tv DW News Africa Deutsche Welle December 19, 2024 6:30pm-7:01pm CET
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[000:00:00;00] the business date of the news i forgot coming up on the program after nearly 2 years of fighting. why is there no end in sight of the warrens about it's being described as the worst humanitarian crisis in the world. thousands of people have been killed and 1000000 small have been displaced, will take you to the front line of a 5 to 500 meters into this direction as where they are as f gunshots right now. and for many of his supports as gun this presidents he liked john my how much is his country's political save? yeah. in times of trouble. we speak for the man himself,
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the hello the i, i'm eddie mike, a junior and you are welcome to the program. now to offering this yeah, we reported on the conflict incident, but it appears in wasn't enough. she has a single headline from not the fullest, besieged capital, alpha shop, 10 dead and 21 that after selling of the cities hospital this week, the half of the conflict is the relented. spots offer control of the country between this is denise army and the rapids. the 4th forces, like this attack on an iris, up controlled area. the town market income, the north before the war has cost tens of thousands of lives. and 11000000 people displaced in 26000000 facing mass foundation. this is denise army made. visa ends gains and you had a capital how to get up the news. after correspondence,
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mario meta was imbedded with them and got re access to the frontline of this for or so this branch has to be the front line just a few weeks ago. or as f snipers would have shot anyone trying to process. but since the army we gain control of it saves to passing, twisted cars, we crossing over to no talk to him, also called buffy. on the other side of the bridge, we are embedded with the city's army. that means we get to see what they want us to see. it took months of fields fighting to clear this road and to push out the power of military rep that support forces for iris f. it is still listed with unexploded devices. most people have fled south latino was over in the army, wants to show us how they're fighting the paramilitary hours this st by street house by house for security reasons. we're not allowed to disclose the kernels identity 6
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months of leaving this house. a lot of the, one of them are going thousands. it says things hang on, we're on all of this place. how often do you get attacked from ours as 2 to 3 times and one day? if i have them on the street, another street, everything, all of the day, we are going to them. they are on one or 2 status. when do we come past it? they are coming back again, and how long would it have? do you think to push them out completely? i don't think booth a level 5 of your ones is nothing more than that. but i'm gonna, i'm gonna need you to explore iris s positions. we're getting closer to the front line. so there's a,
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there's bullets. what i was, this one is just we move on to stacks, assign it to that the sewage is used for protection until we reach a position of the cities on me. but i was like, oh, okay, so this is the ups are based on point from the southern is army, the loss of probation point and 500 meters into this direction is where they are as f as in gunshots right now. quick quick quick, let me start to select the thing is, is that the link there's an eye for that is that that is on joining us. how long killed was a lot of the 5 or clean thing was this night, was because of that, it's all of us on
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a lot of an estimate suggest up to a 150000 people has been killed. and this will, there's been no systematic recording because of the ongoing fighting. it could be many more than that of the iris s has been accused of being responsible for ethnic cleansing, rape mass killings, and other atrocities. and so don's army has been accused of indiscriminate attacks on civilians and to 9 food aid effectively using starvation as a weapon to for general abraham job. it denies that national man, no honest fellows, all the rules on committing and by geneva rules. this is a way to organize um, you know, more than one handed theater experience. so kind of comments of things. the un and rights groups say both sides the iris s and the cities um forces have committed grace, human rights violations. that could amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity
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. from all of this, let spring in dahlia abdel millennium sit on the east for them to go out our list and come and data. now, based in cairo, hello, and welcome back to the program dahlia and sit down. as i please you still call home, but it's far from the home. you once knew. how would you describe the current situation on the ground? um, unfortunately, i wish i could say that we have some positive views that are coming out of sudan. but every day the reports that are coming out just paint the most bleakest of pictures, like the latest reports from the international rescue committee. it's classified so done as the worst humanitarian crisis in the world right now. and yet, the attention, or, you know, given to sit down really though, is so low and the viewers shift media, media, media, attention to it is just incredible. and you know,
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when more than half of the populations, that is a risk of humanitarian, you know, needs, humanitarian aids. and more than half of the population is facing acute malnourishment and hunger. that's 25000000, which is the equivalent of 3 or 4 countries population. and the number of displays has now had 14000000, you know, even those who are displaced internally, some people have been displaced more than 3 times in their life, right? in the past year it was. and so the situation is getting worse, and then there was another report just recently released by the human rights watch about the wide, wide scale rate violations by, perpetrated by the rapids support forces on women and girls in community fun. and even some of them being held in like 6 slave environments. so it's just horace . there is nothing positive to come up to done in regards to human. it's area inside. right?
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and that's the mostly it's side when it comes to this war in my opinion. and not enough attention is being given to it. right. and now introducing you. i said it's good to have you on the program again because i remember speaking to you around this time last year you mentioned the difficult conditions of situation. your family and friends were in back then. how are they doing now? or? i don't have much family left and so then those who could have left, especially, i mean, i come see cartoon. and we have no one left in cartoon. and it's a very sad state of affairs. oh, we still have friends and colleagues in sudan and they're spread out throughout the country. but when it comes to my direct relatives, we have no one left. i mean it's 5 generations of my father's family completely. no longer in the country,
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and none of us know when or if we can ever go back. and that's the most sobering thought that hits all of us. rightfully so, you've been very, very vocal about the ongoing conflict to you once wrote this on x, formerly twitter and i quote, talking about saddam is like yelling into the void. doesn't matter how many rapes must, like as all killings are reported, only a handful of listening how frustrated you that the conflicts has gone on for so long without no end in sight. frustrating does even convey how i feel. because it's not just talking into the void, it's like in the echo chamber where a select few, just listen to what you say. and we're all in agreement that those are hands are type. there's only so much we can do when policy dictates how certain states can react when policy dictates how agencies like the united nations taking so long to
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discuss done in the security council i, when they actually finally do it becomes like a tug of war. and so them is a tug of war between certain states and others. i'm talking about the recent vito by russia for the humanitarian resolution that was put forward by the knights of the kingdom and sierra leone. so it's, as we just, you know, we take, we take the defeats or we take the loss and we just gather ourselves in this. but i'm, when i say we, i'm talking about us is social is those were activist, so to speak in civic society. we just have to, you know, just get back to the start all over again. you know, we start from every, we take one step forward. we're forced to take 10 steps back and we have to start all over again. and it gets tiring. it gets mentally exhausting. as well, but what else can we do? i mean,
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we really have no options and there's not much push to find it to bring it to an end. right? i mean, the frustration is, can fall to see you describe the 2 sides of the wall are safe and as a f, as war fast the generals, what really do believe is driving the prolonging of this conflict? i've always said the only way this war could possibly end is by the victory of one side over the other. and it every day that this war drugs only becomes more clear because they show no initiative for either of them to commit to any of the discussions or any of the tops or the summit meetings that have been held. and if one side shows up, the other one doesn't show up. and even if they do agree, you know it's, it's words are meaningless because they can promise and they will say it. but they don't actively do it. i mean, the r s a is a signatory to the jet,
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the declaration which is about the protection of civilians. you have the worst perpetrators of violations against this isn't the civilians are the, are a set. it is the rest of that is occupying our homes. is this the rest of those committing sexual crimes? it is the arse of that is forcibly conscripting boys to the army. it is the r a stuff that is massacring, so the knees and yet they're not being cold out. they are not being penalized or not being sanctioned us. and so we, you, we get, so these 2 armies, these 2 generals, you know, they're not being, they, they, there's been no, you know, accountability and that's of accountability. gives them the believe the feeling that they are uncomfortable and that they could continue doing what they want to do . and right that's, that's the case. at the moment. right? nadia abdullah monday. i'm so the east political analyst and commentator. thank you
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. thank you. thank you for having me. gunners, new presidents isn't new to the job. john jermanti bahama, let his country from 2012 to 2017. and his return to office comes with a clear margin of victory. the one with nearly 57 percent of the votes against his rival, the current vice president, hamilton bonia. i don't know how much will be sworn in any next year, already appointed on unsafe for russian task force. one of his main company promises disliked the leasing office of forces. he takes charge of the country, not fees as a host of challenges, p among them. fostering economic recovery after the worst price is going to generation high inflation. and that's the 5 use unemployment cost of living prices and got us in on recently unstable region. all foxes is i've been station f address
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address. joining me is gun espresso. then select joan germonti my home. i had to say thanks for making that time. congratulations on the historic and fat take victory. that ends up giving you a 2nd chance to become president. how does that make you feel? well, it just makes me feel the weight of responsibility. and i'm looking at the faces of the young people. i. so i don't know that riley's and high expectation to have in the government use being. ready feeling and i said it's those prepaids, so give it my best so that i can turn this country around and creates a better future for young people as well. it resets and gonna we need to reset so that we can create that a better environment for young people to try and create enough opportunity for them
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to be able to realize their full potential. right, and that's interesting. you've mentioned that word again reset because that's what you have pledged to do. what exactly do you mean by reset? got a, a m, you get to a place where your a telephone or your computer program becomes corrected. and if he is this, you need to research so that we improve on efficiency and governance. and one of the things we need to do is to carry through their clusters review. that's to all of that this government came into place that many issues that we need to deal with in our house is not governance. and also it's in a white glove. this activity is actually one of the 1st things we'll do would be to take the whole of your customers. i read to you again and see how we construct that
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things so that we have a more dynamic constitution going forward. aside from that, we need to take the fight that goes corruption and waste to a new level. and so we improve our goodness expense so that we're not having so many a so much waste as a result of corruption and waste. one of the key things, what i'm looking at is that how much i spend that money spent authority so that i get an answer. you know, what there's, i mean, i screwed it up, that'd be, have a way that they're going into that things. that's the near the size of order. definitely power though, because some is making a profit outs of it. we set a new set of accountability in governance. it'd be with one of the 7 government. they must be prepared to our code to the public for the service. right, right. you've, you've touched a lot on the economy,
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which obviously is kindly the biggest issue. if you talk to that have guardians, you know, they are feeling the pinch. which leads me to this because you've talked about implementing a 24 hour economy. what does that look like and how do you hope to achieve that? why don't believe that so you will understand why the far away economy is that it's not going to be the 1st to implement of 24 hour economy. that's about cultures. that's how that's really far away. and that means a complex baltic services that covers the private sector. and it covers uh that sits in minutes and service industry. and so again, give incentives to people who kind of like the hours increase production and be able to take on more employees, especially for a country like ours, where we have a huge population of more than 60 percent. and so we need to do the things that will make sure that all those units useful went up for them. and so we're going to
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give the incentives, we're going to roll out that policy as well. the problem is, and i want 20 day plan by the end of $1.00 to $2.00 days without the full comprehensive, 24 hour policy, which will incentive prizes. the private sector to wait long uh, was to increase the productivity, take advantage of their advertising. hopefully it's a featured area to watch spots into the trunk of drugs. take advantage of our existence of what agreements take advantage of arguments with a real down union. so that we can increase productivity, unexplored a good coverage for the investors to come instead of in the, you know, that europe and other parts of the world as aging population. so labor is becoming a problem and become the expensive means to track those investors to bring those businesses yet and read them 24 hours to ship a day so that more young people in gather, couldn't get what to do. that is what is all about. so my next question to you, mister president,
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will be knowing all about your problem is guardians now knowing ordered some interesting phase. again, mazing corruption issues and all of that. and you want and i'll stump it out when you, you know, from your next administration. what is it that you've learned from your previous administration that you want to do differently this time around? well, one of the things we focused on in the previous administration was to put back the infrastructure. well, if you would just start the district in terms of rules, once i electricity, healthcare and i mean just name it. and so one of our focus is supposed to put the infrastructure back, but also believing that in invested in infrastructure, you stimulate the economy. and it includes in that kind of be great jobs as well. yes, we didn't change more than 300000 jobs. and the construction is like that under construction sector. paid out probably the whole of the economic value chain,
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the one that i think we would focus on and look at in this decision is to have issues to do with live levels and so well continue on investments in infrastructure. drew. the big push that we advocate since was a bit to look at issues that affect the lab labels in the sense so that they get the means in the sense of invest in infant tech. a girl invested in the pharmaceutical industry investing in agricultural processing button. james, that is most important. and so yes, we're going to look at it and construct a as a drive auto group. but we're also going to look at the logic picture of live levels, so that we're going to create more jobs and all those other sectors. let's switch things had been in recent years. that's been a number of military to go best in some african countries. we've been talking about
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booking of iso and he's at marty. how kind of regional but he's like echo asked respond to that. i'm talking to someone who said as they had a big glass at some point yeah, in my pos joe, that was, we did have prizes like this. and we cannot, has that if you remember, there was this of a lot of this that for the present come powers at times to extend his standing office. and so it does do cool. but if you remember, we had the, the defendant, the, for all the way, the new couple pets or states kind of it. we always have that sort of sanctions. but you don't go ahead and implement. you keep that as a state and the cutoffs, you know, that's it carries them to agree on expenses and program and eventually come back to see me in that room. and so i don't think that it was use the glasses to try and
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get them back into the fold company as should i say a rest of me that i knew the day give up on my direct sir? i would give the space to echo us to see how we can speed to our 3, how the brother, brother the countries and see how i can draw them back to the deputy legal problem to believe that was the most important thing that and i think that with us, jane that there. right, right. i mean, as you say, you know, finance. that's what am i doing president, that's an issue as trying to do it. he said, we said he's trying to use diplomacy to try to get those 3 countries back on track . so we'll have to wait and see how that goes about. are you concerned that, you know, i'm going to say exactly right. so it's gonna more at risk because of the instability for it. and also you think this, we're, we're address. yeah. if you look at it on that list i sent most. yeah, i got
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a is i, as, as, as, as glad data. and so we need to wait as quickly as possible. there's an advocate program that saves that we don't need, but as pauses on fire, you to help him to questions. otherwise we're going to advanced down his house. it just went to your house. and so we need to give looking at 5. so my, the and the shareholders supports they need to do with this crisis. otherwise it definitely would spread and coming to barcode already in cash is involved in the i'm show you, you've heard about that. and so it doesn't matter. and so we need to be very proactive or right, right. some of that, some reports, i mean, so just and as been in cations and in not the impact of gone out where you're from . but i guess your, your whole point is that you guys are risk us, you see yourself and we have to do all that. we kind of to, you know,
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prevent that situation and use unemployment remains high. and studies suggest that is fueled in violence, extremism, and radicalization, especially in the law of how do you plan to tackle that? well, i don't think that's gonna yet has reached that stage. but it is a, it's a, it's a warranty. and windows, uh, the thing is that to create for teenagers, for our young people, then we can have, you know, for that kind of situation on our hands. is it as the as a big difference in terms of the presence of other states and the better spread of the develop based across the country that some of our neighbors actually got a is a business or residence. but we cannot take that for granted. bingo,
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head of youth unemployment. and we do have who i cannot leave as far as, as we should to give the private sector opportunity to create jobs that we're going to end up with that kind of situation. and that is why it's a matter agency that we stop lies the economy as quickly as possible. open up a business again, invite for an direct investment, set up the factories, the excellent, the funds provide incentives to finalize and provide a group as examples so that we're able to create the ball for to meet people young people. and so it's a, it's an emergency that have your government to deal with and make amends. the governments in that hiring we, when did in case that and loyal people, the police is definitely rules out pretty good speaking as possible. right. got as president elect john romani my hallmark. thank you very much for having a chat with me guardians, i've voted you back into bar that wish you all the best. i think it was a thank you very much. that's so,
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education. these interests to contribute their reputation of poverty and the promotion of sustainable develop the welcome to data over your news. here are top stories live from berlin. she's also a close ex husband, a sentence to of 20 years in prison. the woman at the center of a mass rape trial that has shocks the world, leaves courts think she still has hope for the future. also ahead on our show, ukraine's president of a lot of years a landscape joins e leaders and brussels. he says, european security guarantees will not be enough to protect to frank and that nato in the u. s. must be involved and fighting for the rights of women and minority
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