tv DW News Deutsche Welle October 30, 2023 9:00am-9:31am CET
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the the, this is the, the, is coming to live from berlin. israel steps up to the steps of his ground incursions into guys of the military release is new footage showing it's tice and troops pushing into the territory. as fierce collections with some us are reported in the north, also coming up, people in gaza say there's nowhere safe to hide as international calls grow for the protection of civilians. and for more a to be let it plus 100 storm in airport. in august, i'm looking for his release after a flight arrives from tel aviv authorities there has made dozens of arrest.
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the hello and terry morrison, good. heavy with his fears. clashes are being reported in northern gaza as the as really military expands its ground. assault in the territory un has expressed concern the israel's ongoing error strikes good, his hospitals were thousands for sheltering over the weekend. crowds broke into un aid warehouses in gaza, taking food and other supplies. the guidelines make disparate dashed to bank 6, supplies rating you in warehouses for flour in hygiene products, thousands rush to take what either they can carry the k arsic seems a sign of growing despair. the we have the problem. no,
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i know it's not even toilet. how is isn't it destroyed? no one cares about us. we appeal to the people of the world. oh, international powers are against us. we need it. i. we wouldn't have done this, everyone in need. the show. the cool. so help comes is palestinians facing growing danger from israel is ground offensive. is rails military release these images of what it says? a troops pushing into the north of the gaza strip as they try to eliminate the most terrorist group and risk more than $200.00 hostages. thousands of thousands of sheltering at the l. woods hospital and mid to conflict. now officials have been told to evacuate here to the number of displaced people here is between 12 and 14000. the figure changes every day.
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counting the hospital departments and the intensive care unit. we have nearly 60 patients as well as 800 injured who are receiving treatment and the emergency department is riley strikes have really hit the area around the hospital. but some feel leaving isn't safe either. and despite the growing risk from aero tex, thousands of palestinians are running out of places to run to concern is growing for the number of children in gaza, being impacted by the war between is real and from us. earlier i spoke about this with toby frick or from the united nations children's fund, eunice, a. i asked him what his colleagues are telling him about the situation in going so of the yeah that's right. uses hasn't seen on the ground in the gulf strip. uh, we lost communications around 24 hours and thankfully,
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yesterday we were in such down with the saw the site is that the situation is really big. you know, kinda solve cool. next month, it was a full year old 7 year old girl, and she was telling us about how to find the full year old was be your results. it is a cell home, really stretching a size because she's in such the traumas affected so much. but at the same time this drug is get access to. so essentially life cycle. so that would be 3 d. so t was it now for around 10 days. and her children been saying here what i have you t motorcycles are again, regular goals. this is tracy. this is ready for every child inside the gaza strip. i know there's a lot of concerns heavy about what's happening in gaza city, particularly at the a sofa and l codes. hospitals. what can you tell us about the situation there? yeah, when i think the offices have been on the massive strain, i mean,
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even before this installation uh the results of the whole. well, let me see, i as, as a manager suffices as a seal, analogies escalation of the situation is really very successful that treating people when the children have wounded in you know, size. but they're also treating people. it's likely jody already knew bones and inconveniences, and office the diseases and regular issues that happened all the time. and that we, you know, we exchanged some profile over here about the situation you, on the international humanitarian law. let's not forget health care facilities offered texas, and that's actually pretty cool at the side of the world health organization and other say you're moving a lot from a hospital is essentially a, this sense us are you in general assembly resolution has called for an immediate cease fire that's among growing demands for a humanitarian pause in the fighting. do you believe that we will see the opening of humanitarian car doors anytime soon?
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well, we very much hope so that we will see increased humanitarian access, say on the opposite side is no just wild deliveries, but it's the same. be ready to scale up the amount of live, say supplies that can come in, solve that problem in. but it's a certainly by no means and not given the immense needs that are inside the got the strip. and that's why you use that as to whether you had a 60 channel p code in front of me. you might experience the spot. so that monetary and safely moves that lies around us, we'll get them in and then move them around to reach people who are in such need at this time. the focus of your organization, of course, is children. you described to us an anecdote from one of one of your employees on the ground there. how are children in general being affected by this war? because i understand the number of casualties among children is very high. yeah, i mean the number of casualties is terrific. mold in 3300 children, the reports of the big kill you. and now the 6300 is the need
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w. these numbers are immense and terrific. so 1st of all, what people are trying to do is protect the lives of the children. go to the stop member. i spoke about this now. she's been a 1st parties to protect her children's lives on the side of the goals. but she's also trying to do a job, humanitarian job, to support other children, to support other families who are also having massive, massive needs. most of the situation just real quick and then and then this the access to services yes. and health services. so essential services with us, like most of them spoke about. it's so critical to keep children in line and that's where we're at. it's really about like saving what it's toby, thank you very much for taking time to talk with us today. that was toby, flicker spokes person for unit speaking to us from amman. jordan meanwhile is really is continuing its air strikes and ground operation in gaza. a short while ago i spoke with our correspondent rebecca richards. she's an ash thought close to
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the guys of border in southern israel. she gave me this update on israel's a pensive. it is very, very hard to get access and impossible to get access to very hard to know what's happening on the ground in guns. and we've been witnessing or hearing at least a lot of the 2nd phase of this rule, this expanded ground invasion. we know that that continued to expand the muse riley military telling us again this morning that they bolstering and expanding this the scale and scope of these ground invasion. but exactly what's happening on the ground is very, very hard to verify. we're getting piecemeal bits of information we, we even seems to appear with arrow ports that is riley military ground forces. and now around about 3 kilometers inside that for 3 of gaza and his hand to hand combat going on. we've heard that there were, there was rather a big baffle around the or air is crossing. but we don't know anything about numbers these rarely. miller tre saying that they targeted many harmless militants, but saying some of the palestinian telegram to get a telegram truck chats,
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excuse me, that also some soldiers were killed as well. but as i say, very hard to verify exactly what's happening on the inside. we know that there was a huge internet blackout for nearly 36 hours from friday into sunday morning. and that made telecommunications, obviously getting news out even more difficult was such a relief yesterday morning when we were finally able to reach some of our colleagues there. but you can imagine the fee, if the bookkeeping thousands on the ground not able to get in touch with their loved ones, not to be able to get in touch with the emergency services when in fact there were extracts in their area. so a very serious and terrible situation happening and just so difficult for us to be able to really know exactly what's happening now. how much still has more than 200 hostages? has there been any progress, rebecca, in negotiating their release?
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let number last night actually was risen up to 239 now they still forcing people missing so that number could well rise a game terry, the negotiations we believe are still ongoing content playing a very big role in those negotiations. but we also have the account to have said prior to the ground invasion, to negotiate and say that it would make negotiations very difficult if there's really military where to go in. they have now and they've done so. and so we don't know the state of those negotiations, there was some sort of perhaps the ground invasion might put pressure on her mouth . but we have all the people saying that it's going to have the opposite effect. and in fact, the fact that they get ground evasion has stopped and means of getting those hostages out of life is almost impossible. once again, very hard to know. look into the crystal ball but. 6 so the lot of pressure on the government from the families of those hostages, very upset, very and friday, when the ground invasion began, they were very upset. they were in, there was
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a meeting held with prime minister benjamin benjamins, mitten m, yahoo to say that they were very angry that they weren't informed. and in fact that this was happening meant that they, you know, was had not, they would like starting to lose hope that their loved ones would come out alive. so very, very serious situation. also for the hostages emission pressure, rebecca world leaders stepped up calls were desperately needed humanitarian aid to reach gaza. what's israel's response to that kind of international pressure? that's what we're slowly starting to see more. i go into thousands are nowhere near the amount that's needed for the people there on the grounds of a night. 33 trip more trucks were allowed in, but we're getting a say somebody the organization saying that more than i see a day are required. so the needs of the people there and that we're just not saying anything and those numbers now in the beginning, israel is very hesitant to allow any i to go through at all. when present you as
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president 5 and came that deal. he struck a deal that to be a great the get the as riley's to agree. so it's not allowing a coming in we've been saying that slowly trickle over, but a hell of a lot more is needed for what it is you mounted, terry and catastrophe. that's on folding on the ground. so as i say 33 trucks mall came in overnight. and yesterday, the language from the military started to change based on the assignments they will be allowing more more trucks to come through. now whether that's because they know that this is going to take a very long time and they simply have to allow in, so that they came out of tearing catastrophe, doesn't completely explode on the ground. you know, they couldn't really say something about the tactics but so far, not enough. i it is getting through the hopefully in the coming days that will be expanded. rebecca, thank you very much. those are correspondent rebecca rivers there in southern israel. floor on israel's and curse inter go so we can talk down to military analyst mike martin of kings, colleagues,
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london. like how do you see is real ground operation on folding in the days and weeks a a warning terry. i see it unfolding very slowly because it's, it's quite a difficult thing to do to move into an of an area and to try and, you know, israel said they want to destroy hama, that's a very difficult thing to do. and so what we've seen so far is, is roles crossed into the gaza strip, hasn't gone into the oven area, but is securing some areas outside of gauze, the city itself, israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu. he's been talking about this being a long and difficult war. does is real, have any clear exit strategy that you can see, mike? well, i cannot see and it's really a exit strategy. and these sorts of was unconventional was always
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and with the political settlement. so they come be sol militarily. and so the question is, riley's okay, it's going to go in that it will take out some how much time on the tunnels. it will kill some of the leadership very unlikely to destroy have us. and then what they've then still got the same problem that they started with, but that will be tens of thousands of palestinians that and probably thousands of israelis as well. and so the question is, what is the political strategy that wraps around this military activity at the moment i see none. what about the hostages mike? there more than $200.00 hostages being held by hom, us in the gaza strip. there's a lot of pressure on the is really government to bring them out alive, obviously from other countries as well. there are many for nationals there. uh how can is real continue with its ground defensive and extract those hostages. so i think it's very, very difficult. and again, i think we can what we can read and see is really options, as you said,
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all the other governments who got the nationals as hostages of putting great pressure on these right as well. well, i think we can read is these ready actions is that they don't cache so much about the host is hostages, and not the primary i'm head that primary i am is to do damage to have us. i think on the side, nothing, nothing. you all who is politically in trouble in israel, so a ground defensive as a way of maintaining himself in power. i think this, the hostages are a secondary consideration. i think we can take the analysis from looking at these really actions. if you were trying to get the hostages back, you wouldn't be launching a ground invasion. what about the signals coming from other players in the region might because this conflict has seriously explosive potential for the region, doesn't it? it does. and you know, just over the last few days we've seen a do on of tuck a and making comments to crowds and assemble about going into the goal. is that,
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i mean, obviously this is rhetoric. is iran as well with his proxies, hezbollah and the other. ready in the region, so it does have great potential full and really what the program will come is, is a mistake. somebody will make a mistake. there's so many players. the situation is very ambiguous. it's hard to tell what was going on. we sold out with the, the strike on the hosp to last week, the fake news, which was around already with the price. and in those environments it's very easy because someone, iran, america, israel tacky to make a mistake, and then they've committed themselves to a much bigger conflict, then then have the 2 and that's the problem that we face at the moment. mike, thank you very much. that was military analyst, mike martin. thank you. it is realized called on russia to protect its citizens and use after a mob storm the main airport in russia's august on region following the arrival of
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a plane from israel. at least 20 people were injured. the governor of dog is done and religious leaders have condemned the unrest. at least 60 people have been arrested. a huge crowd overwhelms the airport of montage color, voicing their support for palestinians and chanting, anti semitic slogan. video is posted on social media show how the mob broke through doors and barriers with staff members trying to discharge them. some made their way to the runway where they were reportedly looking for as rarely, citizens after a plane arrived from israel. authorities close the airport as security forces were deployed at the sites. well, saga sands religious leader has called for com. susan
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is this issue cannot be resolved in this way. we will talk with the relevant people, and we'll continue to try to resolve the issue differently. we can go not with the emotions, not with rallies in an appropriate way of doing after the incident. and mcculla is real calls on russia to protect its citizens. the airport will remain closed for now. it's more we can talk to our chief russia correspondent years shut. so he chose just from the let being capital rica where dw has been reporting from since being banned from russia for our critical reporting. after rushes full scale invasion of ukraine, you're a night of anti semitic rage there in august on dramatic pictures from that airport . what's the situation there this morning? a while after the crowd said was calm down by the police finally, around midnight, yesterday, off to the police, you mentioned the tyrant, detained 60 riots. i was at my college color airport of the 20 people was injured.
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and 2 of them even seriously now. criminal investigation is underway at the moment that russian investigative committee for august on opened a criminal case on the article on most rights. and the article provides for punishment of 8 to 15 years in prison. it's to on the, on whether his article of the criminal court will be charged to the detainees. it's set into media that is the passenger. so now safe that's been able to leave the output according to reports, gives the press. of course, in the shuffle on the shock at the airports, remains closed for the time being, it looks pretty devastated. an interesting detail, the pilots, the older than you and tell of these before they flew that these riots kind of expect the could expect to them. and they are passengers that the passengers white forms. i guess no one wanted to get up. so old flew to russia. put this into context for us, uri, what do we need to know?
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what do we need to understand about the region of diag a stuff, a well druggist on this a russian republic uh is known as a mounting punch of cultures and religions. also many jews. a lift, is there a peaceful it together with the muslims? a box in doug as don as in many regions of the call, cuz uh in recent to yeah, so radical islamism has become increasingly probably magic. and basically we kind of observe the trend over the conversation since the co ops or the soviet union, terry. because what happened last night was only the one only thing a day earlier, is it, was it called on social media to a check sort hotels in august on because of a war, allegedly costing refugees from israel. and so at the already level and, and to submit to do us as, as the angry mark rushed into a hotel at protect because of passports of hotel guests in the end and no time in
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the entrance. no jew since his hotel hotels. so a very clear and to submit the gag. but the problem is also the whole political situation in russia where it's almost impossible to protest publicly street protests pretty much for being in the whole country. people can't express it there and go publicly without being punished for it. and so these continuous outbreak of violence yesterday was also, and i think a kind of outlet for people's anger what, what, what they see or what is happening in guys that no, no, israel has a, has urged russian authorities to protect his release andrews in their jurisdiction what response can we expect from the criminal and uri, as well as the putting will most certainly condemns the violence. uh, what else would he do if it has anything to say about that? oh, because right, because like music is also
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a very dangerous drain for the kremlin and to nobody wants the moscow and conflagration to develop international call. because we have seen 2 interesting reactions in this context. at 1st the meanest of nationality is from the neighboring republic of chechnya spoke out into the cold for coal. that is very unusual and it shows that the old storage is a very concerned to that i think the configuration could develop and to the 2nd for action came from the head of the republic of august on also condemned to the violence, but also clearly named to the electorate, the most the mines for him, it was the view craniums who allegedly wrong that kind of drum tunnel that had called fond. right. so he is a blame is clearly being dumped on us for propaganda purposes. eerie. thank you very much. as always, are correspond to your research are there in region. no fans are remembering actor matthew perry star, the hit tv series prince who has died at age 50 for many have been keeping up the
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place flowers in front of the apartment building where the series was filmed in new york. and we've also been gathering at the door step of terry's los angeles. oh, there is 10 seasons on friends made him one of tv, most recognizable actors. what are you going to show me my clothes for millions around the world. matthew perry became a household name is chandler being on friends. he's got no quick witted, sarcastic and sofa facing many fans. saw him as the most reliable of the cast. did i say that? oh, is it sugarless? sorry, it's not the not thanks. what the hell it was back to you. good. i drove off as you go. you take a, she offers you mangled animal carcass. you take it as an actor on one of the most popular shows of all time period, cheve fame and fortune at
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a young age. after 10 seasons on air, the friends finale was the most watch. tv episode of the 2. thousands, perry went on to appear and a number of other shows and started in several films. but none of them topped friends off camera. perry struggled with illness for much of his life. in his memoir, published last year, he wrote about his addiction to alcohol and prescription drugs. he said the pressure to make audience has left left him in a bad place. at one point during the friends run, his co star, jennifer aniston confronted him on behalf of the whole cast about his drinking during filming in an interview last year, he reckoned he had spent millions of dollars on treatment. us news outlets reported that matthew perry was found dead in the hot tub at his los angeles home. news of his passing brought an outpouring of grief nbc, the network that aired friends,
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wrote on x. we are incredibly send by the to soon passing of matthew perry. he brought so much joy to hundreds of millions of people around the world with his pitch perfect, comedic timing and ride with his legacy will live on through countless generations in formula one match for stipends victory. as mexico grand prix saw him break his own single season when record the ducks driver started in 3rd but fast the 2 for hours ahead of him right after the start, his teammates and hometown heroes. sergio perez then crashed out of the race immediately after a head of the 1st corner, he came into contact with charlotte, claire, who was able to continue to finish 3rd, newest hamilton snake 2nd spot as the already crowned champion for stuff and continued to dominate the state by a labor cruise is supposed start to the season, continued with a to one,
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