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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  February 6, 2024 9:00am-9:30am CET

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the, the, this is the, the, the news coming to live from berlin us. secretary state holds crisis talks on guns with middle east leaders, entity blinking is working to secure and extended paul's and the fighting between israel and homos. also coming up britons king charles, diagnosed with cancer fucking in palaces. the monarch will step back from public duties as he undergoes treatment plus 3 dead in california. as torrential rains trigger mudslides and flooding, leaving hundreds of thousands without power. and one year after powerful earthquakes devastated large parts of south eastern turkey are corresponding returns to one of the worst hit urban areas. this neighborhood used to be home to
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thousands of people, but just look around. it's almost entirely gone the little m terry martin, thanks for joining us. us secretary of state antony blanket as in the middle east pushing for a pause and the fighting in guns. so he's heading to egypt, having already held talks in saudi arabia. lincoln says he's hoping to secure and enduring and to the conflict between israel and from us, which carried out the deadliest terror attack in israel's history. in october, the diplomatic push comes as israel is considering an assault on rough, a city in southern gaza, where many displays, palestinians are seeking shelter or no laptop and israel's grind operations and
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gaza. these really military released vintage of its offensive in the strip as taught us on french diplomats met with regional leaders to push for a truce. israel is pressing on with its campaigns after threatening a grind assault on rafa. the un has dumped rafa. the pressure cooker of despair, the southern such a near gauze as border with egypt and i have hosts more than half of gauze population displaced since the start of the war. what is it going to be for forcefully displays from gall? so they followed us to con eunice, we came to russell and they want to follow us again to tell me where do we go and hoping to show up support for a truce. us secretary of state antony blinking, kicked off a diplomatic offensive in the middle east. meeting with id officials before heading to egypt. international pressure on israel is mounting front as far administer
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called for an immediate cease fire and a political solution for gaza. doing we must prepare the future and support the palestinian authority which must take on a new form and re deploy in the cause of state. but as soon as possible. i repeat, garza is palestinian land there by the sea and set on continuing to war until her mouth is destroyed. go visit them, take them to me. this is the essence of our policy. 13 victory of how much total victory is essential because it guarantees israel security. total victory is the only way in which we can secure the further historic peace agreements that awaits us. of israel's defense minister says the military would push on until it has to reign overdone, so including rough journalists. greenville, gloria is following the story for us in cairo. i asked him about the current state,
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the goal she ations towards these far while the table is a framework that was discussed in paris between the united states, this red egypt and caught the in this framework, there is the talk of several faces, a pause of the wall is 7 phases of a pulse of the wall and exchange of the se, and postage is how much is saying that it's reviewing this proposal and it but this week though, some very important sticking points is right. it says it's ready for a pause in of the war, and then there's different phases of exchanging prisoners how mazda is ex, she's saying that it will be only anything. what happened only if there was really em? how much is that? make g off of that. but it's, it's actually a gaza one guarantees from is way to that, that there will be a final ends of the wall. and the, that there is,
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is there any forces with withdrawal from gaza? that is, of course, difficult, was the stance of the is there any payments that you always adjust to it is good for nothing less than this drawing how mazda and for the victory, which egypt roll in all the is karim, what are its interests in trying to broker a deal on gaza. what contact is basically the hop pay for the negotiations? was the political leadership of how much it usually is the 10 to to the minutes inspections of how much at this moment you have in got into the gaza strip. and there is of course context between them and the is really at the age of sion intelligence is you this functions as some kinds of postman between the 2 sites and the between the hamas really and the in gaza in lincoln is right now with lincoln ca, and kyle: so messenger roll as it were. it's rarely forces have have shifted their focus to
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the south of the gaza strip. now they've been pushing in that direction from the beginning. much of the findings now concentrated on the area around rough. uh, that's right on egypt border, how is the war being felt in egypt? what people hear a really horrified at my say, and by what the by the pictures the see coming out every day of gaza and the policy . any question is really in daily conversation, shantee, i've grown up. people do not understand why that is no more international pressure to these are to end as well. and why the government has, of course, some leverage through its contact, which is right in the public opinion, is very much it on the policy insight cream. you've been covering this complex from the beginning, travelling extensively in the palestinian territories. how hopeful are palestinians
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that a sustain ceasefire can be reached? that's what, what i hear that is simply disappear, right? delta in the this it say that it's of course fear of further displacement because especially when the is really ami might go into an alpha and then beat enough people. it squeezed really, there is a rough i area and then most southern point and of the, the, the gaza strip basically wish that back to the is ready for that. is this fear that people might be displaced outside the gaza strip. uh and the i think that's the biggest fear that's a, that's really extremely desperate situation right now. in gust kareem, thank you very much. as always, that was journalist, korean l g o r in cooper high. right, let's take a look at a few other stories making headlines around the world today. anti government
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protest to paralyze cities across haiti. police fired tear gas and clashed with demonstrators were demanding prime minister of a of all these step down. protesters blame him for a reason, wave of violence that's displaced hundreds of thousands of p. the us has carried out a new strike against who the targets in yemen. it says its forces had to drones operated by the around back group. us as launch several strikes on, you have an in response to the tax on shipping in the red sea chile has started 2 days of national mourning for the victims of wild fires burning through the central alcohol res, or region. within a 120 people have been killed and many more are missing. emergency crews say they are still finding bodies in the wreckage. the ball makers in hungary, a boy called, or the parliamentary vote on sweden joining nato prime minister victor o'brien,
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and his if it is party have been blocking stock on his bid to join the line since 2022. hungary is now the only nato member not to have approved sweden's accession or residents. king charles has been diagnosed with cancer less than 18 months since he ascended the throne. of buckingham palace issued a statement saying the disease was discovered during a hospital procedure last week. it says the 75 year old has started treatment and is positive about his prognosis. a dental appointment of king charles cancer diagnosis has surprise many as only last week he was in smiling and waving a crowns while leaving the hospital in london. following the procedure on an enlarged, prostate got, you can tell us, says the cancer was discovered during the king's treatment, but it has not revealed the form of the disease. it says the decision to go public
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was made to prevent speculation and to raise cancer. awareness. london, the centuries are united english and the king a speedy recovery. i think he does a pretty wonderful job to be honest, i'm a big fan and scott says like somebody got a family would want to go through in private anyway. but having being the person in the public hospice soto, i'm sure he is aware of how much that will connect him to other people or the families who go through that. but i'm very sad to hear this very sorry to hear. and i phrase says he will recover, you know, the treatment is really sad. news for, for the water would pay for him. i would cite to a doctor say to my mom, my brother, the stroke,
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buckingham palace says the king is stepping back from his public to use while he undergoes treatment. but he will continue and his constitutional role as head of state dealing with state businesses and official paper work. come on, let's get more of this now from our london corresponded beg, it must be a good walk us through how to king charles as illness will affect his duties as monarch and head of state. the jobs really has a big role to play in as a, as a partition on that because he signs the laws. however, we will 1st notice that you weren't appear in public. normally he's out and about there was of hundreds of engagement each each year. but he wouldn't be, he's going to seen them public. so this is what the pallet has confirmed. we don't know what form of cancer he has. we'd also don't know the treatment. so we don't, we only know that he's going to be treated as an outpatient. so he's not going to
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be in hospital, but we have no idea how long. basically we go and we go and see him. he says he's positive. and the problem is the re, she's to not just told the bbc that he was glad that it was called the so maybe he knows more then then we'll do. and yeah, i guess the british people will be, will be hoping that it was quarterly and that he can have treatment and then recover constitutionally speaking, what would happen if the king were to be incapacitated? so there is a constitutional mckenna isn't so called council. this stage would be appointed, they could then resume those really necessary duties like signing the nose. but as we understand that's not necessary, we understand that he is going to be remain in touch also with a prime minister, which is, which is also the normal thing to do the day that they meet and that they are in
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touch. we have only had that his public engagements will not take place, so you're going fios into about opening kindergarten. so hospitals or anything like that. but that he is hoping that he will be able to to stay in touch and stay on top of his constitutional role. will other members of the royal family then maybe take on some of his duties while he's recovering to yes for sure. so we, we know that the queen, for example, that she is confirmed by the present. she will continue without public engagement. now that's obviously also the other working was this prince william and also kate kate has also just undergoing surgery. so she is not yet hasn't really been seeing wasn't about yet. and the prince william was also um yeah. taking his step back in order to be with his wife, and i guess also look after his young children,
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but it's expected that he will now step up and all the, all the other was will be, have to be out and about just a little bit more well, this obviously is quite a shock to, to britain what of the reactions been to this new so far big well we, it's obviously difficult diagnosis and, and people's hearts go out. so we've had messages. well, was using messages, messages, obviously from the you k, from the to can lead us, but also from, from international leaders. president biden has said it takes coverage of the kinds of diagnosis he with his own family has, has experience of that. he's also told reporters, it's been reported that he said he was going to call prince charles. um yeah, another will lead as a wishing and was faced leaders as well. but what i find remarkable is also the kinds of charities, since they have come forward, and they've really welcomed him,
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being open with his diagnosis. they said that's just really wonderful because it helps other kinds of patients. many often fuel alone when they have a diagnosis like that, but if this is being dealt with openly and they, they feel acknowledged so that might help all of us with cancer. very good, thank you very much. that was the w's biggest, most there in london. now to the us, where to wrench will rain has triggered mudslides and flooding across southern california. what to the state is under extreme weather advisories. at least 3 people have been killed and hundreds of thousands of people are without power. the storm was the 2nd to hit the state in recent dates. a short while ago i spoke with jason company or the nbc news radio bureau chief in los angeles. i asked him how bad the situation is i can tell you that it's not great right now. you know,
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hundreds and thousands of people are without power and they're just waiting for the other shoe to drop. so while the rain has really so to southern california, now we have to worry about that rain getting through the soil and then making its way to bed rock. when that happens. that's when we have land slides in mudslides. now right now across l a. county, they recorded over 300 a month slides and debris slides in the area, but that can be very minor to some uh, more extreme. uh, several houses have already been toppled over. you mentioned there's been some debts. but right now, as the storm continues to leave southern california, specifically, it's a matter of wait and see, is the hillside going to come down? is the mountain going to collapse? things like that. and that's probably the scariest part about all of this. we've got the strike team in place. we've got the federal government,
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william del president biden, called the mayor of los angeles. so we have, we have what we need in place. it's just a matter of where is it going to happen? what exactly it is being delivered in terms of health for the people who are being affected by the 6th stream. whether, as you know, at this point, all they can do is just say, okay, do you have enough sandbags to keep the mud and debris out of your house? that really is all you can do. uh, you know, rein being a very forceful part of mother nature. she doesn't bear down and she doesn't back down from anything. so there's really not much they can do. we both end up some evacuation centers in, in the higher elevation. so people can get out the flooding and out from the debrief louse. but that's really all we can do until the state starts to dry out a little bit. and again, the fear is, what's the scariest part about all of this?
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well, talking about fear, many or, or who worried that this things could get worse. house, the forecasts looking, is there any relief insight i i'm sitting here and it's raining right now. and it was supposed to be out of here earlier this afternoon, and it's now expected to continue throughout most of the day tomorrow in into wednesday. early morning, wednesday it should be gone, and then we'll start wednesday afternoon into thursday. so the good news is that the storm is actually moving. the problem is that it just kind of sat on top of southern california for the past 2448 hours or so. and just don't fuck is upon buckets of rain, millions and millions and trillions of gallons of rain across the region. and so hopefully the forecast is, are correct and hopefully the newer models that come out that have come out saying that the storm will at least give us
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a break within the next 48 to 72 hours. hopefully those are correct because the state could use a break. let's hope that break comes sooner rather than later. jason. great talking with you. jason camping down here, the nbc news radio bureau chief in los angeles. thanks so much. i now one year on from turkeys deadliest earthquake and modern times, protestors of class with police in the southern province of hawkeye. thousands of people had gathered originally gathered in the city of on takia for a vigil for the one year anniversary of the major quick. which killed more than 50000 people in turkey alone and displaced millions. demonstrators say the government has neglected the region since the $7.00 magnitude quake struck a south eastern turkey and parts of syria. our correspondent julia han, filed this report from attack. yeah. this is what remains
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of the ones bustling city of on took you. abandoned department buildings lined the roads, reminders of a life that no longer exist if the year has passed since the quakes, and in many places says still busy demolishing damage buildings and clearing the rustle. this neighborhood used to be home to thousands of people, but just look around. it's almost entirely gone a year ago to powerful earthquakes, patches, se kentucky, they destroyed or severely damaged, some 300000 buildings across 11 provinces. experts say construction safety codes had been ignored on a grand scale. some lives could be rescued with many couldn't. today the official desk told stands that more than 50 sounds and these grades and then talk you, a monument to pain. i'm durham does show lost his brother and his
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mother. he himself was trapped under the rubble for more than a day. he tells me what i managed to get out. after more than 30 hours. it looked like the apocalypse. it happened and you say, no one knew what to do. i soon as you know of every one had lost someone and the state wasn't there for us. there was no help with a single mother a year later, hundreds of thousands in the disaster heat region are still holding out in containers and other temporary shelter. like mimic dustin who invites me into her improvised kitchen. she's been living here for almost a year with her husband and 2 children, but others motion, but i can't get used to this. i had a big house, i had everything. and now i don't know what will happen, what will become with my kids, with all the rain and the cold. i sometimes tell myself, god,
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i wish we had died too. as a family scared associates county, i should be honest as a police president for a to tell you the ad one made hold, promises to swiftly reveals across the region how much it was. a goal in the 1st phase is to complete the $319000.00 himes in village houses within a year and hand them over to the wrong as by the history of ethics. but the reconstruction is progressing fluid and promised at this building site on the outskirts of kentucky, a most of a offline and his team o racing to get the 1st few 1000 departments ready in february. he attempts to explain the delays. sean india, it's the biggest problem right now is the rain. so it's been raining heavily in the region, so they do a little bit more working. non stop, i want to make sure earthquake victims can move in as soon as possible. the billboards like this one have sprung up across the city. you homes, you jobs, a future, that's the talk is government's big promise. but as much as people here wants to
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believe, and it's many have little hope that life and the city will soon return to how it was before. many shop owners are improvising the sell from containers now, but most of their former customers arrive at did, will displace getting supplement letters that the bottom we decided to do something on that right. and to make ends meet. i have life has to go on. we homes that town get will suddenly getting back on its feet. i have almost any said the high, you know, like i say everything will get better, but i'm not sure. i think it will take 10 or 15 years to rebuild the city on this. you lose all of the addition, you, doctors, you kindly see my mother are 4 children, i'm fighting for them. we have to hold on somehow too much, at least we're still alive, and that means there is whole units of our that makes and that whole is a crucial building block for the future. and meet the ruins of on talk you
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now to set a goal where the parliament has voted to postpone a presidential election for the 1st time in his history. paul was due to be held this month, but has now been pushed back until december. and the goal has long been considered a model of democracy in west africa, but this decision is raised concerns over the erosion of democracy, sparking protests on the street. and in parliament sunday goal has ended on delta dental, pre dozens of opposition, m. p. 's me the last page, but then the block ability lane elections. but they were thrown out of the national assembly. and the remaining long because wanted to postpone the election to december. this expands the current, president's daniel by about 10 months. so i'm thinking really what brings us together here is quite simply unconstitutional, which is why i say that today we, we to send an attempted constitutional cool it's it's clear
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that the governments a is to push for a postponement of the elections because they know their candidate will lose before president mackie saw announced the election dealer over the weekend, as he said it was because of a dispute between the parliament and the constitution. going over the rejection of canada. and the next soon offered his announcement products it operate across the capital car. the government's and hundreds of security forces into the streets in a shaw force force any factors. and if i think doesn't measure if we are afraid, it's a question of whether we're willing to let the regime that's in place of advance its political agenda. whether we say no, and the answer from a simple is to say, no, we're going to go on and on and on and on. we don't know so ever since we want you to for election election and that's all we want. we don't want anything else,
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not to. the protest soon escalated into violent flashes with police. sending all has long been done to the modern democracy in west africa. but this latest crisis threatens to undermine that image. finally, if you've ever complained about poor cell phone coverage, spare a thought for the folks living here. this is the remote trouble research center. in antarctica, it has been extremely difficult to get a signal there, but has changed with the opening of the world since southern most mobile phone base station. but we don't company tele nor said it's new for g. service will allow regular, so cellphone use for the 1st time and a the work of scientists living there. the center collects geological climate and weather data tele, nor also recently installed the world's northern most mobile towers. inside the
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arctic circle, you're watching dw news from berlin. i'm terry larson, and thanks for being with the
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securing evidence to convict the changes in south africa. poaching is the business with millions of heroes often remain undetected that has to end and so ranges are now being trained in forensics. turn snow to purchase the co op on d w. slave labor for luxury products. the dock side of the champagne industry. day neighbors receive a pistons for their work and live in terrible conditions. french trade you need is
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trying to help set the huddles off by using it sparkling in 45 minutes on d w. the nice easy at the end just to pass the gun any difficult to access an expedition ventures on to places that no one has the why is the ice melting the signage reset in the i c d w
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the every bit of additional woman at greater risk for africa was drought more heat ways and more potential corrupt fee is. well, what can people do about it? well, take a look of this edition of eco africa. i'm crystal lambs coming to you from lake goes nigeria. and i m sandrica holmes, the tween. nobody will joining you from the complex here in uganda. not only is the planet hating up.

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