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tv   I Want More  Deutsche Welle  November 24, 2023 10:15am-11:01am CET

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side by side, just say some there is a to the cesar is not a vehicle. we need to find a way of leading side by side with made peace with the germans off the road to an over generation. this relationship, and it's absolutely clear that that is also possible with uh, with this hosting from us is that the recent terrorist organizations that engage the most, the worst crimes against humanity, if there's no peace possible with people that train themselves to behave, babies, there's no peace possible with people that just went out to in 6 months, long stroll law on civilians. and so there's no peace would come between the 1st union people. if people liked the test on my mom's shirts and we absolutely would make peace for then we would have to find a way to move side by side. sharon, thank you so much for talking to us today. i hope you will be re united with your
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father soon. sharon lift kits in tell a be thank you. the earlier i spoke to mike martin, a military analyst at kings college london. i asked for his thoughts on the start of this 4 day pause and funny. it's very fragile. um, the thing that you need to look out for a set to be spoilers to the deal. so these are people who was interested in the deal and they might be people within have us. so different functions of the, to how much time as obviously as a cellular structure. so it's not like a, an all me with, with direct come on and control. and also other functions like palestinian islamic jihad, i'm, they haven't been mentioned to tools so i don't even know whether that included in the day when they hold their own hostages. and they may also wish to scope of the day. so those are the things that we need to keep an eye on. or what about the, what's happening on the ground there in the gaza strip is the,
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is really military staying there during this pause in the fighting? or are they expected to actually pull some of their troops out for now? i know they are o everyone staying in position. it is literally stopped firing even if you are, you know, a couple of 100 bases away from people that you've been firing out before. 7 o'clock local time, i'm the one differences and this is built into the deal. how much insisted as part of the deal that the israelis would stop over flights of the gaza strip. say that they were able to move the prisoners without giving away the military positions or all perhaps where the other prisoners, why, and that is part of the deal. so is there a way to be while the data is on, while the prisoners are being moved? one p, i the flying, the, i think the northern parts of the gaza strip. okay, we're looking at an exchange of hostages and prisoners coming up. that's supposed
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to start happening this afternoon. walk us through the steps involved in that exchange. the way that it's set up in this deal, it must be quite complicated. or it's usually complicated the, the main issue is trust. neither side trust each other. so even if accidents happen someone's way and goes off. the problem is that the other side will assume that they're attacking and then the sci fi will be broken. both sides will need to bring prisoners to an exchange points and want us to use that will be on the border of the gaza strip. so these riley's, that's very easy, but how much they've got these prisoners dispersed that like you to be underground and they need to move the we just spoke about is what i have if i need to move them to the exchange point without, as well, knowing where they've come from and when, when they get to that exchange point, both sides will want to secure the side of it. and both sides will then set
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themselves up with a distance in between them. why they can show each other's, the prisoners, say that they can then exchange them. it's horrendously, complicated and full with potential issues. both accidents and some of the school is that we spoke about earlier. so complex deal we're talking about here. it was weeks in the making a lot of negotiations. those negotiations took place in the hall, the capital of kata talked to us about the role of contract in brokering this deal . like they're planning and it's been a central role, i'd say yeah, i think really it comes back to just terry. and the guitar is really the end of the day. we're the only sides. the only the only access is really the both sides could trust enough to get this deal over the line. obviously it gets holidays highest at times positive the how much leadership bought because i was holes over the
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proceeding years. bill top, the good enough relationship with these ladies that they can act as a mediator. i think actually we can, we can see this is a role that guitar is see themselves taking on. they've played a few other roles like this in libya and in syria as a much lower level. and i think this is a role that they see for themselves in the region and on the world stage. mike, thank you very much for your analysis there. that was mike martin of kings college london here in germany. there's also hope that the hostages who hold german citizenship will be among those released many of the people could buy him us our dual citizens, including members of one family from keyboards very, whose house was burned during the october 7th terrorist attacks. a relative told, dw, the 11 family members were taken hostage that de 8 are still believed held hostage in gaza. for those are german citizens, including 2 small children,
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among the families hoping to be be reunited with our loved ones or some with roots . going back to the nazi era here in germany, 11 members of the show home of the door, a family were killed or kidnapped by him. us the youngest, 3 years old. you wrote navy and 3 year old. yeah. hell. siblings snatched by how most terrorist, the whole family ripped apart. know they may just be coming home for grandfather the lot, the beginning of the end of a living nightmare. and i goes to hug them, use them. and they also, they and probably they would be most be done in the 1st time to just. ready check up and everything. but i don't know, i don't know. as even single what they go to doing, what they're going to say. the family descended from holocaust survivors are among
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those. how must hostages to hold german citizenship last month, relatives travel to buy a lend to pressure german officials to help bring their loved ones home. in the center of the german capital on thursday, street talk just drawing attention to the cause. the single exec in the visa on our children on the visa bodies, this the battery come us keep nothing shows who we are dealing and psych to maintain this so we should not forget it and 9 that should the whole well, despite guessing without being on savannah, no, all the families at the heart of this tragedy can do is wait. it's cross over now to our correspondent ben physician, who's standing by force and tell a beep. then you're in an area known as hostage square. what's the atmosphere like
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there now that the ceasefire is underway and some hostages to be released today? hi, terry, i was at the hostage square this morning where a whole lot of people with gathering to hit the latest news. people have been gathering their every day to give their support, family members, relatives of the hostages, and also the supporting public one. man. i spoke to dad this morning, said he feels detached from the whole crisis. he doesn't know anyone involved, but he wanted to point out that he feels compassion for the children of gaza. remembering that among the dead 40 percent is said to be just kids. he feels that he can't express that in the public here. others have come down to this square where i am a real tourist hotspot in downtown, at tel aviv, where you can see behind me the photos of uh, some of the people who were attacked on october 7th, the hostages, who would take it on october 7th. i also have a guest with me here, natalie. uh,
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whose brother is subbing at the moment? um, what sort of feeling is it for you now that there's a ceasefire in place? considering that your brother is among those fighting for israel? i have a lot of mixed feelings because i know that today the suggest some of them are coming back home and i think all of us really nice them are missing them. and also i feel that my brother is in the front line of this war. and i also, i feel like relaxed that they know that now there is a cease fire. and that is ways, but i also know that this war cannot be. and now, because they're still hostages, what's happened there? it's, we can even wrap our minds around it. you know, people who, who, what kills also who suffice the attacks. but at the same time, there hadn't been this many people out and about and tell of even 50 days. what does that tell you? um yeah,
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i know people or in the party nova the nova, and also one that were killed over there. and i feel like we're trying our best every day we we want to feel safe. we want to to, i don't know. yes. our reality back a little bit in this nightmare. but our minds in our thoughts and everything is still we, they us to deal with the soldiers that, that they're still fighting. we just want to feel alive again and to live safely, which is whatever use riley is saying to me at the moment. natalie, thank you very much. great. talking to so natalie as brother uh, obviously uh, able to take advantage of this cease fire and take a break from finding people here,
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waiting to hear whether or not this hostage deal actually does go over the table later today. ben, thank you very much. that was our corresponded ben, physical and in telling me thank you terry. you're watching dw, in is just reminder of the top story. the israel home us temporary ceasefire has begun that appears to be holding. pausing, funding is set to last 4 days and it comes after some of the deadliest fighting in the history of the israeli, palestinian conflict policy, trans prisoner releases our parts of the truce and our duty to take place later on today. the truce also includes an allowance of paid shipments into gaza. hundreds of trucks are believed to be entering now at the border between israel and as each of the
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business dw news, don't forget, you can always get all the latest news and information anytime you want on our website. so that's d w a dot com, and of course our social media feeds are handled there at dw, there's, i'm cherry martin. thanks for the questions. got any issues with a lot say what the,
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what do these do for fun? via do gravitational waves squeeze outside when did people begin getting high and low think. gov how do i need a drum for you to the beat and what perfect kids football find? find the on says yes most with dw science on the top, 10 the in tackling the ro chrissy together. angela as a volunteer who assist slot is an engine into cranium who is being treated in germany. though the care of those wounded in the will was guaranteed gym and also as he's hopelessly overwhelmed and without the help of volunteers. edward o phone, a boss, focus on getting ready. next on d w,
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the top calls to everyone who wants to know more about this topic that concern us about this story is beyond the headline world in progress. the w talk caught people and trucks injured was trying to feed the city center, the straight pieces explain the
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around the world more than 150000000 people of we of mine because no one should have to make up your own mind. dw may 4 mines of the this is focus on europe. i'm lara. babel a welcome. the days are getting shorter and colder and winter is just around the corner in europe for many people in ukraine. it's an unwelcome change of season with the drones and artillery russia is targeting ukraine's heating plants and power grids just as they did last year. the attacks are an effort to demoralize the
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civilian population. millions fear that they will once again have to face the cold without electricity heating or running water well on it. and car key is one of those affected per apartment block was badly damaged. last year at the start of rushers, envision since then she has been living with her mother in the basement, which survived the attack unscathed their make shift home has provided them with protection from the war, raging above, still analogues to move back into her place. and that's where he comes in to meet you and his team have been working tirelessly to repair the damage caused by the war. even though it's a task with no end insight, a suburbs and car keys. things here still look much as they did in the early months of the war when the suburb was bon bonded by the russian forces. buildings were
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headed by artillery and as residents report even by missiles from fighter planes, those that have stayed are now facing their 2nd winter without central heating. some apartments don't even have windows and it has been living in the basement of her apartment complex for 20 months event together with her mother and a friend, because it's warmer down here. this old wood burning stove is their only source of heat. but hopefully we can warm up with this so it would be much colder without it, at least we won't freeze like upstairs and my flight from qualitative for the city and is building is at the bottom of the priority list because it's too severely damaged to be repaired quickly, many of the districts residents are in a similar situation and are dissatisfied with the authorities. in central car keeps a so called fast recovery approach is being used. minor damage is repaired quickly
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so that residents don't have to vacate their homes for long. in spaces in the cities, emergency shelters can go to those who really need them. on this street, a russian missile recently exploded. it destroyed the windows of almost all the buildings here. i'm also all we do the fox recovery cost recovery. we change windows, the garbage and the major this flats resident is currently staying with our family. so the team expects she'll be able to return soon to the garbage and to close the windows. uh, it seems to me that today we can do it uh for. so once the road has also been repaired, it will be hard to tell that this block was hit by a missile. but even as the team is working, air raid sirens go off. do the volunteers feel as if the work is never ending
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with is know for sure, but we're ready for everything now we do it to or and or but in future really much we didn't know when but housing shortage is which is one of many challenges facing the ukrainian authorities, as cold weather begins to set in last winter, the russian military use drones and long range missiles to strength, ukrainian power grid. this led to frequent power cuts across the country. but this time, ukraine is better prepared for russia's attacks. engineers have been rebuilding hundreds of substations and encasing them and blast proof concrete. the new enclosures wouldn't withstand a direct missile head, but they would protect against shrapnel
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mostly with i mean because there might be some damage. but it wouldn't be that bad to you and then we will be able to get it up and running again quickly. if you didn't want to watch it, it would be, it was the one in addition, ukrainian military plans to deploy its air defense as a key points in the energy grid. this includes thermal power plants and large substitutions, such as this one, which supplies up to half a 1000000 households with electricity. but despite its best efforts, the countries energy infrastructure is going to be in for a tough winter. russia has destroyed many expensive power plants, and replacements are only being delivered piece meal. and that means that they gave you on some, janet, out or for some lower then before falls as seen status and uh they have to be even be 3 and from one side to rebuild. prepared to be fair understanding what's happened to be fair. a lot of training can the pro ration down from either side to from the coupon side via on the,
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to the position to have the expert things that russia no longer believes that can pressure ukraine into submission by attacking infrastructure. and now we use, i believe, was that if you think it will be cops, but we will sort of wife as soon as the central heating is repaired and it plans to move back upstairs, the city has promised her it will be done, but didn't fix a date that is for the that's what as i said, sometimes we think we have to give them a kind of we didn't feel that way at 1st, but now we do more and more often to come to the schools. we've been waiting a long time for the war to end it. but you know, in concerning the i u. n. o wishes you had something to look forward to, then maybe the winter months would be easier to bear. the lobby slab
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shack of life has been drastically changed by the war. first, the ukrainian soldier was seriously injured or fighting for his country against russia. then he became one of around 800 ukrainians who were flown out to germany for treatment. now as the bladder slab recovers, he finds himself fighting red tape in germany. and he has been supported by an sheila, charlotte, a volunteer who looks after injured soldiers from ukraine. germany has promised to cover all the health care costs, but on sheila is seeing just how stressful the bureaucratic process is for her clients. it's angela charlotte, his day off. but the care has voluntary work to do in her spare time. she looks after an injured ukrainian soldier in need. he's being treated in a clinic outside berlin. german bureaucracy is angela's biggest problem. in my system, most of these like jobs were validated over a year ago,
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they were in the ukranian hospital with serious injuries and no financial support from ukraine. then they come here and have to confront german bureaucracy. they're confined to their beds, they can't leave the hospital, but have to do the rounds of the social welfare office, the jobs center, and who knows what other agencies that those gain bodies loss was badly wounded by a grenade, splinter, and is partially paralyzed. is this the gigs? i know the, the 25 year old is dependent on health to do most things. personally showing up at all the official appointments is out of the question. angela and other volunteers take care of his paper work. today. they have also brought gifts for bodies love those aboard for sure. it means an awful lot to me with that the volunteers, we wouldn't be able to submit these documents and sort out all these things that
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they're now helping us with are all with us. so when they look like a lot is life is currently at the rehab stage. he'd like to know what he can expect after the therapy. uh, put on hold on. is that a term i've spoken to the doctor to? they say it'll be very difficult to recover from this kind of condition with it, but i'm hoping for the best. uh no. and i do some old check. campbell, a 2 man hits the clinic, social care section. she contacts the health insurance companies, government agencies, and other authorities to get support for patients like lobbies, love after their treatment. he has had no insurance coverage for 2 months now. the same policy. so if i, if he has no apartment yet, he's only been in the hospital. a district office is in charge of his case, but we can contact anyone there were told someone is going to call back and they don't. it's been like that for 2 months now. just give us some, since it's fine, we're not to for a whole lot is love wants to go for a cigarette,
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but he needs assistance to get to the smokers area. berlin city authorities are looking after some 30 wounded ukrainians like him. but dealing with the bureaucracy is no easy feat. and only 2 official helpers have been allotted to help all of them open their people to they work from 9 am to 6 pm. they can be contacted after 6 pm, but the soldiers have their problems 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. and we contacted berlin's health department to ask them about ukrainian soldiers situation. but they declined to comment. angela has brought the wedding photos to showed a lot of stuff. he knows the happy couple. at 1st, madeline just wanted to help. but then loved blossomed between the volunteer and angry. another wounded soldier who came to germany. the wedding was also attended by other ukrainians living in exile here. we usually will have to to
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call it put on the we have read a lot about andre in the newspapers. he is an incredible person, very strong and courageous, and we are proud of him for protecting us. and we want to support him, which andre will continue to need a wheelchair in the future. but he remains optimistic for christmas simple at this to be honest, i wasn't planning on getting married at all, but do you have to settle down at some point somewhere on the injuries, i've changed my life completely. that's how it is. who knows what will happen next, but i hope things will look up in the future. andre has 2 more operations ahead of him. after the last one, the clinic asked him to pay personally, even though the ukrainian government had told him that arrangements had been made. and i still contact the door i called the ukrainian health ministry because i told
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them, here's the situation, can you help? and so they told me the german side agreed to pay for the rehabilitation pull up with us. that would be devices, all, most of the volunteers have already written to numerous politicians and people in charge complaining about the bureaucratic hurdles and confusion them. and i know mine, it's bad enough when you come to germany as a normal refugee, but to expect the same from wheelchair users who have lost an arm or worse is out of the question. so i hope everyone here is hoping that the situation will improve soon. madeline and andre is wedding is at least collins for hope. 2 europe is heavily dependent on imports and where metals like lithium intent. both are crucial components for smartphones and electric cars, for instance. but these raw materials are actually not that rare here. they just
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need to be mind. industry experts have turned their attention to england, south west, which has a vast reserves of lithium for c. e. o of cornish metals, richard williams. it hails a new era of mining in the u. k. in the past and mining industry made its fortune from coal and now the decaying sector is experiencing a revival. the uncanny east coast britons, mining history is still visible. the region is rich and minerals that no one wanted for decades. now they are once again highly sought after 50 meters underground. an old mountain is being revived under the sides, crusty 10 project by the mining company, cornish metals seal. richard williams wants to revive the shafts and maintain on a large scale. currently,
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china is by far the largest tim producer for the global market. he'd like to see more come from the u. k. and cornwall. this is the highest grade 10 results in the world. it's not currently in production. so for the highest grade, 10 deposit that we are aware of globally, it is a big thing and i think it reflects again, the quality of the district in caldwell for 10 mineralization from smartphones to wind turbines. 10 is used in practically all electronic devices, the secular scope, would it be mind coordination? missiles are currently assessing the size of the deposit. theme is also to make britain less dependent on china. but when it comes to a period, obviously on the back of the russian invasion of ukraine and things going on with, with china and taiwan, where there's a lot more concerned about security of supply domestic manufacturing. and we think caldwell given its rich rich history and mine and,
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and certainly it's one of the was great 10 provinces can play a big role in supply and to not only to the u. k, but to europe. the issue is so important that the british government has committed to funding to support the projects in cornwall. the u. k presented it's critical mineral strategy last year, even before the device showed that our supply chains all fall more resilient than the all at the moment. and it's about showing that we don't just rely on one or 2 countries around the world to supply could come in those 12 adults manufacturing sector. it'll cost also looks at how we can be mining locally processing, refining and manufacturing, as well. the reason emphasis on renewable energy use has caused demand for critical minerals to skyrocket funding carmel. another big future project is underway. lithium, considerable amounts of liquids in a central element for electric car batteries were recently discovered in cornwall,
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houses drilling guard. this is still a test facility protection. let's see, i'm seeing you, andrew smith. i believe they will be able to cover a 3rd of the case requirements. so we'll just find years a diamond drilled or 700 meters below the surface to extract granite containing the so called light gold. was a bunch of those as well. got some quotes. we've got some via type. what we're really officer is they will silvery specs, which you can see around here. and then usually payton to process, the lithium is separated from the granite purified and refined. and that needs to be processed further, but there is no suitable refinery for that in the u. k, that is likely and the discussions we're having is that the lifting calls and that will get 1st us in europe. and then slowly back into the kaiser be put into the batteries the vehicles built in this country, you know, with the biggest factories in the u. k, we've got the roar ingredients of the logical next step is to put that face in the middle. and that doesn't just apply to lift. you. do you keys rich and critical
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role materials? the campbell and school of mines in thermal, for example, is also doing research on cobalt nickel and tungsten. you have to have the right to energy, so it's a very special hearing cool that we just happen to have. we are very fortunate to have some potential for lithium, some you know, well to often deposit some well tough tungsten here. and it's really up to us whether we make the efforts to use that separately, obstacles still need to be overcome before the main thing can enter production. but for richard williams, what matters is this abandoned industry could trust for once more. i think there's a growing excitement in the local community because everybody wants to see this mind back into production is a strong mind and a heritage here and see in this mine in the head frame and the wheels to it. and again, i think would mean a lot to the local community. the u. k is unlikely to overcome its dependence on
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other countries anytime soon. but it has taken the 1st steps towards reviving its minds. and sometimes life will take you down a path you never expected. it's an experience that child can. you can relate to his journey. loved him from taiwan to a province in turkey, where he lives on the border with syria in this city ever hung up this story and achieved a feat. many architects would marvel that he constructed this center without any prior knowledge or experience. and since then, it has become more than just a building. it's grown into a community for refugees and locals, a like one that acts as a bridge between cultures. there were days when church and you can't quite believe life brought in here to a 100 last a turkish municipality bordering syria. 8000 kilometers away from his home, taiwan. when i wake up
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and what is my job to day and what's my role in the work the architectural historian has done here has already had a phenomenal impact. he founded the taiwan re homeless center for the world citizens. a beacon of hope for both the syrian refugees and locals. children are taught turkish and arabic, while their mothers make our terminal objects to earn money. they even offer traditional far eastern massages. gosh, originally, charles plan was to spend just a brief time at a university and and corrupt, but then a time when these 8 organization needed someone to build a school for refugees. i know how to put a research. i know how to read article, but i never knew a beauty. but so many years ago, i say, i should give
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a talk because no, i visited more, i feel the boxes. so i tell myself, i know i will fail to i will say what i said, i'm going to try once some of his friends back home thought he was crazy to try the homeless has seen repeated rotated attacks and bombings. the border is only a few kilometers away. every 2nd inhabitant is a refugee from syria. not to mention the danger posed by earthquakes to cho makes his way to the city hall. the mayor quickly gave his support to the project. instead of a school for syrian children, this was to be a community center for everyone. the mayor holds tone highest steam. yep. was
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a said love tom the yeah, pull up. the buildings only become a topic of conversation when they have a special atmosphere. viani. ben chow always says, i'm trying to build more than just a building so mostly familiar with us. the new child was awarded an international architectural prize for the center which was built with a budget of just $400000.00. he had the idea to use massive concrete sections left over from turkeys, border wall. effectively turning a barrier that separated people into a center to bring them back together. because as you can see, each piece of the state you live in palm into the face is a very be sort of to me when us quick, how soon we disputing with medical that more importantly, if one day the suicide problem comes or rocky pounds. this building or this structure see so if you kind of like a match up here and kind of the center draws hundreds of people each
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day and made goods primarily for the time when these markets are produced. and it's workshops, child even help design the leather bags a mouse. i'm really how he was, this is my was see a lot of the sensors here, like yes, yes, many of the locals feared the refugees might be given preferential treatment and rumors spread. that's until the centers neighbors got to know child for themselves, getting job well, they set the syrians from get a swimming pool and a soccer pit and things like that with with the hospital. but he's an outstanding person just in terms of humanity. people here could learn a thing or 2 from him for a move. i'm sure you just tell them to talk to people, you look at the people you know, how do you know how this you know,
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how the experience you know, how to work together. and here on the turkish syrian border, there's plenty more work to do for child. can you at the taiwan re homeless center for world citizens? couldn't europeans be facing the end of the much loved a tally and dish? again, he was clams. well, shellfish farmers on the northern italian coast are sounding the alarm and that's because a new invader is threatening the ecosystem in the po delta. and it's here that around 40 percent of clams for the european market come from fisherman manuals, and nothing is growing increasingly desperate. the invasion is decimating his livelihood out of his founding rate. they may not look like much, but these crap. so the biggest threat to show fish bombing in the po, delta rising. so you,
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temperatures are ideal for blue crowds and they reach devastating damage this year . and let me tell you the problem. so literally everything i've been fishing for 30 years for clams and fish, but all that is going to be safe eating them all. you know, they've devoured almost all the young clams race for next year. as harvest, some 1500 families live from time farming in the delta, around 40 percent of clients from the european markets come from here. now the fishers are fighting back to the above all, we have to catch the females because legally, eggs, twice a year. finally, it was the blue crab has even made its way into a tell you in cooking, appearing on menus alongside the classics. but get the label a little. i break the model and fry them with i mean garlic and chilly,
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and then i let them simmer with a splash of wine full. what do you mean? a beautiful pasta with very little effort. but blue crab hasn't really caught on yet. there sold the fish market to knock down price is because demand is modest compared to the overwhelming supply inc, which the georgiana $100.00 at least fisher's earned $0.20 per kilo. it clean the biscuit. so that means they are basically making a considerable loss until a lot of tv map is spinning, but to protect their own future data, they still harvest large quantities of blue crowds, important people. i think that the, the good on key to the government has released 2900000 euros for catching and disposing of the crabs and advice sufficient communities to capture as many as they can to at least save some clams. fisher's happened, wire mesh, fencing around breeding areas, just predicate and we hope that nature will be kind to us and make this crap
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disappear and that our class is, will come back. and so the fisheries continue to fight for their livelihoods, and against the blue crab. as well, that's all for this edition of focus on your up. thank you so much for your company . bye for now. the
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into the comments are concerned with sim sebastian fix not getting the headlines these days, but the warning ukraine has lost none of its intensity. finally, a few ideas capitol hill use my guess is the prime minister. she was, the more goes on how much space does she have in nature plans for defending the voltage space conflict in 30 minutes
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the . this is deed of the news live from berlin, the israel time ice cream is not wonder way a pause and fighting brings people to the streets in gaza with an exchange of hostages and prisoners expected in just a few hours. and trucks are entering guys are from egypt with a vital aid. the relief is part of the deal for the for a temporary cease fire. the
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