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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  November 30, 2023 7:00pm-7:16pm CET

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the d w the, this is dw news live from balance. these riley ami says if the release of hostages is on the way to x rays have already been return to israel with more about to be fried by how months the release of the 2 women raises. hope so for further extension office each fun task, the cop 28 climate told us open and one of the world's biggest oil producing nations as 70000 delegates lobby is as activists to send on divide.
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can delegates agreed to push the global economy away from fossil fuels? the i'm gonna hold off is welcome to the program. these really ami says how moss has released to mole hostages from gaza. more hostages, i expected to be released in the course of the day. the framing of the 2 women raises, hopes that the seas 5 between israel and thomas could be extended for another day. this comes to hours after 3 people were killed and more than a dozen and wounded in his shooting. in jerusalem. this security camera video appears to show to attack is getting out of a cops and firing of people. the militant islam is group a moss has planned responsibility for the shooting. these really government says the palestinians suspects were killed epicene by 2 of 22 police officers and on
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civilian dw correspondent tanya came by. andrew, has them gave us an update on this latest hosted release. i still received this late this afternoon is also a video footage now of the hand over the 2 young is really women. one is to do a nation, the french, a national, a 100 over a from, from us to the red cross. and we understand from the military, there have already reached a is really territory where there are no being boats to what's the re a base and then from there to hospitals. and then they will be re united with at the time of these. so we understand that more hostages are expected to released over the course of the evening. and this is all part of this extended to steel. that was actually in the last minute this morning. it just showed you be before 7
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am with the truth was about to expire, was actually extended for this period for for another day. now, moss has time for sponsibility for this morning, shooting in jerusalem. what impact does this have in jerusalem on the ceasefire? what at this point in time, it doesn't appear to have had an impact on the truth or on the release of the hostages. but of course, we have to be very cautious restate this for days that it's a very complicated process of very upfront. you. i a situation and of course all eyes. now the attention is extra to extend this uh, pause in fighting. we understand that negotiations are under way for this. and that is also certainly um, in the uh, the attention of the visit by the us secretary of state visit uh by entering the
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blinking who is in the region uh hit just set down with the is really prime minister benjamin netanyahu. they also stressed again it's important to release more hostages and also that of course, to choose it is extended, but he also said that, you know, it is important to take into consideration the civilians and dogs of their protection and actually read upset that the protection needs to be taken into account in a southern java before any military operation could take place. and that's an indication that there is a lot of concern as well. that if this tooth would not be extended, israel might, again, you know, will, again actually has to have said, resumed war. and we have 1800000 people in garza displays many went to the cells. so this is a major concern and all the attention. so focused on extending this choose for the all correspondence on the x, m a n at jerusalem. the thank you very much tanya. the you
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and cop 28 climate conference has opened in due by governments of preparing for 2 weeks of talks and hopes of an agreement on phasing out fossil fuels. the record $70000.00 participants are expected to attend over the coming days. that, that's been criticism of those countries, the choice of the match having the talks as they had to the summits venue, the control over see over the choice of the host is not lost and some of the participants the united arab emirates is one of the world's top all producing countries, any picked up in oil executive to preside over the talks that we are here in dubai . and one of the largest exporters of fossil fuels in a country that's really relying on fossil fuels. and we don't want to shy away from
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that truth in that reality, we think that this is the right cost and the cost to be calling for a phase out of fossil fuels and centering a conversation on what a just transition away from fossil fuels looked like to the cops when he had presidents brushed of criticism, same climate action would be impossible without all companies taking part. speaking at this um its opening so done all just bear. so the world has reached a dangerous cross. roads, by the way, is deeply proud and the home button to be hosting cop $28.00 at the pivotal time. and this terrific has became for prime its action. we know, as you know, the gravity of this moment. we feel as you'll see, the urgency of this, what you have to like in the sense of urgency is exactly what politicians around the world have been criticized for it to send to men shared by many activist
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attending the talk some way i hop in this timing change meeting, we took layers with back to small option a to 1st very important segment changes. it was very well we all the features agreement to different use. the house called the 2 week summit, the largest ever climate gathering. while the un says it could be the most important level meeting since power is 2015 back then nations agreed to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees celsius. but scientists war and that the planet is running out of time to achieve this goal. with this year being the whole test on record. early on i also do the reports have plays a on it's
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a growing size of these meetings is sustainable of the well uh i think uh for a lot of people. the cool position is the weather. uh, as the $70000.00 people come here, buddies, uh, things will be done because like we've heard in the reports, would they be more action download or more would an action we've seen in all the cop conferences where promises have been made and some of those promises have not been kept us for 32 developing countries. so for a lot of the delegates that are here today, the lucy, not a fine in solutions for all. well and seeing that's policy me cause i called the cop uh 28 was fine. last in solution that would help reduce global warming. do you think it's realistic that that we have a real outcome some real progress at the end of comp 20.
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6 allow me, covers be god and a good 14, according to some delegates. as you may know, the agreement has the rich today about the such a novel d loss. and i'm a swan. and also we've already seen some countries, especially the gemini, the u. k. is you was japan, the united are up and married flows and money to the loss and damage fall. and so if one has to go by the 1st day of the of this talks, then maybe it would end in good for 10. but again, we have to about 13 or 12 days to go. now there also process taking place outside the conference venue. that's what more can you tell us about that? yes, penya in, in the morning. some begins most the women put up the 1st test outside the venue. the rece bond is a based kind of what the we're asking for. what the asking for is that the current
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policy on food in around? well, she sees the believe that's all eaten hobbies and we our b of us humans, our own food is affecting the health of our plants. and so that's has been the a call um it comes as a surprise to some people because they use a very strict wood wood for test l g b to ride some, find the protests against government has bind, protest. any form of protest as is banned here, so it was seen by some people have to sign a release that this uh, what are we seeing or the cops, you know, active is coming out to raise their concerns. uh, we can also see that here. uh for the is that's what happened at these this morning . douglas plays back in due by many cents and to dig even deeper into the subject, i'm now joined in the studio by w's environment reports abilities across the file.
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um, better is that the conference was kicked off by agreeing uh, this lawson damage from the blaze also just mentioned. what is this funded? why is it so important? law, some damage from the essentially works like an insurance scheme for low income countries for hip, extreme weather and who's paying into those funds. it's the, the richer nations, the wealthy nations were also coincidentally, the ones that are polluting the most were kind of driving the problem here. and so this was something that it was agreed upon last year and, but then of course, they still have to decide how exactly are we going to play this out. and the fact that after so much back and forth, it is now we're starting the conference by taking it off by saying, okay, it's going to go into motion. this is historic because just a few years ago it was unthinkable to even think that the, you know, richer nations would even agree to pay into a fund like this. but there's still a sticking points. and that is that the, what the negotiator is kind of agreed to now,
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it doesn't make it legally binding for these countries to pay into it. if only urge of developing a says, sorry, developed nations to pay into the funds. so there still has to be enough to just urge them. well, that's what active this are saying is that no, it's not enough. lots of people can kind of back out there. but that's all we have for the moment. and also this was something that has been discussed for months and 5 negotiations around those kind of when both. and so the fact that this was finally agreed upon is already a huge step. now the board mentor logical organization issued a report today that this year 2023 is set to be the warmest here ever. but will, can you tell us about this report? the report confirmed a lot of things we already know, but that doesn't mean that these statistics are not shocking. we are seeing the hottest here on record, a record level of the like sea level rise of record lows with entire dic, eyes record concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. and this has
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received the consequences of this all over the world. the report is that the report, a thing that we're seeing does and every single continents, we're seeing a stream, whether in every single confident. so the fact that the report is coming out now should really serve as a call to action to all the world leaders or all the no accident that is coming on . know exactly like it was obviously saw through when these world leaders are altogether pledging that they're going to change the world and they're going to do better. why not tackle fossil fuels? why not? you know, what activists are really calling for is a full phase out of fossil fuels because we've known for a long time. but this is what's driving the problem and, and active is, are also saying, if we don't tackle this anytime soon, and any of these conferences, cough is going to become the laughing stock because it knows what the problem is. but it's not really addressing it a very briefly comes to investing in a fossil fuels. how like you have the biggest contributes has that to face face the
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amount. it's unlikely that so a full stays, what is going to happen? and that's because this conference needs everyone to agree and we have big countries like us, china, india, even the host, the united arab emirates, they're all against a full phase. or because they say their household energy and their economies are too dependent on it. and then even that you, which is for a full phase out, is only talking about technology, about unabated emissions. so that means that you could still use technology like carbon capture, which has been proven, doesn't work on a big scale. what we can hope for is a possible phase down fossil fuels. that will be a good 1st step. it would be a for sophia. indeed. thank you very much. the w's, beatrice kristof, our that the irish thing on sunrise up to shane macgowan has died. he was 65, he was best known as the front mine of these folk tongue band. the olds,
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whose 1987 single fairy tale of new york is still a very popular try. like every christmas cons, death comes off a long period of ill health. the c, i had struggled with both alcohol and drugs and had been using a we'll chat after a series of falls. and that's it from me and the news team for now, wrinkle level, world news update for you at the top of the out the learning center and with the reading offer is available language learning gem and how to go.

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