tv DW News Deutsche Welle October 3, 2024 10:00am-10:30am CEST
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the, the, this is the, the we news like from berlin. israel launch is new air strikes and by roots, lebanese authorities report multiple debts in the capital, as is really ground forces in southern lebanon. press ahead with their offensive against hezbollah, also coming up after israel vows to retaliate for iran largest ever miss out was solved us. presidential bible says he would not support an attack on iran nuclear program. and ty, food craft on a wars a shore and tie one where to death of already even blamed on the storms approach and thousands of others evacuated from high risk areas. the
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welcome to the show i'm the cold for at least israel has carried out new air strikes on the lebanese capital. bare route killing at least 6 people. one air strike hits an apartment building near the city center. israel's army says it's targeting, the militant group has full. it has issued evacuation orders for multiple areas including towns along the southern border where i d. f. ground troops or battling has bullet fighters. 11 on the health ministries has more than a 1000 people, have been killed and is really strikes during the past 2 weeks. i asked journalist stella mina and bear rhodes to give us the latest on the strikes on the lebanese capital. a base really? um, it has carried out air strikes in an area called the sure the sure is in the heart of the city center. it is an area that's a is name. that's like it's
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a middle class area where many cost families live. it is a approximately, a new one kilometer far away from, with the caretaker prime minister lives. and the it is reported that 6 people have been killed during the strikes and 8 have been wounded. this is just the 2nd strike that is right into the city center of pharaoh dr. story concurrent out earlier this week. this means that people here are getting more scared and scared as israel hits closer and closer to the city center. and it's not only about hitting the silence of verbs anymore. what are you hearing about classes between has a lot and is rarely troops in the south of the country. we hear that there is heavy points in getting on on the ground between his bola and israel is really um, it has now confirmed that at least 8 of its soldiers have died. it is a little bit what we have expected because while is are the, is there
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a army has the upper hand when it comes to arrow strikes has paula is known to be quite strong. 5 during ground come box, and we heard that the organization has done a couple of and bushes. those journalist stella mina and barrow. thank you so much for your reporting. a. d. w 's mom and teresa wasn't buried with southern das here district where the is really army has been targeting, what it says are hezbollah facilities and he sent this report. i am here in it all for you to solve in some of itself the route. this is known to be a since the last one cold, but it's also home for hundreds of thousands of the been use, the civilians and some of these. it's also very close to live in on the only civilian airport. actually a few 100 meters away from here and it's 4 to 5 kilometers away from the heart of the city and the city center. as you can see behind me, the huge destruction goes by, is why you the air thrice in this area,
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it has been intensive at waves of air strikes up on this area and elsewhere. and maybe with water is why the saying that it's targeting at his blood infrastructure here in this area in delphi. now since the last organizing this a visit for the media off of the press, it says along with many of the civilians that we spoke to here, says that there's no military infrastructure here. and in fact, what you see that behind me is set to be a residential building for the needs of indians and some other uh, civilian facilities like shops and, and so on. we'll continue moving with his beloved person out here to visit this area. and as you see, jaime, this is a fresh air size, and we, we've been told that this happens in the early morning and literally hours of the morning in this area. the smell of gunpowder is, is a very annoying here,
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but i could smell a gun powder all across the city all across the u. s. as you can see, as you can see, some civilians here. c praising cause blah, shouting in the 54 is right, and the us we've been so these where residents of these are this compound us, uh, 6 buildings here where the story is completely destroyed. very close to here. the last week is why you conducted the most intense s, right? you in the, in the coming, the chief off has the law house on the front line. as you see behind me, this is a compound, a fixed residential building, et cetera, to the ground. and in this lady, the air strike in the early hours of this morning. so we really need the guy to be on the go as the law is now. say that we should leave the area. it's not
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a safe place. it's still targeted by as why it is as price, and we continues to be here as rated ones overheads as mohammed straight and reporting from bay of route. meanwhile, israel morales is response to yvonne's largest ever missile strike on its territory . you as president joe biden says he would not support an attack on or on his nuclear program, according to the is really army. some of its air bases were hit and tuesday's attack, but no major damage was caused. israel's allies do agree, it has the right to respond, but all are calling for restraint. is rails leaders discuss how to strike back to ron in response to tyrone spigot 7, miss silas out in the markets of jury slims, it's business as usual. but the conflict and how israel may strike back is on everyone's mind. i think that nobody one will not the us,
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not anybody that say we don't have choice, but we have a very strong army. we believe in a sham that he's with us. that is our country, women to be here. we belong here, and no one's ever going to take that from us today. i trust the idea if i trust these really government that will do everything good for us and we're really not afraid of rubber. and i mean, this is the only option we have on lexus cap to video footage of israel's defense systems destroying many, but not all of the a 118 missed solves launched by iran. no, no, no navy ships from israel's biggest ally, the u. s. also help dyslexia attack the us president joe biden said he and all the leaders of the g 7 nations were discussing most sanctions on iran. but he made clear that back in the israel. so
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next step has limits. what is the top one around me see if i find that answer is no. uh and uh, i think there's things we'll be discussing with is realize what they're gonna do. but they have all 7 of us agree that they have a right to respond or they should respond and forcing ron's presidents and says he's country does not want to go to war with his royal. he says tuesday's miss all attack was itself the pay back for israel, killing of the leader of hezbollah. the minutes and group supported by iran to my mom. i was rude with us, so we were left with no choice, but to respond to the ga i'm. if israel decides to retaliate, then it will face harsher reaction. we is slow me this poly button the in
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the occupied westbank. a funeral has been held for the past and killed in a ron smith, silas salt, a palestinian man, hit 5 parts of a row pit that fell from the sky in the city of jericho. and a short while ago i asked the w, corresponded emily board dean to tell us more about how israel might be planning to respond to iran attack. well, just off of the attack, prime minister benjamin netanyahu came out saying that the wrong had made a very big mistake. now the whole coming up right now is still waiting. it's options. danita non israel's ambassador to the un has set that quartz, our response will be decisive and yes, it will be painful. now we're hearing from is really officials. that's a response. could include strikes on strategic infrastructure in our own. so oral and gas rigs but also assess the nations and the tax on iran air defense systems.
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but personally, it could also include the tax on is on iran, nuclear sites um, but at the same time, we're also hearing that this response will be coordinated with the us in the us. well, supporting a response and i'm saying that israel has the right to defend itself, has also said that it does not support strikes on the runs nuclear facilities. i think that's very much reflect the desire in the us to avoid a lot more between the 2 sides, especially out of crucial elections in the us. but i'm, as we've seen in the past, the calls made by the us some noise and listen to it as well. and so we will have to wait and see what will happen next. it says emily guardian in jerusalem, let's take a quick look now. some of the stories making headlines around the world accord and single for has sentence, a former minister to one year in prison for receiving illegal gifts. so romani, i'm is we're on a plead guilty to taking more than $300000.00 in gifts as transport minister is conviction is a rarity and singapore which is ranked as one of the world's least corrupt nations
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. flights have resumed at a japanese airport after an american world war 2 bomb exploded just moments after a passenger plane taxied past. no injuries were reported. dozens of flights were cancelled at the me a saki airport in the south, which was a navy base during the 2nd world war. a fire at a hospital and taiwan sounds has killed at least 9 people and broke out as health authorities were trying to evacuate patients due to time soon. crash on almost 200 people were brought to safety. the cause of the fire is under investigation. well that ty soon has made landfall on taiwan, south western coast cracked on his already killed 2 people and injured hundreds more. as it approached the island, thousands have evacuated, low lying and mountainous areas. officials have shut down, schools and offices flights are canceled and financial markets closed. taiwan,
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president warrens, the damage is likely to be catastrophic. 40000 troops are on standby to help with possible rescue efforts. and our corresponding james trader is in the heavily populated port city of gauss young. were the type food made landfill already i asked him how intense the typhoon is? absolutely well and how is leading up. so this type of thing making landfill, the wind and rain has been pretty extraordinary down here in gulf show me the city of some 2000000 people. the major for the for type wants to export and imports. and if you can see this, this patch of trees behind me over the course of the last few hours, they've essentially been completely boxes, strips barrier, in some cases, many of them broken down as well as a result of those wins. as the typhoon was approaching, much of taiwan now is on the 3rd consecutive day of closure. school closures, business closes, company closures. the entirety of taiwan is on
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a 2nd consecutive day of such closures. in advance of this type, student arriving, i'm really interested in the door. as this type student was approaching, it was actually weakening. so it just gives you some impression really of how strong this type you're in is despite that weakening as it was approaching. because of that authorities, a still warning of a potential risk of storm surge is especially in those coastal areas like in the city of cal, somebody who's are farther off the coast of the north and sign on. and that's why those tens of thousands of military personnel remain on stand by to assist with rescue operations. and we expect in the next hours time the yeah, we're expecting this type thing. so now move northward slowly in local media. this type thing is now being called a strange type food because of the extremely slow pace that it was actually moving . we're initially expecting this type things to make land for some point. yes.
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today sir. wednesday afternoon actually made land from some 24 hours later. authorities of the morning because of that slow, a pace, it'd be impacted, it's likely to have on site. one could be longer than was initially full cost. it's meant to bring heavy wind and rain. so the west inside of type thing, the more populous positive side. taiwan as some 90 percent of taiwan is population residents in the west in pods. before it decreases an incentive fee to a tropical depression. likely as it arrives in the capsule type a in the north of taiwan. some point on friday as either way and same state or from taiwan. thank you so much. and it's waiting the 2024 right livelihood award. with honors, the courageous change makers has been handed to 4 winters. it's a row founder of a movement in hebron which is against legal is really settlements in the palestinian territory. filipino active as
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joan carling celebrated for her work defending the rights of indigenous people. umbrella levels for mozambique honored for her efforts for climate justice. and the 4th winter of this year's award is the british based group forensic architecture which investigates human rights abuses. and here's a closer look at the research organization founded in 2010 by british is really architect ale weisman. this being one, this use of done it's nobel prize for uncovering environmental and human rights violations by visually reconstructing events like political gone, 6 violence fires, accidents and abuses. so basically what i'm working on right now is a reconstruction. and one of the consideration as well as this image,
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which shows the reconstruction of the car that 6 year old palestinian girl hen brought job was in when she was shot by is really gunfire in january, 1 of their most significant cases was the grandson's, our fire in london, in 2017, which was the deadliest in the u. k. since world war 2, the team explained how to analyze the fire spread spreads. over the course, we collected several 100 of those images, lots of place. we were able to synchronize those on the timeline. we were also able to use them to understand the development and we use the 1st escalation tracking in order to understand the movement of the camera. so these dots, let's see here, tracking the motion of the witness account with over 100 investigations and 31 countries they have revealed suits about war crimes environment. the injustice
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isn't genocides. it's founder advisements phase. by looking at small details, one can understand the bigger picture of history. even before winning the right livelihood award, they had already made a significant impact. so being as evidence in major legal cases worldwide, their work has had injustice were affected communities such as migrants in greece and ukrainians, affected by the russian invasion. and i can now speak to bob transferred to you is the assistant director of forensic architecture. well, welcome to the w and congratulations on this award. what does it mean for you and your group? hey, good morning. thank you very much. across the street. and i'm really on the list of people. one was on the some of the leading lights of human rights in the us, 45 years, and it's really on it to be considered among them and alongside the 3. fantastic, lawrence, and we really share this almost a day, i would say would assist organizations and eyes. we have our partners and friends
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around the world and we've, i've done this what we saw some of your work in the reports. but could you briefly tell us a little about how you work, how do you select issues to work on? how do you gather information? what's your process or yeah, of course. um. so what am i thinking about the way we, what is the um yeah, we developed this uh digital research statements which in turn a huge amount of information. what's available online in open sources in a public domain, into robust evidence. so that might mean, but when somebody, some of these for or when, excuse me, businesses on when somebody stopped by the police process or when a problem falls in the crowded civilian name of something that i regret that we received an awful lot of in the reason yes, um, when the reason why that happens is captured by thousands of different mobile
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phones, maybe somebody. so just before the bomb falls, maybe somebody fields, emergency service is running into the after all techniques a very good ad. turning those fragments of information into a robust storage of robust evidence it's been played. i don't know what to do is to use the information challenge states, ways, awfully expensive. police militarism states about how got incident play that and who is responsible, how when we got information, it's been take it to me. exactly, sir. i didn't mean to interrupt you there, but i think that was where you were and where you were going. how has in your work, and as you just laid it out, made a difference in the world so far. and so we want to take a look into the legal spaces and the court reason, political processes as much as possible cost. and that's why we seen on would be presented in the un general assembly near getting towards the human rights, the i,
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c i, c j. and probably it doesn't national conference around the world. but we know that the change and justice and the time to but it's, it goes on the, the only happening voltage and critical spaces. so we also take on what in the gallery exhibitions and it's a cultural spaces where we feel like we can reach a different audience, much larger audience in new ways. and i'm platform, the voices of individuals. attributes isn't song is uh, width, and whom we want to investigate, state bottoms, and violations of the roads. is there one single project that you're most proud of? with our credit, what are the, what are we doing? cost isn't investigates. and companies more than a 100 times in the last decade. i just come back from just on board where we opened an exhibition incidents on june 23rd attacks in honda on the sides of germany. this is being one of the most profound cases i can say personally for me now it's, it's a dis what 6 times are ryan germany. and now in your stumble, which we think is
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a very important place to tell you this was and talk about it. the story is i'm just using tens racialize might in some units is i'm, i'm to use a space like a cultural space like up to 2 platform. the voices of the mothers and fathers lost their children in, in the most of the following way. and the software to continually that roster and the ignorance and the next in place since the and the times the, the racism of the german state being very, very significant for us to give them a way to speak about that story and their experience after what c i'm ready for you to achieve in the future with your group and maybe also now with this award on the shelf as well. we have to keep doing what we do. anything
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keeps sharing on site needs with, as many new organizations in our seo this we time. no, we have synced organizations today in of the, in, in athens, in paris, in ramallah all the time, mexico cities, really all around the world. we want to keep supporting bands of growth working never to support the right 90, but it was, is incredibly significant in not project. you know, it's hard to think of a busy in science of the human rights field in the last couple of years to have all it recognize attention drawn to it and is really nice looking for is the word great . as bob trafford, a forensic architecture, one of the recipients of this years. right. livelihood award. great speaking to you and congratulations on the great work here in germany. it's unity day to day. 34 years ago, the former german democratic republic communist east germany officially joined the
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west on the 3rd of october in 1990, the eastern states became part of the federal republic, and berlin was reinstated, as the capital city re unification happened less than a year after the fall of the berlin wall in november of 1989 today, unity day is a public holiday year in germany. but even decades after reunification, germany remains politically divided. the right when populist anti immigration alternative for germany or a f d is on the rise, especially in the former east. as the eye of the problem is this life and freedom implying that germany is not a free country by positioning itself as an add to the peaceful revolution of 1999. the eye of the angles civil rights activists like frank e, but he was in the bank god of those who fought for freedom in east germany. back
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then as a civil rights activist and the communist dictatorship, he was the lot to be able to live in a democracy that supposed to be a he a and dodd's and ha, what we have here in germany. in my view, one of the free societies in the world is the legacy of the peaceful revolution. and above all, that legacy consists of making it possible for 16000000 inhabitants at the time, i believe, to live in freedom do because yourself inquired. so leaving the peaceful resolution, hundreds of thousands of citizens of the communist east, germany took to the streets. in $19189.00, the dictatorship had come to its end, surprisingly without any violence by the security forces, the billing rules. so to today b, i s d use this plus logan's from bank fan, but their goal is completely different. they preach nationalism and insulation as opposed to democracy. and freedom of the city of tombs given us up know enough to
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have been to tom because he's the f body refers to slogans that we used in 1989. so we developed across the breadth of the population. i can afford and edit act as if we still have to complete this revolution that we're living in a certain lack of freedom because we're on the way to a dictatorship con, another that's going to show. and that's not the case. and that's why i accuse them of misusing this. logan is an addict up to. when does this my time? i don't know the stuff. i don't just being governments or for does it. i didn't smoke miss co 3 dictates after we unification, gemini seems to be drifting apart again. besides the fall, right? if the, the newly formed the w party, it hasn't chief significant success and regional elections and the ease with policies. that's a slight between socialism and nationalism about 35 years ago. it was basic human rights that people are with their lives for the money for guessing on. this shouldn't be forgotten. and everyone uses the freedom they have now. but they
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should consider how they use it, what c a a freedom also has something to do with responsibility. i'd have to present fund for them to. to him. frank eva knows democracy is hard work. he rouse to oppose and renewed the vision of germany and stand up for freedom. now too heavy weight competition providing some light relief, a selection of chunky competitors in alaska are battling it out in the annual fat bare week. the event celebrates brown bears and is now and it's 10 years. voters can keep an eye on 12 contestants via bear cams, to see who is looking the most to have us. the bears have been packing on the pounds all summer and gorging themselves on salmon. by the time they are ready to hibernate, large males can weigh more than 450 kilograms of females are about one 3rd small. and i recommend you don't leave us for the bare cabs just yet
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into the conflicts own with sarah kelly. ukraine says that a recent incursion into russian territory has made a mockery of putting the red lines and that the west should go haul in to help when the war. i discuss the options with a finish for administer alina about. tony, thanks for having me. so how does she see the prospect of turning the side in bushes in version of ukraine? conflict, the next on d. w goes down and so didn't city a bomb shelters and nuclear bunkers from the cold war.
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the east, germany's underground secrets are gradually being uncovered. and some are even be made accessible to visitors, but only under strict security protocol. in 45 minutes on d, w, the living in our society is full of contrasts and inequality is a big challenge. many problems can only be solved by working together. yes, i think of each other as a new sliver. what is home? how do we tackle the major issue is about to talk about the there is
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a significant risk of human extinction from advancing our system. our series continues to dw, the ukraine says that it's recent incursion into russian territory has made a mockery of fruit and red lines, and that the west should go all in to help it when the war. i discussed the options with the finished foreign minister, alina val towed in on conflicts down. finland knows a lot about red lines from russia across one last year, when it decided to advance in decades of neutrality in favor of joining nato. and given its expansive border, defending against aggression from moscow has always been a cor focus. so how does she see the prospect of turning the tide and rushes invasion of ukraine and what other threats does she see on the horizon? for example, in her.
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