tv DW News Deutsche Welle January 17, 2025 7:00am-7:16am CET
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the, the we will not say the way, thoughts february full teams on d w the . this is dw news coming to live from berlin. these really prime minister says a deal has been reached to release hostages in gaza. benjamin netanyahu offices, israel security cabinet. we'll meet later today to vote on the ceasefire for hostages deal with a month. also coming up, hollywood loses an offbeat icon. american filmmaker and writers, david lynch does but the age of $78.00, the one terry martin, thanks for joining us. after
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a day of delay and accusations is real, security cabinet is now expected to meet labor to approve a ceasefire deal for garza prime minister benjamin netanyahu says the final details have now been ironed out after earlier, claiming a mazda backtracked on parts of the agreement. but it is really national security minister dom up and we're has threatened to resign from the coalition government if the deal is approved before it was really government must approve the agree before a truce can take effect as planned. on sunday, dw correspond a ton of kramer is in jerusalem, joins as though tanya were waiting for israel to formerly approve and ratify the deal. walk us through the process. what happens next? yeah, he's got a statement from the prime minister's office early, very early this morning. saying that the both sides have no agreed
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upon, you know, the entering out the latest details. and that the negotiating team to is really negotiating team is known its way back from doe ha to is, well that has been in the past day was a real crisis over this with the is really a prime minister claiming him, us for re negotiating some of the latest details, but also around the political crisis, hit internally in israel. now, while the crisis over these details said needed to be a set in this deal seems to have been sold. now the political crisis seems to be ongoing still, but what is happening right now is we are seeing is that of the time mr. has announced that he has a cold for the security cabinet, the smaller copying that to meet on a fridays or later today. i'll be expecting this to me, but then the next step would then be that this deal will be brought to the
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a wider cabinet in the government, a government here. so it's not yet clear if both of them will meet actually on today on friday before us about starts. have been some indication that this could only happen also on such as denied. i do not have the confirmation for that yet. so i'm coming. the commentators here in the is really me to have question that they said this could be all done today because the result of that would be that actually the, the implementation of the deal or the release of the 1st hostages of those all planned for sunday would then also be delayed. now i understand that the deal does have its opponents in the is really a government. how much leverage do those opponents of the deal have to me it, it was expected that as opposition to this agreement, but it became
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a real, you know, i would say political crisis here in the past 24 hours and we heard a the that is many due to those 2 of the far right ministers, the finance minister, minister bits of this much rich and the minister for national security to my ben via know it to my bank via has announced last night that he will resign. if this agreement will be a post and its current form, so he and his section will, are certainly be expecting him to resign from the government, but he doesn't have a loan. the numbers in the sense that he will bring down also the government with him. so we have to wait what a bit, so let smoke which will do it's expected that they will vote against us do. but this do, but the deal itself will still a go ahead. no. we also know that the opposition parties have already propose to a prime minister benjamin netanyahu, and they've done that again
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a late last night and said to him, you have a safety net. we need to go ahead with this deal. so they would be basically stepping in during that time, but also only for the time of this uh, you know, when this deal is being carried out. uh, we have to wait and see if other ministers would be hard to do some one. we could minister with said he might vote against his deal. you know what they are deciding . so this deal, you know, until this quote is passed through a at least on the is warranty side. we have to wait and see how this will develop. tanya, thank you. very much for now, our corresponding interest on tonya kramer as well. if the deal goes a, had a mouse would initially hand over $33.00 hostages in the coming weeks in exchange for israel freeing hundreds of palestinian prisoners. but head of the announcement, israel has stepped up airstrikes in gas,
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or the last run health industry says the by the killed, more than 80 palestinians mixed feelings among thousands celebrations at the news of a ceasefire. mix to doubt that it will happen and tinge with sadness. it everything that has been lost that trepidation is backed up by events. since the announcement is rarely ash dykes punctured to celebrate to remove taking the lives with them. the deal is supposed to come into force on sunday the on searching days ahead and making some here novice. now we must remain cautious. we were afraid that could be an even was not boston before i saw him anything of it the next few days could be even more difficult than the whole of the last year. i am in the middle of summer. we just hope the blood should stops by for
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others and noticing the positive impact the news has already had on the everyday lives. the price of the sponsored vegetables used to be 30 seconds now it's 5. the ceasefire. news has reduced the price of the spot of oil cost $10.00 cycles. now, it was 30 before that. we weren't cigarettes prices to be cheaper to the others as thinking about the future. let me know how do we need to start thinking of solutions and enough destruction and was we're exhausted. 15 months of humiliation and living in trying to tense. and during this time, i hate on the winter cold, and this the children who died of cold while young about the is riley's, also appear to be apprehensive. receive free like is there is a threat from the from come us like if we just like going to let them guy say again, that might be doing october 7th again, like knowing that it guarantees differently. i think we, we gonna fall back to
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a well again, with a was because a citizen was because we've come with some us. i think the agreement is a good agreement. the once we get all the hostages back into the bodies at the being held captive. but i think that's how much that will re i'm regroup again, as we see in the correlation that they have been some dis, court against disagreement with home us. deceased by a deal is fall from sutton. and it seems that few on either side are willing to believe it until they see it. while the united states has been instrumental in helping to push the goals of the seas bar deal over the line, the agreement has been months in the making, a dressing. american troops and a farewell speech on thursday outgoing president, joe biden admitted the road to deal between israel and him. us had not been easy. meanwhile, donald trump to officially takes office on monday, said the agreement would never have happened without pressure from him and his
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teeth. well, dw reported michelle stockman is with us now for more on the us perspective. michelle present biden has invested a lot in getting this cease fire deal in place before he leaves office. tell us more about the president biden. is a man in the waning days of his presidency steering into the void of his legacy and looking for something to hang his hat on. because he has lost the right to will to his biggest political f o. and many are looking at this presidency with very skeptical eyes. at this point, he has put a norm as effort in reaching the steel. if you look at the diplomats that he sent anthony blinking months of shuttle diplomacy to try and get the hostages released and to end the destruction that's happening in gaza, that's largely affecting civilians. also, he has put breton burke, who is
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a very experienced negotiator in the middle east. he purley negotiated the release of american hospitals from iran who have lived the architecture for this deal. however, it's just not sure that he's getting everything he wants last night. he addressed the american public on i'm assembly. see, and i just want to say what he said here. finances nothing yahoo must accommodate legitimate concerns of palestinians for long term sustainability of israel. so as much as he has laid the architecture for the steel and appears he's not sure he's getting everything he wants. and he also has been accused by human rights groups of not doing enough to protect gus and civilians. so that's presently by incoming president. donald trump, he has said he wants a deal in place to before he takes office. why is this so important to him? even before he takes office? well, i have to think we, we need to look at the timing. donald trump wants a big victory to go in on right from the top. something that he can brag about. i
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am here. i'm making the deals that are going to make america great again before even becomes press. that's right. he sent his one of his top lieutenants, so to speak, his golf, buddy. steve would cost a who is a billionaire investor and developer and sources totally as really media that are of officials said he did more to convince netanyahu to take the steel, then bite and had done over months of diplomacy. both buttons and trump are claiming a credit for the seas far. what does that tell us about the priority of the middle east for the administration, the us ministration. moving forward? i think for both a lot of this has been a huge deal. israel is a long term ally of the united states in the middle east democracy that the us wants to back. however, israel's conduct in this conflict has dragged down the image of the united states. both men don't want to see that happen. and they actually want this off their plate
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so they can focus, well, trump does, so we can focus on what his nominator for secretary of state, marco rubio said, is the near peer biggest, both united states, china. so he wants this guy and he wants to focus his efforts on combatting china. michelle, thank you very much. dw reporter michelle stockman, look sketchup on a few other stories making headlines around the world today. the united states has imposed sanctions on sedans, army chief of both ought to elbow around, accusing his forces of attacking civilians and using hunger as a weapon of war. this comes a week after the us sanctions ahead of the term military forces who have been fighting suits in these army for almost 2 years. airlines had been forced to divert the flights over the gulf of mexico to avoid debris from a malfunctioning test of space. x is starship rocket. the upper stage of a rocket broke up minutes after launching from texas. however,
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the space ex team did manage to catch a returning booster. a feature only cheap once before. and american filmmaker, david lynch has died at the age of 78 and known for his dark and thrill uh, artistic vision. he earned best director oscar nominations for blue velvet, the elephant man and holland drive. he was also behind the ground big down ground breaking tv series, twin peaks. from his debut 1977 starkly serial eraser head, david lynch's unique and edgy cinematic vision was unmistakable. his 1986 phil blue velvet secured, his status is a highly viewed art house director burning. and this 3rd for oscar nominations, but is arguably most influential were came away from the big screen when he turned his hand to television. equally thrilling and shocking audiences with his serious
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twin peaks. i don't lynch's uncompromising cinematic style as in as earn some respect from peers, ranging from quentin tarantino cohen brothers to steven spielberg, who called him a singular and visionary dreamer. lynch died just days before his 79th birthday to g. matthews and entertainment journalist and l. a. she told us more about why lynch was so influential. i'd like to think of david lynch this way. a lot of his films and even television shows were maybe made you feel uncomfortable or hard to watch certain scenes. but they were also hard to forget. he was to realize, art is really i consider him kind of like the salvador dali, a film here in hollywood, keesha's, remarkable. he's one of those kind of filmmakers, filmmakers, as an artist. and so you just know that when david lynch's behind
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a project is going to be interesting, it's going to be artistic and you knew it was going to be great entertainment journalist page your mother's there. i'm terry martin for me and all of us here at dw, thanks for watching. the name is the calls back. said loud. thank you so much for joining in. welcome to don't hold bad. a lot of people do that. it's all about saying a loud noise would have been nosy, b like good everyone to king to check out the award winning called called so called back up you go a car from the communist.
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