Skip to main content

tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  January 2, 2024 6:00pm-6:31pm CET

6:00 pm
of the is this, the, the we news line from berlin? a plane burst into flames at tokyo sunday, the airport. nearly $400.00 people on board get out safely after and crashes into a smaller aircraft. during landing 5 crew members of the smaller plane or dead. also on the program, rescuers in western japan search for survivors after a series of earthquakes on new year's day. officials say at least 55 people have been killed. and ukraine's president the landscape says russia will pay for its latest missile strikes. at least 5 people are killed and nearly
6:01 pm
a 100 wounded in the utah the unco fairly welcome to the program. we'll have more on those stories in a moment. but 1st we have some breaking news for you. the tv station of living. 7 in milton has the la groove says that a top come off official has been killed in an explosion in the southern suburb of a root cellar. a very was one of the founders of mazda is military. we live in on state run news agencies, and the blast killed 4 people and was carried out by and is really drone. israel's prime minister had threatened to kill a re even before the october 7th attacks will be monitoring the story as it develops. returning to our top story in japan, 5 people have been killed after 2 planes collided on the runway i took is anita
6:02 pm
airport. japan airlines passenger jet hit, a smaller coast guard playing shortly after landing bowls. aircraft confines 5 crew members on board. the coast guard plain were killed all 379 people on board. the passenger airliner were safely evacuated before it burst into flames. julian bray as an evasion expert in journalist base and cambridge in the u. k and joins is now mr. brew welcome to the w. this unfolded on the ground, one of the biggest airports in the world. how could something like this happen? yeah, so you might, well, because my understanding is that possibly the small read off versus i haven't been bashed right? well, actually all the same runway as the incoming and it weighs about
6:03 pm
a 35900 seems about the, the bought out on the back of the is a fairly un croft. and so he would have right to buy it to like. and so we need to establish why slash boss was put in all this way or behind. so the bank of the really patients our high speed instead of tons on the, on the small red. but the shape doesn't work. but this is just speculation. this will come out in the investigation. i went to goals is already a stocks is the, your bus was quickly engulfed in flames as was the smaller plane. how do you think all the passengers on the air bus and the crew of course, were able to get out so quickly? this is rehearse 5 inside the gate that they have installed for the entire crew. their main priority is to keep you a passenger safe. and so the target time is 92 seconds to evacuate. you
6:04 pm
jack crossed. now they have a inflatable shoot switch. i'll put out from both sides of that is it is possible. i then you will find that the crew will assist you to get out of the shoes. now we've actually seen it, whereas with the previous instance where people install, they started building the cabin. i had to sort of try to get their luggage and everything else. so the lesson for this has to be, gets rates issue, see everything behind that. so wait, just get all fedex once we're outside of the ask for rhonda way. so this will run away from it. and hopefully that message is now up very slowly, and everybody's saying to me that this air bus hits the smaller coast guard plain, both of them burst into flames. the air bus, of course, a huge, a massive aircraft. 5 people died on that coast guard plan,
6:05 pm
but one person made it out alive. how is that possible given the intensity of the crash? hey dave, this is speculation that so we understand that might be the pilot that the managers to get out. it really depends all the time. i understand that the shade was actually full of emergency equipment testing. so all these sites, uh, so it might be quite a full load. i got my design, the escape route, so the people sitting in the back with it. we jumpstart, though this visual come out to the investigation, but very clearly, that's for a i belong to the coast guard. so lots of pain on that broadway. and that is the main distrust of the investigation of the body to find out why it was there. now is quite interesting because you see pictures of the a 350 is complete the light
6:06 pm
full way along to choose along the hallways. the light box with boston materials, the inside which is pressure rise. they might need to keep the slate also the inside. so the positive, the space they binders to get ahold of us google need a crew of everybody you back to a 2 sided and 369 people. so is it very slowly across the lives website? so thank you. the cubic crew because you to it is a wonderful job. how much of a role did play that this is one of the most modern, large passenger planes that this does not turn into a bigger tragedy. i think you've hit the nail on the head because inside bills are moving towards the side of materials and it's got a great degree of insulation. it's light because i use life and materials these days. but the point was that on, in fact, you saw it was on fire as it came in. and uh,
6:07 pm
but even so the passengers inside was still safe. is there any way you break through that barrier? as a 5 comes inside said you have a big problem, but they might have to get the slides out. the door was open and gets everybody off by the boss or that is the whole point. you'll find that. so when these things happen, emergency lights come on thursday, budgets, you procedure assigned to a, everybody actually solid and realize you think with video hasn't changed it. i did also brought it to the light box. the point was the same for all the outside. those on the inside. so when they signed the chain to hold, they are able to get these shoots, inflated and out very quickly. and they literally, by either have review out onto the slides. by the way, they will probably have a bedroom stops at the foot of the shoes because some people will be addressed as
6:08 pm
they go down because it was a rough process of the for just this to save lives. so i do have to give her this. what do you guys say as a vacation expert and journalist julian bray? thank you so much. i meanwhile, people in western japan are still on edge as aftershocks continue to hit the region, the death toll from a series of earthquakes, there has risen to at least 55 rescue crews have been struggling to reach some of the hardest hit areas due to infrastructure damage one day strongest, earthquake jolted issue call up prefecture triggering nami warnings along the island, nation's western coast. japan is prone to earthquakes, and this is the strongest seismic activity. the country has seen for more than 5 years. the movement of fear when the quake struck
6:09 pm
and now the off them off. the series of powerful quakes, reaching $7.00 on the risk, the scale of left wide spread, damage and destruction. a world turned upside down. this aerial footage gives an idea of the devastation done to the case to roads in chicago and on the ground, the human cost of the quake lives in chaos. and homes destroyed the clean up might have begun. but for some, the devastation is too much to cope. with the house was like this of to the last as quick in 2007 we would need just rebuilt it. i don't think we can rebuild again. others are adjusting to being without basic facilities, with cues foaming to receive russians. drinking water in my
6:10 pm
household powder is still running, but the problem is water even in areas where water is still running. so that being asked to save as much as possible. well now i did that with your school is that people have died in the disaster will start to use a dozens more weight rescue while japan's cheap cabinet secretary added this screen warning that it wasn't too, but yet hopefully maybe not some. and you'll go to the people of japan, please be on that that, that may be earthquakes for about a week of an intensity scale of up to 7, to my know, to the people that live in areas whether quake was strong. please look out for evacuation information and take action accordingly. according to that view and equipment. i almost had given us off the shocks adding to the disruption
6:11 pm
on the new year that no one wanted to stop this way. of the rushes were on you for a now last go says, at least one person has been killed and several others injured and ukrainian attacks on the russian city and region of belgrade. the strikes come after you cranes, president bullard, and here's the landscape out of russia would pay for its latest missile attacks on ukrainian cities. at least 5 people were killed and nearly a 100 wounded. and those airstrikes on the eastern city of car keys and the capital peas, risky workers search for survivors in a damaged building. the russian missiles caused extensive destruction to this neighborhood, and keys was outside the other side of the house. and it was flying like this red building and
6:12 pm
then hit and smoke started coming out around in and saw that there were no windows in the system. the premium capital was the target of several russian strikes, which is mostly civilian areas. just a little so targeted the country, 2nd largest city hockey, injuring thousands, and turning costs of residential neighborhoods into smouldering craters, cranes, president below de lensky, condemned via tax. he credited western defense systems for intercepting and destroying the vast majority of russian missiles. so there were a more strikes by the inhuman russians with almost $100.00 rockets of various types . at least 70 rockets were shot down. almost 60 of them shot down in the key barrier. there were severe bindings and hockey sewland ski is under increasing
6:13 pm
pressure to shore up military and financial support from western allies to help you crane continue to defend itself against the russian invasion. and please to welcome . now kara roodick, she is a member of the granting parliament and leader of the opposition party hollows. she joins us from keith. kira your apartment was in one of the buildings. hit overnight and tell us what happened. hello, nicole, thank you so much for having me. i woke up today at about 7 am uh because of the sound of air raid siren. this is not uncommon for us because there has been many attacks and key of these days. i tried to go downstairs to that we are, we usually hide under the stairs, but it was just like not quick enough because then i heard the explosion and then i have seen that there is a smoke and my windows. they just like they were pulled out of the frames and
6:14 pm
shattered on the floor. and part of that wall isn't dry both. and then they went out, it was dark and smoke and people were screaming and uh, but the attack did not stop at this moment. so you can imagine, induce armageddon and michelle's were coming and coming and people were trying to seek, you know, somebody needs help. but can you just imagine this is just her and the, it's yours way. and there were many people from my neighborhood that were actually severely injured, saying god, i just got a couple of stretches out of the shoulders of the glass. and i was able to house my neighbors. but that the choose is that right now in ukraine, when you are going to bed, you don't have any guarantee that you will wake up in the morning nor to 12. and this is what's happening every single day. i think many people in the west seeing
6:15 pm
that the water is over, but it is not. it is going on every day and we never know if we are going to survive and the other attack. yeah. that most of all or so i have to see that you're safe, the sounds incredibly frightening. just to give our viewers a sentence because this has been going on for almost 2 years now. but, but the attacks, especially in kids now seem to be coming closer and closer again. was it what is it like for you living in keys at the moment? as well as of right now, like i have no, no windows as part of my my home and we'll be putting some plastic wrapped over them. so we can go through the night we, it all smells like smoke and we didn't have the water for some time in the morning . and we only ask each other effects all yours is our own right. and if, if everybody's alive and people attending,
6:16 pm
we are good for now. so today for this attack today, there were so many people come in helping out with the glass. there was so many glass shatters everywhere, and the shoes rush has to has so many missiles and big inside of our way and the air defense system that you've got, they are doing good, really good job. but apparently you see it is not enough. it's not like a 100 percent production, not even 90 percent. and this is why we are quoting. we're going to get more research for the air defense systems, the fighter jets. but the fact is, the truth is that you feel incredibly incredibly countless when you're standing there looking at part of your head. uh, my neighbors are trying to think they apart. and so look you, you look at this and you don't know what you can do. and people break down just
6:17 pm
preparing for the nights to survive night by night. and it is incredibly scary. it is as far from normal as possible. and the question is again, like what can we do? what can we do? and as they petition is in ukrainian, i can work with my partners in the west to help for ukraine to get more and more support. i want to talk about was the, is that i'm sure you've been in touch with over not only these, these past hours where you've been personally affected, but throughout know the past weeks and months. how are your allies planning to respond to this intensified campaign by russia, especially against urban areas as well. the 1st one is of course, giving us more abilities to defend ourselves, to 5 back to make sure that the protect the results. and this is what we really, really need more air defense systems and munitions for that. but there is and not
6:18 pm
the end goal that is critically important. recently, our military has unpacked their ms childs. it's for blank all the way and from brush. and they had many western parts there. so one of the ways to help us defend ourselves is to make sure that the sections actually work. that the rush i was not able to manufacture as many weapons and missed us as the do right now. and this is something that can be done and should be done, and this is what you will be working on uh, even more intensively because again, i'm the living right now. what's happening here and i can tell you i, i can tell you that there is nothing, nothing more terrifying when you have absolutely no control over what is happening to you and your loved ones. and do you feel complete, complete despair? when is everything that you work on? you build your life is just going into ramos in one minute. you printing lawmaker
6:19 pm
kara roodick. thank you so much and trying to be safe. thank you. 2023 was one of the most exciting years for space exploration. more people were in space at the same time than ever before. a number of space tours and flights also took off and india became the 4th country to successfully soft land on the moon. that is to name just a few highlights. 2024 ascent to be just as exciting. and here is what's in store. one of the most highly anticipated events on the 2024 space calendar is the arguments to mission. in november. it's slated to send these for astronauts seeing here at a launch demonstration event on a 10 day lunar fly by. it will be the final destination before artem is $0.03. humans back to the surface of the moon in 2025 for the 1st time and over half a century. the milestone program led by nasa involved 6 other space agencies,
6:20 pm
including europe's east. it's also a stepping stone to bigger things. they so certainly a good lease on one side, of course technology has advanced and we are exploring again, do you do us? that means we or we send us to an out outside our space station, i'll know a little bit. and the more news to obvious next stop are on the way to boss. so cindy is successful tundra on mission to the moon. south pole was just the 1st to an area where water has been detected. nasa is soil sample prospector. viper will head there next. and in may, china also plans to launch the chunk, a 6, a robotic exploration mission that like its predecessor, the chunk a 5 is designed to return samples of lunar soil and rock to earth. for the 1st time, from the moon's far side visit the other moons and the solar system like one
6:21 pm
that circles. mars are also on the agenda in 2024. in september, japan space agency jacks is heading to full bose with a mission that will seek to collect a few grams of material from the red planets. larger moon. the following month, we'll see the launch towards jupiter of nasa's europa clipper emission. it will try to pinpoint possible future landing sites on the jovian satellite surface and also gather data on its icey outer show and the ocean suspected beneath it. trips the asteroids are also planned for 2024 uses. hair emission will look at the 2 asteroids did the most and dime more photos. back in 2022 now says dark spacecraft intentionally slammed into dime more photos. that was a feasibility study into whether it's possible to deflect the course of new earth
6:22 pm
objects. with the aid of to help her satellites. hero will examine the asteroid and nearby space and the aftermath of the dark collision. and head lice is really a mission that focuses on the planet that the safety. that means what, texting our planet for objects that might hit our plan. and this is what i have always do it because have a is looking at the impacts which the nasa thought commission had on this asteroid send to see how the, how this was affected. the moon looms large for every space varying nation in 2024 . but it's just one destination and one of the most exciting years ever for space exploration. let's bring in can you scale? he's editor of law. so watch dot com and washington d. c. k is good to see you again. we just heard our reported hall 20241 of the most exciting years ever in space exploration. do you agree?
6:23 pm
yeah. and that gets part of the excitement out of the way. there's so much more and i don't know where to start. almost. we're going to go back to the moon, others private admissions that are gonna land there. i actually have a connection to one of them. one of them is taking a piece of some of them out of everest, from nepal, back to the mood that was inspired by trip by went on to ever so the ashcroft front of my back of the day, we bought some rocks back on the space station so paul is sending something to the move. that's how, you know, it's become so exciting now that it's not just the big country here of the country . there is smaller groups of people in more diverse places they're getting to participate. and so that to me is the most exciting thing. i think the, what the 2nd most exciting is what was touched on was the euro per clip. our mission is already has to just mission going to the jupiter system and ask for biology. the source for life is one of the more important things you've got. the james web space telescope, which was mentioned, which is looking at places up far across the universe and close by ways we've never
6:24 pm
been able to look for things before. and among the things we see is the chemistry of all these worlds in a lot of it is like to me is a biologist. interesting. let's see. more. plenty of commercial spics. you have all the starship that they tried to watch twice last year. hopefully they'll make orbit this year. you've got a i a wing space crackled, dream chaser that's going to go to the space station, which by the way, the space stations been occupied for 25 years. oh, and when you look at the videos for the space station, it's hard to tell which one you're looking at because your style to china has one that we have. yeah, i can just go on so bad. it's just like you asked me another question. do you think, well, we rose, consequential for us back on or i was thinking unfortunately, i'll be kind of old when it gets there. but those 2 missions to jupiter because they're gonna look at your rope and ganymede and so forth. and that's really the big question. i mean, for me, at least, and i've been watching this for years,
6:25 pm
i'd like to say that going back to the board is going to be it. but it's frustrating. i was 14, when i watched the apollo 11, when i'd 68. now it should be quicker to do, but it's not and take a reason why. but when we do that, when we see people walking in the moon again, just remember, i don't know if you are, i don't think you were alive of the time. but 3 quarters of the people on this world have never seen another person walk in another world. so it's gonna be like doing the same thing again for the 1st time and that. yeah, for most people that will be exciting. so i should just sit back and be quiet. so yeah, that's cool to a lot of people want to get involved in this excitement and a lot of nations are getting into space exploration. now that creates a lot of competition. do you think there should be more international cooperation to help us advanced more quickly? yes, and you know, the interesting thing is when i was growing up, it was a bipolar world. it was used as a used to the west and then europe got in on it and then japan is now,
6:26 pm
like i said in a paul is a player. united arab emirates, as a spacecraft is doing amazing stuff in orbit around march. i mean, it companies now have the financial resources to go wherever they are, which owner wants to go and these broad shoulders of read a lot of science fiction. and a lot of that science fiction talks about a lot of people going to a lot of places. so my answer is yes. and i think part of it is also that satellites are smaller now they're cheaper. you've got the ability now to have people in the smallest budget village on route to pick up a cell phone and have why fi and talk to some one somewhere else. and also to learn about how to go to space. yeah, we're just on the, on the cost of see what it's like with everybody everywhere. can have up up a ready to play and space if they want that to me. of all the other things, just having everybody involved is the most exciting thing. keeps going, always great speaking very, thank you so much much and that's all for me. for
6:27 pm
now. we'll be back in about half an hour with more on that breaking story, coming out of baby roots. by the
6:28 pm
way, it's time for visionaries, for sustainability. but also for horsepower the, it's time for the mobile revolution on dw, the the princess for
6:29 pm
a day dawning one down after the others. all smiles useful and alt month are celebrating their wedding in morocco, reminiscences of a $1001.00 nights. the ceremony follows strict schedule that revolves almost entirely around the front. in 45 minutes, d, w, the . so you don't think and feel the same way you expect and want different things from life and your parents do. i just want to pursue what that's nice on fire or you think your kid is 2 different, risky,
6:30 pm
irresponsible, unreasonable, all stuff. i want my son to become a doctor to in the clouds. it's time to to and then when generations to nash january 14th on d, w. the news won't electric calls in europe. all china is comic his now spinning the boys. tons of fuss, electric oval as to whether it also be a success. get fiance's right now on the road. c the are small electric cars made in china the right answer to.

15 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on