tv DW News Deutsche Welle February 5, 2025 8:00am-8:31am CET
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and a dream vacation to the human, they change their lines. the we will not say the way starts february full teams on d, w. the this is did up in years life from berlin. donald trump makes of dramatic destination about because of the us will take over the gaza strip and we will do a job with a to will own it. us president of the game during your visit, the washington back is really prime minister benjamin netanyahu over the future of the world. roberts tell the truth. also on the show swedish authorities rollouts any links to terrorism, off to them off shooting up at college. kids at least 11 people the
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i'm going to expand it to welcome donald trump has said that the us should take over the gaza strip and the palestinians living the should be settled elsewhere where us president made the comment that the press conference with it was really 5 minutes to answer the thing, i mean listen, you know, at the white house anytime from suggested us to be developing to, because i would bring stability to the region. and anthony, i hope all of the drums proposal, watts pursuing. we're just saying that it could co today change history. trump said that the us would take care of the reconstruction of the war to and tennessee and didn't fill out sending troops to do so. to us, we'll take over the guys a script and we will do a job with the 2 without it and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangerous, unexploded bombs and other weapons on the side, the level of the side and get rid of the destroyed buildings level it add,
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create an economic development that will supply unlimited numbers of jobs and housing for the people of the area code is funded in washington dc. benjamin out about his group was that the trump met them. yeah. who press conference earlier and described the move, the after trump announced his plans for goes up. so this statement from us president trump definitely caught all of his journalists covering this press conference at the white house's east room off guard. because his planned to turn gaza into what she called the riviera off of the middle east. really send, you can say shop the way through the press corps at the white house. all of us were a friend, typically checking the transcript, searching for other sources to see if we understood them correct. they also talking to colleagues and president trump plan to take over that is a direct quote. the gaza strip isn't only a legal under international law. we are talking about force displacement of
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hundreds of thousands of people that are now there at the gaza strip. and this is not b, location is some i try to put tray or don't play this business exposure and from the round. then something that according to the geneva convention, is force displacement that constitutes a will crime in international law and conflicts. do we know any, anything more about this plan? have any more details be made public? so this press conference between president trump and prime minister netanyahu left . i'd say more questions the nonsense because president trump did not answer how this would look like in detail did not answer the shouted questions over the needed approval or from congress. or if this would mean a sending troops to the cause of strips he left that open, but apart from that, that has been of cause many reactions and consent. what this new idea might mean and might well the effect that this might have on the already fragile ceasefire
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agreement between israel and come off the athens reactions here from democrats. calling this idea of reckless, unreasonable, others, like the democratic senator to chris murphy set, the trump and i quote, totally lost it. and from the reactions, we also heard from the foreign ministry of saudi arabia. this send out a statement rejecting any infringement of what they call is legitimate right of the policy pinion a people. and we will probably him more reactions from the region. in the next couple of hours, you talked about deceased by dealing with guns or the 2nd phase of that is up for discussion. was this even a talking point between nets and joe and the president, trump and, and do donors from comments essentially detail. this is by a, so that's a big question. the many are asking themselves because the important thing is 1st, what the are up nations would say when a couple of days ago he said that egypt and jordan should take and pull the
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statements from the gaza strip. they rejected this idea egypt, jordan, saudi arabia, the united arab emirates, cut off, published in, you know, 40 and also the arab league rejecting and saying that this threatens the region, stability and risk even expending the conflict, undermining prospect of peace because they worry that israel would never allow them to return to gaza once they are forced out of the territory. so we're waiting for more reactions on what they could actually look like. but we've heard already from a senior and from us. leo criticize it. and so in said that they would never allowed a plan like this to go forward. and what does this tell us about the trump administration's policy in the middle east? benjamin? so president trump got a lot of praise from the israeli prime minister. was the 1st 4 in need, or if it is invited to the why, it's as it was a state visit the. so there was a lot of, well of course, a lot of press the, a lot of interest also to the red carpet for this leader with that's important
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also to, to highlight that and remember that these wanted by the international criminal court for crimes and crimes against humanity is having a very busy week here in the united states. he is extending his visits to meet with lawmakers from the democrats and from the republicans on capitol hill meeting. president trump's middle east envoy, steve woodcock, and it shows how trump puts a lot of effort into this a leaders into his friendship is he said with israel and was it lead up any reading it on? yeah, we knew, but there for the moment, benjamin out about his group in washington dc. thanks so much. i and we have some on that now from shut all my lip now. he's been 26 years working on the 7 consecutive is barely prime ministers and his dollar a senior fellow of the atlantic council. thing time, i asked him if thomas contribution funds for does what in line with the international law. how did the demo a certainly going to be in the details. i mean,
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last night the president trump gave us the real a as a real performance, very ambitious. and it's clear that it's a uh, this plan gallery only one particular issue here is uh, you know, as you implied as a huge amount of resistance. shelby's sake of this, in the world and region closer at hand. but logistics a very complicated, but the presidency has been very clear up until this point, at least that he's looking to sort of invest less in, you know, boats and treasure and in the middle east and maybe focus on issues at home. so whether or not he actually is going to go through it, that's what it actually looks like. i think there are a whole series of questions that still remain at this point. but new on the basis of what he has said, talking about recycling people out of guys as something of the jordanians of egypt . sions have said they would not accept. for example, this is what does not fall under them. definition of false displacement, something that is considered illegal. i'm the international law. oh, i'm not
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a lawyer ultimately present like everything else that would depend on what that look like. i mean he, he, he and other people who have talked about plans like this, talk about, you know, offering people the ability to, you know, to relocate. i don't know if that's what it would like or wouldn't look like clearly there are other units which guidelines don't want to relocate. dozens don't want to hit like i have heard that. i'm not suggesting that they do or don't. i'm just saying in terms of the actual specifics, whether or not it will actually, it will not be legal to be and will probably depend on what the specifics of what we're looking at. or if it even comes to that, to that point. whatever we are seeing at the moment, how much support do you think there will be israel for a plan such as this? and i mean, it's really public. it's been interesting. certainly, i've told absolutely yes. last night's meeting. and even further, i mean there's been this sort of pendulum between you for your and being panic stricken about what could actually come down the pike. so, you know, clearly there are, there are elements, especially within the private, just as government,
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which will be excited about some of what they've heard. not about everything that we know. it will be equivocal. again, you know that from their perspective, right, there are issues with how the hostage deal does. it does not progress to future phase is what that would imply for the other goals that the prime minister elucidated in terms of the war in terms of you know, the future of some us whether we would actually remain in gaza, what that would look like. so i mean by and large, i think they're excited about the prospect of what trump is talking about. whether or not that happens is a separate question. but like everything else there, you know, they, i think people, people just to go back historically quickly. i think that there was, you know, at the time, great excitement and by some quarters and as well initially by his deal of the century during his last tenure. and then many were surprised to discover the when he actually table that there was a push back from some of those importers. it didn't like all the details, so everything will depend on the specifics when we get that far. but this idea of moving palestinians out of gaza, isn't this a plan that is traditionally been supported by the ultra nationalist in israel? that's just very much. that's why i'm saying i'm those are,
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those are precisely the elements i talked about within his government. i think that you know, it, it does. it certainly does speak to a broader swats, depending on what it would look like and people are thinking about what would happen, what could be a solution for guys? i think the president did tap into a degree of public sense. been when he talked about the fact that everything has been tried historically and then over and over again. we're back in the same more as always in gaza. so whether or not this is the solution or another solution, i think that there are, there are plenty of people even maybe even beyond that particular swath of the public that are interested in, dealt talking about what could out what else could happen, whether it would be this is something else is, you know, is a separate issue, may be the out of all in general, it appears to be against the brand. you're talking about the jordanians, and the egyptians are there. so i'll get every i said that there is no possibility of any normalization devised with israel at the cost of a future palestinian state. why suggest a plan like these have countries in the region on the on board as well. i mean, at the end of the day, it's not,
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it's not surprising in the context of which the president front, that other people presumably will put thing up, put things on the table with it which advance their interest as they see them. again, this is just, you know, they eat, he may put this out there and say this. so he has that business. what's going to happen? but certainly, if we look at other things that are playing out and in canada and mexico and south america, we've seen a put a lot of things out there a way to go back and say, well wait, it might as well negotiate. i mean, from his perspective as a, as a, as a businessman, as he reminds us all the time, you know, it's hard, it's hard necessarily to say it will look like this. it won't look like this. i mean, i was calling this morning that, that in his last 10 year, when the abraham courts came to pass, you know, part of the backdrop to that was that it actually been busy. and moratti's, i believe, and getting notes have probably been in their mind, the courts came to swap out plans for annexation. so i mean, we don't, you have no, actually there may be even in trump's thinking he's putting this out. there was an idea and hoping to move other labors in response, not necessarily this one, but it's a little bit early to to know exactly what's going to happen. where does that leave
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negotiations on the 2nd phase of the guys sees fire. that excellent question pregnant. i'm so the president is that he's still committed to as a prime minister, reinforced what he said about getting all the hostages out. the implication of the question being that when ostensibly conflict with some of the other objectives they put out there, that may be true. um, prime minister said after his meeting with the president, so i'm boy this week that he was dispatching a team to to don't, we don't necessarily know what their mandate will be, whether it's involving the implementation of the currency is whether it's the next phase. i think a lot of these things also believe me determine, meet the issue of, of, of the 2nd phase of the deal as all these other issues. wible depends on whether, you know, to what extent the president wants to employ carrots and sticks, such as the post disposal. i mean, before he was elected, you can get away with rhetoric, but now people will be watching to be about the see for the seriousness of his intentions. show on lip from the left to console. think thanks. thanks very much for joining us today. a pleasure to be here.
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the sweetness prime minister of christa shawn has described mondays must routing is the west and the country's history. at least 11 people were killed including the gunman after the rampage as an adult education center. it happened in the city after around 200 kilometers west of the capital stock home of thought of to see the gunman acted alone and that they don't believe there's any links to terrorism. the attack i was among the dead, he's believes to have taken his own life. so we didn't even show that the hora that unfolded. he just sent us an adult education. police say they believe the suspect to the attack of who had not seen none to them, acted alone. the reason we couldn't give more precise information at this stage is because the injuries are so expensive that we're doing several things right now. on
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one hand, it's about identifying those who have died, but also following up the injury situation. then we're also carrying out an extensive investigation. we still believe we have the primary perpetrator to find out the hold them came out or you have any special readings. prime minister condemned the attack. we always all set the blue tall today. we have seen brutal and deadly violence begins completely innocent. people must leave thing on. this is a worst mass shooting and swedish history and new socks, and as yet there are very few answers. so you all kind of can give those answers. it either help. but there will come a time when we will know what happened. ball some, how it could happen, who different and what motives may have been behind it and look the some count on the i got off the shooting began just often midday. the head of the center was in the middle of lunch, was playing,
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i realized straight to way that it was serious. so i and a big group of people ran out of the school. when i was in the school. yeah. and i heard schultz close by, all right, and others with me just a run run. and we around for our lives to be pretty, re splitting it for them as police and um balances. got to what relatives gathered around the center if in used somewhere in phone contact with the loved ones inside the all, you'll have the estimate text at each other all the time for over 2 and a half hours. my daughter got to the center just 5 minutes before the whole thing started. she's been very scared all the how about in the kid at the order and those have she told me so blood. the teachers were very good. they help the students brought them inside and locked the door and so on. the head goes crazy. totally crazy. i'm angry. i'm show. this shouldn't have happened to the school should be
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safe. as police continue their investigations into the attack, his motives, they, the prime minister, have all the public note to speculate and i live in is a john list it at a better. she arrived at the same shortly after the shooting began. i'm not, can you describe the scene as you found it? and when we spent 4 hours there, um, uh, amone's, very low rate parents and partners to the students name side of the screen. um, it was horrifying. people who are crying and they were so worried, do we know more about what prompted the shooting? no, the police us has played to everyone not to speculate about motives. and
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also the police said there's no sign of an idea. logical to i interviewed a 19 year old and she told me that she heard a lot of noise and she didn't understand that it was shots fired. but then there were more shots fired and then she understood the business issues. and then the, the teacher has the students and she said that the teacher was acting really quickly. and in the way that maintenance fee and quite safe. and they were hiding in the classroom, hiding under benches and the teacher left the classroom door. this will be described as the west mouse shooting in sweden's history, always reading,
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responding to this tragedy when a, it's a don't morning here, literally on the same side arts and people are in so and he and i did through the safety move, we'd be open and so people who want to pay their respects to them, the victim churches are the most open. and i think there's a need for unity coming together speaking to each other. really there for the moment. thanks so much for joining us at. one must certainly be a very difficult time, and i live in from edinburgh. thanks so much. at course your thoughts on other stories making headlines around the world. your brain says 5
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civilians have been dealing with the interaction decided attack on the city of easier. i'm in the 5 key region. you're paying official, say russia in the b sides of the city center, and the noise of premium is only sales, but at the sides of cushioning. your brains president says he would agree to do like these thoughts with the russian president loving it. the 1st mexican soldiers ever lived with the country is northern border. in response to demand from us president donald trump, he agreed to delay a 25 percent out of on mexican important exchange for prospecting migration team to the us. events of deployment of $10000.00 troops also aims to track down on the smuggling of fentanyl and other products. in washington, the senate finance committee voted along party lines to advance the nomination. overall most of kennedy, jr. for him, the 2nd street port kennedy with no face of both ends, a full sentence is expected to meet considerable opposition. there for numerous
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contrivances ranging from vaccine skepticism to his well documented form on the truck. she will instead give his financial to stay in washington dc where concerns arising over donald trump's unprecedented delegation of power to bring in that you don't mosque. and as a part of the influential role in federal spending decisions, democrats here, the situation is dangerous, unconstitutional, and a power grab hundreds of protest as a rallying in washington, dc against billy in the e law. most takeover on the federal payment system. raising alarms that it could be one of the largest privacy and security breaches in us history. we feel like our country's being stripped away. we've got, you know, what's on the elected official who's attic as a share of every view on much. he's taking control of the finances, all of a sudden we've got orders to hold up funding for critical aids. and people are uh,
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rates. yeah, this is not what people voted for. we feel like our democracy is under attack, where various members of our government and other organizers are here to protest in one must unlawful intrusion and the best of our intellectual property, our private information, our health care information, and the very systems that make our government function via the big data and the software and the hardware. most the world's richest person also serves as an unpaid advisor to presidents. donald trump. these departments of government efficiency as being tasked with identifying ways to cut spending loose and regulations. now his team is leading efforts to shut down the united states agency for international development. a move this drawing shop criticism from opposition. democrats. they argue these actions show must,
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is gaining too much influence in washington. those is not a real government agency, as it has no authority to make spending decisions. it has no authority to shut programs down or nor federal law to give dos it show cold on treasury payments. is that land originally dangerous? democrats say most of the options unconstitutional, but the president has defended him. and for now, most commission to revamp government shows no signs of slowing down. donald trump is also freezing us overseas and raising questions about the future of assistance programs around the world. america has on to allow being the single biggest international doing now. in the us government agency for international development or us a i. d helps millions across the world from vital food
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supplies in sim, bob, wy, and shed to emergency disaster responses and hate see what life saving medical equipment in ukraine. you as a id is the world's largest humanitarian earth provider. now it's future hangs in the balance with donald trump's proclaimed america, fixed policy run by a bunch of radical lunatic. we're getting them out and we're getting them out at the top. in 1961 us a id is funded by the us government and had a budget with around $40000000.00 in 2023. less than one percent of the total state are
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a bunch of it's responsible for aiden development in strategically important countries. all those and conflicts and works in around 120 nation funding. a range of initiatives from feels hospitals to contraceptives. h i v aids treatment clearing land, mines, energy security, fighting, mailing nutrition. and giving people access to clean water in 2023, most of its funding went to ukraine, the ip jordan, the democratic republic of congo and somalia. a trump pause, a foreign aid for 90 days when he took office. and some of us a id programs have already been forced to close the doors, like this healthcare seemed to supposing transgender people in south africa. i've
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been coming to this clinic for years now. i think it's been ideas or something that i've been under the key and now with switch cramps ridiculous policies that is old and the change. that is why i came yesterday because the closing for the next 90 days, the funding for ease has seen shock waves through some of the most vulnerable populations, leaving the future of millions of people in the european space agency is saying if it is kind of the monitoring an asteroid that has a more than one percent chance of colliding with the f inc. 20 such a tool. the asteroid was 1st recognized as a threat in december by the f plus 10 to school in july, night struggling at around the 17 kilometers per 2nd. and a collision with us would release anywhere between $5.15 mega tons of imagery.
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how about scientists believe it's trajectory, could change over time, making an impact with of unlikely a and a quick reminder of the top stories that they are following for you at this is donald, from concepts of the us troops, a call back. the guys are scrape up defendants to indians living there, a recycled dance where the us president may have to come into the white house press conference with his reading prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, who sent the idea of good change history and sweden's prime minister of mister sean as described mondays mos filtering as the west and the country's history, at least and ever peopled with him, including the gunman of the rampage as an adult education center in the city of the bets edge for the moment coming up next off of the break. we have
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