tv The Day Deutsche Welle November 29, 2023 1:02am-1:31am CET
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ill between 2 parties and deeply mistrust each other is bound to stand on shaky legs. since its inception, the temporary truce between israel and the mos says more than one seemed on the verge of unraveling. on the 5th day, the fragility of the agreement was again apparent clashes in northern gauze. i left several is really soldiers injured and what both sides call a violation of the seas fired by the other. but still, the deal stands signaling that the warring parties might be more committed to the truce. and they let on nicole for lation berlin and this is the day, the ones how most stops returning hostages. we will review the military pressure on home us until it releases more of them. we do not think that's continued wolf that would make a spread, say, press, and it was really made and make
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a garza and live a potent eventually we will see more people die from disease than we are even seen from the mold bod meant our hope is still each sustainable food that would lead to affect their negotiations and eventually to an end to provide that to, to the, to also on the day the crime of sexual violence against women in war is really rights groups say the international community, including the u. n. is ignoring acts of rape committed by him aust spiders on october 7th. and we are here to sell them. we are not gonna let them be silent anymore. we want them to south out for all the women in music, around like the shout outs for all the other women in the world. it doesn't matter what your nationality or where you come from. you have to shout out for women that were abused. the welcome to the show,
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despite what guitar is calling minimal breeches on the 1st day of its extension, the temporary truce between israel and hum us is holding. both sides have expressed hope for further extensions to the deal, especially has been growing for israel and tomas to seek a lasting truce. something that is really government, as opposed to young aguilar is a former piece negotiator who helped draw of the 1993. also, a court today is the secretary general of the norwegian refugee council. and he spoke to the w about what the way forward should look like. now we are urging for a prolonged ceasefire. we do not think that continued wolf that would make is rather safer and it was suddenly made to make a dozen unlivable for 2300000 people. yes, the 2 sides can make agreements. it's it, as they have done so or so in the,
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in the past is where i have, or with regard to how mazda is a terrorist organization, they have still broken these. i think it has to lead to i think the rest of the world will also the monde that it has to lead to a more kind of settlement of this very long is rarely published, didn't conflict that was young ecolog speaking to dw earlier there will oliver make turn in is a form of hostage negotiator and the director of the organization for thinking. he says the fact that israel and tomas are not negotiating with each other directly is significantly complicating the deal making process when i think i have the greatest declaration for the tare negotiators, because i can't imagine the difficulties to have at least 5 different points of reference that they have to go through in order to reach agreement. when i was involved with the surely degree my it was a very simple thing of having
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a designated group. this negotiate is on the is really side on the m s side. and you went between them. the other thing i think that complicates the negotiation process is this constant press conferences. and in the 5 years that i did the surely do no one knew what was going on or no one knew who was involved. and i think that makes it much easier. but as i say, i have the highest praise for the guitar. the negotiators being able to deal with such a complex process. you have been in touch with a mazda officials since october 7th. what did they tell you about their goals and all of this will launch on service in doha, 2 days after october 7th. and i think it was recognized that what's happened to civilians, indiscriminate killing and the hostage taking us civilians was in right. and the
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message i was given then was clearly that all the civilian hostages could be released without. it goes without negotiation or without any preconditions provided that there was a ceasefire that would enable the coordination of the whole process to take place. i communicated that message, but obviously, and understandably, and a stress that i think israel was very much in a traumatized situation. and i think it still leads and therefore needs good friends to be able to guide it in a time like this. but the message watson to know what's happening, i think could have happened much earlier, or if now israel says they will not stop until they have crushed a mouse. they also say they want all their hostages back for now both sides of only released women and children. from your experience and,
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and from what we're seeing from the is really side this reluctance towards a durable ceasefire. do you see anyway, men and, and soldiers could be freed as part of a deal as well as well. if i may explain them in explaining, i don't in any way endorse set and i'd like to stress that. but the reason why i'm so just what take and was that there was seen as a leverage to ensure to be nice of palestinian prisoners, but otherwise with diane is really jail. so the soldier i think is seeing in a different category from disability and hostages. i think the negotiations over the soldiers will be much more difficult and i just sincerely hope for they to have family stay to have loved ones that want them. she would be re united just as much as the thousands of palestinian prisoners and is really jammed. wanted back by the
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families, i sincerely hope that we will understand now there is no military solution to this process. i think they did the reality, the heart of what has happened, the and fiction of really hurt on both sides. this is a moment when i think that we should see that it's only a political process that will find a durable solution. i come from ireland, the irish had to learn that very hardware as did the british, that you couldn't have a military solution to the irish problem that it had to be a political process. but what's just essential that process has to be inclusive on the significant people with constituency needs to be involved in the negotiations inmate dis desire. i bought. there's one of the c cochran independent palestine. otherwise, i see the agreement is reached,
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as we saw with all flo will stand the test of time as oliver my turn and the former hostage negotiator and director of forward thinking, thanks to the the right is the cheapest and possibly the oldest weapon of war. it's also the least condemned and most silenced war crime. it's against that backdrop that is really rights groups are trying to raise awareness about reports of sexual violence committed by her mos militants during the october 7th attack. this week protestors demonstrated outside the un office in jerusalem, calling on it to address the issue of violence against women. by whom us some is really activists say that you one is down playing the suit. the one says it has requested access to collect information about the attacks, but it has not received a response from israel. christina lamb is chief correspondent for the sunday times,
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and she's also the author of the book, our bodies there battlefield, in which she chronicles the lives of women in war time and how sexual violence against them is used as a weapon. christina, so good to see you again. your in israel at the moment. what have you heard about the sexual violence perpetrated by him? off on and after october 7th. so i've spoken to a number of women's organizations and police and others to always say that they have a body of evidence from people at large the music press or not. so to discover that might witness is of women. young women being briefly rate scan rates at the festival was at losses at the atrocities against women. and how does that compared to what you've been
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able to document and other attacks and conflicts? so i mean, the problem here at the moment that is that the most divided sup actually come forward. so this is all the information coming either from people who are like 1st responder or people who are hiding that day and say that they saw things. oh, certain videos that how much themselves or how at the time a sweet note they were trying to live streaming service the address which is um, oh say from an sorry ations from from us fight to to be cool. so that, you know, there is quite a, a body of evidence suggesting that this happened. i was just a massive pick. uh,
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it unfortunately is something that we see in every conflict. there has been widespread criticism of international women's organizations and the one not responding appropriately to the acts of sexual violence perpetrated on october 7th, or if it protests and hashtags like meet 2, unless your do have been trending. why the silence? you think? i think part of it is the way i'm actually has an east to find that it's come forward. i'm back here. let's be on it. so there's been a lot of property down there this saturday. so i, you know, that as an attendant see, to sit down to those things. this quite often things we had sold at the beginning and somehow not featured. i thought. so that's when the reasons that i came in to actually, you know, go through and talk to people and try and find out for myself as much as you can.
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what's really happening. and then suddenly, you know, there are people that were collecting, be the 40 eastern party remains, talk about, you know, clear evidence forensic evidence that women were 8 degrees c, right? so before it would kill me in certain cases, you are safe. i see that that tells me friends for break. um, so that's a lot of anger here. come home, women's groups that this isn't being taken seriously. they think at the international community and that different stuff. it's a nothing applied. i mean, one thing i would say is usually a desire to settle that as an inspection to me, she puts that statements very quickly about this in other places. i'm not sure but
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people. yeah, for example, would agree with that where, you know, complaining for months that this was happening before anybody said anything. if you look at the r c, i think the thing is say something like 60000 women, that rate they see it. so nobody's really talking about fact. so you could argue that, you know, this is an issue that doesn't get enough attention. generally it's not something specific to, to israel, but it is the case. the us women take care not for out a state, they could put out a statement, for example, expressing that concern, a direct quote said that person commitments a right screws have been calling for the ice a seat to investigate the acts of gender based on sexual violence as a crime against humanity. now,
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considering everything that you just laid out and that the licensee has prosecuted only 2 cases of rape and over 20 years, you know a scenario as chaotic as the october 7th attack. no, the survivors who have identified themselves as victims. how hard will it be to establish some sort of accountability as well? okay. so is there isn't a member of the i c c so that, that complicates things. but it's, um, um, as you point out, i see she does not have a great record on this as an affording reco database. the current to prosecute occurring calm when he was selected last year on its pages was precisely do something on this issue. so here is a good example, but you know, it is starting to see cool and certainly to collect evidence of this, but there is, there's 2 things going on here. the a says no,
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and should be investigation. i see evidence and those are, those are the sicilian commission, them and basically they used to mean it shouldn't be the case that you do actually have to have the women themselves come forward in order to believe that jesus do something often very difficult for people to talk about it, you know, it's the wrong crime where the victim is of damaged so that they did something wrong certainly. and you've also tried to find an answer to why this keeps happening. have you found an answer? i mean, it seems clear to me that it's happening more more. i think one of the reasons it's the same thing. special community there is to be empty unit state aside, the rate is a very effective boyfriend. if you want to humiliate your enemy or tire ice, the hard drives them out of an area. so the mainland,
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no one's paying price to that because on this nobody is brought to justice. interestingly, i mean the ones that have bright spot, and in this, in terms of getting, just as if they used to be the best of jurisdiction, which means that any country can prosecute somebody for will crime anywhere. it doesn't have to be a car to where it happens in germany. it's actually kind of yeah, it's this because germany has now convict saves iraqi for taking a z mother and child and the child actually was chain. dock outside died. so that's, that's the best conviction for what happens to the cd. so that is something a model. the other countries could be using those author and reporter, christina lam, chief correspondent for the sunday times. i highly recommend to read her book, our bodies there. battlefield. thank you so much for your time. thank you.
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the the credit citizens can rest assured that the government will stick to the promises it made. we will not abandon any one with the challenges we currently face . you will never walk alone is once i promise last year and usually remain that way of life. that was germany's chancellor left shots promising to maintain government spending in the face of a budget crisis that has rocked germany once a by word for financial virtue, a ruling by germany supreme court has left the government, unable to agree a budget for next year that spurred some countries to question jeremy's reliability and left others to enjoy some shot in florida over berlin's predicament. in a moment, i'll get some analysis on winds here when his finances had been thrown into disarray. but 1st a look at how exactly we got here. winter came early this year and
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well, ordinary german scrapple with the pitfalls. it's government 2 faces a slippery slope. it all started here with the verdicts from jimmy's constitutional quote, a couple of weeks ago, but called the countries finances into question. the government had moved left over emergency funds from the private 19 pandemic to fund to count the climate change. the court ruled that was the legal why an uncle and michael was on pallet gemini introduced the so called step break. it is enshrined in the constitution. i'm limits how much government can fall right. it can only be suspended in emergencies such as the pandemic. the verdict left a gaping comb with 60000000000 zeros and the government's budget. the sad news
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already we can clear to me. so i'm interested in dick friday to fish, to losing the $60000000000.00 euros in the climate fund to know will result in an executive drop of around half a percentage point in growth next year. from one. from this we'll continue into 20252026 via top. it's also bad news for some of the governments biggest plans. the money had been allocated to semi conductor and battery factories. so the funds and even trains. and half of it has already been spent. so the government needed to take emergency action. so for 2023, that brake has now been suspended, which means the bar and if it has been suspended, the government could for more. it's not clear yet what will happen in 2024, but it could spell a hard winter ahead for the governing coalition. unfortunately,
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due to a technical problems, we don't have that analyst, i promise to bucks. we have some news coming out of armenia because 2 months ago, a long running ethnic and territorial conflict on the costs of europe and asia interrupted. and you all out finding and lead to be effective dissolution of self proclaimed for public in the south congress. this region, the core no carol, lies in azerbaijan, but was historically home to a majority of ethnic. armenians will operated autonomously and had their own government. that changed in september when i was there by, john launched a lightning military offensive against the break away of regions. very forces declared victory within just 24 hours. and most of the regions, 120000 ethnic armenians are themselves forced to flee to neighboring armenia. at
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the start of next year, the republic they called home will officially cease to exist for our next reports, the double use your river shadow travel to armenia and met some of this conflicts refugees, to find out more about their concerns and hopes for the future of the drum and cheese mazda bundles took with them. what did they cool with when they fled from their home in the car? no, kyra, bottom i t o n z a job li, these blankets and a few other warm things on the 24th, just the we only took new households, electrical appliances, and some fruit. i had drives from the bar. we had a small car and that was all we could fit you show is politically the give her against has been sharing this house with 2 of the reputation families for the last 2 months. there are lock you that one leaving here on her own. let them stay without asking for any of the families from the gardener corner possible. also
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living here until a few days ago by that they've now moved out into athletics over there on the new symbolists. previously, a refugee in the 9 to ninety's fleeing took maintenance down. for now, gar, know colorado actually of a solo to that one day she'd have to pack up again and to look for a new home this time. nearly every residencia has left in the garden of carter a box and then acts, at least that they haven't to get to come to town. we've often more than 100000 to armenians escaped from the guard up or above many of them. a steel either shock for a nation deeply rooted in tradition, being super right that from the length of their ancestors is perhaps that the biggest blow of all every day armenians come to pay their respects to those killed in divorce. over now go or not talking about these so called cemetery for heroes. open teams the capital years on is an early ninety's, is a conflict, has a sense claim to more than the $35000.00 lives on does the our media insight. we
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lived through 4 wars and that's enough. we're tired of war and bloodshed. we just want to live normal, quiet lives. the give her a guns are trying to leaf normal lives in place of the which along with thousands of, of the refugee families from the car. they get along well, we have the letters, but the future looks bleak, most out of work or the assignment, or living driving taxes. many of the refugees depend on social services provided by armenia. the european union and international agencies also help, but it's not enough to do that. but the 2nd level of the, the arrival of more than a 100000 people from the going to cover a bucket is a huge boot. and on the, i mean in economy about the invest spots, most of these people have outstanding bank loans. you'll know the banks and the go into a cover of ok. we're all i mean in my gosh, 2 and the customers or half a $1000000000.00 on bunker. you know?
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my god to support stock. mom barksdale man. most of the refugees find no position to pay off the debts. they have lost everything. zip. i want to have a night many, i can use the army union government of giving up in a garden or above too easily and does a wonder why so many men lost their life easier verse of independence. tiguan to follow the dawn of it for to wish no go, no quarter box army and like all that for my son will just be totally disappointed . he's under no illusion that his family has and the long term future in our media . yeah, i to actual the way we want to leave and go abroad on each that just gives the children the future then. so me see give our dance. i'm not alone in wanting to weave our media, but most of the refugees just want to read. tell them to the beloved homeland. now gore not go to a box, but they have no idea whether that will ever be possible. and with this
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report from my colleague your shadow, we've reached the end of the day that's or time, but make sure to stay informed. stay engaged and stay in touch. you can follow our team on social media and you'll find those apps that we use. and myself, nicole underscore, squarely, if it is the latest headlines you're looking for. there is of course, always power. westside, 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 by the
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europe largest house made by a 3 d printer. it's being assembled in the southern german city of heidelberg, an approach to building that promises to be economical, climate friendly and quick. leading only 3 workers on site for 3 d printers, the builders of the future made in germany, of the on dw might robots become
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our friends. might we fall in love with a machine? for scientists around the world, it's just a matter of time. they are developing part official intelligence with human sensibilities, my avatar and me. how a i pertains consciousness in 45 minutes on the w, the values for robots back to one giant leap for exploiting the ocean floor. cutting edge technology is i'm looking the potential of deep sea mining, but this time a research team will study the possible risk sucks in order to minimize that,
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we have an opportunity to to get it right before we can start. environmental activists, oscar tops rules fail billions to be made out to pascal commentary. deep sea greed dots, december 7th on d. w. the picture building your dream home. now picture that home coming out of a giant printer, sounds odd, but it makes sense. 3 d printed houses are faster, cheaper, and more climate friendly to build. what that looks like exactly as one of the stories we will be exploring. and here is what else will be asking on this week's
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