tv The Day Deutsche Welle September 3, 2024 12:02am-12:31am CEST
12:02 am
today and the prime minister went on television to ask forgiveness from the farmers for not being able to save the 6 whose bodies were because of the weekend. but by any means necessary yahoo! double down on his determination to destroy us. i'm feel gail in berlin and this is the day the we are here to protest against these ready government. i'm, i'm angry. i'm here. you see here and it just frustration because i don't care about the hostages. the we can see that home anymore and to hope for the change. we need to come here the
12:03 am
vehicle also on the day of fall right policy windsor states election hearing jeremy sending shock waves across the country. political system, leading germans wondering whether it should be allowed into government and such methods. you just have to come together in the interest of democracy fest with no. yeah, they will crotty like this terrible, absolutely terrible message with us. so i don't know what will become of germany. welcome to the day, a short general strike of mass protests in israel have laid bad divisions of these ready government strategy on guessing the hostages held by a mouse in gaza, released thousands of workers walked off the jobs today, demanding the government a prime minister. benjamin netanyahu boots reached agreement with him as to allow
12:04 am
the hostages to go home. however, the strike, which was cold and short notice, was ignored in some areas. the families of many of the hostages blame the prime minister for the delay in progress and ceased by talks with her mouth. and they say he's doing this for his own political survival. during the strike demonstrates his blocked main roads and flights that kind of a bed go to an an forth with a light. a labor court ordered an end to the strike, declaring it to be politically motivated. previously protesting, perhaps it across these route, when troops retrieve the body of 6 hostages from a tunnel in casa, and he's supposed to broadcast remarks, since those bodies were recovered, benjamin netanyahu said he would not give it to pressure to agree a deal. i think double down on his strategy in gaza insisting that israel must retain control over the philadelphia, colorado. that's a stretch of land between gaza and they bring egypt. i'm ok,
12:05 am
let me support. let me close and hold the families and i repeat it tonight to a new location. so if i ask for your forgiveness a little, it's a not bringing them back a live and we would close but we didn't succeed. fill her shaw. so the axis of evil needs to philadelphia car door, an apple 5 inside. the reason we must control the philadelphia, colorado. how might assume the seas for that reason that we not be the adult? and for that reason to be the case, i insist that we be that or will. how does mister netanyahu speech more his interest? and i've paid that last respects to hush goldberg pole in one of the 6 hostages, whose bodies were recovered from gaza over the weekend. is there any ministry? he says he and the 5 others were shot dead by him. us killing spa, the cool for today's general strike and mass protest. mass captured more than
12:06 am
$250.00 people during the after the 7 tenant attacks. nearly a 100, a still big house well yeah, i don't know if there is an expert on these ready politics and professor of political science at michigan state university in the united states. she joins us from the state capital, a lansing a welcome to data being professor. i'm, let's start with today speech from benjamin netanyahu. we had to click that i am asking for forgiveness that before going on to be effectively double down on his position. there's no changing his mind this or uh no, uh, i tragically not, i think for both from us leaders and war and for net anyhow, they put their own political survival and, and so forth above the welfare of the palestinians and israelis. and of course, one of the hostages were killed by her mice and taking them hostage 11 months ago.
12:07 am
it's certainly the case that density now has never put getting the hostages home and get into a ceasefire as the 1st priority. and he hasn't done so for the last 11 months. i don't think it is a very sincere apology and many as early as don't see it as such. about 70 percent of israelis throughout the many months have wanted him to immediately resign and want him to have new elections even before this. they held him. of course the mass is responsible for the massacres and the taking hostages. that took place on october 7th, but that's in the our was held responsible for not doing enough to be able to return and prevent that by distracting the country through trying to weaken its supreme court, which produced a mass demonstrations for many months uh before october 7th, uh and since then you know about, uh, july survey industry leads by this all democracy institute indicates the majority
12:08 am
of israel is 56 percent. would want a deal to at least all the hostages and end the war. and about almost 30 percent would want it for part part of the hostages for a ceasefire, and only 14 percent didn't know. so for a long time now, the majority of israelis and many surveys, one to you know, put as a 1st priority, getting the hostages home and getting to a deal. of course that would also end the suffering of noise housed in hands with them. yeah. so i think he just wants to stay out of jail since he's been incriminated in stay in power and some of his right wing coalition, extreme right members of the coalition wants to where to continue and okay, i don't want to withdraw from dentistry. obviously i'm represent says if these are the government to take a somewhat different, lied to the but you're taking that,
12:09 am
but the point is made we'll, we'll move on. i'm going to play you another clip from mr. netanyahu's. uh, earliest page, letting out that when he said this more would and that would define the end of the war in gaza in guns when come us no longer rules guys. we throw them up. we define the end of the war in world war 2. when the knots is no longer ruled german, to do that, you need to have a military victory. and you have to have also the political victory to destroy their governance. so i don't know if i'm, where is the, is really public on the way that missed the nation. yahoo! as prosecution this war of course, the many israelis, and many people around the world could understand that when there's organization like a mazda that officially wants to destroy the country. and that, you know,
12:10 am
massacre and hundreds of civilians and october 7th and says they want to have any marked over sevens that you wouldn't, that you would want to not have from us rule the territory next to you. and of course, you know, hopefully they'll be a passive save along side is all the features. there's the certainly understandable goal. but certainly as you know, has the experience of many countries as well. since world war 2. and this analogy that you know, the end, this is a, you know, how stands, you know, strive for a nation. and self determination is this really is how that you will be able to successfully just get rid of y, o a mass and so forth. and therefore, just just listen to that. yeah, just it just, all the stuff, if you will answer that seemed to you your seem to be going to, i didn't quite get an answer to my question. i'm with these republican the way this war is being a prosecution. by this government you seem to be hinting that they all behind the
12:11 am
prime minister. i know i know, i'm sorry if there was any misunderstanding. i think they very much want to prioritize and for many months getting to a cease fire and getting to the hostages back as opposed to complete victory. and that's not only were those really public has been, that's when he met. that is, were many in the defense establishment, have been for many, for also in the summer in terms of china pushing it to you know, to get to a deal. and even though he has understandable concerns about the border between guys and egypt, where they are so many channels when they have been re armed in that weapons, in the past, the military establishment itself is saying that, you know, in the 1st stage like israel can go back if, if it were going to be used in any way, but also more importantly that there could be some kind of international force or regional force including different countries that is all right. agree on that could be at the border. um, so again, it's not that it's not an under,
12:12 am
it's not it's an understandable concern, but most of this really public has been solidly behind prior ties. it has the number one issue getting to a hosted steel and to thereby thereby a ceasefire. and now we have about 600000 is really demonstrating that would be the equivalent to i think, 6000000 germans and over 15000000 or 20000000 americans demonstrating that they want to prioritize as the number one issue and bringing the hostages home. and therefore at least having a ceasefire and of the war. and so he's not in line with all 3 of this really public and talking about the philadelphia, a colleague of that as the prime minister i did when israel, when we can see now why both sides see that as being so important. whether your, your smuggling, trying to smuggle people or explosives that ends botanic tree, or indeed try to a secure about particular border when each royal seized control of the philadelphia,
12:13 am
colorado, from egypt, egypt, a wound then that it was ready to respond. and why didn't it? as wide into egypt respond, i mean i think that it's um, it too is trying to get to and facilitate immediate and negotiate a deal between as well on from us. and so that's them. i think it's priority. i also think that gyptian government, of course, has itself had designated from us the tears organization that it has done so. so for those before, because they see it as affiliated with the muslim brotherhood, that's a threat to their own government. so they certainly have mixed feelings about how modest but as their public and of course we all care deeply about the depth and suffering and displacement in gaza. so i think that they're concerned about that as well. and therefore, you know,
12:14 am
want to be able to negotiate something by which it wouldn't be as role at the border and they couldn't get a deal. and so to some extent they've pushed for that. and you know, they're probably people on the ground and getting bribes. you know, and so forth at the border for the things that the back and forth through it just have a final what, where israel slash netanyahu is internationally because mr. daniel, who does say more isolated than that. but the us present joe biden was asked today whether these are the prime minister was doing enough to achieve a deal full of the hostages. a simple unambiguous answer was no. so was that the nonchalance of a one term president with nothing to lose or has the wife has had it with benjamin netanyahu? i mean, i think they have um, they're extremely frustrated. i think for good reason that he's not prioritizing
12:15 am
a deal. i think other administrations have been frustrated with missing, you know, as well and previous american and ministrations. and he very much, i think is prioritizing, staying in power with his own pollution partners. and the extreme is parties in his coalition. i don't want actually to get a deal um okay, and are not prior confusing the hostages. and so i can understand why the american ministration is frustrated with them as our, as i say, so many israelis with 70 percent of different times wanting to him to resign immediately as the joining us until history about professor professor. yeah, i'll run off from michigan state university. thank you. i put as leaders here in germany awaiting their options after the fall, right old tennessee for germany party to the 1st place in the states election on sunday. asked the one the voters in the eastern states of arrange you despite being
12:16 am
classified as extreme is by general thoughts as they, if they went almost a 3rd of the ranges, votes and came a close 2nd in the neighboring states of saxony. but his chances of governing unsaid as all other policies have refused to work in coalition with german chancellor electronics whose social democrats fed fully in both folks old pauses, deformed coalitions without bite wing extremists the far right. if the may have emerged. as the biggest went out into region of electrons, but will likely end up in opposition. all main screen policies have pledge to uphold a firewall against entering a coalition with the n d migration pocket and both the range and sex any a low x. the majority didn't cost the vote for the a if the and don't want to see it's kevin some state, it has a mandate to form the coalition for whiskey and certain methods. you just have to come together in the interest of democracy fest with no. yeah. they will crotty no
12:17 am
later i'm tired of a lot in the cheryl's thoughts is simply looking to be a model don't feel so open, but at some point you have to ensure that people see the choices being reflected while in fulfill clifton. think up on saturday. i think they should be given a chance to work together with everyone. when only then can you say whether they're up to it or not, by denying them that chance by claiming to be too good. you actually end up elevating them and you shouldn't do that too. much but that he is concerned about the rise of the file. right. why does t as the fact that the f d has done so well, especially in rural areas, is concerning. focus that i yeah. as long as this, i think it's basically right not to work with them. but it's hard to see a government being formed at all. then you can come to like this terrible,
12:18 am
absolutely terrible message. but as i said, i don't know what will become of germany. and while the a, if the say they have a right to govern in state level coalitions, the parties running the national government on the pressure, they badly manage to scrape 10 percent of the vote combined with just the you to go before federal elections. these results are likely to increase the tensions filled by what of shots is already divided coalition stimulus fossa is where the battle has been stiff, don't, and is one of germany's leading aspects on your pants and international politics. welcome to the w. please stop by explaining to our international audience why based to state elections being viewed with such hara by the leaders of germany, national governing passes. it's a historical 1st and it goes to germany uh that a car ride carter. you have scored a so well that it came in 1st and regional elections gets roughly inside of the
12:19 am
seeds and in the 2nd region, it comes in 2nd and then also sits upon the when we're, when the very big complementary group. why is this important? first of all, because it indicates a shift and the german party system. that's how the neighbors have gone through his earlier germany always seemed to be a country where the fall rise can maybe rise to 13 or 15 percent but, but not to the boats. and here we are, this has happened in the, in 2 regions. and the question now is, does this have implications for the federal elections, which will only happen in one year time? okay, we'll come to that. let's to 1st of all though, about the rise of the se in germany and then we'll, we'll, we'll talk about the, the rise of, of a frightening populism across europe. but here in germany, why us so many germans looking to the asked the to say,
12:20 am
guess them because this, these results didn't come out of nowhere. i did a. so yes, that's true. um i have d has built its base over years and opinion, all data for eastern german regions had indicated for awhile, but they can come out very strongly and indeed that there was a risk that they would come for us and they did one of the regions now what did they do? first of all, they offered a party platform which speaks to the fees of many people in eastern germany. picking out social economic concerns. picking up a certain criticism of the federal government screen transition policy that many germans feel that puts them on the pressure but doesn't really support them. and i have to actually denies the needs to and to manage a very engaged policy to 5 climate change. and then um
12:21 am
i have to also, and this is not a policy issue by the question of presence. and the anchorage within society has built a social structure. this in municipalities and eastern germany that, that really kind of crowded out. but maybe doesn't have a sports club, didn't have a use center, and they how to set up structures. they showed big presence. and so people felt they are close to us. they are, you know, they, they understand what bothers us and they are part of our, of our community. and so we, we saw those very strong results yesterday. but this doesn't mean that this will translate automatically to a similar result on the federal level because of structural differences between eastern germany. i'm western germany really remains and also questions of political culture. the german mainstream parties have
12:22 am
a deep anchorage and west, and germany didn't have the historical break that they had an eastern germany where for several decades that there was a socialist regime uh, was no free democracy, right. and so the difference is which, which play out. okay, i mean we've, we've, we've seen the right wing popular sponsors making significant in roads into mainstream public 6 across your, it's in the front of the case weight and feeling violence. the list seems endless. and migration is a common factor there. and here in germany, but what you're talking about there is not just migration, but the fact that these, these, these right wing part is easy and searching patches seem to root themselves in communities. yes, absolutely. my migration, of course is an important issue as well. and also only for i do,
12:23 am
but also for the fall as part of the b s. w, which, which came out of nothing and jumped to 16 percent. and then also the mainstream holidays up really hot and the positions on immigration, on a sunday home on normal legal immigrants and so on. and interestingly, the fact that the european union's migration policy really got tougher over the past month and also germany and the government coalition at this point has more restrictive positions on a on immigration did not change much to the appeal of the fall rights position on integration in regions where the actual number of immigrants is not particular high investment do not higher than invest in germany. ok now that you posted them on expedite you believe that this this far i search in this eastern corner of germany could also impact gym and foreign policy is i think
12:24 am
it was sort of hanes thing that when you talked about the, the, the, you and jeremy toughening that stance, but i'm guessing that who's there's also more than just migration that you're talking about. yes, that is true. so what we have seen and the 2 eastern german regions yesterday is that 2 parties scores fairly well. that criticize the federal government's support for ukraine and take a much stuff, dis, dogs on russia, and actually argue that rather than delivering weapons to ukraine, the country which really needs to defend itself into a completely illegal aggression at invasion. and rather than supporting ukraine, the german government shall promote peace, meaning a short push your trade will once negotiations with russia. and interestingly, both of the fall last at the far,
12:25 am
i try to position themselves as the parties that will bring peace back to our neighborhood. and of course, completely ignoring the fact of their rhetoric that is russians aggression on ukraine. and also not mentioning clearly that russia is a completely unreliable negotiation palm at this point. so they seem to have an easy fix, don't do the weapons, peace will come back. and this is of course, attractive to some people who are after the years of support for, for ukraine. feel a certain fatigue and condition of those who feel they are not being treated well and they feel that the social economic future is endangered. this argument, which is really a very, very difficult and bad one. this argument that is easy to bring peace to ukraine seems to be quite attractive to some and this may put pressure on the german
12:26 am
government. in particular, in a situation where the us may doubt scale is support for you in crime that a bigger burden will be on your opinions and a talk which, which is faced with an option that there's an easy piece deal. of course we'll be more critical of that some questions to kind of thoughts us on the bus as much depth don't speaking to me. other line. yeah. or no way has announced the death of a white beluga while, which gave new meaning to the term way of watching this because the memo was suspected of spying for russia. years ago, he was found wearing a homicide on camera. the homeless have a st. petersburg stump. on it was friendly, retraced suspicions that it had been kept in captivity in russia. it's congress will not be examined. i know the,
12:27 am
12:28 am
the, the living in a polarized world, artificial intelligence painter or kill us. and it's creates the bright futures for the human societies. we touch screen i system which is a pretty big risk that the, our systems could actually get out of the control of their developers. and then a i next on d, w. will the legal immigration to the usa determine the american presidential election. on the one hand,
12:29 am
some voters do strongly motivated by hatred and ignorance. on the other hand, there was a lot of solidarity and the willingness to support one another trunk wall and the border crisis flows in 60 minutes on d w. the lenient stream. it must be in trouble rate and burned in south africa. well with disabilities, more likely to believe that job lack lives matter, protest shine a spotlight on racially motivated police by same sex marriage has been legalized discrimination. we also
12:30 am
because like instead of the there is a significant risk of human extinction from advanced systems to finding out spaces 30 cd or raising programs. i would write to sort of these cult we don't currently know how to steer these systems, how to make sure that they robustly understand and the 1st place or even follow human values. once they do understand the i, the they take little of these i would write to create such kind of a technology these to contribute to the human, the human to say even the brain, the system.
10 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on