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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  December 11, 2023 9:00pm-9:31pm CET

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the, the dw, these live it from berlin tonight, a familiar face and a change at the top in poland. the former prime minister donald chose is now the new prime minister, is returned into a few years of white. we national is ruling, it sets the stage for warmer relations with the european union. also coming out in its campaign to destroy him off israel stepped up. it's a tax on the city of hon. eunice. it agency save the situation for civilians is catastrophic. and in need of supreme court upholds a controversial mood by the hindus, national government of never in promoting that means the special status of john
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move and cashmere will be revoked. some hard liners are celebrating the ruling, but not everyone shares their joke. the i bring golf to our viewers watching on p b. s in the united states and to all of you around the world. welcome holdings. parliament has just elected former prime minister donald to us to be the country's next prime minister to us. the appointment comes after poland, former leader of my tales, are yet the last a vote of confidence today in parliament. that loss is ended 8 years of rule by the nationalist, more injustice. pardon tusk is now expected to lead a coalition of pro e. you've parts the earlier i asked the dw is magdalena the bush to pull the cods to explain the background to today's events. and more so far,
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we go to this point of to at the election, the middle of october, which has been won by the opposition. and donald trump is the leader of the opposition. and it is the position is built off of the local 5 teeth, ranging from next week to a conservative a to motivate concept which is bodies and wants to extend for, well, she sends mostly for close relationship with the new. as you may remember, she was not only phones 5 minutes a few years ago, but she also was the president of the you would be uncomfortable. and one late to one year late to the office, you went through the process she'd forward to the election and i'm the law and justice parties to power for the next 2 features new. we know that in the past 8 years we've seen poland clash with the european union on some significant issues. remind us of what these issues war as well. there were quite
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a lot of issues. the, some of them were the freedom of media and the mind. no way to rise, but you know, maybe the most important one as to which was standing in the center of the conflict between poland and the use. it was this. so culture conditional reform at which we histone or it's tried to explain several times. it's a very complicated but you know, it was about the independence of judges in poland. the independence of course, at that have been doubted. and um, that's elected to a number of legal proceedings in the you and many cases. poland has lost. and um, there was also the free is equal to who appear in money that was wishful by brussels for full. and we know that donald, to us, he is a known commodity in brussels at the european union. now he's back in power. will he be able to mend relations with the you well,
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she will of course try try to mend them and build only the relationships with brussels, but also with jim own and you were for the building. i'm do you have to remember that? oh, there are also issues that could be disputed in that you like. for example, when it comes to the migration probably takes or didn't you clue out of an urgency for instance. but the whole is, of course, i suppose from the gentleman as from the 1st verse of 5, this 11th of december today, which means to restart the relationships between poland, brussels and buildings. what will this state moving forward mean inside poland? do you think that we are about to see some domestic transformative acts take place to let you know that all of this happening now? um this is uh certainly um what it can use to live in new young oh for pulse wanted uh the swans, who elected to your position and um,
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they holstead coolant will get more friendly and more color and more open face in the world. and in the repeating union, you have to remember there is to assure just a number of people do support their low injustice party, which is not the window election bought. it was the biggest part to the go as a single product. you can most votes. so there are also many supporters still in poland of them and too much to speaking today and, and the polish problem and said she remember them. and he will also then to feel at home in colorado. w corresponded magdalena and bushed while ago. we appreciate you giving us the latest on what has been a significant day for publish politics like the one to thank you. we're now to the board and gaza. israel is pressing ahead with its campaign to eliminate tomas, stepping up a tax on the southern city of han eunice where it says key homeless,
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militant or hold up. of the militants are threatening to kill the hostages. they seized during the october 7th terror attacks. if israel does not meet their demands, the us and a number of other countries you may remember classify him off as a terrorist organization. agencies say that the humanitarian situation in gaza is apocalyptic with hospitals on the verge of collapse and no safe places for civilians. the hamas run health ministry says that is real, has killed nearly 18000 palestinians, mainly civilians. in the last 3 months of this father is constantly on the news in hon. eunice, going from hospital to hospital in the hopes of receiving care for his 2 injured sons. he is the only one in his family left to take care of the 2 boys. his wife, daughter and father were all killed in a strike close to their home now and it had the phone that i
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missed. our children tried to live, to live in security. i live in peace, to find food. i got him to find medicine to find treatment, to have a dignified life. but there is no treatment, how no medicine and no food can. if someone doesn't die from the war, they'll die from hunger, from the lack of food, or from the lack of treatment to other people out of the village. at rappa hospital, many families have had to say their goodbyes to loved ones. it is real targeted. the main city and southern gaza after him, us threatened that it would not release any of the remaining is really hostages alive. israel did not release more palestinian prisoners. the my aunt's family was displaced from han eunice due to the war. they came to a rough, which they said was a safe area to my sister's house. they were in
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a safe zone when it happened that the whole family died. my aunt and her husband, they're children. up in the north of gaza. smoke bombs have been released at that you probably are refuge account forcing already display scoggins as of what little shelter they have as civilians are desperately running out of options to find refuge across the strip. israel has again rejected calls for a ceasefire, claiming that the end of homos is near. i spoke earlier, did you go to use i you abraham about the humanitarian situation in gosh, it was, it cannot be emphasized enough. according to all humanitarian organizations, the situation and causes catastrophic. as you said, apocalyptic a. we're looking at an estimated 90 percent of the population of the gaza strip that has been displaced,
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90 percent of the population. some have been displaced more than once. once civilians were 1st asked us to evacuate from the north to the south and now there are also parts in the south, the hope that they have been asked to evacuate a from. and so there's also the logistical challenge of how to get a to people that needed within the gaza strip when there was near constant bombardment and an ongoing ground, expensive and humanitarian organizations have been very vocal in their demand for a cease fire in order to save what at this point can be saved of a, for the civilians in the gaza strip. these really is really, it really is very defensive about these, these accusations we heard today, the spokes person for the prime minister's office say that it's humanitarian organizations that need to fulfill their uh, their, their mandate. so to speak, to get the aide to the people that need it. he said that the un is not being firm enough with a you know, how much militant to using safe jones as
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a lot that saves those as launching pads for a rockets. and he said that there's a bottleneck at the roof of the border, which is no surprise because prior to the war, the rough crossing was really not made for the volume that is needed to go through . and that's currently the only crossing open the crossings from israel to gaza or closed. these really is really officials have said that one of these crossings between israel and casa, the cam show them crossing, which was prior to the war war, 60 percent of all goods coming in and out of guns, and went to cam, show them that it may be open in the near future for inspection not for the passage of goods, but for inspection, and that might help with the bottom x. but they've been defensive about these accusations that they are responsible for the humanitarian catastrophe and the strip. we understood that there had been solid, the already a strikes by palestinian shop owners in jerusalem, as well as by people in lebanon on today. these protests, are they just
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a symbolic or but they have any impact on how israel is conducting this war. i don't think they're gonna have any impact on the is really government's position . they have been very steadfast, that they, that the only in the words of the spokesperson today, that the only clock that matters is the one where they, uh, you know, where they get to their goal of stated goal of eliminating from us completely from the strip. but what we're seeing since the beginning of this worth growing hostility, i mean the, the anger in error countries, the anger in countries surrounding israel is boiling to give it to levels that many experts are saying we just have not seen in decades. but it's, it's unlikely to see how any of this will have a, any effect on the current is really government. having said a time and time again, how steadfast we are in the execution of this for these abraham with all he just
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did not from jerusalem. volume is always thank you. russia has, once again attacked, ukraine's capital keep creating their defense is shut down at least 8 ballistic missiles watched at the city today. explosions and damage buildings reported on the cities outskirts, degrading the president. zalinski is now in washington, hoping to help break a dead walk in congress that is holding back more aid for you crate. i'm gonna go down to our special special correspondence. i mean, as if he is in keyboards tonight. i mean, tell us more about the strikes on key that happened earlier today as well. many of us were working at around 4 am to the sound of loud things. it was the largest missile strikes by russia on kiff and at least a month. and it was a little bit strange in 2 ways. the 1st way is because no air raid sirens woke us up before the things that we heard. usually,
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the sirens will go off. that means you have time to get down into a bomb shelter if that's what you want to do, get out of harm's way and then maybe 20 minutes half an hour later, you might hear the explosions. these are cruise miss a lot of times it's cruise missiles coming into cuba and ukraine. air defenses are alerted before. they even enter the air space near t. if that didn't happen today, which is a little bit disconcerting, what happened was, the explosions went off and then a couple of seconds later, then the air raid sirens started to ring out across the city. but there was some good news and this is why it was also strange. because the key of government, the city government said that the air defense managed to shoot down all 8 missiles . and these were not normal cruise missiles. they were ballistic missiles, which russia claims are not that it's impossible to shoot them down. so this is really strategic to, if it's true, what's clear is that russia was not able to hit its target. a couple of people were wounded, but there was no large scale damage in key if so,
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a lot of people here are very grateful to these air defense systems for shooting down the missiles. yeah. and the ability to push the russians back. we know it has a lot to do with foreign weapons being sent to ukraine. you printing president zalinski. he's in the united states right now. i'm trying to convince us lawmakers to keep that a coming into his country and me that that's a, that's a big deal for the people living where you are isn't, as these things are directly connected in ukrainians minds, they know that the thing that's protecting them the most especially behind the front lines mt of are these advanced weapons that are coming almost exclusively from the west. so you have the patriot missile system. also, the german made a air defense system. and there's a lot of doubt now coming from the us, which is not just ukrainians, ukraine's largest provider, but it provides more weapons and the rest of the world combined. there's a lot of doubt coming from the us. now the republicans right wing republicans have
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taken over the house and saying that we're, they're not going to support ukraine unless bite and concedes on certain domestic issues. so that is absolutely wiser. lensky is there in the us. he's going to meet bite and tomorrow. he's also going to meet with the speaker of the house to try to work out a deal and save the aid for ukraine before the year ends. that's important to him. it's also important to this country, and especially for when i'm talking to people in key. if they know that the, their skies are protected by these american made weapons, the w special corresponded. i mean, as of tonight in key, i mean, thank you. so let's take a look down some of the other stories making headlines around the world. allies of russian opposition, public safety and election of all they say that he has been removed from the prison colony where he had been imprisoned. of all his warriors have been unable to contact him for almost a week. his whereabouts are unknown, his age fear that he has been moved to a harsher prison calling. the you in peacekeeping mission tamale has officially
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ended with a closing ceremony at its headquarters and the capital obama code. the mission was the deadliest in the u. s. history. 310 peacekeepers killed in the span of a decade. molly's military hunter ordered the withdrawal of you in forces back in june. swift police have launched a manhattan for a shooter who killed 2 people and injured a 3rd in the country. sell the 36 year old suspect is believed to be on the run police upset of roadblocks. they are appealing to the public to come forward with any information they may have. the philippines has some ended china's ambassador over confrontations between ships in the south china sea. manila says chinese vessels blasted water cannons and several filipino boat st. costs the collision. beijing claims the philippines. china claims almost the entire south china sea in defiance of international rulings. a new draft agreement at the
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human climate conference and due by water is down possible action on limits and global warming. the text is not directly mentioned mentioned phasing out fossil fuels, and that appears to be the main stumbling block. the draft calls instead for reducing consumption of fossil fuels. and climate activists today stormed onto the stage to protest some participants including the european union. and the us have rejected this provisional agreement. they saying it doesn't go far enough. the comp $28.00 talks are due to wind down in the next 2 hours and our correspondence, the only phenomena stein is she is following the summit force. indeed by she shared with me her thoughts about this draft deal. well, what jumps to mind and you mention goods are the words and the phrases that aren't in the draft. analysts put it very aptly when he said, you know, the word phase out has been phased out. because what isn't included in text is
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a phase out, all fossil fuels, or even a face down. and the word oil or natural gas gas are not even mentioned in the text . and a cold phase out is optional, as it stands in the drops x right now am and you know, there is a reference, you mention that to reducing fossil fuel consumption production. but the urgency of a sense of urgency in how that paragraph is framed is lacking and, and in order to keep sort of, you know, the 1.5 degree target still inside, which is the main purpose of this. this document in the science has been pretty clear about it. i mean, you do see what is mentioned in the text. the 1.5 degree target has mentioned the text, their commitments on fine and support mechanisms. but they're to, they're kind of chaotically scattered across the tech, so it is, remains pretty big, pretty weak. as you say, the criticism has been open, has been vocal there. there's, there's also been protests today, right. tell us about that of the. yeah, exactly. there has been
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a really strong pushback. pushed back by climate activists by n. g o's slammed the text as a scandal, calling a scandal that has been put as outside of the plenary hall. a box of is holding out placard thing, hold the line, calling on their governments a to basically keep negotiating to keep the fossil fuel phase out really on the table here in dubai. and, you know, colombia as environment minister has, has said that the real winners here are the fossil fuel capital interests. the you have come out to say, is that the text in parts unacceptable? it's insufficient. germany's for a minister has said that sort of thing. it seems to the world, the wrong signals and that the world still has a place for fossil fuels in the future. so i feel like everybody agrees, you know, there is a lot of work to be done still um cups a host at the host of a cop, a president of the, a copy of your beer has called it an important step forward. but he also very know
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to be skipped to press conference to head straight back into meetings with delegates. and so yeah, we don't expect us to continue to to, to finish on time. yeah. definitive opinion on i was gonna ask you, they're only a few hours left in this summit. so if we don't get an agreement, what are they going to do going to over time? i mean, they can't just agree to disagree. can they of the know these, i mean these uh, techs have to be adopted by consensus and, but there are still a few hours left. and as you know, historically these un clements on his own usually go into overtime the last time. and some of the finish on time was 20 year almost 20 years ago. and a southern elder bear has repeated time and again that he wants to make it a historic summit that he wants to finish on time. but with this draft text and you know all sides, especially also the most common on real countries and the block separately supported strong fossil fuel fuel phase. that would have made it clear that they won't accept this kind of draft. so there will be more negotiation. yeah,
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it could be very, very late night for everyone, dw, usually not even 100 on reporting from the climate summit in dubai. you only think the french parliament has rejected the government's plans to tackle migration. and it is a major blow to president emmanuel macro. and the proposed bill had attempted to balance between welcoming skilled migrant workers at the same time cracking down on illegal migration. but the minority government struggled to build support for the plan and the, the opposition from both left is an for white parties. microns administration will now need to decide between reworking the plant in the senate or perhaps abandoning it altogether. earlier i had the to be used paris correspondent lisa louie here in the studio with me and i asked her to tell us about what is happening now with this legislation. the brands that have just been some breaking news actually. so this bill was supposed to be discussed to paula now for a couple of weeks,
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but the position filed a motion to reject bass before it. b of debate could stocks in parliament, and there were enough votes to evaluate for the rejection. so it has now, if the debate is now hold to it. mm hm. and the bill has to go back to the sign aid or to a mix commission, or the government can drop it. it's a major setback for the position. the reason reasoning for wanting to block this bill is the interesting thing is that, you know, there's the less legal position on the far right on the right wing because there's that will what it together. and so ones. yeah, it's quite right. yeah. right, right. and on one side said it doesn't go far enough. we don't want any immigrants that would be before. right. and then the left wing policy said no, you know, we don't want to split at all. it's too tough. it's cracking down and immigrants that we need. it doesn't represent him as immigrants, as we would think of them, you know, they are, we bought them here and they can contribute to our society. they didn't agree on
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the reasons, but that voted for that. what can we say the in parliament a majority of employees are in favor of, of changing migration was, is that a statement that we can say? well yeah, but not into the same and in the same direction and as i just said, so one task. so if the position actually wants that to be a tough o'clock down the fall, right, awesome moment us to not under former presidential candidate, marine the pen said, you know, we need to close down the, the, the borders. we don't want any immigrants here that or illegal that was criminal, is that only the fall after saying the opposite saying, and i read, we want them here. it actually shows that my current government is really struggling to get support for. it's billed for it's draft close as you know, since the parliamentary elections last year. and my client doesn't have an outright majority in parliament. and so they need other parties, especially the republicans to x, which is a conservative project. and 40 of the 62 republic couldn't call them entire and
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voted to reject that. what's the value? so what does this mean that for macro owns government? if he wants to get anything done, is he going to have to cuddle up a little bit to the right? or what are his options? you know, no one knows really actually, as i said, the options with this bill is you know, send it back or it would just drop it or not debates again. but what can you do to actually speed up things or to, to, to streamline the whole put is a good place that's, that's actually not clear to or it's a major set back for him. it shows that he can actually bring the parliamentarians behind him even when it comes to a draw flow, which is, you know, has been labeled as quite tough. yeah. but with the majority of the french in favor of that dropped off. yeah, it's historically reported, but many times i believe france here in germany and in, in the us as, as well. actually we could have you with a studio. thank you. it is a supreme court has upheld the cancellation of the special status of drama in kashmir by the hindus. nationalist government led by the range remote to the muslim
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majority region of shall move in cashmere once enjoyed a measure of political economy. the 3 years ago, indian authorities began severely restricting protests. they are, as well as media freedom, but the court has also ordered jump moving cashmere to home state elections. here's more now from the w correspondent, ideally bought in delhi. so there has been mix of responses to it, so there is no single response. so if we with thing and note any politicians are creating this, what they call to get that started go right. we can do nice lives in delhi and in the general region this celebrating it, the eats and salt blink from fits. but if we go back to the question, we have a look of politicians that's pointed and defeated betrayed by the code. why look, population should be evaluated? this is totally indifferent. then they feel not. and also there is a comfortable feeling with low population. they say if they write something or if
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they go outside to protest against it, they will face the consequences. it could be they can fix it just to jail. so that's why we see the local population in question. we riley is talking indifferent to the score truly boxed. on the other hand, they said like, you know, india, supreme court decision upholding opposing that would be an article $370.00 has no legal value and they don't recognize adult. even international community won't accept it. that was ideal about their reporting from daily us. well finally, we want to bring you some festive news. ski season is well underway, especially for these 300. if you're going to see them in just a 2nd. i think these 300 skiing santa's who hit the slopes in the us state of maine killed it. out and read, sir, they are, they are white beers in stock in camps, down hills. father. christmas is for raising money for an education chair. and this event has been held for more than 20 years,
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just before saying it goes back to the north pole to give its tories read what you dw, lose you. as a reminder of our top story, donald tusk has been elected as poland prime minister, ending 8 years of nationalist room. centrist tusk, held the post in the previous decade. he's failed to improve strained relations with the european you. your what you need to do is have for a short break. i'll be back to take you through the day. stick around and we'll be right back. the
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3, this one, the absolute max. i love telling tales of diverse best. uh huh. ultimate graces, not in 45 minutes on d, w, the
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swastika, a documentary about this sounds of power, inspiring story about survival of the home and you go get the tennis. i was the only one was in nazi germany, watch now on youtube dw documentary the that they are meeting behind closed doors this week. but the reason is not even an open secret anymore. us republicans and allies of hunger as prime minister victor or bon united in their desired end aid for ukraine. it's controversial, but it's no surprise. hungary as prime minister is known for booking the trend, especially here in europe and he's about to do it again. the european union meets later this week and it could give the green light for ukraine to start membership talk. now this could happen, but thanks to hungary, it probably will bring golf and berlin. this is the day.

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