tv DW News Deutsche Welle December 8, 2023 4:00pm-4:16pm CET
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december 22nd on d, w, and the, the news life from berlin. israel's ministry campaign intensifiers in the south of the gaza strip. the army says soldiers are facing fish resistance from us benefits, but the gun fire opportunity and strikes have left to even more palestinian casualties, leading the us to call for more production of civilians. also coming up, germany's foreign minister arrives in divide for the un climate conference, and the bulk is among those portion for the global commitment to phase out fossil
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fuels plus trouble at home for german charles, the old sholtes. he's under intense cold to me, often a series of setbacks and his approval ratings. slumping in the polls. the fine dish manager working footage has emerged from guns. i bought a case showing dozens of palestinian men detained, and forced to strip by is barely forth. is the man all seen sitting cross legged or kneeling in several different locations and being transported on the back of military base. because of these pictures were filmed in northern gauze or not from garza city is run has not confirmed who the man uh, but saves it, is instead of getting individuals, these rarely armies books when daniel had got, he said, and i quote, we are investigating to see who is thinks to hum us and who is not. uh
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and uh, i asked uh, correspondents and the creamer and jewels. then what's more, she knew about the images of the detainees. well, as you said, um the is where they only wouldn't confirm those pictures of videos, but they've been circulating us since thursday on a social media showing on dozens of men. a strip down to the underwear was uh, some of the homes found and accounted by us soldiers. so these have videos and photos. some has been a g, are located to the north, an area on a parts of them to bid last year, which is a town in northern garza and uh, some families and relatives have actually identified on social media at least the their relatives on this uh, on some of the photos and of youngest son and one of them is a local correspondent for a london based our big newspaper. they have put out
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a statement in this regards. but again, the are me. i would just say that they have a wrested hundreds of men in tara, go interrogating them as well over recent weeks, separately. and tanya, that has also been pressure on israel to allow more aiden to cause a how is israel responding to that as well? the pressure has been mounting not just to get more 8 into the goals, but also for more protection of civilians mainly by the united states. but also the united nations is saying now that it's incredibly difficult now with the expanding around probations also towards the south where many protestants have been displaced to from the north. the situation is becoming very a dia, this well with heavy bombardment going on. this bobby also had some rocket, far coming out of from our dollars a today, but there is some token,
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some reports that is run might, are considered to use the term. so i'm crossing to for screening of humanitarian aid that is usually coming in on trucks through the off of crossing, which is the crossing or with egypt is rather had closed. it's to crossings one in the north that it's mainly for people to go through in the past and other one that can them settlement the self of goods. but so they might be less pressure on the crossing and also off. but having said that, because of the heavy fighting reported in the south, humanitarian organizations are thing to have difficulties to get the, the, the little 8 that is coming in of the 8 that is coming in to this 2 people. uh 1st and also to the central area to the northern areas and also in the south because it's an extremely difficult to distribute aid and be heard the you and i'm just a general secretary for human determine assess mountain cliff. it's also saying
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that we do not have a humanitarian operation in southern garza anymore. the con, call it like this anymore, because there is no safe space for people and also know safe space to distribute the 8 when the but there with the time being, tanya came and 0 some. thank you so much. i, a german is foreign minister, is expecting a global commitment to phase out fossil fuels as a un climate conference enter, as it's finding a weak island. a bad bulk is representing germany and the european union in device . one of the issues of the call 20 at summit is by the delegates will agree to end the use of coal, oil, and gas. the negotiations also focus on renewable energy. barebones is germany. we fight hard to secure these commitments. yeah, i'm between yet, the strategy is ambitious, because in order to keep 1.5 degrees celsius within reach, need to triple the expansion of renewable energy and double our energy efficiency.
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if it's the end of the als ball. but expanding renewable energy is an energy efficiency is not enough to achieve the target of $1.00 degrees celsius coleman. so now to get that off and off. so yeah, we also need to phase out fossil fuels, in fussy, and you know, a long as you can start a, let me be clear, a phase out of fossil fuels and not a phase out of fossil emissions. there is a huge difference is of venice not. i'm bought clean. i'm of using all saw one test data. and those are the only fun how much time is at the conference in the, by i as to why germany is calling for the phase out of fulton fuels and not the face out of for some emissions. yes, she's talking basically about the most contentious issue here. ads come to cop $28.00. what she means is that germany and other states um, including the u,
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including latin american countries, those countries also that are on the front lines of the time of crisis, including the small island. developing states are calling for a phase out of fossil fuels, oil, gas, and cold. and the difference is, and that there's countries like oil producing nations like saudi arabia, for example, is the most prominent and outspoken example of this for calling for the face that a fossil emissions. what they mean is basically they want to produce key producing and using fossil fuel. so keep the status quote and then invest in carbon removal technology to reduce the emissions off that fossil fuel use. now that is by many deemed as a distraction tactic because of these technologies don't really exist after scale, they wouldn't be needed to just keep emitting fossil fuels as well as doing right now. and they really expensive. and so that is kind of an unrealistic scenario. and that is the, the basic bridge, the most contentious is issue here. you know,
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will the draft text really includes fossil fuels in, in there. so final, final agreement will states be able to agree on such a phase out. but the devil is really in the details. so that is one part of it. what else is being discussed at golf? 28th country of the. yeah, exactly. i mean, we're talking about the global stock take that is basically the most important text that's delegations are now trying to get into the details off. and i mean, fossil fuel phase out is at the center of it. there's also a lot of kind of just as questions playing into it, because a lot of net developing nations are arguing, well, wealthy nations should lead the way to phase out fossil fuels because they've been using these resources for much longer. and so there's different options on the table and now it's really up to the ministers. so the, i mean that's why i'm not going to be able, as jeremy's foreign minister has now arrived and to buy is going to leave the
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negotiations here. because those are really political questions. and there's a lot of geo politics that plays into this into this, into this text. and we're expecting long nights. and at the end of the day, the outcome of this conference will really be judged by, you know, the question will this kind of conference in an oil producing state like the united arab emirates agree on a phase out of fossil fuels? that would be a story, but it depends how ambitious, the language that meters will agree on eventually is. so you know there too. we need to look closely. data mostly on a phone, how much time defaulting from the cop 28 conference venue into bye thanks. so much another tom that comes up a lot of you in climate conference in the united arab emirates is one and a half degrees celsius. now back in 2015 countries agreed to ramp up efforts to
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limit the global warming to hit the target time to pick stop and look at what could happen if this limit is exceeded. the wild fires in canada floods and libya sweltering heat in brazil and extreme drought and the horn of africa. this is a world 1.2 degrees hotter than the early 19 hundreds. a world that is edging closer to the temperature limit leaders agreed would avoid the worst impacts of climate change. 1.5 degree celsius compared to pre industrial levels. that's like a 1st line of defense where we want to tell the few months the need to change our behavior. you know, the save the planet in order to keep the planet for future generation. as we hit the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels, scientists say it will lead to even more extreme, whether or drought and the disappearance of more animal and plant species. people are already at risk will suffer 1st and more like this family in southern iraq,
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an intense drought forced to, to leave behind the countryside and settled for poverty in the city. during the night, when there was water, we used to grow everything, go nowhere, land, including vegetables, as we live, the culture. but when the water started to dwindle, it wouldn't be available for 2 months for a month until it's stopped to compete in more by the end of $500.00 more parts of the middle east, africa, or asia. it may be some of the hardest hit right now. but the risk for extreme weather is increasing everywhere. different parts of the world are going to be affected in different way. but what we also know that those big stream events, the pads are both extremely advanced, is also going to shift. and in the places where a currently you may feel, well, we are not going to experience as much, i'm sure that that's not true. to keep the planted, habitable plants and animals the to work with their environment. but key eco
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systems like these are already starting to break down. i sheets are melting permafrost. the storing and coral reefs are dying off. going above 1.5 degrees doesn't mean complete disaster, but any fraction of a degree makes a big difference in people's lives and the environment. according to climate scientists, we need to stop burning fossil fuels, the pump greenhouse gases into the atmosphere by 2050 to keep to the 1.5 degree target. very, very close to 1.5. but at the same time, it shouldn't be a signal to give up a call, then do nothing. on the contrary, we need to do more in order to prevent even bigger increases in temperature. the closer we stick to the target, the more we can hope to avoid the worst impacts of climate change shed in germany, the german jobs flows approval rating has fallen to a record low. the monthly germany trend phone found less than 20 percent of voters are dissatisfied or very satisfied with old off schultz. around hoff said he was
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acting $2.00 to $31.00, only 12 percent failed. he was a good communicator. i'm less than a quarter said he can steal the country through a crisis slides. the west following for the head of government in more than 25 years, shoals became john sla, just 2 years ago. and his social democrats have now begun their party congress. the disastrous pull results would surely be high on the agenda. the, the chief political correspondent nina has a, has this assessment. there's several reasons i play here one to be fab. any supplemental would have a difficult time right now trying to stay a year of 6 and let me call has to these times of uncertainty of multiple crises, but they're also homemade problems. and these are reasons 2 and 3. now this is a 3 way call us and government, so 3 parties with our own confidence and their own priorities. at
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a time when that is not a lot of money available, these parties want to make it clear that that priorities of being pushed through. and they are facing that out on the open stage, which brings me to reason number 3. well, as far as himself, the chancellor, ideally this country needs somebody who can show a vision, who can say where the pop is headed. but he's being perceived as weak as not being a good communicator. he will be delivering his speech here at his own hall teams convention in berlin tomorrow. and that will be works extremely closely. many people want to know does the left or it's still have what it takes to revise the bab trends that polls are showing on the same slate. does he have what it takes to keep his own government together? you know, has a very some sports deals now and a russian and better. some athletes we compete have next is i'm in big games. the international olympic committee says, the athletes we be allowed to compete on the a neutral flag. the issue had been unders all since by sheriff's invasion of
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ukraine, competitors from russia. and it's like been out also a band from various international events and competitions. national anthems will not be played and the displaying symbols and facts of the 2 countries is bad. that's it. for now, but affects the documentary looking at the potential consequences of industrial next part. there's some deep beneath the ocean i've finished managing play season. the taste of us, we have a problem that was in the us middle class income has fairly risen in the last 20 to 30 years perhaps. right. so it gets the same time that keeps rise 300 trillion that the trucks, the december 9 dw, the.
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