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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  September 13, 2024 6:00pm-6:16pm CEST

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[000:00:00;00] the, this is due to the news live and from berlin, germany and 10, you assign a new migration deal. it allows germany to more easily recruited skilled workers and to deport failed asylum seekers and made increasing pressure on berlin to trite and migration. whoops. also coming up, british prime minister here summer is set to meet with us president joe bite in washington. they're due to discuss letting ukraine fire long range weapons into russia.
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the library golf is good to have you with us on this friday. germany and kenya have signed a migration agreement here in berlin. the deal was over seen by canyon president william rudo and german transfer. all of schultz means workers from can, you will be allowed to field job vacancies here in germany, such as for bus drivers. the agreement also allows germany to deport canyons who do not have the right to stay in the country. there's more now from the german chancellor, all of schultz for give me another known come to the agreement opens up prospects for canyons because skilled workers so young people can come to germany for training. this can help us compensate for the plates and shortage of skilled workers as my, the initial effects of which we are now feeling. and which would be with us for years and decades to come to guide to that as well, and go to the as we have team coverage on this story to night, i'm joined now by dw political corresponded ons brunt who's outside the chancellor here in berlin,
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where the chancellor and the president had been meeting and the w correspondent, village maureen, and joins is from the canyon capital nairobi. let me start with you. tell us more about what germany gets out of this deal. most important for this, for germany, is that's a trained person now from kenya will be more easily the more easily come to germany and to take up positions here, enter the gym and labor market to that, just because to the driven population is an aging one. and they're a match. few are young people from germany itself entering that they have a market. so this is a way of finding stuff from across the world, basically in this case from kenya to keep the german economy going. and then the 2nd part, of course, is not getting people from getting there into germany, but getting people from can you out of germany. that is this possibility of facilitating the duplication of kenyans who uh, illegally in germany and say like, what's in this for? can you and how does,
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can you benefit or of kenyans will benefits of costs of yes uh, thing being jobs. uh, a lot of can young people, 67 percent of them do not have jobs. so the 1st thing uh will be them getting jobs uh, in gemini. the 2nd thing will be, they will be able to, will have low save uses to a do the skills to id or vocational training, which will enable them at the feet for the jump on markets. and essentially, there will be skills developments we've a curriculum shared between gemini and kenya, and that will help feel that this kills a gap. and lastly, for the canyon, so will be coming to gemini. they will get is in access to german language and they will also be such a fight. and that will also be done for their families when it comes to that time for them beings united in the hands with me pick up on the idea of the partitions
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here. part of this agreement allows germany to repatriate rejected canyon asylum seekers, even though kenya is not one of the main countries of origin and of asylum seekers here in germany. so. so what's the point? yes, there's only about $800.00 kenya instead of 2 weeks to, to be deported from germany. but the point is really a political signal that the german government was sending through this to german vote and see it on germany. it isn't very, very heated debates in beginning on most recently. but even for months about to rigor, the migration into the country, tens of thousands of people pushing to get into germany mainly from countries such as syria. and i've gotten this done and the opposition policies have to be making a lot of political mileage. all of that. so trans, the quote and this government are trying to present such an agreement as a way of controlling migration into the country so that the benefits of migration into the country and putting skills into the country can be maintained while still
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controlling the number of people that are illegally or is not wanted in the country of setting up such agreements one by one and kind of piece by piece to establish a legal framework that will control migration in a more precise manner. and that is the offering as it were to the german voters that they should not vote for right wing parties. for instance, the w as homes bronze, if you're in berlin and felix, very good, and i wrote it to both of you. thank you. well, some critics fear that this migration deal could contribute to a brain drain or loss and badly needed skilled workers from ken. yep. dw is mario mueller mets with a young doctor. and i wrote be to hear about those concerns as a child, harry, or to, you know, witness. dr. safe is young, a brother's life and the remote canyon bennett. that's when he knew he wanted to become a doctor himself. but after 7 years of study in racking up more than 21000 euros
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and student that his dreams still seems far beyond his reach. reports of unemployed medical graduates, occlusal concern, and the final status of this training. and he hasn't been paid for months. sometimes your mind was blank because you know you ask yourself what's next. if they can't pay you a new thing and i keep saying what can guarantee that somebody can actually pay you a post in thank you. of the sadistic suggest that no guarantees. 4000 doctors in kenya, a currently drop list or unemployed. although the services and you need it, the doctors union says there's a dias shortage of specialists, and patients have to wait moms for surgery. according to the health ministry, 9 out of 10 health facilities, unable to provide basic outpatient services. you should have turned okay. it's more
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you will put you in. it is for all way on this hit uh, within the country. um, because uh we need looked as well. i remember uh, we are very short totally to be a tour to commendations for the doctor to patient to issue we at 100-121-7000 yesterday w a toyota. com is that to, for 1000 citizens in every country, we sure necessarily have no medical records attribute, much of the problem to miss management. and also corruption which, you know, has heard of medical graduates having to pay up to 1200 euros to get a job in a hospital. and others what have sex with recruiters is a condition of being hired by to that. the overall situation has prompted many doctors and other medical where, cuz to leave can you hear nowadays? i like to brain during especially being offered i. it's not just limited to look nice. it's also mediately affect. so not this, we think we have so many patients. you know, and so with the very few and up to seeing them, you see your doctor. yes,
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you can stay, you know, for the lives we're punching and all that. but to how you're going to be alive. i'll start the rest of what is i think you, you'd have walked to yourself to let me try. if i don't get like other doctors in training. but you know, is now also considering going abroad to what one option is germany, which is now offering opportunities to young, well educated daniels. i can a meaningful, i'd like to give back to the community that re screen. so that's why i done the walk here. but you see, and it's like constantly so the conditions. uh, not really healthy or not. uh really uh, but not too many too many of us. so i feel like if i get an opportunity, a good thing. yeah. money. of course i wouldn't go and some of the people that are going to miss, which you know, how do you most likely solve the german people as a nurse. ok, i give the for the elderly because those other jobs, germany as most desperate to feel
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a long way office child to dream. but due to you can imagine doing it for a few years and money and extra qualifications. after that, he wants to return to kenya and finally start saving lives. and villages, like the one who drew up and i didn't send out as we have. here's a quick look down some of the other stories making headlines around the world. german authorities have detained a 27 year old man, accused of planning and attacking the city of health and the southern state of bavaria, the suspect, the legibly intended to use a mis chevy to killed members of the german military, prosecutors and say the man was motivated by radical islamist ideology to german naval vessels have sailed through the taiwan strait for the 1st time in more than 20 years. china, which considers democratically govern, ty, one as its own, also claims jurisdiction over the straight chinese foreign ministry described the action as a provocation. that endangers trying to secure in germany says that the street is
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in international waters. that's government says it's planning to declare a national asylum crisis, which would allow it to take measures to curb migration without parliamentary consent. opposition parties in question, the middle of which comes days after neighboring germany announced a new border controls to keep out unwanted by a british prime minister gear storm or has arrived in washington where he will meet us. president joe biden there expects to discuss allowing ukraine greater control over western supplied long range missiles. chief has been pressing its allies for months to provide more powerful weapons with fewer restrictions to be able to strike within russia. russian president vladimir boots and he has worn to the west that the use of long range arms will cross a red line and means that nato is at war with russia. if this decision is made, it will mean nothing less than the direct purchase. a patient of nato countries,
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the united states and european countries in the war and ukraine waiting, and this is their direct participation. and this, of course, significantly changes the very essence of the very nature of the conflict. with this will mean that nato countries, united states and european countries are fighting against russia. and if this is so, then bearing in mind the change and the very essence of this conflict, we will make appropriate decisions based on the threats that will be created for us . all right, i'm gonna go down to our special correspondent, all your neighbor, him, she's in washington dc for us. so i am going to see you. and despite this morning for just 5 minutes secure storm are you said to meet with us president joe biden? about steve's push to be allowed to use long range weapons within russia. what has the white house is position been on this up to now?
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it will open till now. the white house has not approved the use of american long range. messiahs well into a russian a territory. so for the use of american made weapons have been limited to sort of cross border a fighting which was at the time that this decision was made already something that the white house sort of most over for a long time. but what the british prime minister is asking for right now is that to allow ukraine, the use of a storm shadow at long range missiles because parts of these are made in the united states. and so the american approval is required of to allow you continues at d deeper into the russian a territory. and also that's part of a british sort of, of what the prime minister is trying to present as
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a joint joint action between the united states and its european allies. when it comes to support for ukraine. we're not expecting a final decision to be made today after the meeting, but it's certainly something that will be on the agenda when the us president ending of k prime minister meet later today. how much does the upcoming us presidential election effect decision making concerning this? i mean, what's at stake it bite? and lucian's restrictions now was just that, you know, less than 2 months still in the office as well. for ukraine, there's a lot at stake. you're creating a specials argue that the use of these long range missiles would, you know, be of great help. although we've heard us officials also see that that would not be a, you know, the solution to the kind of aggression that's coming from russia to ukraine in terms in terms of bi election. there is wide fear in ukraine. i've
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covered ukraine multiple times and i've spoken to create officials about how he was a support for ukraine would change, or perhaps less than that if there would be a 2nd. trump, a presidency. there's still a lot of support for you creams here in washington, but definitely there's more skepticism. ask for that support more on the republican side. and it's something that of the former president trump, and the current republican nominee has also spoken about multiple times just in the debate of the most recent debate with a vice president campbell of hers. he did say that she would be able to find a solution for this even before taking a office. and that certainly suggests to us, to a lot of people in ukraine that she might be willing to compromise with a put in on some points that perhaps the current administration has been unwilling to compromise on. that's right. but you can't forget. he said that would be the 1st
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thing he would do. he was in the board one day or special correspondence. i abraham in washington i as always. thank. so you're watching the, the use of next day dw documentary reveals the soviet era, bunkers, tunnels and former torture chambers below the streets of georgia. i'll be back in the help of the more buildings have to see you. then the city is hungry for the future. in southwest, telling us 32000000 people live here, many of them are young and the 3 is coming through making money,

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