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tv   [untitled]    December 6, 2024 2:00am-2:30am CET

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and certainly our services be our guest at frankfurt and bought cd managed by from bought the this is dw news live from berlin manual am i called slammed the opposition for toppling the government. the french president that uses the political extremes of working together to cause chaos actually brought down his prime minister and a no confidence vote. also coming up, syrian insurgents enter, hama, after pushing out government forces, pressure mounts on president, also out as rebels rapidly sees territory the i'm all me and use of welcome president of france and manuel nicole has given
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a defiant television address the day after his prime minister lost a historic no confidence vote. nicole said he would appoint a new premier within days following the resignation of me, shut about me, but gave no hints as to who it might be called blamed his opponents on the far right and the far left for the defeat. choosing them, choosing disorder over cooperation to pass a budget. i call also rejected calls the step down before his term ends in 2027. you should corresponded liza louie is following the developments in paris. we asked her about the claims from some very unhappy french that the country is becoming ungovernable. what it is, it's it, it is incoming of a right now. but the question is, it change that france does not have a culture history of correlation, a governments, but my call it tonight that we need to change the basic needs a different need to get a grip that different possibilities on the table. for example, it could be
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a socialist president, it could be, it's a for a social is prime minister, a prime minister from the green party, or from a centrist policy. that would either corporate with other moderate policies directly. or that that would, that would be some kind of no aggression talked between the prime minister party and other policies that would actually, you know, support the governments if so if you read lines were not crossed, this is what font is aiming for. what the president in monro at fault is aiming for once for this country, canada chief, but we will see over the coming months to syria. now we're rebel forces have captured the city of hama. it's a major victory for the coalition of anti government forces, as they advance rapidly across the country. the loss of hama is a massive blow to president. bush are all sought. after almost 14 years of civil war opposition fighters into the city and city of hama after 3
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days of intense fighting. the groups lead to size the here to clean up a 40 year old roomed. the city anatomy says it's redeployed, its forces from the city to the outskirts in order to protect civilian lives. it's another blow to president bush out on a side, hama is one of the c major cities outside the capital to remain on the full government to control throughout the nearly 14 years of serious civil war. its capture comes just days of to is the mr. rebels rest state to control over that part of the country. second city, some government forces, many tvs. the display civilians are overjoyed at being able to return to the city of to more than a decade away. as part of how that the joy is indescribable words
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cannot describe how happy we are. it's such an incredible feeling. after all this time we returned to a level can you notice sent a level and walk through it, streets the street. so we could never forget into the head, we have a semblance of normality is returned to the streets since the rebels take over bucks that have been report shortages of essential goods and services and trash piling up in the street to meet the i'm searching for the south, how much is strategically located in central sylvia? it's seen as crucial for assets forces to hold, to retain control of the capital, damascus. it's capture has some people in the capital concerned. definitely. everybody is scared of the huffman atmospheres. tents and people are worried. everyone is concerned, we did not expect this to happen, but we have focus is the situation stabilizes shuttle and returns to the way it was,
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and better off to capture a la carte, and how much the rebel offensively set to continue to be in search and say they're ready to head south, the homes, the country's 3rd largest city, and the next may just stop on the march to damascus. and to the country of georgia where after a week of anti government protests, the prime minister is threatening to eliminate the political opposition. directly. couple of kids, they accuse protesters of what he called liberal fascism, which echoes language often used by russia. demonstrators have begun a 2nd straight week of protests over the government's decision. to the suspend talks on joining the european union and the capital to believe see, the government's response has been increasingly violent. doable use, maria cut the mazda reports, a violence on the streets of police. the police tried to suppress and type government protests which have been going on for
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a week. now. right, scripts have counted more than 250 people injured sofa. duck colors really is a literary translator. he was at the protest, boseman. they grabbed me, they searched to beat me and then they directed me to the police, ben and they continued to beat me there. besides the police for using a well go online about demonstrators being radicals, they repeating the football game though the georgian dreams like that, we want wired like against russia. how tacitus collapse and display the faces of those they say, have also been beaten by the police in the last few days. all sorts of people have been hard, including local gentlemen. and here you can see the rest of me because bar on you, one of the opposition leaders, members of his potties say he was between unconscious and detained on wednesday, george and prime minister erotic about. he's a thank the police for their work,
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inviting opposition, party offices, as well as what they've been doing on the streets. governance, the government, feel shame, what are they doing? so i propose you put the chicago to the stomach. there's no reason for the civil sondra, this is try me. so is that it's total them is the, is it, the government is against the use. you guys have the 36 with capital by the government is not reacting to people's voices sheet. a job, a using violence to silence the use and reason. the leg georgians a little bit more is it on the cardboard, is not many lectures and students are on stride, but not everyone byzantine below, as you progress and live on gig. initially, suppose they've link potty to suggest some demonstrates as i agitating for revolution, like ukraine in 2014, i think that are trial to create. it's kind of, it's been, you see, sort of my then there are over since the students doing by this idea that the georgia 0 pay and policy is canceled. and we should,
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we should set as joey opium feature. there are also low those. so students, so a professional ocean was young people take time out from the cold, in a church, close to the parliament, where the main demonstrations are, how every 4 months and the prayer before returning to the coast outside the report from dw is maria called to mazda earlier we asked her whether the protesters have a long term plan. well, i think that's the problem. nobody knows how this protests may end up as people is here. so go, no, they say that we don't have any, any other options, any other truths within only takes of the streets, we can only sort of demand what and what they're demanding that demanding new elections. because many people here say that the capacity selections one week to buy their own parties. and the 2nd demand is to return to the european top. many
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a tell me that they don't want the lucian 90 say that we want peaceful sort of the peaceful demonstrations to continue on to pressure on the government for to is the government is ready to bank zone. we don't see any signs uh, as of now and now some other stories making headlines around the world. iceland, outgoing government has granite permits, the 2 willing companies until 2029 animal rights activists condemn the decision that will allow the killing of around $400.00 wales each year. iceland, norway, in japan, are the only countries that allow commercial wailing after many species were hunted to the brink of extinction. in the 19 sixty's as an earthquake off the us west coast triggered as tanami warning and the states of california and oregon roads were card with traffic. is people coming to free the the typically inland rather than magnitude 7, quake struck in the pacific ocean about 70 kilometers off the coast of northern california. the sonoma warning was withdrawn after about an hour.
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well, after years of negotiations, a massive trade agreement between you and the south american miracle store block appears close to the finish line. you commission present worth of the fund. the lying arrived in oregon. why this week for final talks, the deal would create a huge new trans atlantic market. but there have been objections in the u, especially from farmers. the trade agreement has always been controversial in europe, and especially in france. french farmers have been protesting for weeks, fearing they could be overrun and under cut, by accurate cultural imports from a south america. if the american sword deal were to be inactive. france of course, cannot single handedly hold the deal. but now poland has also said it won't sign the current draft that pursue a comprises argentina, olivia, brazil, park. why and oral quite mentors. we have us. membership is currently suspended.
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the blocks join to cannot make products, since it's 3 trillion us dollars. the 27 countries into european union at up to 18 trillion, altogether the macro, see what the, what impact 770000000 people o. d u and the south american block has been talking for a quarter century. meanwhile, china has the mass of increased its own trait with macro sewer. now the pressure is on the youtube finally, at the situation. the successor, baited as donald trump will become us president, and the units of strength and its own partnerships in the face of blooming us terrace. the current draft of the you mark a sore dio, calls for 90 percent of terrace between the 2 sides to be dropped. that would include terrorists and agriculture products like meat and story, but also car parts that are being sent to the you from south america. as well as cars machines and chemicals being sold from the you into
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a mac or sewer is still among the voices protesting the deal, or environmental as they warn themselves, america's industry, which is not generally seen a sustainable and puts prophets over the protection of the rain forest could be fired up and to talk more about this, i'm joined in the studio by the w porter jeworski's there. are you reported from south america for us? can you tell us there's a lot of countries involved in this? this is massive economies. so what is that stage here? i think what is really important here to begin with is that if this deal finally will be rectified, we're talking about one of the biggest free trade zones, creates it. that would cover my kids of almost 10 percent of the world's population . so this, this message, if we look now at the benefits that would have for the different regions. let's start with the macros 4 countries. so what we see if they could import export meats and grain and imported into the year with like lower trade barriers. something that
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has been criticized that we just had and we put from your pin farmers because they say that cannot compete with the prices because of low enough environmental standards. so if we look now at all the criticism aside from the but if we look at what is that he actually gave me from it or could be gaining from it. we do have 3 industries that what kind of automobile industry, it's the kind of car industry and that's the fall of my industry. but above all, it is important to notice that for the what is really at stake is to access to overall materials. that would be crucial for the green energy transition like lithium, that is used in the creation of electric call activities. and audrey and tina is the 3rd a holes, the 3rd largest reserves of the world. so this comes at a time when president trump is coming back into the white house in the us. and she's taking a very different approach from imposing parents on or threatening terrace on
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a lot of countries. and it's, that's basically the opposite of what you is trying to achieve here. right? absolutely. and it's exactly trumps protectionism on the one hand. and then china looming trade will fit you. and the other hand, that is the kind of pushing towards the move or kind of creates a certain urgency now to finally seal this deal of to 25 years into making. so this is one thing, but then on the other hand, also south america, a, china's role in south america is really important to you. because we do see that china is south american speakers trading partner. and we see that chinese firms are constantly in for the chinese firms are constantly growing on the continent so that even experts saying that if the union does not feel this deal, now it would push south america close to china when it comes to trade. okay, well joe ski sir dw reporter, thanks for talking with and that's it. you're up to date. you're
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watching dw news. stay with us for a documentary on living with h i v in ireland. i'm on the niece of stay with the can you see is what old car tires have to do with the production? here's a hands on the really indeed the snow on youtube. so this is our very 1st episode of our very 1st season on our very own cause cast.
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yes. i've had jobs. got another right, different i, it's a hard task for pause people and the people who love us. and i just so delighted to be here with the legendary b u z. we now moved around the law. they're all, my god, i'm here with drag icon data. so i'm like, what's the rushing out, what, what you want to get it a post by post? i think more than anything. what i wanted was to be able to talk with other people who are living with h i b and anybody else who's interested come on joining kiki, but really just to meet each other, share our stories together and hopefully having people come to us to talk to us and we'll just slowly start to a road all of this. god damn stigma. s no, i a 100 percent. agree with it. that's changed narrative if it was likely relate to in this country, but also making a hey, chevy orland shane. free like
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a small quest, what will get there? i have problem. we want to hear from you. we want you to get in touch with us. and we want to expand the survey so that we can include everybody and just feel a real sense of solidarity. anyway, manually, you are happy to talk to us, we will be thrilled to share your story and talk to them. i don't have any expectations or any women coming out about there who are the data to help to get the movement kickstart. and i was actually called up on that and i'm so happy i was because when i was doing all my public speaking, i'm like, i never really talked too much about what you're saying. but i think we can find women in this country who would be reading quite a bit. their status on someone's like, are we talking pressure under woman? and then i change them twice. that to why is it that women feel the art into such an unsafe place? to come in with that, your status in this country, like what a we do and upfront and then we should be cognizant about. it's not them, it's society. people have to be defiant and they have to be brain because there's some people don't cite this as far as i'm going to do that. whatever happens. i
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mean, the vast majority of women that i would know would say it's their children, the reasons why they don't share, they're not willing to come on on kind of star and be interviewed in the paper with their photograph. it's also interesting how as people who become had to be positive were always so concerned about our parents amendment to find out if she's on the other foot 2 and parents who become heads have the positive that they're, they're most scared and trying to protect their children. as holding the secret, as we all know, and we talk to all the time, can be the most powerful thing in terms of our mental health anxiety and so on. so far, the amount on know here's how many children don't hear. you know yourself let louder since i've been here, i come over here to get a bit of privacy. you know, one that the kids are like to hear everything even when you think they're not, they're taking something in to have the kid on it. okay. and so they're always
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listening. i have to go outside now don't tell people normally. but i mean, i have told some members, definitely family. my sister didn't take it great. actually. she's 2 years older than me and she's always been like a role model kind of thing. but i don't now i triggered sometimes i remember she got tested about 7 times, you know, like after being with me she stay in the house that needs they are pulling the child over the pillow, that kind of thing. so she, that me, what was her now? she told around me sometimes your story just isn't 0. unfortunately. now who i was never really said anything. that's what it's like and replaces anyway . he just buried at the back kind of thing. the concern for me is always the
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kids like, i mean, what are we children in the world to me? if i wasn't a parent, i could be more open. if i hadn't got that to think of a well, i could do things differently. and you know, it was one of the 1st concerns i have when i found do, can i have another baby? and i was such a relief di codes. i would have really struggled this guy had been taken away from me. but you do notice tanks. small differences and the way that you are treat is maybe when i finally had my youngest tanksley, everything went great. name is gorgeous. from house to the nurses in the hospital. put me in a single room way down the hallway so far away from everybody think they were scared of me or something. afterwards that made me angry and things like that. i sleep. experiences like that to to give you
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this long company for friendship. someone else who understands the situation that you're in piece and he actually went to one of the support sessions at a workshop source of hanging out how time i walked into the lobby and straight away i saw a gas and beheld town where i'm from this nicest like tiny, tiny, little village. nice. all right, nice. that's the students here. look this problem here. a woman that i know is here . and he said no, she isn't. because she saw you and she's gone. and i knew there was only one reason why she was there and only one reason why she around so every time i go to the hospital or to any support group, i know there's
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a chance i can see somebody know they're not safe space then she can feel so threatening. i see that women sometimes now in this way from the car. but that's it. yeah. the page i vs, actually given quite a lot to be grateful for to be thankful her i have this like new perspective and like i never thought it was good but i felt stuck although i could identify what things i felt like how do i move on from here i clicked with me, so i probably like this one to be that person to i wish i was there and i was diagnosed. right. so i think the,
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i didn't see myself as an advocate for an active this. but i didn't realize who face of secrecy once in a positive community to find but so many people, different rates are just hairs of us with major in our two's i'll be gone through really, really nice that we weren't living in academic. okay, tennessee or some type of demick of silence, the air and everybody's and you're all very welcome to another episode of the show. i hope you enjoy whatever it is. it's going to happen here over the next hour or so to get things started as a hand you over to our beautiful m c feeding. we want to donate mr. frank cook.
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tell me our desk is, robbie lauder down there at the t shirts. well, i thought would be a good conversation star, i just need to read. um yeah, to be honest, i haven't a clue. was going to where it should have, you know, i had this hanging up and i only wherever, when i give talks rooms living when he j b. okay. and i was like, i'm going to be a national tv. no, there's no big audience going out where today. i found it very hard for me to talk about the stigma of orders and do them justice and to keep the unlimited and like a huge pressure on me because i just wanted to right by everyone. i want to cover all ground simplicity. i cannot represent every single person's story. page of the effects is all very differently. let's start there. let's start with
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being h i v and what that means h ever rates have never been higher in ireland coming sunday or today we got around 500 new diagnosis every year. but one of the highest in your actually per rate of diagnosis was active education. the complete lack of education around teacher to people think age as he is gone, is that the thing to think is kind of one of them diseases of the last century and we don't to worry about it anymore. so absolutely and look, basically it's a virus that once it gets it, it's, it's in your same and it's in your version of fluid and it just needs to get into your blood. it doesn't matter who you are. once it gets into your blood, you have hate you, have you done? why am i always put in my trauma in front of everyone, so they can learn more about each ivy so they can treat me but humanity. why we always to educators? why did you want to capitalize on our pain? so some people can be like to poor parents and we shouldn't treat people that way.
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when it's only us doing the job. where's the education scale? where is our community bucking us off? it's nowhere your seaman is dangerous. oh no. this is the good news. okay, so i've been holding the pinnacle the other day. might be charging effects. no one morris, my partner, 7 years. no. it doesn't affect him. if i take my pill every day to keep me safe on him, of course you can tell me so we could have sex. no, i knew a knock age ivy to know it. i mean, we go sex now and you, you probably wouldn't notice if your assumptions very know that we need to be there. if we're going to change or we can complain about stigma, all we not only do need help, we need help from the community. it shouldn't be on an us or stuck in this. a cycle of shame and silence. we need to break out of the
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ice. it was the last thing they tested for my bill is wherever open down my bills are. hey, why? i reckon i'd had a long time. i'd had it for years for sure. and that's very frightening. and it was for me anyway, because i'm not allowed to have a child who is nearly an adults. i have a child who is married chrome. my daughter obviously knows about what to do, what she doesn't know about me. it's on my mind all the time. however, one of my child has had a turn life rain or feel like center or sore throat, even. i kind of stopped myself. how strongly self in painting constantly self. maurice could be that could it be that
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the i mean would you ever say to h i v test i asked i talked to she knows she can reopen my mother. she knows that i what i do if you know she can tell me anything, i want to be open the whole shift. yes. i would. she says the would you like to do it for you? they have testing. i could. okay. if you wanted to she says yes, she says yes, it's happening. all of a sudden my was racing. i took the test and i looked and i just started crying, screaming, crying,
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i think we just thought that and she had it. so she also started crying and to and are you ok? and i said to you to know where i am at the moment, i feel great. i think good by the later we talk for hours pretender i think what i think carrying here feels the loneliness that comes to orient the.

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