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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  November 3, 2023 11:02pm-11:31pm CET

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as this matters, us secretary of state antony blinking is back in the middle east as washington works at stopping the israel home. us war from spreading support for israel's rights to defend itself. yes. but also calls for humanitarian pauses and the offensive. and for israel to do more to prevent harm to palestinian civilians, but no letter from israel for the moment. prime minister benjamin netanyahu was blunt demands to have mos release all the hostages 1st we can talk about so as far as later on the call fairly chamberlain. and this is the day the we need to do more to protect palestinian civilians. the situation on the ground him guys he's in describes of what's happening in
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gaza today is not like any of the previous will make a mistake with this. you will pay dearly for mistake. as long as the united states stance is real, never spent a long way already into the back a little. so with the 8th also on the day efforts to hold donald trump accountable for his alleged role in the january 6th 2021. capital riots of so far brought no results. this weeks all the start of cases in the state courts aimed at keeping his name off the ballot papers and next year's presidential election. no person, not even the former president is above the law. are we asked after this hearing that this court fine, trump isn't in eligible candidate under colorado law and order the secretary state not to place them on the about the welcome to the shell. it's good to
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have you with us. us secretary of state anthony blinking has called on israel to protect civilians, as it says, to be closing the news around gaza city. after a meeting with prime minister benjamin netanyahu, he again reasserted israel's right. even it's obligation to defend itself, but stressed it mattered. how does that and urged israel to allow for humanitarian pauses in the fighting. it groups are going further and intensifying their calls for a ceasefire. something israel has categorically ruled out the head of the world health organization called the situation in gaza. indescribable, with hospitals over whelmed, with injured morgues, overflowing, and doctors operating without anesthesia. on friday, israel struck an ambulance outside causes biggest hospital claims. the vehicle was being used by the terrorist monster on health authority says the attack left dozens
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of dead and wounded camps and despair. people rushed to help those wounded in this try canal ship a hospital in gaza city mos ron health minister said that an ambulance con boy was hit as it was leaving the hospital, caring critically. one the patients to the roof of bolt across and into egypt. israel into and says that the ambulance had targeted was being used by homeless militants of the striking l ship, a hospitals, the biggest hospital in the gaza strip. as to the numerous challenges its medical personnel has been facing in recent weeks with doctors desperately trying to treat patients in a facility that's on the brink of collapse. with frequent power outages, the having to use mobile phone lights to treat the wounded voided. if it was they said, you know, all resources in the hospital decreases by the minute and no one else is here to
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help. and then we hold the united nations and the whole world responsible for doing nothing towards those patients and the palestinians. the amount of listing of all the new model. we have children here, children suffering here. and there's no one to help them, but they without the un has once again called for humanitarian poses in fighting these vigorous races must continue, but they are not enough. we must have those pauses, or we must have those pauses. if we do not have pauses, we will not keep up with the needs of the people. have garza, i'm the is really, is also caught up in those areas of conflict. israel's prime minister benjamin
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netanyahu said his country would press on with it's offensive them gaza meetings at hospitals like i'll shoot for. we'll have to rely on the little the have in order to help the rapidly growing number of wounded. and aaron, david miller is a senior fellow at carnegie endowment for decades. he worked at the us state department on the us policy on the middle east. mr. miller, welcome back to the w. l prime minister netanyahu had said calls for a cease fire would equal calls for israel to surrender. today we heard him connect the possibility of a temporary truce, demoss releasing its hostages. how big a shift is this in his position? as well as in fact, the prime minister is offering a trade, a temporary cease fire for the release of all the hostages. uh, i think that's probably deal these release might might wanna make if it's just a release of the for nationals leaving these rallies. jewish is really is
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behind or is really nationals behind. they may not all the jewish, i'm not sure that the government is prepared to accept it, but the reality is the hostage negotiations are incredibly opaque. neither you nor i, frankly have the biggest clue about what is actually happening in these days of negotiations moderated by the countries in the addictions these really in the america. just don't know. yeah. and i did speak to someone familiar with the hostage negotiations though, and they said they must, won't release the hostages until the bombing stops. which, you know, when that m, yahoo says we will stop the bombing once the hostages are released. and her mom says we will release the hostages wants to bonding sobs. where does that leave us? well, and you could try thought experiment or you could test tomas his intentions. by
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creating a, you can even, you know, create a humanitarian pause. for 681024 hours. do you think that something that we got israel would go for just to try it out saying that it would you know or given what they've been saying about about the risk that truces bear for them, especially now when they say that they have in circle gaza city, right, well they don't have to leave their establish position. i mean a 12 hour you mandatory truce or a series or you manage your interest is in, in localized areas to allow humanitarian assistance in and to allow. when do and incapacity. probably the syrians to move in to say for areas might be something we're trying. what they want is create an extended ceasefire that needs to be negotiated. the real question is, is how much put on the, to the release of the fall of the highest in 240 estimated humans that they
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have me, which is rarely to agree to cease the bombing. and then of course for how long once a mouse fries the hostages, one of their points of leverage and their cards then disappeared. so i don't know. and again, how much is also wanted the release of the anywhere from $5.00 to $6000.00 palestinian prisoners who are these rallies? now hey, hold a 3rd of them uh without, without trial and administered detention. and then so that's another angle here. i, again, i'm not trying to be difficult, but i really think we don't have anything remotely resembling of a fair grass. yeah. what these proposed really valve will have to leave it there. we're unfortunately running out of time though, is the aaron david miller from the premier game down. and thank you so much for all of that.
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the united states says it's using an arm drones over garza to assist israel and freeing hostages, kicking out in the attacks on october 7th. families have again protested in tel aviv to demand the release of their loved ones. the drones are meant to help visually locate the hostages almost a month after the terror attacks just for kept as have been released and another rescued israel's as more than $240.00 people, are still being held in gaza and they are from gallia, columbus raw. he now she was born and raised in israel, now lives in los angeles in the united states. she sadly lost 2 family members in the homos terrorist attack, and 4 of her relatives are still missing her cousin, golf and his 20 year old daughter were murdered in the mos attack on their keyboards. on october the 7th. and that's the wife. 1013 age daughter are gone and they're small sons go and tell or believed to have been kidnapped by her. mom
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scalia, welcome to d w. how did you find out your family was among the victims and the day the attack happened. i was here in the us preparing for my flight back home and we have a what's out group are all connected and it was a jewish holiday. and very early in the morning is around the time we started getting the messages that they could, both as being attacked. and my cousin and his family took refuge in their safe room in the house after about 20 hours or so. we lost contact with them. and we started fearing for the worst fast forward in sunday and monday, and we learned that uh um, from the idea that were able to go into the house that they suspected that there were 4 bodies in the room where they were hiding and got to miss car
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missing and in those 1st few hours we had hoped that maybe the little boys call and go or manage to escape. i do as lot of confusion. there was a lot of fighting. it was an active uh, fighting area. and we were getting some information into the 2nd week of the war. we were able to get concrete information. but there were only 2 bodies in the room that were my family members. it took many days to identify them because they were dismembered and burned. and we were able to confirm that it was my cousin adult and his 20 year old daughter because she had a butterfly got to and he recently had surgery and he had stitches. and he had a metal plate um get a bicycling accident and he was recovering. so we were able to figure out that it's him. and then the for the wife and other children were missing. for
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a long period of time, missing meant 2 things. they were either in a pile somewhere. i hate to say it unrecognizable or kidnapped i there wasn't any evidence as to where they were. and last week we've got concrete evidence from the id s, intelligence community. they have confirmation that they were indeed kidnapped that day. and that's really all we know at this point. so you know nothing about where or how they are. no. so that is, that is the agony and the anguish that we're facing right now is that we don't know where they are. we don't know what the condition or if they were injured in the process of being kidnapped. we don't know if the mom and the kids are together. we don't know if they're held in the tunnels below ground in the dark. as some witnesses have told us from the recently liberated in that piece, or they're in
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a home somewhere, we haven't slept. all we can think about is, are they hurt how the little boys are they with their mom or not? the voice witness, their father being killed. what did they see on the way? how is their journey? there has been no to any of the hostages, not just my family. there's been no proof of life. there's been no, uh videos. uh, no red cross, a delegation that was able to go into gaza to see, you know, what's happened to all of these people were in the complete darkness. and it has been terrible, terrible, terrible to just speculate and not know what's happening to our family. it sounds like an absolute nightmare. it and you say you went back to israel shortly after the attacks. how did that feel or how was that for you? or?
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i just didn't think about it. i just started, i booked a flight. i also heard that there was a lot of distress and there was because of the attack was so sudden, and the army was calling a lot over service to come and help in the fights. they were short on a lot of supplies and my husband and i took 3 extra suitcases. we had a friend who's in the army and we brought with us cellphone batteries and little l . e. d lights for helmets and any supplies that we could do to help people. um and then i just got an l flight, the only airline who was flying 14 hours in fear and, and sorrow. and from the minute i got there, it was a non stop action, a lot of sorrow. um, you know, attending funerals uh, talking to family members and just really being immersed in like,
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what's happening and as well. so at the moment, part of why this was so shocking to people in israel is that the country was built on a promise of safety and security for the jewish people. will your home country ever be the same to you after this? so thank you for asking that. i think we're currently in national trauma and i think really world trauma. right. i mean the things that we've witnessed the eye witness testimony that we've heard the video we've seen. i don't think our brains or human beings were created to even process these kinds of thoughts or these kinds of images. um, i think that we will uh overcome this. um that we were never going to be the same. yeah, probably i don't know if you're even in a place to think about politics right now,
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but you think israel is doing everything it can to get the hostages released so you know, it's a complex question. i would tell you that i have confidence in the conversations and the back channeling that has happened. my family stances where they're asked, do you know more, are you not sharing with the army told you or the intelligence i have told you are stances even if we knew we're not going to stay because we don't want to sabotage the chance of getting them back i would say that i think they're in there's the american intelligence community and other nations are helping and i would like to have faith and trust in the system that everything is being done to get innocent civilians back. yeah. so there is a political divide. i will not deny that the tax caught us by
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surprise that there was a delayed response, right on journal forces. took a long time to get there and to protect this. and these are things that will be addressed and will be looked at when this is done. but right now, everybody's very united in the national focus to get peace and to get everyone back, no matter if there is a rail, you're not all nationalities. all human beings who are held in captivity need to come back home to their loved ones. thank you so much for speaking to us today at calia for, you know, sharing your story and none of your family. and we're really hoping for some good news soon. thank you so much, i really appreciate the time and opportunity. thank you so much. and almost exactly a year from now, the united states will elect its new president at the moment. it looks like the choice will most likely be between the incumbent job. i'm and his pre assessor
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donald trump, pull show trump is by far the preferred choice of republicans, but it's probably fair to say the least favorite choice among non republicans. and those who say he's guilty of trying to subvert the results of the last election and inciting the capitol, rise of january 6th of 2021. now trump has faced trial in congress for that, and lawmakers failed to impeach him. he's also facing federal charges linking him to the insurrection, but even if he's convicted, that would not prevent him from running for office. again. that's where his latest legal troubles come in. there are efforts underway currently in some 20 states to prevent trump from appearing on the ballot next year. this week trial started in colorado in minnesota at the 1st hearing in minnesota on thursday, the judge sounded rather skeptical. section 3 of the 14th amendment protects the republic from breaking insurrection just because it's framers understood that if
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they were allowed back into power, they will do the same or worse. section 3 is plain text bars, trump from ever holding office. and this court as directed by the minnesota legislature in section 204, b point 44 must exclude trump from the ballot. what? what i'm concerned about the, let's say you're right, let's say we agree with you that section 3 is self executing and that we do have the authority under the, the relevant statute to, to keep mr. trump's name off the ballot. or should we, katherine ross is a professor of law at george washington university and specializes unconstitutional law. so lots to talk about here, as well as these latest cases lean on the 14th amendment of the us constitution before we think into them. could you briefly explain what section 3 of the amendment says? yes, section 3 of the amendment which was passed right after our civil war says that
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any person who at one time was an official of the us government who swear an oath, to protect the united states and its laws was and who then participated in this interruption engaged in insurrection, or provided aid and comfort to insurrection, this wouldn't be barred from ever holding another elective federal office. 10 of the time that that was passed, it was kind of clear who wasn't as direction as did. they serve in the confederate army or one of the governments of the confederate states or the confederacy itself . and if their state presumed to send them to congress, then congress refused to seat them. so it was clear at that time that congress did the enforcement. and during the 20th and 21st century, this has hardly been used at all. i mean really less that i have 4 phases and,
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and the paper is really isn't as clear as it used to be right now with the, with the cases at hand. is it and how could trump be disqualified for something he hasn't been found guilty of? or at least not yet as well. that's one of the questions in, in the 18 sixty's, there was not a criminal prosecution before. congress said, we're not sealing you. you weren't in the direction this um or gave aid and comfort in some cases, minimal. one man gave his son a $100.00 when his summit listed the confederate army to help them with expenses and they wouldn't see the father. so what is enough, what does it mean to be in an interaction? what is the definition of an evidence direction? these are questions that evidence has been presented in the current trial in the colorado court to try to interpret the contemporary meaning as well as the original
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meaning. and trust lawyer says it has to be of participation in an organized state of warfare to oh, good, throw or separate from the government. and they say as bad as january 6 was, and it was a legal and it was violent. that isn't our definition of immense direction, but the leading scholar of the history of this part of the 14th amendment has said, this absolutely needs the definition. and then there's a question. who has authority? is it the court? is it the state legislatures? is it only congress and do you need to have been convicted of a crime because trump has never been pro, got charged even with current pending case. either insurrection or insight? yeah, we just heard the judge in minnesota. they're questioning whether or not the 14th amendment should even be applied here, and i want to extend that question to you. doesn't it take the choice away from voters at 1st?
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i didn't know we were going to reach minnesota, and i need to disclose that i am on a legal advisory committee to the non profit that brought that case. but i have not been actively engaged with them on that case. um, so uh, what is present, what should the court do? and, you know, trump has made the argument that this would deprive the voters of the right to make the decision themselves. if that were actually what the constitution requires, then the 14th amendment would make no sense because congress in passing it just, we're taking this out of the voters, hands, mississippi, and alabama cannot send us interaction is and expect us to see them in congress. they don't have that right. and what the voters in these 2 cases are asking, is that they be allowed to vote on candidates who actually are qualified to hold
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the office. if the voters choose them. because if the voters choose someone who is not qualified, then the voters have had no impact on the system at all, and they're both or discarded. so we compare this to some of the things that are kuma and montague institutions like court aggressive and has to be 35 years old. some to and the secretary of state is each state can sit on the part of the 21 year old on the ballot. they can serve with those law professor catherine ross. thank you so much for your time and for those insight. thank you for inviting me or the and finally, catalonia human tower champions have set a new record because the use of the law sancho formed a tower consisting of 3, joined up 9 story towers of 9 people. each. this 9 by 9 power has never been
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successfully completed before it takes around 500 people at the base to support the weight of the tower. human towers or across space were 1st documented in the 18th century and are considered by unesco to be part of the world's cultural heritage. and don't worry, i know it doesn't look like it, but nobody was hurt in the making of that tower or it's falling apart. for the 3rd time, the race are to stay in touch so you can follow our team on twitter. you find those under the, the, you news and myself that nicole underscore, florida. if it's the latest headlines you're looking for, there is of course, always our website. that's the w dot com for now though from the entire team here on the day. thank you so much for spending parts of your day and your week with us . happy weekend by the
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