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tv   Money Isnt Everything  Deutsche Welle  November 3, 2023 8:30am-8:59am CET

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of this office stories the on the headline was back inside in depth interviews and see the world in progress. c, w. the of israel is at the height of its battle against the law. says prime minister netanyahu as idea of forces claim to have surrounded kansas city. bombardment, however, continues across the strip. according to the un 4 schools sheltering displays, people have been damaged over the past day. there is no sign of humanitarian pause called for by us president joe button and southern gaza. hundreds more were able to leave for egypt and safety today on the 2nd day of the opening of the roof of border crossing. but 2000000 thousands remain trapped on what is today the
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deadliest battlefield in the world of nickel for ocean berlin. and this is the day the we finally got a chance almost. we've got this is my 5th attempt. i'm not happy at all. that's because i'm leaving my, my on my brothers this and went home or the, i don't know if i'm ever going to be able to see the family on behind or the friends that i left behind the like, we're not sure we're going to make it so we're trying to do anything that we sent to do the survivor because we just simply don't want to die us. but
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also on the day growing on a as in argentina as the countries jewish community faces a wave of anti semitism over the is really offensive in garza, my mother in law was shopping in the man standing in line behind her a seed. everybody hates you. jews in the street, someone was told, go back to the gates or still ada, excuse me, a little bit, but mostly it makes me angry. sorted though, welcome to the show. and scoggins last hope to get to safety on the 2nd day of the roster, rough or crossing opening hundreds more for and passport holders have headed into egypt. large crowds gathered at the border again on thursday, but only those who are on an official list were allowed to pass international efforts to open the border for larger groups or even all civilians trapped in the enclave have so far let nowhere. most of the latest evacuated are american citizens
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. disparate to get out of gaza. the russell border crossing is the only escape for these families. many of payment this past due amount of hours waiting to have the documents approved and be allowed to board the mixed boss shooting across the board into egypt. i have an american passports. my georgia has one to my husband submitted his papers, but he still didn't get his passports. i'm pregnant. how am i supposed to get out without my husband? i appeal to anyone. i want to get out with my husband and my daughter. i'm just about to know the the
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civil 100 jew nationality palestinians, foreign nationals and critically injured guys and have cross the border. the education officials say they will assist around 7000 people to leave. but the process may take weeks we do not have any information regarding the opening of the crossing in the coming days. or operations are being managed on a day to day basis. we sincerely hope that our egyptian brothers will keep the crossing open on a continuous basis, especially for those where severely wounded. we have approximately 20000 injured individuals with thousands of them in critical condition. ambulance is raising the crossing, rushed severely engine palestinians to egyptian hospitals. with mold in a 3rd of hospitals and guys, and not operating at old. many more people need urgent care. but egypt remain same
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that it's medical evacuations will be temporary, with no mass exodus from gaza. and we can speak now, so he by tv, she's the country director for the n g o care in the palestinian territories and joins us from ramallah in the west bank. he was good to see now some it has been delivered through the got to the gaza strip through the roof or crossing we saw there and you know, at all how many causes it can benefit from it. so thank you so much for, for this question. i think that over the last things we have here, the estimation by that you and i'm done is the city of constant and the do numbers much bigger numbers. hundreds of projects on the basis to be able to secure the requirements for the mass population. that is affected but unfortunately, and the number of jocks that's entered is very limited. it, it, of course the,
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it is very welcome to says that the people, but the number stays at the very, very low and minimizing the number in the same time fuel is not on the, on the list for which is very important, that keys to cover the needs in the hospitals in georgia. yeah. and your organization has published a report on how specifically women and children are affected by the war. what did you find? so as the one is affected by the word, but then there are layers of liabilities that are added for women. women who are pregnant, women who are household heading, hitting the households, and women with disabilities repeating the disability with physical disabilities. and definitely the children and of course the newborn. so the different ages they have and the different groups of women and children. they are affected most severely in terms of nutrition. and being more than that,
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i've been to catch up with diseases, the spending ones and more of the due to the older crowd which enters deleted and prevention and gender based violence and protection issues. and access to services become more difficult for women who are heading their households in, in, in the, in the doing the crisis and hor, unfortunately women for instance, would be as you know, the last to eat when it comes or the last to benefit from and humanitarian this a cities that treats that family in very small quantities. today when i was on the phone with my colleague, her grand daughter was crying for food. i'm hungry, i'm hungry. and she told me, you know, i have been doing quoted for 3 days just to save the water for the babies that we have here. we have $1.00 and a half month, baby, and 4 months baby. and we just tried to save the water for them. this is the situation, unfortunately where they are severely affected and then the kids, it's
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a huge, fun story also with, i mean these are not able to report and think it's, and on, at the end of the kids are not connected to the time of the. so the situation is really harsh and it becomes even hardship for women and kids of different of different groups. yeah, you mentioned your colleagues in gaza, they are working under unimaginable conditions. what is it that you can do for them from where you are? are so old, what we we, we are trying our best to be connected to our colleagues on daily basis with the lack of, of the communication that was that terrifying moment for us. what we try to do is to secure it as much as we can. what we call a hygiene kids survival kits, dignity kids wanted food. these are the creeds will use to jump to help others now because they are displaced, internally displaced and evacuated, to the south. we find them among those would need we need support. as i mentioned they, they are unable to access bread, some of them,
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they did not eat bread sends for days now and, and we try our best, but that, that, that the commodities are going, i've gone missing from guys. so we are trying to find, for instance, voltage voltage, what they're thinking, voted for them, and it's not possible they rarely could get to get them and so forth. and one of them, after long, long a tense that lasted for 2 days. was he by tv from care? thank you so much and all the best to you and your team full and are over the is really offensive. and gaza has led to a spike and anti semitic attacks around the world in the wake of the hamas terror attack. already traumatized, jewish communities. i've had to grapple with st. someone was told, go back to the guitar at uh, excuse me, a little, but mostly it makes me angry at the videos like this of an elderly woman verbally
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abusing a jewish mamma, adding to the anger, felt by many political journalists, remain among well health to program on the radio station right here, converse the jewish school adult is attend is one of those no longer requiring students to wear uniform. so they cannot be identified. she understands the wants of the contradiction of going from pride in the face to hiding it a sunday. so like i stopped wearing the keeper and to put that respectful distance between god and man, they were a baseball. okay, we're a soccer cat. people of the parents of many of my daughter's friends took away this star of david nicholas's anyway. many dads and moms are considering not sending me a children on school trying to sort of so imagine tina synagogue, schools and jewish clubs maintain strong security measures. a range of jew stuff to more than a 100 people were killed in the 1992 bombing of these, right?
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the embassy and the 1994 bombing of a jewish community center. one of the survivors of as a task is done, your opponents. he's now the sentence executive director and he's not afraid of the current climate contina in argentina. fortunately, in the last few years, um, particularly in the city of when a service has been a trend towards coexistence already and us, you and i see that going beings here. our society is rich and diverse, but we need to be vigilant. at the end of that sort of brodsky wrote the book dictatorship and anti semitism about argentina's military dictatorship from 1976 to 1993. despite the current attention, he remains active from the jewish community, resisting liberal joy senses what he hopes to g. it is, for example, that guy you,
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but if we just want to, i don't want to live in fee. you know, you're going to me of the movie. the do you mean it's a is very divided. both of us who do not supports what israel is doing it, the palestinians have it trys surface sets in political discrimination. i recently read a tweet from abrupt by you said we should be expelled. we have hello some jews say they are not afraid. authorities or concerns and the types of security, a jewish institutions. let's bring into w corresponding locked in, got to the ethics and religious affairs expert and also just so happens to be from argentine on martin, how are you? um, how often do rising tensions in the middle east trigger this kind of anti semitic fall out in argentine? well, very often not only happen to be urgency. i'm also hoping to be jewish in a, grew up in that community. i think that very often whatever happens in the middle east spreads over and spill us over and this is no exception. of course i think
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that the 7th of october attack we present to see change in terms of the dynamic uh and the understanding of the it's really interesting and conflict and they think that obviously we are going to see repair captions of this. mm hm. um, so what's behind that? why are people that are jewish being taken as an extension of actions that are, that are you know, decided on buying these really government the way i think that there are 2 or 3 matters beds sort of the most direct one. he said is rarely itself has been very effective in passing along the message that is relevant. jews are east really and jude ice and can be completed. uh so you know, in some sense it comes with no surprise that east road sort of presenting itself as a guarantor of, of jewish life across the world. mean seduce,
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essentially become targets. i mean, i've seen this probably from the 1st slide, the side, as i said before, i think that the other part of it is that uh, lots of america, an urgent need is one of the case is, has a very strong sense of victimization in the face. of colonial powers, and it is through these categories that these rarely ballasting in a conflict is red essentially no, to buying power with colonial designs on a population that has no way to defend itself. so particularly among the left, i think that the commitments are very clear with the police team cause and then there is sort of a long standing anti semitic far right. much like we have in europe. that has taken advantage of the current situation to actually also push in that direction. i mean, i have to say and take 70 to some is not a new phenomenon to the, to the region, but also it's a region that has seen a very strong and very tight communities across religious across religious
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boundaries. mm hm. okay, but let's pick this apart because we've seen some pretty striking reactions in south america to israel's war against hamas political reactions. olivia has broken off diplomatic ties with israel, colombia as president, has compared israel to nazi germany. and the string of countries have recall there . and baset or so what is motivating these, these policies and this, this israel critical course here as well? well, i think that some of these people, including columbia, i believe the t let so on and so forth, helps from political and ideological commitments. i think that to a large degree, many of these groups, and many of these political godrays are talking to their own bases, which are actually very much call me to, to do a logical position. so even since i think that what we're seeing is people that are taking sort of the, the, the, the, the opportunity and that sort of the conflict,
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the district teacher can geopolitical guns like to ponder to their own your audience. so i think that this is really to archie agree the case. i think of the same time it is true that as i was saying a moment ago that she political history afflicted america means that there is sort of an almost automatic positioning against anything that the us in for, to use or in countries that sort of generally align with the, with the global left. anything that is seen as a lining with the us will be immediately, you know, taken to the opposition. and this is clearly the case with israel, which is very, very close geopolitically to washington. yeah. how big a factor is the rhetoric that we're seeing from leaders in the increasing attacks on members of the jewish community who think i generally tend to think that it's actually a very big deal. i tend to think that responsible for sort of the state of the polity is really the political discourse. and it's not just publications,
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but it's also jordan, these 10 sort of public opinion makers. and so one who take a position that repeats some of the word strokes, but i think that it's important to say that disclosing it goes in both directions as our report showed, you know, juice that take the position that the state of israel is committing word crimes and there are many of them across like america because there are many of them involved essentially, and side colonial and lift wing projects. they are also a, the, the, you know, receiving end of a lot of the public discard studies, bro, east rarely, particularly among the let to american right large and t. now the far right is now really in play for the coming election. second round, we'll have to leave it there martin. god, thank you so much. the pleasure. when the us supreme court overturn the constitutional rights to abortion, across the united states last year,
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the backlash around the world was fierce. but it's not just in the us that reproductive rights are under attack. and recent years, efforts to restrict access to legal and safe abortions have increased in latin america as well as the you. of this trend has spurred authorities in france to move to and strong the wrong to abortion. in their constitution. over the weekend president emmanuel, my count tweeted the draft, the constitutional law which was based on the work of parliamentarians and associations will be sent to the council of state this week and presented to the council of ministers by the end of the year in 2024, the freedom of women to have an abortion will be irreversible. watson, calling the is now the law had already passed the senate, which voted by a clear majority in favor of the proposal in february. but here's the french justice minister erik du pont. already socialism is the revision. don't put ghost
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writing the right to a portion of the constitution today is not a gimmick. coming. he gives you a rhetorical device, old or new, or a kind of reaction to events far away and striving the right to abortion. a woman's fundamental and enable freedom from main security for all women in our country to leave funds. and we'll put b as bring in lia hotter. she's the senior regional director for europe at the center for reproductive rice and joins us from geneva tonight. leah, the french justice administer, they're promising security for all women in france. is that what this move means is the constitutional proposal in front of the dogs and friends will become the 1st european countries to explicitly and trying to constitutional guarantee for access to a portion care in its constitution. and it really is a very worth and symbolic step. it will recognize access to abortion care as a fundamental of freedom, the merits,
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constitutional protection. and so i really think it's very important not to under space. how critical this move is on the same time, what we also need is bass laws and policies in france and across europe and countries. ensure the access to a portion care is not just the legal rise. bluffs is a realizable writing practice. so we need your team countries to move some policies into 9 with modern public health care guidelines with international right now, i'm to continue their efforts that they have been making over many years to remove barriers and restrictions on access to care. now france leading the way here is this the only way to protect reproductive rights from being politicized, like we're seeing in the us, for example. the house is leading the way, but i think at the same time we also see many other countries in europe and region globally across the world in volcano north and on prophecies that have the
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potential to meet to very progressive reforms. so even in the early regions, discussions are reform are going to take place in belgium, in denmark, in germany, in oregon and in the u. k. just to name a few country where these kinds of prophecies are taking off. and of course, we've seen him lots of the recent elections and colors. we expect there to be very important discussions there to. yeah, i want to talk about the example of poland, which, you know, we've, we've watched as women with a lot of concern from, you know, near and far there have been attempts to completely ban abortion. now, we're looking at a change in government. but what have you been doing in the past years to challenge the restrictive laws there? i mean, the situation is old and does extremely grave and has been for decades in 2021 and became the only country in european union and recent history to remove the ground
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for legal access for abortion, from its lowest. and we've seen several women dying in public hospital in the bonus hospitals, in recent years because of these rollbacks because they've been denied access to life saving abortion carriage, right? miscarriages. we know that the families having significant impacts on women from ukraine who are now living in poland and who need access to where she care. so the bottom of where she has been devastating. we've been working very closely with our publish partner organizations to challenge the times at the european court of human rights when the condition of the nation discrimination against women. we've been working documents the impact of divine have had on refugees from ukraine, an advertising width for national majors with the government that will be coming into place in poland. done with your opinion on the need for action to address the really harmful and dire consequences of the pollution portion of yeah. out how
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easily can what has been rolled back be restored. i'm not thinking in the polish context, it's very clear, just want polish organizations, experts i need to bolster as a problem to turn dives in their droves me during the recent elections while they are calling for is the the criminalization of abortion as a concrete 1st day and then the united nation of abortion, at least in early pregnancy, in the 1st 12 weeks. and so if these laws are, are changed in this way and the buyer is removed. and these measures take effect that the published on abortion into line with the practice. and most of you were honest with me. but for the vast majority of people in going to need a portion care, they will be able to access and safely illegally in their home country. there are places in europe that have even more restrictive policies when it comes to women's
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rights to choose. where is your focus right now? i mean actually in your phones in malta are the 2 e u member states that have the most restrictive laws on abortion. and then we're broadly outside of the you. they are joined by countries like monaco and dora lichtenstein. so in fact, most countries in your have legalized abortion and abortion is, is technically illegal. i think what we're seeing in some countries in the region like it used to be, for example, we're in hungary, at the wire washing is legal. it's very difficult to access is in practice. i'm not square laws and policies have put in place barriers and restrictions on access. the make access in practice very difficult for many women as the after, as a regional director for in europe at the center for reproductive rights. thank you so much for those insights and that's or time let's make sure to stay informed.
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stay engaged and stay in touch so you can follow us on social media. our handle, there is apps data we news if it's the latest headlines you're after and on over to our web site, that's d w dot com for now though from the entire team here on the day. thank you so much for spending part of your day with us. by the
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end, as we are in, the military is being modernized. japanese, yours are interested in the service. the recruit urgently wanted us in on the lead. they are risking everything to criticize
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the watching due to the news coming to live from bartlet, racing for a new phase. and israel's war on how much israel military says it has completely surrounded, garza said, he, the military main things i'm off as it is preparing to fight back. also coming up on the show us secretary of state and to be blanket arrives in his room. he's expected to call on the government to minimize harm to civilians in garza, the.

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