychologist, dr. booth should live in telling me thank you for having me. the only manual macro is the latest west and latest to visit israel and the palestinian town address. the french president met the palestinian leader in my mood, a boss in the westbank city of rama, after holding tulips with his ready prime minister benjamin netanyahu in jerusalem . president mackerel, proposed not be international coalition pro together to fight the so called is not a big state the proteins to talk at the palestinian militant group, hamas. they also stress the need to be lower to the peace process. the city thumbs would push regularly and lebanon's can take a prime minister has made a surprise, a visit to the south of his country at mid sporadic classes was reading these
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writing forces on the same group has by law a close to the board with israel prime minister match even the cots he met with the head of the un peacekeeping full force at its headquarters near the border in the quarter. the fighting between the around about has belong is right. the army hispaniola fears that the medicine group may try to invite israel from the north, thousands of civilians on both sides of the border. a flat janice that kareem algo r a as in the lebanese capital bankrupt. i asked him about the situation on the boat. well, it's slowly escalating, there's a lot of shining on both sides today at his bull, not just a few minutes ago. i committed to 6 of the people of its people in depth. and today that brings the number up to 76, his qualified. this is where kids is in the last 2 weeks. but you also,
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it's important to mention that to all this is spin was in the framework of the rules of engagement between the 2 sides. because the training takes place mostly on close to the for the area on both sides. so on to now, it is not escalating beyond the board. and that's kind of a root of engagement that is going on since many, many years between northern israel and the israeli army and southern level known as his folder. meanwhile, civilians on both sides of the border have been uh, fleeting and taking cover. and what have they been telling you as well? yeah, if you're i mean, just a few days ago we were in the villages of the sauce and the finishes were quite empty. a lot of people left spanish, she another families and the others was staying or preparing themselves for a soaking up on food. and actually it seems like this. but the now you also have really the 1st kind of refugees, for example,
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in the southern live and the city of tire. you have know the number of about and 19000 people coming from this house to the city, from the village to this house, to the city of tyre leaving the in school. it's living the, it was the other relatives wasting what's going to happen. so we have or, and in terms of displacement situations right now, level on which people, there's a afraid that that would be a full scale, a wall breaking out into cells and escaping to some of what they think safer. say for areas for that, that's that cream outgoing environments. well, homicides more than 5700 people have been killed by as rainy as striking casa, well far as these sites. 3 vitality as hospitals are out of action because they've run out of fuel to power generators. israel blockade is cause an acute shortages of food medicine and fuel. the lack of fuel in particular is hindering emergency services already stretched by the bump on the blood stain,
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wreckage of an ambulance and gaza. this vehicle was crushed by the bloss, germany's really striking. but it was one last purpose we were running out of fuel. and so we have been taking petro and diesel from the damaged ambulances, and using it to fuel the ones that are working in common causes ambulance drivers, emetics have been working around the clock and a great personal risk. since israel began forming the strip. how much control health industry says that over 5000 people been killed in the bombing, it was just so book that you were having great difficulty transporting the injured also because there are several strikes going on at the same time with god. there are also a lack of communication. it's almost non existent. she been when i do that in
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addition to it's back in pain is or has been forced to complete blockade of the gaza strip. allowing only a trick of aid since a how much terrace attacks on october 7 explains that how much is holding petrol is refusing to let in any fuel. as part of the deliveries with more and more ambulances destroyed and still running out because emergency services could soon become defunct at a time when their work is more important than ever. a long running project here in pilot and brings together young musicians from israel and the palestinian territories a decade ago, reunited conductor daniel byron. boeing. i found it in no casserole academy in memory of his friend, the palestinian writer and website. and despite or indeed perhaps because of the kind of conflict, the students of the bottom boeing a site academy of united to perform a minute silence for the victims
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of how much the inside is concert, who a scene of re unity, young israelis, palestinians, and lebanese musicians sit together, listen to each other and find a common tone. 3 needs a full study together at the band going site academy and bell in the music school. and it's students have been shaken by recent events in this and i thought we must ensure that to at least here they have a place where they can come and feel secure, that they can express themselves freely and safely have a place a where they can be together, which is obviously i can do the, the academy was founded by conduct to daniel baron. boy, i'm in 2012 with the goal of the coming. the divide between is radius and palestinians. his deep conviction is that peace community come from understanding
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the his son michael van blame is a professor at the academy. the institution hopes to provide the students with a safe space and a feeling of normality and doc times globe and discuss the i don't believe there are any defines that can help you bridge the mavita. i see repeated efforts to overcome boundaries through talking. and i see the making of music together just combine them and with. 6 the, let's see, there are many different emotions of their sadness, anger, but there's a lot of fear. the students are very afraid for their families and friends. despite the situation in israel and gaza, all students returned from the summer break to the academy in bell in this evening is about more than just music. this was really moved. that's all i can
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say, said suzanne, seeing these young musicians from both sides of the wall playing together uh blank . but an emotional program. this hillary emotional, the pre approval is, is necessary need for the performance. but also for the musicians bravery in the face of trying to do that commitment to keep making music to get the most indeed every news my from. and then his reminder that top story this out, one of the hostages released by hamas has been recounting, have $45.00 out of your should have had, if she said she was forced to columbus has of, on those what was later treated well by a captain so it's gotten you can always get dw news on the go, just download the app from google player from the apple app store to give you access to all devices use from around the world as well as push notifications for
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any ration the possible. well, heres at the top of the hour of the day the, the, the
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is real or analysis and background stories data. the news provides extended coverage. what is the military and situation? how can an escalation of violence be prevented? experts report from this the extended coverage on the w news next on d, w. e x. the swedish,
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all the chinese was a swedish design. the compact s t v has the engines name for 3. the read in 60 minutes on d w. d w. news on a put this in the note. follow the limitless freedom of the online young north koreans fled to south korea, where they realize the dreams of the coming social media. to the fact is, we close it up in lives under kim john. but then they disappeared
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without warning. need to reach to us as a north korean public and the video was happens from north korea with love starts october 25th on d w. the i'm british manager. welcome on today's program. we're looking at 3 questions around the is around home us full based on developments, sofa number one will come us release more hostages in the coming days. i'm going to go to conflict, expand into a regional one.

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