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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  October 7, 2024 4:00pm-4:31pm CEST

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the, the, the ukraine's, the also signed stops october 26 on dw, the . this is dw news, live from berlin, israel moxley, anniversary of the october, the 7th come us terror attacks mona's, remember the hundreds who died at the music festival in the 1st strike, which led to the war in garza. also coming up on the program in israel, of conflict with hezbollah and 11 on the is ready military sends in more, troops has both sides launch strikes. plus the nobel prize in medicine. those to, to us, for searches for that will work on human genes,
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will unravel the science behind the prestigious award the money to this mckinnon. welcome to the program. today, outside with the 7th mox, one year since homos carried out its terror attacks and israel, the nation is mocking the anniversary is the atrocities which led to the war in gaza. more than 1200 people were killed in the assault led by him off and around 250 others taken to gaza as hostages vigils and memorials of being held across israel victims. families have held the minutes of silence at the size of the know the music festival. what will those $400.00 people were killed in the 1st attack? and dw correspondent tanya fema is in room with the attack on that music festival
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took place. well, i think for people coming, have you seen a stream of people coming has since the early morning when the day started with this is minutes or moment of silence is run 629. this is actually when the attacks terror attacks happened and as well when 1st and overall could verify some garza and done some ice with militants breached the board. and came in also here to re me where many young people were at the end thing until the early morning. and then the killing here. uh, many of those people you're seeing here right behind me. this is a field of photos and names of those that have been killed on that day, but also those uh, some of them. yeah. have been taken as hostage to garza and they have still not returned to the mood here. people coming here, no paying their respect a morning the last once we saw a family members coming here, putting flowers,
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a praying as well, but also just friends and people passing by thinking of all would happen on october 7, and of course the mood is bother somebody because you know, people still say of the trauma of october 7 is still here. but of course we are also very close here to the border wisconsin. it's just a couple of a few telling me to waste. and this morning, there was some rockets, 5 extra credit here in the course of the morning, a lot of outgoing shutting as well towards garza. and that means also for the people in garza. this is also not over there. huffman and during 12 months of more in golf, a palestinian spare. so this is certainly a very some but the here and this actual side a where people were dancing and then uh were killed in murder to you where we are standing right now. a misty w, as tanya explained, that reporting from of
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a how the how most attacks came without warning of israel marx or religious festival. the assault is now widely seen as a se leah on the pos of israel's intelligence services, is a look back. the events of that day the sun was just about to rise, when over a 1000 rockets were launched. israel from gaza, as millions of israel is rushed to seek shelter. 1500 him austrian militants on land. seeing air broke through to israel guys, a border fence in more than 60 locations, minutes later they reached is really military bases. and the nearing border communities on the way they shot indiscriminately a pessimist by all the while. the rocket beverage continued in various palestinian militants and civilians kept flowing in through the broken fence. the fighting expanded to over 30 different locations in the south of israel. one of these locations was the nova music festival. hundreds of rivers tried to sleep for their
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lives. cases of sexual violence rate and other atrocities were reported in 2 weeks and months that followed. the mentions of the cottage was slowly exposed to videos posted on line by her mouse. the picture was green and unprecedented. tara tech had caught isabel by surprise. their whole families and communities had fallen into the hands of homa as a very sore, and citizens of israel. i mean, we are at war, not even an operation will be said to have more than we come up in the in the 1st hours these really security forces were fleeting and civilians were mostly left alone to fight. thomas was setting houses on fire, shooting hundreds to death and has taken over 250 people, hostages back to gaza. only after 48 hours, it is real to be gain control over all these territories in the breached quarter.
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on that day and into you the past tense, over 1600 is really to account. ready some 100 hostages as to how to buy from us. these really are strikes on guy's, started that morning, and soon followed by full skilled ground invasion. over 41000 palestinians have been killed in gaza in the war that followed october 7th. the day to change the middle east. that's ca, kayla is one of israel's most declaimed contemporary offices and he joins me now from tel aviv welcome to c w. thank you so much for your time today. your a, a rice, a, a storyteller. can i ask you, what woods you would use to describe israel today? one year off to the october, the 7th. the tax were i think that you may have passed, but the 4 people were leaving you a a. i think we still dropped in that day and very, very much like
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a ground over the or because the in this year is out of the events. it happened it at the fed desa the victory 0 says, but fundamentally a nothing had changed. a, we still have the same government, the, our prime minister didn't even conduct one interview with a, he's ready a news paper or media by the a is there is a note, pointed investigative committee a, there's no talk about going to re election, which would have been demetrius, thing to do after such a, a catastrophe. so they do is in all more than that, we don't have any sense of the future because when we look at god the one year after the war, i don't know what it's in the always planning. he doesn't share this information with us. he doesn't tell us how does he see guys that the day after do a warrant and be a he keeps all the cards in to his chest and in that sense,
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basically, a does nothing and freezes this strategically picture, freezes the 40 to get a picture of freezes all of our future. why the incidence keeps running going? you know, one a we ease right ahead. the is active. the one to for success is in the ward. it gets to be been on, but they are worth nothing. if they're not leverage to an agreement, nothing else. he's talking about the victory. the still does not exist after the war is over. a easy way of thinking people are they have been used be, but we need to leave want and by each other. so a, a, they did the same thing, would be to try to ever address successes to get an agreement that could get the kidnapped the people back from guys that i'm kind of my oscar, i'm sorry it's the fall. you but cut, come on, come i ask you, i mean i, that 100 hostages are still being held in gauze are,
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i know that you as many other as riley's, have been protesting for months for an agreement. so why has the being no deal in your opinion? what i think is it the, the bows of this sides, you know, the come off and the nathan. yeah, we're very tough customers each. understand why they're to fit the earliest organization. holding quite a hostages could be quoted glad did in the be very tactic. i strategically but the other end i can't understand how it prime minister it was. it is responsible for the kid not being of the civilian is from 0 halls. cannot say this is the most important thing. originally these view is on top of my priority. by the way, this is a getting your president is becky, is considered the a, the prime and most important to a jewish meat for every one who's
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a jewel knows about recording to do on showing that there's nothing more important to, to return to people for your back, you know, any that says, you know, i think that is, it can be said as of october, basically, a, something about the drawers with the visas. i had return to some kind of with they asked for a day do of, of ease, right? as being a safe haven place, which or choose a can even dated was broken. but at the same time, it's the fees that could they ask for it, because you have some kind of a government vicki suppose to represent you interest then, and share any information with you. it doesn't sure the future that the trends, what is most likely that you don't feel criticism of benjamin netanyahu and his government you, you are making that very clear. so i'd like to ask you many. israel is riley's, do seem to support the war in gauze or an opinion polls all showing that supports fitness in yahoo is actually increasing again. what do you say to that?
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well, 1st of all, the support function, you always get increasing. but if you steve, extremely low, i would say in the bows at the iso effort, supporting in 2 fords, $13.00 election. now, when you were prime industry, in the time of it exists ation war, you should have 90 percent this for 3. you know, a people do not want to criticize it there either. but i think that in this case there is very good. i said, i gave you know that the now it started, did you, diesel, reformed 2 years ago? he's me mr. of defense. a warranty? and he said he puts us in a great in immediate danger that they only wanted the fire scene. this idea of roles in word is that then you all sent him an elective filing before the war. you steve firing g. she didn't go back on your own, he's where he says, oh, i firing the guy, but a, just for the mazda is the guy who was basically responsible for the was, it will really is hanging the example. i'm saying that we something here is it is
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to, to the restroom, to come up and come out on you because we, we have very little time left. but i'd love to ask you, you've been made very clear your thoughts about the situation today. the political situation, obviously the situation is israel today is a very difficult one, but let's just look ahead for one moment. what do you think is needed to build a better future briefly if you can a, i think is it, we are in the a horrible position right now. but i don't think that the me there is a can sees an opportunity in this situation that was created because i think is it right now? it was, it was beside the court on the day, but which is like the can join when a process is starting a, a, the, a creational space. the state is a being conducted with the support of things are where that the may agreements weasely. but on one that we push these, but i side would promise the free people to a better future. so in the end,
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of course, at the same time, it's a great opportunity because she's on outside it away from countries and away from proxies. but all those kind of things a should be done together, they do is not getting it to to victory, but he's creating an exist testing which we can already be at to kyra, thank you so much for your time today. it was a pleasure having on the program. thank you. now in morals and vigils, remember october the 7th last year, also taking place here in germany to moxie anniversary of the attacks uh relatives, evictions of the home also sold suspended a service that voted in central synagogue. germany's presidents will lead a multi face gathering place in the day
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now as far as have again sounded in tell of the of, of, to how must militants launch the barrels of rockets from gaza. meanwhile, israel carried down to a series of extracts on the job, only a refugee come and goes as no thanks. time. also advanced into the come. these randy military said it's troops of surrounded jelia, have killed thousands of militants and dismantled infrastructure in the come of the most is terror attacks also re ignited the conflicts between israel and another. iran backs, millison group has beloved and 11 on has been lost as it has struck the is really pushed of haifa with missiles for the 1st time. meanwhile, israel says it sent more troops since 11 on it is also launched, more strikes on the capital they route smoke still rising from is really air strikes on the roots southern suburbs, a car dealership, and a residential area, surrounded by rubble. video of the overnight bombing shows
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a giant fireball lighting up the city sky. israel's military claims it strikes targeted, a weapon storage facility of the militant group has the law causing a secondary explosion. israel says that hit targets in the east of the country as well. and conducted reeds in the south. the lebanese health ministry says at least 20000000 people were killed in attacks across 11 on over the weekend. 11 on is enough people. 1.2000000 residents have been forced from their homes and is real intensified. that's campaign against hezbollah and late september, the more houses we were sitting in our homes. we had nothing to do with it. this is what our lab health issues, and i'm minding my own business, trying to earn a living as well. fine. no, i didn't expect this to be living in the streets. israel's air strikes are increasingly supported by ground troops as well. the idea of releasing video of
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soldiers preparing for deployment. it will be the 3rd division to be sent into war and loving on. on sunday is rarely prime minister benjamin netanyahu met with soldiers and congratulated them on their campaign. they finish on uh and not lose the fucking them. oh you must. a year ago we suffered a terrible blow. for the past 12 months. we've been changing reality from end to end. the whole world is astounded. the blows you inflict on our enemies and i salute you and tell you, you are the generation of victory goal and it's a whole has below has responded with increased rocket attacks across northern israel. on sundays, several people were injured when 2 missiles evaded air defenses and struck the port city of haifa and was the 1st time has below rockets of damage. israel's 3rd largest city, netanyahu has said the main objective of the campaign in lebanon is to make northern israel safe again. so far, the zone of destruction has only widened. i'll see
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w is correspond to then they root mohammed tried to tell us more about these ready offensive and loving them. so this really bombardment of the whole it has become a daily routine. now it starts every day with is what you need drones overhead all day long with and time and strikes on the solid and suburbs of they would as the more thrice continued to hit the towns and then sell them to the end of a cottage and of course and at nights these were 80 ambulatory orders, new evacuations, from da here in to 1000 suburbs. and this is followed by intense waves of air strikes throughout the night. this, of course, is causing stress to people across beta who does heavy strikes, shake the whole city and you know, the sound office really strikes are very audible across all the veiled. i visited
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here last week and the destruction was already huge. and, and, you know, that was before the widest hits on to solve on that, that's how solving suburbs over the weekend. so i assume that the entire neighborhood stuff we visited on now set to the ground. so it does look like the offensive as whitening has the law has been continuing to saw it. israel full striking several towns and cities. does this suggest that hezbollah as military capabilities also isn't very much in tax, or i wouldn't say in talk. so we, we witnessed some significant this way, the tax on his beloved military infrastructure and we still haven't seen a symmetrical retaliation by hezbollah. so to say, even though the group is showing capabilities to strike deep inside his writing at 2 or 3 and, you know, reaching haifa and, and often to love eve. in fact,
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a group has, has been launching a intense broadcasts and drawn as to whether it's why in the past few days, despite the hard hopes that the group had taken through, you know, the device tasks and destination of its top leadership. it is a part of the still capable of targeting as well, but also showed capabilities to flight back the is why you we are me ground incursion. that's the up until now. seems to be how the on the way i just wanted to ask you, the jordanian foreign minister has flown into bay root, has an a with a bus stop warning about the escalating violence. what does he say? so he gave a brief statement a while ago saying that he's cutting a message off fully dorothy and support for the button on against what he called these white. the aggression that started in gaza and now is shifting to was bailed . he said it is very dangerous situation and that is why is pushing the whole region into a loud war. he also promised the government to provide some, uh,
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you know, um, aids to fill the huge needs caused by the influx of refugees. and then the buttons is very, very difficult situation here and they would for refugees. and it's described by the u. n. agency as a terrible crisis, more people are sleeping on the streets with very little support and increasing risks of diseases as winter's. coming to the bay route bureau chief mohammed tre, today. thank you so much for that. we appreciate that. let's take a look now at some of the other stories making headlines around the world today. and the spanish coast guard has rescued at least the us, the migraines close to the canary islands of africa's western coast. the group which included 3 toddlers was brought to show for processing my grand arrivals in the canaries of more than double the sea. the narrow of the southern mexican city
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of chil puns, thing though has been killed just in days off to taking office before caesar investigating the death of allah. under all costs, the region has for years been blighted by tough, was between drug cartels. 2 chinese citizens have been killed and the bombing in practice, stones biggest city karachi, a convoy was struck by an improvised explosive device nivia for the beloved liberation on me, which is a militant group based enough, got us done, says it was behind the attack. and the head of pains in south korea to strength and security and maritime cooperation. the presidents of those nations signed agreements during talks. in manila, the philippines has recently taxed with trying to overt disputed voices. to american scientists have been awarded the nobel prize in medicine that work could one day lead to the prevention of these diseases, including cancer and diabetes, dart williams of the w science,
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explains biologist gary rhodes can then victor ambrose received the nobel prize and physiology or medicine for their ground breaking discovery of micro r n a, which changed our understanding of how genes are regulated. it works like this and identical copy of your unique genetic code. your dna is found in the nucleus of every cell in your body. that acts as a kind of instruction manual telling that cell what to do too. but cells and different tissues perform completely different tasks and have changing needs. genes have to be regulated in studies focused on the development of a round, warm, called single rep details elegance. the 2 scientists discovered the class of molecules called micro r, n a, which plays a key role in that genetic regulation. it influences how cells adapt and when my
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telling them which page of that instruction manual to turn to. it's fundamental science that has changed our understanding of how biology works. by knowing how to control cell functions, we might one day be able to develop medicines to switch off diseases like diabetes and cancer, or on some more on this, on a top house from the w science, joins me here in the studio. anna, i'm, let's start with how exactly this this works. so mike crow, r n a, how does it work, and what does it do? yeah, it's a little bit complicated and goes to the very, very core of how our genetics work. so basically, every cell in our body comes with the very same instruction, the flips, but not every cell develops into the same type of cell in the end. so there are some sophisticated translation processes taking place from the dna, our genetic code via something that it's called m r n a messenger
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r n a to something which we all know it's proteins and proteins are fundamental for, for our living. now micro are an 8 or this is how people saw this. it works for the longest time until the research that has got the prize today came into play because micro or an 8 q and the m r n a. so between genes and proteins that use this messenger r n a in a way that am that the right proteins can be produced and the ends mostly by silencing the m r n a. so the part in between, it sounds very, very slow, but we use surprise the, you know, this discovery in particular was award as yeah. so if there's one thing with nobel prizes that you never know which price is going to be ordered in the end. so of course it was a surprise, these people, they were on the, on one of the lists that i saw, but there were hundreds of nominations. and so in the end it's always a surprise. and that's it. it was the pride like the,
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the ground work that they do is it was a surprise back then. like in 1993, they did the experiment on the discovery with a warm and for 7 years people did not really care for this. it was only in 2000 that micro r n a was also shown to exist in humans and then the field or the research as to where, like, oh, okay, that could be interesting or that is actually of super fundamental for how our bodies were to. and actually, because my next question was going to be, how could this actually change things in the future? so this is obviously relating to people's bodies, our health, i presume. yeah. but this is a super important point that just dress the nobel prize as for physiology or medicine and the like the noblest assembly said this year it's very clear for physiology which is on the, on the beginning of the, of the spectrum basically. so there are no concrete applications to talk about yet people are doing research on how micro renee is involved in depression or, and cancer or yeah, in diabetes. but it's also very hard to target micro or an a because it's such
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a fundamental process in our audi utilities and car sales. thank you so much for sharing some lights on that discovery us and his a quick reminder was our top stories. flea israel is mocking one year since the upside of the 7th terror attacks led by almost a don't service of the size of one of the 1st assaults began a day of nationwide commemoration. and israel has launched more strikes against hezbollah and bay roofs. more troops also being sent to post israel, ground defense and level and that is all we have time for, but to stay with us, we'll have more coverage of israel october the 7th to memory. throughout the day, i'll be back of the top of the hour to that international. thanks so much for the
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the the climate change particularly scary for the younger generation. and this fear they feel helpless. all the ways out of this, the tomorrow today. next on d, w thinking as
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a network thing as one a show about vision range and bid project together for a future worth living, working for a more united way. in 60 minutes on the w, the if you like, history and thought with the side of the culture, travel and control the sea. and i'm a single book us that will put the wow, that's up, i can do it every day. not every day we encounter so many things that we don't even notice and i just got a straight into the background, but it is still showing a spotlight on them. what you say might just surprise. we're going to dig up the,
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the, on the everyday things around. when did they come from when, why did they have all the time? we can just search for the day and take them out where i mean, that of the severe storms. forest fires, record breaking heat worldwide. we are alarmed at the same time, feel powerless. international studies show that young people in particular, are very worried about climate change. what can we do about it? the threat global warming poses as not only to the environment, it's also becoming an emotional test for an entire generation that topic and more coming up on data science show. welcome to tomorrow. today
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is most of that intuitive. i want to take.

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