tv DW News Deutsche Welle October 8, 2024 1:00pm-1:31pm CEST
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of human extinction from advancing our systems. climate change is the new frontier of so from our series continues on cents. on the basis dw news, a lot from bell in the is riley military opens. yet another financing from is, moves troops and to south west lebanon, climbing it till the top has blocked them on the in sprites, on the test below, has 5 more than a 170 projectiles into israel, over the past. and also coming up strikes inside the central gaza rest of g kindly thousands dead. these really minute terraces of us preventing an eminence how most of time in minutes and have only a 5 walk into israel. and all this follows commemorations of the october 7th,
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a mazda terra, it's actually a year ago in the us 1000 small. so the new york university and set for demonstrations of students stage various different observances, a world away from cost. and the nobel prize in physics goes to an american professor at the canadian colleague who's become known as one of the gold fathers of pay on re explain what made these $2.00 so special the i'm good, how about as well come to the program? israel says it has begun what it calls limited gronvold preparations in south west and live in an opening a new front and it's fine with has blah to israel claim to have killed the top. has black come on an overnight it strikes on the lebanese capital bay route,
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so high and those st. e and was said to be responsible for overseeing the budget and the logistics for the minutes and the group has. but i'm is supported by rob, despite it's heavy losses, they've has 5 more than a 170 project tasks into israel. over the past day. the gentlest growing, the why is in very rude to him is rather expanding is offensive 11. and what's the situation that way, you well, what it continues strikes a year in the southern parts of the field also is really good strikes in the eastern part of the country and the big really. and of course i could continue in the south, was a new focus to, to what's the west to what's the been so rainy with the seems to be the new focus of this very the army. they have a really sweet spending decisions for this world. pensive, ready, and they now really in a force,
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one of the service k things. it says that this is the part stop. so now is there any officials said they have killed another top has block, amanda. what do you think these targeted killings and as strikes are doing to has blogs, military capabilities this way? nobody knows it, because you can see that his folder strikes is right every day. focusing very much with the city of hyphen. so take you to be this way from what it's showing is that the students they also let's just visit is really, i mean, coming into later on. so obviously they have some really big lift and the deputy organizations costs just the way the statements and what she said, the biggest thing is the most our military capabilities. that's a told me now that has the deputy chief says he's support. so evidence efforts for
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a cx 5. how does that go together with $570.00 rockets into israel in the past 24 hours? what that's the quote together was 80. so i basically showed all this because this is really all this violence, of course, the resolution is 71. this should be the face of us these 5. but it seems that both sides are at this point watching to show strains either before the to contribute. this was for you want to get the, the should position if there will be. now, how difficult is it to come to a cease fire agreement? do you think is this for this? is this very difficult, especially because it's right. it seems that the student can use this chance. it still can be great to his full that it's complicated to say, i think as long as this is happening, there's
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a good chance for us to try it here. and on the smaller side, we don't know really what the decision making, what is the decision making process? here is there to make decisions that's all big up in the ad on this makes a ceasefire. looks to of the issue for the, for see, try to put down this time of the hard and very rude for us. thank you very much. of the one year of war gauze, us health authority, which is controlled by how mazda says the death toll from the conflict with these rel is nearing 42000 people. numbers the un says are reliable overnights, and these 26 people have been killed and is really strikes on the bridge refugee camp in central gaza, including children, is really prime minister benjamin netanyahu insistence country will achieve what he calls, total victory over almost which launch they have to have a 7 turbo tax against israel. the other violence has trapped the
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civilian population of gaza and across 5, enjoying widespread hunger disease and the collapse of the health care system. a this is where the to move of family can home, but only for now. days this one of thousands of tents near the beach and send to a gaza. there were forced to leave the real home in northern gauze at last october . i must admit, attends from gaza approved to the attack. so then is there any communities is where i retired? you did with an air offensive and play to a ground invasion of these. how husband up to saddam and the grandchildren has been on the move for the past 12 months, like tens of thousands of other palestinians in gaza. we were displaced by the foaming wherever we went. that with mess because we would leave one place struck by tragedy only to arrive at another place where a new building on a folded every place, we fled to became another scene of devastation. to con,
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pay myself, they sold shelter and civil schools and northern garza. then fled south to central garza to o'clock of 200 units and back to be sent to them. on the almost 90 percent of calls us 2200000 people for security displaced by board of the family is now dispersed across garza. as he says, she never expected to end up living in a tend. they have no income and depend on age and charity. the children no longer had schooling and help as much as they can learn more about them. now instead of tiring school bags they carry will to really with when i see my children or other children do this a lot that i feel the pain deeply we. i do love another membership, one with a few of it. strikes is a constant. both have lost 2 family members and such a tax of these says she goes to assistant and is tried, you know, stuck tobar applause. been working almost a whole shot at midnight. we were screaming and was not knowing who had died or who
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had survived between the flemish and the customer by mooning, they told us we couldn't say good bye to our loved ones. because the bodies were in such a terrible state took with us just one dash, well as i saw 5 lucky so i never got to say good bye to my sister. oh, her children. oh, yeah, we buried them all about about 11 children, the county a 5 women over the men. we got it from the shop with a loss of my sister and her family has affected me deep companies that come on usa or the show me comes over. sure. and she'll get the dish, especially for the and how long does she associate it for you? do you guys talk to a better assistant, tim, how about the same uh i lost my brother and his daughters when their tent was bombed, near the unreal warehouses. especially i do, but now to model protege i am they were all killed. the son was injured by shrapnel
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. the so the yeah. the front another yeah. i mean the front, the whole. yeah. for that event i buried my brother in rafa. and on the same day sled with my family, him a little bit to show that this news you may never be allowed to return to a home. in northern garza, the war has not only destroyed best areas of the territories, but has also effectively divided it into north and south. the return of displaced people to the north is part of the seas for negotiations, which have sofa failed to return to shuttle. if possible. i have a boy and 2 girls in the nose, and i just want to hug them. if the most important thing is to hold my children again, i'm one you haven't lost nobody else. i'm afraid i will die before i get to embrace my son and daughters while i'm working, i miss them so much to be filled with me. i can't breathe. i don't know if it makes
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me feel sick because i'm far away from them. i know, i don't know how not going. i know it is a simple grace, but what his goal is, i was no stranger to, we're in the past. this is the longest, it's people have endured such unremitting biden's, death and destruction with no end in sight. positive vain is uh comes of director for the occupied palestinian territory. the energy of international rescue committee joins me from amman in jordan, but we heard and report from this displaced family and gaza. homecoming. all these stories to yeah, i think the scenes and the testimony that you use in your introduction to speak for themselves where the impact over the past year is really been devastating on gaza. and the implications in terms of the humanitarian impacts are quite extraordinary.
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i think those quick uh, testimonies really give an impression of the extra the, the acute level of need that exists in the gaza strip. now since the beginning of the war access to gaza, the supply a few minutes area and aid have been a bit of a problem. is it any different now? one year later qualifying it as a problem is an understatement. it has been extraordinarily difficult to ensure a access of humanitarian supplies into guys, though it's almost as if the, the, the quantity of supplies has been calibrated over this period where we are really facing a whole range of constrain simply in terms of getting humanitarian supplies across the border into gaza as we speak. we're facing another period of the growing constraints where the number of just as an indicator of the number of trucks that
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have been able to across the borders. the guys has reduced precipitously. and to give you a, an impression from approximately $200.00 trucks per day to, in the order of less than 50 trucks a day. under these conditions, the amount of tearing response is really very, very difficult. and i would argue, is unsustainable. now and in recent weeks, as well as increasing the focus is military operations or has by 11 and has this somehow to change the situation in gaza? i don't think it has made a significant change on the situation in guys. as i mentioned, the constraints in terms of humanitarian cargo, getting into guys that has actually become more difficult over the last week to 10 days in terms of violence and conflict. in guys,
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the military operations are ongoing and the strategy of rolling out what is referred to as evacuation orders are what we as humanitarian is referred to as forced displacement orders, is really uh, at a rate that it has been over the last couple of months. and these are, this is a strategy of a forcing people to, to move from one area to the other in the wake or preceding a military operations. in that sense, the situation remains the same. and then in some sense, we feel that they've made it to read further. now about the future of gauze, if we're looking at the images that we're constantly seeing uh, off the total bomb down territory. is there anything that gives you hope for gaza and it's people you, you publish a very challenging
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a proposition. we obviously are focused on our day to day operations, which as i have indicated are under very difficult circumstances. obviously we need to maintain some degree of hope, the ultimate solution being a meaningful ceasefire. but i'm afraid i have no indicators on the immediate horizon to feed that whole barbara to fit in with the international rescue committee. thank you very much. thank you. or as israel mock the ones. yeah. and advisory of the, of tober 7 attack students at columbia university in new york stage demonstrations, some in support of israel, all those backing the, palestinian coles, and protesting the war and gaza. columbia was the science of mos protests against the wall earlier this year and touched off a wave of compass demonstrations across the united states. do the use. abraham reports from new york now police barricades,
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lines and id scanners. these are unusual measures for columbia se campus, otherwise known for its openness to the public. but in the lead up to october 7th, university leadership team, the necessary for student safety side protests, encounter protests on one side of the divide. a pro israel demonstration today is not about about us here. it's really not. it's about our friends and family in israel, and it's about commemorate october 7th. we just wanted to find a way to honor the hostages. to remember the people that you know that were killed and to raise awareness separated by metal and public safety officers,
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others protest the war and guys of those attacks triggered the wonder university to cut ties companies linked to israel. they are getting some of the funding and support. right. and we have a ride tomorrow. we have the right to be here and we have a right to the july. these protests are some of the biggest on campus since the new academic year began last month. in the spring, dozens of students were arrested here in mac, protests calling for an end to the warren casa, and for columbia to divest from israel, protest or sees the building. and a student encampment was violently dismantled by new york city police. today, an installation in memory of hostages, killed, and still held in gaza, stands in its place. the university's interim president visited the installation was a experience of the spring has left a mark on the student body. many pro palestinian demonstrators tell us they were
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free to show their faces. fearing retribution, however was face has the code of browsers. many of us have ended up on tossing websites, and your name is on several websites with information about me. and that is a cute risk for it also means that interview, personally, i don't know how to be able to say the can because i have my name in that space and i am docs. and as the university hopes to avoid a repeat of the spring students on both sides of the divide, tell us a lot lower needs to be done. prefer to be trusted between them and their peers. and for them to feel safe on campus. the increased surveillance in such a dangerous position is very hawkins. all the people on the other side don't talk to me, but i just tried to tell them that we are human and you should be allowed to grieve in peace. here on the side,
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struggle to even find the basis for conversation. that's what will know some of the other stories and the headlines today as a government protest isn't albania, have flashed with police and the capital toronto, the demanding that the government be replaced by a technocratic can take the cabinets ahead of next year's election. police said 10 officers with injured in the classes, you as well that political violence could damage. a baby is hope of joining the european union uses. it will appeal to the world trade organization of the china in post anti dumping measures on brand. the inputs from the blog, china is move comes off to the e. u voltage to impose terrace on electric vehicles made in china use economy commission as, as those taxes were fair and appropriate. the prime suspect in the
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2007 disappearance of the british top law medlin, because has been cleared of all charges in a separate sex primes trial in germany, christie and b had been accused of rape and sexual abuse. children the remains the prime suspect in all kinds disappearance from her bedroom in portugal. so charges have never been brought people in the us state of florida preparing for another powerful storm less than 2 weeks after being slammed by hardly can helen. now hardly could. milton, as weeds category 5 strength as it passed by mexico's, you could tom peninsula. it is projected state the coast of florida late wednesday, as a so powerful but slightly weaker category full hurricane authorities have issued evacuation orders for lots of parts of florida, gulf coast, with lashing winds, and a surging tied hurricane. milton makes itself felt. as it passes mexico's,
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you pretend peninsula across the gulf of mexico, cars ciocca highway in the state of florida as residents, lee, the storms pat joseph dade, are preparing for projected winds of over 200 kilometers per hour. but as they work, they also have to clear the debris from another recent storm. hurricane hawaii. really frustrating that the last hurricane came the store. and they screwed around and haven't picked the debris off and now they're scrambling to get it picked up. and if this one does it, it's going to be flying this. if it comes is anywhere close to the policy that's going to be on the 2nd floor. so i've so really scared and how i think there's from the last storm. so i really think we're going to evacuate. the international space station captured this image of the eye of milton from above as it crosses the gulf of mexico. it's expected to make land fall on the us coast mid week. vice president comma la harris, urge residents to follow evacuation orders. please let the to your local officials
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because i know a lot of folks out there and have survived these hurricanes before. the ceiling is going to be very, very serious. and i urge you to please just wrap whatever you they listed as of orders. you're getting senior level official, stay know what they're telling you and they know what no 10 is about to be. so please do that. some florida residents had just returned home after fleeing hurricane helene, at the end of september. that storms destruction costs at least $230.00 deaths across several us states. efforts are now under way to minimize the damage of another natural disaster. the wind as of this is nobel prize in physics have been announced american john hop field and canadian jeffrey hinton on the recipients of the award for the discoveries and inventions in the field of machine learning. let's listen to into why the noble prize committee
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a summary of the shows these particular witness. thank you. it's discoveries and inventions formed the building blocks of machine learning that can aid humans in making foster and more reliable decisions. for instance, when diagnosing medical conditions. however, while machine learning has enormous benefits, it's rapids development has also raised concerns about our future. on the now joined by matthew was agent some to w a science method. we just had the committee honoring that with the same time raising concerns. what do they mean? well, i think the thing that they are pointing to in this case is what we've seen talked about quite a bit of the last few years, particularly as we've seen large language models which are a form of artificial intelligence describe and i guess
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a product of the what these 2 gentlemen have have done over the years and the way that it could be misused or the way that it could be spun out of control. jeffrey changed in the canadian british winter of this is award. will joint winner of this award has raised in the past? he's concerns about the loss of control of i technology. so that's the ethical consideration when it comes to it that it was raised by the nobel committee in announcing this use windows. of course, there are positive aspects to i, which is the reason why these 2 individuals have won the award given the potential and enormous positive outcomes that the outpatient of this technology could have. tell us more about this, that was that the price. so the original work started in the early i see, so john hope failed, develop something which ended up carrying his name to help field network, which was an interesting little neural network which in life person's terms effectively replaces the neurons of al brian with nodes in the same way that the
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new runs about brian and connected by sign up says these nodes are connected to each other. you said some information in sign image and it's able to store and save and recall that information. if it's given a prompt, the light of down the track, and in this case and i bill prize committee, described the why that are distorted or incomplete image could be fed into the system. and then retrieve by the system funding from a distorted image. the most likely image that you are trying to find from that previously saved information and then sentence was built on this creating more complex models that could recall information. so really we see this today a lot when we put information into the chat, j, p k for john book and it spins off pretty accurate, often descriptive text that tries to answer that question because there are all the applications as well as i mentioned this all these other applications, it's not all about a i right. well it will, it is all about i, but it's what the i all i can do for us. so we have seen, i begin to find its way into other branches of science. this is
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a physics nobel prize. this is computational and statistical physics that we've seen recognized. but astro physics, for example, has benefit from this technology. being able to understand information that is being read in stuff systems well beyond our own and trying to interpret what this is saying for astrophysicists and astronomers to make sense of material science. being able to spin up the radical new materials that we might have used for in the future for that 5 voltage as an example that was raised by the nobel committee. we've got stat and federal tax that was now made from silicon. but what other materials could we invent that might be more efficient and capturing sun life and medical imaging? as well as another point that has been rise, the ability to be to feed to i and i on model and image for or an x ray and side there's the tree mountain. even if to the human eye, it might not be so clear. so it's the ability to take information that way as humans might not be able to make sense of and make sense. but for us, thank you very much. matthew argues that from the w sites.
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before we go early morning commuters at a train station and the astronomy and state of new south wales and concerts in the usual travel companion, a koala bear. the curious most appeal was spotted on c, c t. v. roaming the deserted platforms before bumping into some surprise passengers . a security guard was pausing trains to slow down when passing through the station enough to los he chased by police. the corolla finally returned to his natural habitats. you're watching dw news, here's a reminder of our top story. are off the climbing until the top has blocked them on the internet. striking as well has begun what it calls a limited ground operations in south west and 11, opening
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shape. on d, w. or germans or voting for the far right, causing a growing, concerned, and some see parallels to hitler's rise to power. what are the events in 1933 really comparable to 2024. right, so the far right to germany repeats it's not see past those in 45 minutes on d, w the this shadows. these are costs and video shed lights on the dog is devastating. colonial har is infected by germany across and he employed discourses,
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tactic farms and destroy lifestyle. what is the legacy of this wide spread race as depression today? history, we need to talk about here, the stories, shadows of german colonialism. the unsafe handling of fireworks can cause devastating injuries to your hands in just a fraction of a 2nd cat, but it's can also inflict serious injury some jobs compose the threat top 5 digits to us consists of sports. but did you know that smartphones can also damage your hands? that's your exercise to keep fits. but have you ever done a work out for you and today will show you some simple but effective exercise, healthy hun leslie, stopping on in good shape. the t w. health so.
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