tv DW News Deutsche Welle October 24, 2024 5:00pm-5:31pm CEST
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is happening to migrate on the african comes from policy starts november 9 the this is dw news live from ballot diplomats come together in paris to push for us these $511.00. the french president the by the way of my call, criticizes israel's military operations. as don't afflict, don't as pledge a $1000000000.00 in the system. also coming up south korea and ukraine, one of a major security threats as north korea sense troops to russia. they see a young on soldiers could be used on the front line and you price plus saw political set size making a come back in bangladesh as the expulsion of the authoritarian formally that
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allows for expression to function. the guy that says, welcome to the program, and that's a national age conference for 11 and has raised a $1000000000.00 in pledges for humanitarian assistance and security. more than 70 countries to attend at the event hosted by the french president. in the, in my call in paris, the aim was also to secure the pragmatic support for a ceasefire and the wall between israel and has blocked. the lebanese health ministry says the conflict has now killed more than 2 and a half 1000 people displaced, mold and the 1000000 president my call said he, especially regrets the total and civilians to like give to assist the old police. the ball must end as soon as possible, or you must be
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a ceasefire 11 on please do more damage. more victims, most strikes will need to put an end to terrorism. no, and sir, the security eval to organize. and my bitterly regret that iran has engaged in this with hezbollah, against israel, while the great interest of lebanon requires for it to stay away from the war and gone. so i regret that israel continues its military operations and 11 on and that the number of civilian victims continues to increase, continued to the multi with money is of course this part of the country that stick. another key only to use it just you in know is the method. it's just because of the war. there will be a phone or level as g, d p or more than 9 percent. but there are, of course, reaches the 1st on the reservation is what the country really needs most existence
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. and this is via you can not find. so in that sense, at the current strip of the 2nd us secretary of state to be lincoln, try keep, stop. this is fine because she's as garza maybe more important than this conference in, in paris. in many years they've been on c spy. and gaza is a key for the, for the weapons to, for the siding. here in the 2nd reservation is a 1st level, is a phase states that the state budget is a black hole in this country, spots owned by enormous corruption. so the question is, we have to spend this money as because we have one point, it's 1000000 refugees internally displaced, desperately. it said release in doing this should only so becky permission organizations or angels is probably too big of a task. it needs somebody to state that there's somebody pretty,
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nobody came to this enormous gap for known, exist the state you live now live in, and also us to send a 1000 troops to a southern border to secure as he's fine with that actually be a viable solution you reckon of the adults only this, the parents conference set that they wanna send the 200 the us to tell us to read the equipped army. that's of course something that is needed. the armies on the, on this on the feet. but the, i think k, you can see the army really here as a quick 6 to the problem. because one of the issues is and to re establish state authority and the size of the country now is the liberties army would go militate against any who's going to position. that's with me. probably in the same minutes a civil war in the country, the army would fall apart. according to sectarian live, see, don't expect this is the way the liberties army against his bullet. this probably
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will not work and also don't weigh them against this, right? because so the money that comes should be not spending for the to be put the use army to stop the is there any for except incursions into the country? so don't expect from the army. anything i can say is written against his phone, which on the screen of the who are in the bay roads. thank you very much coming your way. it's jennifer moorehead is comes with director for the 8 organization saves the children in 11 in the off time. if the outcome of the conference is good enough, it's definitely not good enough for us nor, nor the families and the children that we work with. every day when we are talking to, to kids and, and the parents that, that we are reaching with our programming. all they are talking about is the need
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for a ceasefire. the need to go back home. it is definitely the top on everyone's mind and certainly is your, your correspond, it just mentioned the, the ceasefire needs to be regional a, you know, we are, we are within the original context and what's happening in gaza feels very real, very relevant here. and, and loving on today. now that has confidence as also raised close to 1000000000 years for 11, and according to the host, with this amount cover, the needs to guess well, the us to manage here and appeal that is reflecting what we need to do in order to reach the 1st 1000000 most vulnerable is or what we estimated to be around 426000000. the cost of repair and recovery is going to be exponentially higher. and as we know, loving on is in a very, very fragile stage. and it's, uh, it's a, it's a difficult path. i had to see and understand how this,
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this country is going to recover and pull it. so out of the price instead of now finds itself in. now we know that children are disproportionately affected in a conflict. how does this apply to the wall between israel and has blah yes, children as always bear the brunt of every conflict in here. it's no different. you know, the 1200000 people that were displaced in the 1st couple of days of the escalation of this conflict. you know, 420000 of those are our children. the most significant leave for kids. you know, the kids a school age 1500000 of them or so are out of school because of the conflict. and because so many of the public schools are being used as a shelters. this further pushes back a child's ability to recover from, from the overall trauma of this conflict. so the requirement the need for children to be back in school to be back in uh in a, in a regular routine um is,
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is very difficult to, to uh for see the children's mental health has been significantly impacted. of course. uh like, uh, like it always is kids talk about being so afraid every, every big song that makes them job living in fear like that really does a lot to your, um, to your system and, and to your long term mental health and chances of recovery as well, we have a lot of concerns about children's recovery. also around nutrition and mel nutrition. we already have a state of severe food and security for over a 1000000 people in this country. prior to this crisis, which we forecast is only to get more complicated and more difficult, moving forward as it takes longer for this conflict. and for children to be re established in a, in a more safe for team. now and 11 and hundreds of thousands have been displaced by israeli attacks. and it is real tens of thousands to leave the homes because of hezbollah as rock as you've top step on this. but what does it mean for children
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when they're torn from the environment? what kids tell us themselves that it's a, it's a terror recently traumatic events leaving their, their homes. and in particular, you know, kids talk about their, their bedrooms, their bed, and they want to go back to their, to their, to the toys. but the, the not knowing what's going to happen in the future and the fact that their parents are so insecure and, and don't know also what the future's going to bring adds to the sense of chronic insecurity and stress. many of the kids that we talk to their, their homes are already destroyed it's, it's impossible for them to see what their, what their futures going to look like without uh, without a home to go back to it's, it's an extremely difficult moment for kids here. janice, i'm gonna head them. i'm safe, the children, and 11. and thank you very much. jennifer. thanks for having us. have a look at some of the other stories making headlines around the world today. tell
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us the indian doctor say at least 17 people have been killed and dozens insults. and then it's really striking a school in central gaza official. so it displays people the sheltering at the building in new. so at the time the is really mandatory, said it targeted a almost a month set to do a secretary of state onto the blinking says negotiators will resume talks in the coming days on ways to end the gauze of war and for you. the hostages sees during the october 17th a 7 turbo time during a visit to the cott top link, and also set part of israel's will with has blocks and it should not be protracted nowadays. turkeys air force has struck curtis minutes and targets in iraq and syria in response to an attack on a state wrong defense company in the uncover which killed 5 people. the defense ministry says it hit $47.00 targets linked to the outlawed p, k. k. curtis, to work as the oxy and they consider this in the unity. a russian lawmakers have
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ratified a defense treated with north korea, which pages, mutual assistance. if either country comes under a temporary mcculloch is brushed as low a hard problem at the duma voted unanimously to approve the pact the opera house is expected to do the same. united states, as john young has sent thousands of troops to russia for training. south korea has condemned to deployment as a security threat, a script more of this from a journalist probably, and catch my in. so and w corresponding, they come in t. if finally i, let's start with you. a soft grab has been urging for an immediate withdrawal of north korean troops from russia. so i think his own security concerns about north korea has been ating russia with weapons since the beginning of the war. why do south korea and seem to be more worried now? what to be very key. a south korea has already been very before i would say their
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voices have not been heard so prominently. but now what we've seen that north korea has sent soldiers to russia. that is a further step of escalation. that's even. yeah, i mean, more grave. and what is a self critical read about? i mean, they are questioning what's us, north korea, getting return for its military cooperation with russia and the close. so they could have a rate, the higher the price we'll beat, we already know that russia is supplying north korea was a secure security guarantee. i mean, put in and control and they both assigned the military at treated as almost an alliance. then we know that a rush up would probably give our supply to north korea. we had currencies to north korea, but of course and rush. i could also supply and north korea was submitted through technology. and then if north korea now sends the pots of its special troops to rush out and potentially a fighting and ukraine, they will get experience on the battlefield. and that is very concerning, of course, for south korea because north korea opened the saying,
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it is preparing for conflict also with the south. so it is really a very tense situation and they go over to you what, what did the potential deployment of north korean troops in ukraine, maine for the situation on the front line? would it make a difference? a look, i think somebody you great in point of view, the massage, and the munition that north korea has already sent. russia is a very big deal. some people are saying that even more important than boots on the ground, but some estimates the up to half of the shells used by russia come from those create this huge supply weapons going back. but suddenly we are seeing that russia is running out of soldiers. that is having more trouble recruiting people, having to pay the premiums to get people to sign up and even having to consider according people up in russia rather than just getting volunteers on board. so that would be a help as for them being here. and you can ukraine, obviously that would be something the most kind of favorable situation for the company. but even if they stay on russian tetra say, and help process, a protected support from ukraine were deployed,
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say to the coast region with ukraine is active, is occupied, some russian territory that would already take the pressure of the russian army and allow the russian army to push forward foster and along with wide a stretch of the front lines and they currently out of hobby and softer and officials saying they could potentially reviews ending weapons to key for more to be know it's yes of both presidents use it as well as for administer to tell you all they both set all options on the table and those options include explicitly, also am possibly sending weapons to is ukraine. now, what they said is that the concrete measures and the steps that the south cable take, they have not been decided yet. and they depend on how north korea and russia of the behavior of the so i would see it as some kind of yeah, leveraging a technical patients. so for example, if north korea continues and you know booth at the, probably the soldiers also to,
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to ukraine and when they really show up in large numbers and fight on the battlefield, then i'm sure that sounds good. but also consider taking the step and send the weapons to ukraine. and i think self chris, we also avoid that the whole power balance here in east asia is shifting what we see again, here's the basically the region of pointing into 2 blocks. the authoritarian regimes of young, young badging and, and, and most coal getting close to and of course south korea and japan, they get closer to natal make how important could potential soft carrying weapons deliveries for you, frame b a this is a really big deal. southcourt is one of the few countries that still has a big weapons. production base is still preparing to fight the kind of author a will that nature was preparing for the 1980s. but in the meantime is basically taking its attention away from it is now slowly having to kind of painstakingly recreate that production capacity. we've seen ukraine's neighbors, romania, poland,
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buying a lot of weapons from south korea. and like the us of germany say, where production lines have to be basically recreates from scratch. south career is able to, you know, deliver these weapons in space and months rather than he is. and did it. what has very big stop pulse of munition. so far it has supplied the us a bit and then the us where they would send its own shelves to ukraine bills if those came directs to ukraine. that would be a huge help. so there is great hope here, and you claim that this might change and that actually this is the one west of that live country that is able to actually kind of puts, you know, make a difference on the front lines and actually come good on these promises in a short space of time. so in a way, there is a kind of real sense that this is maybe a mistake that the russians are doing that it actually could have impacts on the battlefield here and really see ukraine getting this bought. it needs much for the income, much faster than, than western european countries able to do jealous ivy and fetch me and sold and dw correspondent and they come late and keep that. thank you both very much.
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striking workers at boeing have rejected a new offer which included a 35 percent pay rise over 4 years. the union has vowed to extend the 6 week stripe on till the pension plan is reinstate. it says, almost 2 thirds of members voted against boeing's offer. strike has added to the us by makers, financial crisis, quotes and the losses of surge $6000000000.00. and from on the boeing strike, um the joins buys the bits the from the business department, stevens a 35 percent over 4 years, plus a one time bonus of $7000.00. it sounds like a good deal. why did they reject it? had a 12 percent pay hike as soon as they signed this thing, $3.00 more pay hikes over the next 3 years. that adds up to 35 percent. if you compound that, it's actually closer to 40 percent ads about assigning bonus and some other perks.
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why would anyone vote against against this thing? and yet almost 2 thirds did. so the reason is because many of those workers are looking at the past 10 years, a time in which their wages have risen less than 10 percent. but the costs that they face have risen by about 40 percent. so they're still looking, they're ones from a tough time in which their re weigh just the amount that they took home once they counted for the expenses fell and fell and fell. so you can understand why they're very impatient to see wage heights happen faster and more towards the front. keep in mind, a lot of these people live in the seattle area where the most expensive regions in the us. the other thing was that benefits pension that you mentioned that traditional pension, it's a defined benefit. that means the company promises you that you take home x amount of dollars per year once he retire. but we did away with that in 2014, and they replace it with an investment based pension fund, which is much more precarious for workers and even don't like that. boeing says it's not going to bring the old one back because to expensive. many younger workers probably don't care. but clearly there is a portion of these workers that does really care and that might push and push for
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that. the question is, we don't know for how many people that's an actual deal break. now a, the strike is pretty tough on the company with lots of tens of millions of dollars per day. what, what's gonna happen next? it's hard to say we know that boeing is burning cash right now. they are burning it left and right. they need to sell to deliver planes, frankly, to make money. and when they're workers on stripe, they're not going to deliver planes either to commercial airlines or to military's . so they're looking at cost savings. they're going to have to borrow a lot more. they're going to have to sell a lot more shares. that's going to change their business operations down the line, so we don't know exactly what's going to happen. we know there's going to be streamlining plans, cost cuts, and the positions will probably be cut. the companies said so far that's going to be about 10 percent of all positions. and i believe it's about $17000.00 positions is what you're looking at. so this is going to have serious consequences down the line. and that's even before you factor in the costs that are going to come with a new contract for labor. whenever something does finally happen. a boy also has
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a new c o. and a he announced a fundamental cultural cultural change. what does that mean? what effect? yeah, i mean the things that kelly or voters are saying is exactly what you would expect someone in his position to step to say, you know, boeing is, is really just a place on fire and a has been and he says that, you know, he wants to see the company more present in the whole production chain, from design down to the factory floor. but that also makes you wonder, where was boeing in the 1st place? where has it been over this time? and what does that mean going forward? when many managers have been working in the style for so long, you know, or bridge says that this is a large ship. essentially this company is it's going to take time to turn around. but what's clear with the strike right now is that he's not the only captain of it . and this, this union is going to decide. and when you have such a division between union and management, 64 percent. and this is after the union president said that he thought that they would accept this deal, whether he thought that the vote would at least be close. it wasn't 64 percent. so
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the question is, where does it go from now? and that's something that we're all gonna be watching. student is dw business. thank you very much, steven. it's been almost 3 months since bangladesh, former prime minister, say casino, resigned and fled the country following weeks of mos demonstrations led by students . many of them described as seen as rulers autocratic, following, also some in bangladesh creative seen feeling palate to make use of that freedom again. i think that it's in political, sat, top political cartoons like these. we have nowhere to be seen in bung with this main is to media of would spend minutes to share cutting now was stealing fall or cartoon is committed to hawks is he and his colleagues loads please defend from the big thing top political leaders, duty and costing us 15, you know, 10, you know, i know the embargo, but very well it was
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a kind of legal embargo on drawing political cartoons if you to visit with somebody and they give emissions under the digital security act, which looks on as the cyber security act, typically people it will say is we would be in danger if we drew something critical, it triggered the worst kind of censorship. what do we call? the self consensus shift? 100 soft. you take so costing us government utility and cost. what needs to have at a sit and prosecute at what there was, but then hung up late after the popular uprising in august. menia this there in 50 amplewood into excess size. the beauty of freedom. we see that some of the clubs didn't pull it up. i can be, we saw about 500 cartoons drawn and 15 to 20 days before the night board was direct santoria. and it was not meant to work out there have been calling for that. if we have wanted to write the history of political cartoons, it would be a significant chapter. we significant that that hold off a chris freedom in bangladesh has declined in recent years. the organization
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jupiter. so we build border design fee, 160 people out of 180 countries in its 2024 was press freedom in dick's analysts say a bung with issued just at the beginning of its efforts to improve press freedom for press freedom, there needs to be certain reforms a to of the digital secuity after cyber security at most of the various laws that define what does defamation and sedition and things like that what, what constitutes going against the constitution? what constitutes going against the, for the constitution, all of these things are criminal offenses and the 5 to the general. so anyone writing even dressing on social media? so coming out of that would mean these laws actually need to change. may have the whole cast board for the distinctive last to be the field that's under consideration. we bought of this new and preowned government. now do you bring them
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germany install? so one of shots is heading to india with members office cabinets that holds towards end of strengthening ties between your biggest economy and the world's most populous nation. and increasing number of young people from india already coming to study in germany. on i am ready for germany. gee, and her friends are looking for warm clothes. she's expecting to experience sub 0 temperatures for the 1st time soon, then audio, so the, so lots of good that lots of sweat goes on. my dad's the suicide. it's ideas are 7 lives of fluids. the 21 year old, this moving to germany to do masters and user experience design. fields that focuses on making apps easier to use. she hopes that studying in germany, you will give her better opportunities later on in the highly competitive indian
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job market. so many has a great reputation for education. they have great, quite a deal so, so, so, so universities are available now and another, the many thousands who had their heart set on studying. and germany is jacob, the budding engineer from delhi has been doing his master's in germany for a year now at the university of chi bag, small town inception, as well as the 1st of all studying in gemini is no, that's expensive. the 2nd light gemini, is the best country and automotive engineering. so that's why i wanted to work in the field in production engineering. and in the developments of the automotive industry. so you can have this. that's why i chose gemini on fryeburg by megan said jacob, welcoming the new freshman like him. they only have to pay 94 year olds and semester fees at the state university. it can cost more in larger german cities. but an
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india tuition fees can be up to $10000.00 bureaus per semester. this is another reason why the number of indian students has increased fivefold in the last 10 years. jacob says his only problem is that compared to his hometown of delhi, the bus doesn't come nearly as frequently imply bag a. g. a had a different concern before her move. the rise of the far right. an anti immigration alternative for germany party, which has also attracted attention in india. i'm going the positive of the situation to seems very unstable. so big lot about unbiased hood and racism that i might have. the jacob says he has not yet experienced a new racism. but he says it's easier to settle if you learn the german language to the science asa waits easier when we speak german with people and said they are so friendly in front of this. we can also speak english,
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conflicts, the senior american diplomats fly back into the middle east promising to stand by 11. and even if the ally, israel continues massive astride some bay route and other parts of the country, it doesn't look like a for me, that's a piece of my gift today. those who give up easily on that prospect sees you off the valence former justice minister and peace negotiator. it is right conflict the next on dw, last month of the 3rd, right?
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the russian army advanced 100 thousands of concentration camp prisoners workforce to go on to the death marches. what did the nazis want to achieve during this final chapter? these lesser known historical documents shouldn't new light on the answer. in 45 minutes on d w the think the o just twice think ahead or was outside the box on your but always remember to think for yourself. we all had to sign was incredibly like,
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this is a driving you with free information. dw made for mind. senior american diplomats fly back into the middle east, promising to stand by 11. and even if the ally, israel continues massive strikes on a route and other parts of the country, it doesn't look like a formula for peace. but my guess today doesn't give up easily on that prospect is you'll see valence former justice minister and peace negotiations in israel. i believe that there is a chance that after such a will when people understand that managing that they, the conflict is your child of these and impossible. knowing more people will tend to go for the appropriate.
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