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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  January 7, 2024 2:00am-2:15am CET

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of the your what you can do the news live from building more trouble for us is joined. boeing after a dramatic emergency landing a piece of fuselage blows out in meet a there are no serious injuries, but authorities have grounded some of the boeing's best sailing. 737 max a cross will stick to an aviation safety expo in a moment. also coming up, you a secretary of state and me blinking price is on with a will in diplomatic to a thing he's mine. i mean is to stop the conflict in gaza from spreading the
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jared raid. welcome to the showing us edge line. boeing is facing most scrutiny over the safety of one of its best selling plains. federal authorities have ordered an immediate grounding and inspection of some boeing 737, max 9, a craft. this follows in the alaska airlines flight in which is a fuselage panel blew out. so i have to take off leaving a gaping hole in the pine. eliza landed safely with no major injuries. emma, who took a pre flight selfie before boarding an alaska airlines flight from portland, oregon bound for ontario, california for her. it was a normal flight until it wasn't on sleeve as feel a plane drop. and it wasn't like any other turbulence just because the masks i came down to. so that's what i knew like, oh gosh,
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this is something way different. and the i started freaking out. a piece of the fuselage tore off the left side of the jet as it climbed out of portland. little door flew off. we i'm so grateful we weren't higher in the air like that more things in it. fly out. no one flew out. i think that's incredible. that we're all safe. the whole was left by a panel, the plains manufacturer, boeing designed to cover the space for an optional escape door. it took away from the plane, had been crossed, b, that's high altitude of cruising altitude, for example. maybe more passages wanna unbox, forgot about creating a big movie about the copy that meant searching. what would have been the risk of loss of life with the passengers potentially able to be sucked out of the vehicle? the pilot made an immediate emergency landing back in portland with all 174 passengers and 6 crew members on hurt back on the ground. it all sink in
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for an interview. i think it's just crazy, like when we were sending a lot, i guess services waiting to get re booked and everyone's looking at that picture together. i was like, oh my gosh like that is like literally like entire door or panel of the plane that flew out. right. so i'm feeling a little shaky. i really want to go see my friends and my boyfriend. so that's what i'm looking forward to. the plane was a brand new 737 max 9, boeing's best selling plane on saturday. federal officials ordered the immediate grounding of all 737, next 9 jetliners until they are inspected. boeing says that fully supports the phase decision. the anthony brick house is professor of aerospace safety at the ambry riddle, aeronautical university. in the us. welcome back to the dublin. you tell me what went through your mind when you saw this a good lawyer,
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jerry. it was absolutely shocking. last night, my time, friday evening, when i 1st started getting pictures of this event, just happy, you know, it worked out successfully and now a safety investigators. we need to find out exactly what happened. the craft was brand new, 2 months old. how do you think something like this could have happened? it's really early to say right now what exactly happened. but whenever we have a structural failure, there's a definitely a reason why it happened. structures do not fail for random reasons and i'm confident the anti sd. and boeing get alaska airlines will get in there and they'll figure out what happens. what do you think they going to be trying to identify and be looking for as, as they investigate. the good thing about the materials that we used to make aircraft is that they literally will tell you a picture. so investigator is going to be changed to look at the,
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the damage the aircraft as it sits on the rep. they'll also be looking for that, that piece of door or structure that came off and they're going to visually inspect it, they'll probably microscopically inspected, and they'll be able to piece it back together because the material will actually tell a story. i know, professor, this seems to be another mock against the boeing max fleet. of course, the plane was grounded world wide old. most 5 used to go off to 2 crashes. a lot of people are probably wondering is this really a safe plane to fly in? yes, we are well aware of the 2 tragic accidents involving the max 8. this is the max 9 . it is really early in the investigation. so it's really point any fingers and as a professional. so what we focus on is not about blameless about finding out what happens so that we can make necessary changes to make the industry as safe as possible. so use, are you saying that these, these 2 incidents?
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so these crashes the couple of days ago in the slightest incident, don't really have anything to do with a child to know is, is it could be a totally separate situation. is really early in the investigation of the 2 backs. a crisis did not involve what we would consider a structural failure where to, to is this event did involve a structural failure. so i know because as you know, to boeing aircraft, you know, one would like to connect the dots. but it's very early in the investigation, and this appears to be a totally separate type of event. right. and, and you are right and he's very early in the investigation. tell us. so this is a guess, a kind of a p uh does off to the boeing at what does boeing and of course you, it, us regulate as need to do to convince people that it really is okay to fly and planes like this. well, as of right now, this is saturday evening. my time here in florida in the us, united airlines has ground it several of their max nines. alaska airlines has
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grounded their max gallons under an emergency air worth and is directed from our federal aviation administration. so all of those entities and he has the bowling, the airlines, they're going to get together. and they're going to make sure that inspections are done so that they can verify the safety of these aircraft before they get into the sky again. and. and what about elsewhere, i mean, other regions around the world, particularly i guess, here in europe to will be, will be also looking to what us investigators managed to uncover. absolutely, the great thing about where we are right now, everybody communicates extremely well. so any country that has an airline operating the max 9 that will be paying very close attention to what things play to how things play out in the us. and if it gets to a point where this is more of a systemic issue with the design of the aircraft, then we could very well see other airlines actually grounding there. boeing, 737, max. not me, bryce. great to get your insights,
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professor of aerospace safety and the break house in the us. thank you so much for your time. thank. thank you. can use us to country of state and to me blinking says he wants to make sure all of the conflict in gaza doesn't spread, blink, and also stays these particular concern over exchanges of fire on the border between these route and live and on. he was speaking during a diplomatic mission around the middle east, blinking his pain in turkey. grace is now in jordan and we'll move on to cats on egypt. and israel. this is the 4th time since october 7th, that i'll be in the region and will be there at what remains and incredibly difficult time for the region in the wake of the october 7th attacks on israel. as we said from day one, we have an intense focus on preventing this conflict spreading. and a big part of the conversations will be having over the coming days with all of our all as partners is looking at the steps that they can say. using the influence
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advise that they have to do just that, to make sure that this conflict doesn't suppress. second, uh, we'll be looking at what we can do to maximize the protection for civilians maximize the amount of trade assistance getting into them. uh, and also to get possibly just out of gaza. jason compet donya is the los angeles bureau chief nbc news radio. great to see you again. the jason now asked me blinking says he wants to make sold the conflict in the middle east doesn't spread . what are his big laurie points to think as well, to be honest with you, i think the biggest worry point at this juncture is, is this show of american, you know, lawmakers stated is, is that going to be enough to do anything? is that going to be enough to garner a ceasefire? is that going to be enough to uh,
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allow some hostages to be released or is that going to be enough to allow some more a get to the civilians regardless rep than have had their life completely devastated for the past few weeks, months and, and, and critics are now saying that here's the united states, once again, doing what the united states does, it's going into other countries to tell that country how to run the country. and that's probably the biggest fight at the moment, right now, just on a personal level here on american soil. i can tell you that there has been protest across the united states in that are calling for as the fire. and this is a show for the binding the administration in an election year and early in that election year to go out and say, look, let's count in this situation down. i think really the biggest worry point is that this is not going to be enough. if it is, it's a huge win for the biden administration. and in the election year you can have
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enough wins. right? you are right. it is an election. you tell us a bit more about the perception among the us public about, i guess by the, if it's not blinking is making now and the war and gas and more generally. so the biggest fear is that this war is going to continue to just go on and goods the goals triple being nothing but a pile of rubble in the next couple of months because neither side is going to get by you or the israel defense forces or you know, be your mom's fighters are going to go in there and there, and they're going to level the place. that's the biggest fear here in america and in america being the melting pot that it is. we have thousands of people here in this country that are palestinian and, and of the jewish faith that have family members in that, in that part of the globe. so the biggest fear is for americans in general, is we just want the,
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the war to and we want the fighting to end. and this comes as the fighting escalated all earlier this weekend in the region. and is the united states being there, the right move, right? now she should, we be more forceful. these are the conversations that are being had around dinner tables across the united states tonight. and just touching on that, i guess what result boss. they'd be at the end of anthony lincoln's trip for this to be considered some kind of a success among the american public to so in my opinion, this is totally my opinion and i'm going to take the reporter head off and, and just haven't covered the state department for the past 20 years or so. i think if he walks away with an accord with several of the countries that are in the area and they haven't been understanding that they're not to interfere, they're not to get involved. i think that that is a when the,
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if they can negotiate a ceasefire of some kind or they can negotiate more a being brought into the region. i think that's a win as well. i think one or the other. i think you, you, you chuck that up on i, on the winning column. i'm not sure he's going to be able to hit the try fact and get all 3. but i do believe that there will be some sort of progress and towards some sort of ceasefire. some sort of piece in that in that area, at least for the time being that let's try some common dump it down. yeah, we have nbc news radio, jason, thank you. thank you. he's a round up now. some of the world news headlines, at least 11 people, including 5 children have been killed in a russian missile strike in the eastern ukrainian region of don't yet. russia has intensified its attack, so new crime, since the start of winter ukrainian prisons loaded me as a landscape stays russia, has launch hundreds of me solves in the last week a line, a lawyer. as for
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a child senegalese public opposition later on to appeal against a court ruling powering came from standing and next month's presidential election was mine. sancho was sent to prison for 2 years in june for marly, corrupting a young person. but livia has made its biggest error code kind sage up, police found more than 8 tons of the drawing keaton. in a shipment of wood panels bound for the netherlands, the un says, believe he is the will be good as the biggest kind of kind produced the off to columbia and poor. these things the meet your needs. a brazilian football legend mario scholar has died at the age of 92. he wants the 1st person to win the sports world comp is both player and college and the only person to have it done, it twice is around, off of our top story. the us a safety regulator, has ordered and immediate grounding. and inspection of some of the following, and 737 to max, not a craft. it follows an alaska airlines flight in which
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a windows laptop to take off in oregon. you're up to date here on dw this more on the w. com. i'm jarrett draining the building. thank you for watching the votes. people have to say the that's why we listen to based on the report every weekend on d w my name is the calls back said wow, thank.

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