tv DW News Deutsche Welle November 15, 2023 5:00pm-5:30pm CET
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the as is ralph carried on what it said was like august had the operations against thomas miller as a groups of people. the right code was the humanitarian situation. also on the program, britain's top codes rules, the government's comforter, visual migration policy on low u. k. wants to stop asylum seekers from arriving in small boats for supreme court, which it fits funds to send them to relax. and to hear from the 1st german commander of the international space station to your funds to explore the final frontier the . i'm still going to welcome to the program. israel's manager says it's false is of entered gauze is biggest hospitalized al she for a following the long following a long stand off these rail defense forces. i specially trained to troops and i've
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kind of, you know, have to talk through the operation, the kinds thomas, in a specific area of the hospital, medical personnel, windows you 5, those are right, was immune in time. just reading the officials said that they're taking steps to avoid civilian casualties. 8 organizations of war and the finding will complicate on over the dire situation of patients. we should have to speak for the israel defense force. if you told dw more about this ministry operation. so this was a event that happened this started last night based on our intelligence bibiana focused. and the precise target was send the component of the hospital with our special forces accompanied by a matrix by some amount of care and equipment. and a very, very focused the operation eh, i would say the hospital we have, we engage with some med terrace. we're still learning and what happens there? this is ongoing is happening as we speak. those forces are still inside certain
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areas of the hospital right now. there's no exchange of fire inside the hospital. we're going out for specific things that we're looking for. and i know that the patients at this point are safe, then separate areas. and then that's why we came in with a very, very small and professional force. a lot of corresponding rebecca rich as the in israel told me more about what's happened since these really forces and fidel chief hospital will feel it obviously very difficult, pretty much impossible to get a clear picture of what's happening at the hospital. it's a vast complex of buildings and is we're hearing from the idea of spare. they're saying that they're carrying out this talk to these targeted operations inside certain undisclosed areas inside the hospital. and the patients and medical staff are not in all the part of the hospital we've been hearing on the ground reports suggesting that move move between any of the buildings has been virtually
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impossible for a couple of days now as the, as the military kind of surround to the hospital, we've been hearing about tanks on the grounds, all of that el cheapo hospital and 5 firing happening for the really between a soldiers and from us. the tense, that's where the military is certainly staying. so we're hearing that it's a dire situation for the, the patients, they're already the hospital has run out of electricity because of fuel shortages to run the generation is it's fast running out of medical supplies, hearing harrowing stories from doctors. so we're trying to perform a medical treatment operations and such without the without the relevant medication and tools. we also know that there are about 1500 people. we believe that a sheltering inside the hospital with all patients and they're in danger of being injured as well. but we, we know that evacuating is proving very, very difficult. the. the vi is riley military saying that they are willing to try to evacuate people. i was on a briefing whole with them
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a little while ago and they said, you know, it's up to them not being specific about who them, who they meant when i said them, but that it's up to them as to how and when and where they want we'd like the people would like to be evacuated. so we've got a very complex situation and of course no international generalist i able to access because it's a very, very difficult to find out exactly what is happening on the ground much. and what is the latest on negotiations to slate, up to 3 of a hundreds of hostages who are still being held in gaza. we know that negotiations have been going on for days. there was a pause in those negotiations off to the ground defensive began, but we're hearing today that the guitar you negotiate is saying that very, very close to a deal to release 50 hostages in return for a 3 day c saw and some women and children from palestinian women and children from his riley prisons. uh they say that be these um stations uh happening and
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coordination with the us but that its is currently the sticking point. we know that the is right, a government prime minister benjamin netanyahu saying that they will be noticing site until all the hostages release. so whether or not that particular deal comes to fruition. you know, we're still waiting to hear more information on that. i've actually buying myself today. we have a number of families, all of some of the hostages. we've, they've been conducting a week from jersey, sorry, from tel aviv to jerusalem. and sort of a protest or an aware or when is raising events to try to lobby the government lobby international organizations to do more, to free the hostages, to make it a higher priority. opposed to government saying it is one of a key ams, but they've got military gains as well. and those 2 aims are, don't match if you will. but at the moment what we're hearing, what we're hearing on on the radio, is that any hopes of finding some hostages or remnants of, or um, you know,
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signs of the hostages were around. i will see if i have not come to fruition sites about rebecca, rebecca, rich as it enters toby frick speaks full of a united nations international children's emergency fund. unicef. you've got concerns about how this situation at our street for hospital mice on fold following that is really right or. yeah. so somebody says, yeah, the, the site because when i use the miniature side hospital, let me see a few photos of offices really being at the, a centralized hassan is, is, has this disease. it's massively inserting on, let's just say to the doctors and patients. you might not see or it'll be in that the yeah, it's kind of careful, critically images children, civilians trying to capture people who have all the conditions and you have all these fighting around and out of the circles of ministry guys inside the house. so it is a mask,
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and that is really for us. the key thing is around making sure that people are settled. they open the gains of protecting children, protecting civilians. even during the contents of phillips, he's all his guys. all of israel says a test. everything a can to minimize at casualties. are you satisfied with those assurances? a hi con, speak specifically. so what the site and the, what i can say is, what are the results and the reports, all the numbers of children to the care, what is the small, 4500, your thousands injured, and then many, many other things as well. no, just choose tools. so the situation is really catastrophic. safely. the children who live across the gaza strip. we know that you're around a 100000 children inside, displaced by age of the south of identity and very big c like and shelters. and i was as obvious, she was like, disease outbreaks, that was rain yesterday for the 1st time. the use of executive director who is
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visiting also to in the south as well. and then so that does help. so this is really the brain and not just in the moment across the gulf. so we know the rest of the children are already married. right, real. and i'm not getting any better. just a quick one on those deliveries of, of things like a incubators and medical supplies to a hospital. that is essentially a without power. and is this a useful of the supplies useful without power to actually run the hospital? are still the tools where they all need to be protected from the tysons, protected from energy, going to be safe havens. secondly, they need to be able to function. that means i need you to function. we're not really uh critical point when it comes to the amount of fuel that's available. um the fuel hasn't been coming in. it's the result, the running 30. all right, john, and also send you may have. so this is
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a key point. what is the hosting just kind of function do, do it needs to do, and then you, yes, you need some medical supplies. so the doctors have access to the central result is they be able to, the best treat shows, increases the into of that. so there's a whole host of things that we need at 1st, we need to use the present the site and then re to get some friends in the field on the supply side. because the doctors is the one i like have 2nd by 2nd to help out . i key childrens. that means a lot. okay, thank you for that to toby freaked out from you. and you said the wife, how says the us president joe biden has spoken a guy by phone with his randy prime minister benjamin netanyahu, the 2 leaders side to have discussed that negotiations to secure the release of some of the $200.00 or so hostages being held by how much more than a month after the hostages were taking their families, keeping up the pressure on israel government with the protest, mushroom telling faith to jerusalem on the road,
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demanding the release of their loved ones. around $240.00 hostages were taken during the october stephen's tier attacks. only 4 have been freed, and one re skewed. these relatives won the government to do more to get the restore leased. my mother was taken, my sister and my sister's husband a and my on they will all take instead of the 9 days a go. they don't have any more of a time. we don't know how that will be in the date that we don't know if they have for the or so many relatives accuse prime minister benjamin netanyahu of not doing enough to bring home the hostages about the where are you? where are you i
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mean. 7 i'm demanding answers from new ton yahoo! and the cabinet answers and dates looked at 7 o 2. we have no strings anymore. that's. that's the israel has consumed the dates of norma fiano, a 19 year old soldier, captured by him. us the militant group claim she died in israel is bombardment, but has not provided evidence of that. there is hope that the international community can help free the rest of the hostages. relatives have also demonstrated outside the you in the offices in geneva. for hostages that have been released is that an amazing stop but the that we still have 240 being kept that so were send, did you was, you know, i'm hopeful that my family wouldn't be released, but i don't think it's going to be as a to be for,
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for people kind of release is but more into an agreement with the big number of hostages and something more international diplomacy involved as the finding gaza shows no sign of losing up matches. believe that, reminding the world about the hostages is the best chance of getting them out alive . let's take a look at that. so most or is that making headlines around the world trade in or far as a site. these 3 people have been killed in the series of russian me file strikes, at least for me, file safety, eastern time, a say lead off overnight and exasperation of region. at least one man died when his village was shout. francis issued an international arrest water for syrian president, bashar assad in connection with alleged crimes against humanity. residents, a sides accused of being complacent and kindly come a tax near to moscow. saint august 2013, and which more than 1400 people were killed. britain supreme court has ruled that
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the governments planned to send the asylum seekers to run the is unlawful. the decisions a major blow to the problem in the service you soon who's made tackling in legal immigration, a key policy pledge. he says government is already working on a new treating with ronda and could change u. k, nor to make it happen. the rondon government says it's unhappy that the court rule that it is not a safe country for asylum seekers and refugees. a desperate people making a desperate crossing. i mean, the migrants take rubber boats across the english channel, a 32 kilometer journey to seek asylum in the u. k. more than $45000.00 domains, a trip in 2022. more than 25000. so far this year. over a 175000 people are awaiting a 1st decision on asylum claims overall. britain's conservative government has made its plan to the port asylum seekers to rwanda. the centerpiece of
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a policy intended to deter people from making the crossing. in april 2022, the home secretary struck a deal with a rwanda's foreign minister to send people there while their claims are being processed. a 6500 kilometers flight from britain to central africa, the u. k. has already invested over a $100000000.00 euros in the plan. hotels and rwanda had been converted into lodgings for migrants. still sitting empty. as the plan soon ran into legal challenges. the 1st flight scheduled to depart a military air base in june 2022 was imported and an appeals court has since ruled the plan unconstitutional. critics say the plan isn't just on lawful and inhumane, but wasteful and expensive to one government assessment says that removing an individual would cost $60000.00 pounds more per year than keeping them in the u. k . so, so unclear just how much of a determined affect the plan, whatever have despite all that,
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there have also been calls from within the european union to adopt a similar scheme. eager to cut down on migration other countries have seen the plan as a possible model for linda to outer space, which appears just a bit closer these days. early this month, yours most powerful telescope. euclid beamed back its 1st images to us. last week, the you held a summit to plan your next steps in exploring space. you are in space agency hope since the beginning of i'm patient's new era. when it comes to unlocking the secrets of space, the european space agency is in poll position. this year it's launched to not one but 2 high profile research missions. the 1st is euclid. it's job is to measure exactly how the universe expanded 10000000000 years ago. recently, its 1st images were published. the job of the space prob juice is to investigate
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the possibility of extra terrestrial life on jupiter's icy moons. the vendors, copernicus, the most um vicious program to observe the planet for the in the future. the set wants to do more than deliver satellite data. it also wants to use artificial intelligence to predict the consequences of environmental pollution and destruction. another goal to be a pioneer in the prevention of space trunk. the plan is to extend the life spine of satellites and after their mission, let them burn up without leaving a trace in the atmosphere. in 2026, the agency wants to catch a 112 kilogram piece of debris from a rocket for the 1st time in mind space travel.
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however, visa has never outgrown the role of junior partner for nasa. currently supplies the so called service module for the us is a ryan capsule, along with important building blocks for a planned space station that will or the, the moon. all your systems are looking at an exchange. european aster notes will likely be able to join us as admissions to them in 3 missions are currently under discussion is a huge problem for isa is rockets. the agency is currently dependent on providers like space x as its own launch systems aren't ready yet. arianne 6 is expected to lift off in 2024 at the earliest 4 years behind schedule. let's take a closer look at the history of a joseph ashburn, who's director general of the european space agency. jim and his alexander guest has spent about a year on the international space station. children get 2 emissions
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a welcome both shaking hands with an actual space man, so based on going get watched again quickly. i'm. let's start with you. joseph ash, back i'm we had in the report, that's your hopes that this year. but if this is the stuff that i'm vicious, new era to achieve what effect just last week and cvd, we had the space summit and that this based on did, we really decided on the part of the m shift of how we want to do a space in the future, if that means much more competition and doing in a better defined way and this is done for long show us on one side, but also for exploration. that means to, to have a cow go a vehicle that things kind of go up to the space station is talking dear. i'm just thinking again cargo down to the surface and this is a cup ability, which you'll have doesn't have to day. and we want to develop this in competition competition. so who will be competing for want industry, you will be competing. so we, as you start, we will you be the ink or customer, right? we would buy a service, but we,
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we let the industry do it in the best possible way. and the way we are doing it in a similar way as an off site is done with in the us. so with the cops program out of which as we all know, us basics with the 5 to 9 was most developing and really developing into a very, very impressed a found on show a new presumably your hope is that this will be your, these will be your repeating companies that they will have to be, you'll be in companies because as e, so we're spending gilby and dec today is monday. that means you'll have been companies wouldn't be allowed to compete. ok, i'm just not a gas, but i just want to runs up to the international space agency in special space station including one as a commander. so what, why do you want to go next? yeah, indeed, it was a great, great privilege to fly to the international space station for europe to do experiments, to bring back to the european citizen we did about 700 and different fields of science and like to try to help prevent diseases to help with new materials that's
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a really good to do is really important for us in europe. to do is great that we have continuity with and now developing a know and cargo spaceship that could potentially develop into a human spaceship as well. the next step uh definitely is going to the moon as the argument program that we're involved in that we fly to with european service multiple of the ryan spaceship together with our partners with both sides of the moon. next as a scientist. why, why would we be na? oh people that i've never been that you and you being closer, but you know it's, it's being gums and why people as suddenly going back again. yeah, you really got to see it as a new continent. it's like a continental, like on talk to as was like, talk to go was a 100 years ago, a new continent. and did you need to discover the 1st of all, because it's there, it's in our, you know, it's our dna to understand our surroundings. we have to do it, and the moon is the next place to do. it has a lot of answers for us that concerns ourselves. the security of our species on our
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planet to defend ourselves from asteroids. it's also an archive of vers history of potentially it contains a knowledge about how lives go to earth. so is it really, really have to discover it because it's there and, and, and just being there once to put up a flag or a few times, it just doesn't help it. i mean, if you want to understand an entire continent like on tortuga, you'd have to go there afterwards again and to put down a scientific research basis. that's the, that's the next plan. joseph ashbrook, just on the, on that point we, we better there are any number of missions to the minimum induce going a, china is going um, united states and, and, and now you're wants to get there as well. so is there any sort of co ordination about this or does everyone just how about it? i'd say it's a good mix. it is a bit of competition, obviously, between different countries and different places. but there's a lot of cooperation and especially deal with bins based agencies,
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very well known for cooperating with major problems. we have a very strong cooperation with the united states with nasir, but also without the file. so india is one of them chip and is another one. so beauty and space by, by nature requires us to, to work together on that's what exactly what we're doing. so it was, it was the site and positive when when india landed on the, it was on the fall side of the moon was at a site was involved in the event boss to in fact, we provided some of the signals for the lending of this or lending that he killed off of india and yes, the whole may be a smaller one, but yes, we have been involved effects that received a very nicely at the office. thank you. from the chief of the indians basically to to organization. file contribution do make this successful being the possible. let me find you. so the moon is, is the next day is not official. this is the moon, the next me. so let me, i mean, he wants to go back to because it is allowed. we have satellite statute, the space station and then we go to the moon eventually of the but the one is
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certainly the next big target. yes. all right. and the training sounds intriguing and lines are all say annoy. so yeah, it's a, it's one of the things that all european astronauts do is we're tried to get ourselves ready for such a mission or some such admissions that come up in the future. and one of it is to get everybody on the sort of an equal level in terms of doing science on the moon surface. so some of us have already a background in like me into physics actually use speaking to, to do, for instance here. so i've, i've worked in the field on okay, knows, but not all of my colleagues have, and so the part of the training is to get everyone on the equal level so that we, once we are on the surface of the moon and work together, we're scientists, or back on earth so that we're their eyes in the years and like sensors, geological sensors on the surface, so that we're efficient in communicating with them. so we can bring back the right rocks for further research on her. and alex mentioned in his 1st, in these 1st i'm so the best of science and medical questions that come down to
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that in space, which we sort of brings me to, to my question for you, which is about, i think that, that a says 2023 budget is just over 7000000000 yours. so what are we getting and you look for all that money. besides some spectacular photos, we're getting a lot extra digits. if you divide the 7000000000 by the number of people, then you'll have about 500 millions encouraging all the way and haven't got a pen yet. this is about 14 yellows per person for you. and that is, uh, the price is a of a ticket of a send him a ticket. but the says developing big, send him up for this. uh 14 you elizabeth. okay. um i liked it and how does it let, let me push on that. that's it. so one of the tangible benefits that that would deriving from, from you don't take offense, it will perhaps not you, but you don't take it off into space. mean, we're doing so much more than just ask one of us to not to of course are the most visible part of it. but the about half of our budget of to 7000000000 is spent on
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those types of ation, telecommunication and navigation, which i really services or the use of satellites for people on plan to do, especially if i could. i made money building, so i get called shall fall, this place. so we have a estimate. so which are done by economist and they say one you invested in, in the space programs bring back about the you of us. few of us in some cases, even 10 years back to the economy because new services develop, new business is open. and if you invest in space, it's going way beyond the space segment it does have to, but it does not mention, it doesn't economics to mention, it keeps telling. so, and you'll help, but also secuity dimensions and it will use a mix up be done this where this is a is good value for money for the, for the economy. what about ecological mattress? because of course you sending rockets into space that does not look like it's going to be good for anyone's comp and footprint. i'm, what are you doing to minimize that? first of all, we're doing a lot of research to be even green and both sustained have been our in our space transportation,
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but also all we do. but we have one of the best is not the best poll come using satellites to money to our planet. we call it to take to buy this of our planet with the compound x program, but also to us explored us and the middle electric emissions. and they are necessary to understand our planet our climate and to mitigate and to adapt all the time but, but also to understand how it works. good talking to you. thank you so much for coming in and joining us dollars is that of, of european space agency at joseph ashburn. and i still haven't found that gas. thank as i say, show up to date, i'll have more. well, here's the top of the hour. there is prodigy has that news, asia, in just a good the
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reality of the fact. a catastrophe is the good news, a history science action or should we believe the prophecies? in 42 in 60 minutes, the interest, the global economy, our portfolio dw, business b on here's a closer look out the project. our mission to analyze the flight for market dominance. this is where the heck with the w
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