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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Justice With Judge Jeanine 20170522 04:00:00


reaction and analysis from muslim scholars, military experts, lawmakers and pulitzer winning prize reporter who also lived in the middle east. first, president trump on the choice he believes the muslim world must now make. terrorism has spread all across the world, but the path to peace begins right here on this ancient soil in this sacred land. america is prepared to stand with you, in pursuit of shared interests and common security, but the nations of the middle east cannot wait for american power to crush this enemy for them. the nations of the middle east will have to decide what kind of future they want for themselves, for their country, and frankly, for their families and for their children. it s a choice between two futures, and it is a choice america cannot make for you.
a better future is only possible if your nations drive out terrorists and drive out the extremists. drive them out. drive them out of your places of worship. drive them out of your communities. drive them out of your holy land. and drive them out of this earth. judge jeanine: joining me now, muslim scholar and author of in the land of invisible women, a female doctor s journey in the saudi kingdom. dr. ahmed. doctor, thanks for being with us. you know, drive them out, drive them out. also it is a choice america cannot make for you. what was the message of the president? overwhelmingly, the message is that the president understands we have inside islam a profound and dangerous
ideology islamism, and it is muslims to eliminate it to evict it and abandon it but the united states is supporting us. it was one of the most remarkable speeches they think you and i are ever going to see in our lifetimes. this is a once in a generation event. judge jeanine: what do you think of the way it was received in the middle east? how do you think all of the 50 muslim leaders reacted to this president s speech? i think they were hanging on his every word. dazzling. it went far beyond my expectations. some of the language, he spoke to us as muslims speak, talked about those who honor god, talked about the faith of the soul when innocent young people are lured into extremism, the condemnation of the soul. talked about restoring values to humanity that are universal and precious in islam and he had the courage to do that at the epicenter of islam, of course not mecca but symbolic with the custodian of the two
holy sites right there is astonishing. judge jeanine: when you look at king salman, running to the end of the red carpet, not running, it was with his cane. there is already or so it appears this trust. why saudi arabia now seems to be aligning with the united states? what has happened in the last eight years? the speech is remarkable not only because of the president and the language and the intense. you can see the president had true feeling and sentiment and investment in the ideas, but that the muslim world is finally mature enough after decades of suffering from jihadist ideology and the united states has also been punished terribly by suffering through jihadist ideology, almost the timing in history is allowing this to happen. furthermore, in islam, there is nothing that host greater honor than hosting a guest as you yourself know from your origins. judge jeanine: yes.
so it was remarkable. judge jeanine: well, and you know, it was remarkable listening to the president describe saudi arabia, and the fact that he had heard so much about it but it was their graciousness, it was the beauty of the country, and clearly there was a connection, but is this the beginning of the reformation? for me, i m not in a position to speak about that, but i think does it call muslims to reform their behavior to exterminate a fanatical ideology? for us to go inside mosques where some of these ideologies are propagating? something that the koran itself allows, if that is happening? yes. the ground has been laid. this did not come from the united states. president sisi made the remarks, they said president trump is not the same as candidate trump. these are sophisticated world operates.
you know, but instead coming with his wife and his daughter, you know, almost a statement that women come and walk with me, as equals. what s that message? impressive. not just that. of course, bringing the first lady, but bringing his daughter-in-law who s converted to orthodox judaism. judge jeanine: his daughter. and son-in-law, orthodox jewish gentleman is tremendous. it s a mark of as we are here sitting symbolizing two different faiths rooted in the middle east, you and i, so too, he brought that with him. it s phenomenal. this is how we re going to collaborate. and not a single moment was lost on any of those leaders. him flanked by the king of saudi arabia, the king of jordan, president el-sisi. all of them, hardly am i in that group, all of them are unified in the approach. judge jeanine: well, it is certainly a different day. it is a speech that every
american needs to see. i was just in egypt, can i tell you, my egyptian driver can quote the speeches of anwar alsadat, american children can study and learn and i myself are going to study. this is historic. judge jeanine: dr. ahmed, my friend, thank you for being here. thank you. judge jeanine: joining me from d.c. with more reaction to the president s speech, congressman darrell issa, member of house overnight and judiciary, and foreign affairs. congressman, you heard the doctor, and i m going to ask you the same question with a political angle. what was the difference between president obama s 2009, i apologize for being an american speech in cairo, and this speech and the difference in the acceptance in the muslim world? eight years later, after a lecture series, one might say in cairo, what we had was a welcoming speech, a speech that said please join me.
we are in this together, and we can solve it, the united states can t solve it, there was a great deal of humility in the speech, basically saying that we ll be with you, but ultimately, we cannot do it without you. and again, it was a speech of welcoming and opening rather than a lecture. judge jeanine: and what do you think of the fact that, you know, president trump has only been in office four, five months, and yet, this, the establishment of the financial targeting center, the reception of the coordination here. i mean, this doesn t happen overnight. how did the president do this? well, a couple of things. some of these were programs that were pent up, waiting to happen, certainly the saudis have wanted to re-engage with the united states on u.s. weapons and u.s. security assistance, that they pay for,
but it wasn t very welcome with the last administration. remember, judge, at the beginning of last administration, you had hope by the arabs, by the muslim world, and by israel. by the end of the obama era, all of them had given up on the united states under president obama. he simply alienated everybody, including bibi netanyahu. he spent money trying to defeat american tax dollars. judge jeanine: exactly. this reopening is about undoing eight years but beyond that because it s got to do things that didn t happen under george w. bush. it s got to bring the arab world together in a different coalition. it s not just a coalition of military might. it s a coalition of ideological, if you will, purity. the idea that religions are supposed to help people live together, not help them kill each other. judge jeanine: and you know what s interesting is that even the president made reference to the fact that, you know, for generations the christians and
the jews and the muslims lived together, and it s only this recent, you know, destruction that s occurred in the interpretation of islam. but you know, congressman, it s very interesting as i sit here, you are lebanese descent. i am lebanese descent. the doctor is indian subcontinent of pakistan. judge jeanine: so many americans can relate to the middle east. and yet so separate from our lives for so long. do you think that instead of talking about coordination, we re going to have real partners and allies again in the middle east? absolutely. we re already seeing it. i was a few weeks ago, i was at the refugee camps in lebanon and jordan where the united states is re-engaging to try to bring some real solutions there. you know, the last administration wanted to brag about how many refugees we brought to the united states. when you see over 2 1/2 million
refugees in jordan and lebanon, you realize they can t come here, we have to make it possible for them to live there. that s one of the agendas you re seeing. and speaking of the country that our ancestors came from, you know in downtown beirut, in solidare, without glasses, you can see a jewish temple, a shia mosque, a sunni mosque, an orthodox church and a roman catholic church, you can see them all, and you can walk to them in the square, and they re all ancient because our people have lived together, and it s that welcoming they think president trump showed so well in saudi arabia that we can do it again. judge jeanine: and you know what? i think that the middle east is now a believer. the president was very clear, iran is the enemy, and iran, of course, the historic enemy of saudi arabia. have we taken sides, congressman? you know, in 1979, sides
were taken, we re only now owning up to it. the reality is that the extremist direction of wahhabiism and the growth of al qaeda and isis had much to do with the shia and sunni responding. the reality is unchecked since 1979 is part of the reason we re here, and that s what we ve got to realize is, that islam will heal itself when islamic leaders part of the process. that s what the president went halfway around the world for. that s what he delivered in a very powerful speech welcoming the muslim nations and i think the rest of the world to join us in a different fight, a fight for the ideas, when he says drive them out. he s not saying drive the people out. he s saying drive these ideas out that have tainted our countries. judge jeanine: congressman darrell issa, thanks for being with us this evening. thank you, judge. judge jeanine: joining me with a military perspective on how the speech will affect the
fight against isis. retired army lieutenant colonel mitch utterback who served three tours in afghanistan and one in iraq. colonel, we heard about the $110 billion arms deal with the saudis and another $400 billion that will be invested in the two countries. more jobs at each end. what are the military implications of this deal? good evening, judge. one of the most important military implications for everybody watching tonight is fewer americans in that part of the world because the saudis purchased more of our equipment, more ships, more tanks, more planes mean more u.s. troops able to be home with families. but it also means they have demonstrated that they re willing to purchase the equipment over many years and want the training. they want the maintenance, they want the help with operating it and they want the help with taking the fight to the enemy want and the help deterring
iranian influence in that part of the world. judge jeanine: you know what s interesting? president obama was always talk about the coordinated efforts and the coalition. i have never seen anything like what i saw today in saudi arabia, and dr. ahmed is shaking her head right next to me. why is this so different, colonel? well, the doctor will agree, i m sure. the president demonstrated deep cultural competency. a deep understanding of how to behave, how to present himself, how to show humility. how to dignify his hosts. also how to project strength tame. it was a very nuanced visit for those of us that have lived and worked and been shoulder to shoulder in the middle east. we saw that as, hey, this guy looks like he s been doing this for a long time. great advice or just an incredibly deft, culturally competent leader that we have now. judge jeanine: doctor, you
wanted to add something to that? so well said, congressman. the moment for political will has been building because the stakes have become so high. we re seeing the collapse of syria, the rise of iranian influence in yemen, the destabilization of the region through jihadist islamism. the consequences of the downstream impact in europe. the muslim will is tremendous. the timing is important. judge jeanine: back to you, colonel, you know this terrorist financing targeting center, which will have the staff of individuals, experts from the united states and from the arab world, what do you expect that to accomplish? couple things, judge. i expect the u.s. treasury department to bring years and years of counterthreat to financing, the intelligence and ability to track the money, but once we know where the money is, and the gcc countries with the language ability, the culture ability, the knowledge
of how the money moves around. our technical and intelligence capability married with the gccs cultural capabilities and language capabilities is unprecedented, and it really is going to dry up in large parts the biggest donors, the biggest guys who wish they were jihadists but too scared to go so they give the money away. this is the great stuff. when you say gcc, colonel, you re talking about syria not syria, talking about egypt, jordan, which countries? those are the gulf cooperation council, judge, saudi arabia, qatar, kuwait, oman, the united arab emirates and bahrain. countries that have very, very strong military partnerships with the u.s., now a counterthreat financing partnership. momentum is building, this is a great sign. judge jeanine: colonel utterback, thank you very much. and dr. ahmed, thank you so much. former u.n. ambassador john
bolton is on deck tonight, but next today we begin a new chapter that will bring lasting benefits to all of our citizens. judge jeanine: is the u.s. finally back to leading on the world stage? dr. zuhdi jasser is here with his reaction to president trump s historic speech. and later, judy miller offers a look at what to expect from president trump s trip to israel. justice rolls on in a moment. no need with thending thcars.com app when on the lot, scan a vin to pull up all the info you need to help get the price you want.
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faiths, different sects or different civilizations but good and evil. joining me now with reaction former u.s. navy lieutenant commander and president of the american islamic center for democracy. great to have you back on justice. good to be back with you, judge. judge jeanine: thank you. speech the president gave today seems to have reset or rebooted relations in the middle east can. it happen so quickly? certainly, this is why he got such a warm welcome. the sunni world which is 90% of the muslim world in the arab area, has seen eight years of abandonment. they saw everything dumped at thealtar of the fake iran deal with hundreds of billions of dollars going to tehran. now they see a president who will shore up the coalition as necessary to defeat isis. they see a president who will hold them accountable to not only defeating isis but radical
islam. this is why the new center on counterterrorism is important. left unguided, left unled, the sunni regimes will ultimately feed the ideology like qatar, turkey and saudi arabia did like radicalizing the syrian government and others. this new relationship will hold them accountable and they welcome that, they need leadership and guidance and seeing a rebooting of the balance that was stability in the 20th century that was lost in the last eight years of obama s surrender. judge jeanine: what happened as the president indicated for generations, christians, jews and muslims lived together in this holy land. what happened that broke that? what was the beginning of the destruction? i think ultimately the world is starting to witness where islam is in history right now. we are going through enlightenment, a reformation, and a understanding of a respect for secularism and the
need to separate mosque and state just as created the french and the american revolutions, and this is why what s very different than today s world versus the cairo speech of 09 of obama or president bush s era, post-arab awakening, these regimes are roiling with groundswell of arab awakening, i hope the next speech from president trump will use freedom, democracy and liberty. yes, he might develop a coalition to destroy and decimate isis, but in the long term, radical islamist groups will keep coming back unless we feed the diversity of thought. time which islam is in history to bring back that time which there was stability, cooperation between the faiths, there was a lack of kinetic, radical islamist ideology that wants to decimate everything else. and the time to reboot that is now. judge jeanine: as a military man, you were in the navy.
when the president said he s going to oblitrate isis and seems to be doing well on that front, but at the same time, saying the muslim world has got to work with us. we can t do it for you. i mean, you know, obama said the same thing, but why is the reception so different? why is president trump, who s just so newly in office, able to deliver with such credibility his argument? because president obama did it from a position of beginning and ending by blaming america, by blaming the west, in an almost self-flagellating apologetic. telling them to drive them out. we will isolate iran and genocidal regime, that is language they have not heard for a long time which is true leadership from the front rather than the back if any at all. the arab tribal community respects leadership, even if
they tell them what to do or not to do, and i think that will go a long way to stabilizing the region. judge jeanine: well, they respect strength and they respect leadership and they respect honesty. and what s interesting is that the president went in saying i m not going to tell you how to live or impose my sense of what you need to do. anyway, dr. zuhdi jasser, so good to you have on justice . thank you so much. any time, judge. judge jeanine: coming up, president trump with a strong message to iran in his historic speech. former u.s. ambassador to the u.n. john bolton is here to weigh in next. all you need is love plays my friends know me so well. they can tell what i m thinking, just by looking in my eyes. but what they didn t know was that i had dry, itchy eyes. i used artificial tears from the moment i woke up. .to the moment i went to bed. so i finally decided to show my eyes some love,. .some eyelove. eyelove means having a chat with your eye doctor about your dry eyes because if you re using artificial tears often and still have symptoms, it could be chronic dry eye.
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leading that effort. the president s first major budget proposal is out tuesday. it includes sweeping cuts to medicaid, food stamps and farm subsidies. it could eliminate health benefits for millions of poor people. jury selection gets under way in bill cosby s sexual assault trial. he says he won t testify. dozens of women accused him of drug and sexually assaulting them. . funds arms and trains terrorists, malicious and other extremist groups that spread destruction and chaos across the region. for decades iran has fueled the
fires of sectarian conflict and terror. is a government that speaks openly of mass murder, vowing the destruction of israel, death to america, and ruin for many leaders and nations in this very room. judge jeanine: president trump ripping into iran s government in historic speech making it clear they are america s enemy. former u.s. ambassador to the u.n. fox news contributor john bolton joins me now with reaction to the president s strong words. good evening, ambassador. the president made it very clear where the lines of demarcation were, iran and syria are our enemy. let s talk about iran. right, i thought this was a very strong speech by the president. i think it was well received by his audience in the arab world which is seen in the last eight years, they think america has taken leave of senses for not appreciating the threat that
iran poses, not just to them but to us, and it s because both the nuclear program and iran s longstanding support for terrorism. so this is a signal that the obama administration really is gone and that the united states appreciates that the ayatollah s regime in iran is a threat in the region and globally and we re going to deal with it, as he said, during the campaign. judge jeanine: when the president talked about iran, he talked about the fact that very clear that we have got to starve terrorists of their territory, their funding and the faults are of the ideology and we can defeat them. iran has always been, ambassador, the enemy of saudi arabia. so in addition to identifying iran as the enemy, we are also making it clear that we are aligned with saudi arabia and, i think, the sunnis as opposed
to the other sect. well, i don t think that necessarily is the case. i think we re aligned with regimes that oppose what the current regime in iran is trying to do. back in the 50s and 60s, though he was unpopular for other reasons, the shah of iran kept iran on the west of the cold war. it s not the people of iran that s the problem, it s the ayatollahs in charge. they do pose a threat to the oil-producing monarchies on the arabian peninsula to israel and to the united states. so to eliminate that threat, to deal with the nuclear, the ongoing nuclear program and iran s funding of terrorism, we re going to use the friends that we have, and i think they re delighted to see that the president understands the nature of iran s threat which is something barack obama didn t get for eight years. judge jeanine: clearly. the president made it very clear it s not the iranian people, i mean, it is those who
are chanting death to america and destruction to israel. in light of this new, this reset in the middle east by the united states with saudi arabia, jordan, egypt and the other most of the other sunni countries, it appears that the president also was talking about the possibility of peace between israel and palestine. it s clear that that is on his agenda. well, i think the threat of iran is certainly focused the attention of saudi arabia and some of the other key monarchies, and that s why prime minister netanyahu of israel does think there s a chance to harness that new strategic clarity, to get peace with the palestinians. the president is an optimistic man, willing to take a shot at it. good luck to him. i don t think it s going to happen. i don t think on the palestinian side, the palestinian authority is capable of making commitments and honoring them, and there
will have no legitimate authority for the palestinian people. it s a great tragedy, but that s where we are at the moment. we ll see. the president is determined to play it out and i don t see any downside. it may come to nothing as so many other evers here have. but if the saudis and others are willing to go along with the effort by israel and the united states, let s see what happens. judge jeanine: sounds like a new realignment with saudis and the israelis possibly being on the same side. ambassador john bolton, thanks for being with us. thank you. judge jeanine: and coming up, my all-star panel on deck ready to battle it out. back in a moment. it s just a burst pipe, i could fix it. (laugh) no. with claim rateguard your rates won t go up just because of a claim. i totally could ve - no! switching to allstate is worth it. working my canister off to clean and shine and give proven protection against fading and aging. he won t use those copycat wipes. hi.doing anything later?
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extremely busy night of news. let s get right to it. joining me now mercedes schlapp republican strategist and richard fowler, senior leader of the fellows council. both fox news contributors. richard, your reaction to the president s speech in saudi arabia. i think we re seeing candidate trump and president trump, and he seemed to not escape the teleprompter. it s a good night for the president. judge jeanine: mercedes, would you like to respond to that. [laughter] look, i think this is showing a moment of strength by this president in basically going to the muslim leaders and saying we need to unite in order to eradicate radical islam. he also talked about the importance of the disastrous mess we have seen because of radical extremism in the region, and also he s sending a very direct message to iran, clearly by working with saudi arabia, by working on this
multibillion dollar arms deal. basically saying, look, iran, we re not with you, we are with saudi arabia, and taking sides, and i think it s been a very welcoming reception from saudi arabia, basically saying this is a new era for relations with these important muslim countries. judge jeanine: okay, richard, richard, why do you think that he was so the president was so well received in the middle east? well, i think the reason he was so well received in saudi arabia, only talking to one half of the muslim sect. he wasn t talking to the other half. judge jeanine: 50 muslim leaders. you have the sunnis and the she aone group was not there in the room, at all, period. the other reason the saudis are so happy is more to do with the fact yesterday he signed almost $100 billion arms deal to saudi arabia turning a sharp ideal that we can use diplomacy to
solve problems to using weapons to solve the problems. judge jeanine: by engaging in the arms deal, we give the saudis and the gulf states the ability to protect themselves as opposed to sending american military over there. and i thought that was a great argument. plus it makes jobs in the middle east and the united states. i hear that, but i think we ll be neglecting the fact, a good majority of the 9/11 attackers came from saudi arabia and saudi arabia has been sponsors of terrorism. the president forgot that last night. i think president obama remembered that. go ahead. what about iran being a state of terrorist state. they re not getting an arms deal, mercedes. what i m saying is here s one of the things they did work on. it was saudi arabia, the fact of prosecuting individuals who are going to be financing terrorists. that was part of the agreement they made during this visit. also we saw the establishment of this global counterterrorism
and extremism center in saudi arabia. these are positive steps to eradicate radical islam in this region. now with that being said, this is not what we saw under president obama where president obama decided to stand with iran and basically what have we seen with iran? iran s involvement in syria? seen a stronger russian-iranian alliance and seen the fact that iran basically is continuing to finance terrorism. what we did see in iran is they don t have the ability to acquire or attain or develop a nuclear weapon, that is a step in the right direction. they lost the we can relitigate the iran deal as long as we want, right? here s the truth. now donald trump has the keys to this car and even though there was an election in iran yesterday and iran seems to be moving more to a globalized position than previously, he still slapped them in the face. that is not diplomacy. judge jeanine: richard, doesn t
it bother you when you hear the iranians yelling death to america, eradicate israel, the big devil, the little devil? come on! you think they re our friends. bothers me as much as russia engaging in our election. judge jeanine: oh, boy. i m will for someone to give me evidence of that. you know what? i don t want to go there. richard, richard. they engaged in our elections. judge jeanine: richard, richard, the bottom line is now we ve got a president allowing the middle east to get the weapons they need so we don t have to go over there and fight all the time. can i make one historical point on this point? judge jeanine: sure. every time we ve sold the middle eastern countries weapons they used it against us. that s not true. judge jeanine: you are wrong. we gave weapons to the afghanis and the iraqis, those weapons used against our men and women. point-blank, period.
judge jeanine: mercedes, finish. one point we have to make clear. it is israel, one of the foreign ministers mentioning that they were concerned, they re nervous about the close relationship between the united states and saudi arabia. we have to be very clear that the one ally who we do need to stand strong with, someone who president obama did not is with israel, and i think that s going to be an important message that president trump is going to have to deliver when he meets with prime minister netanyahu during his visit to israel. i think judge jeanine: tomorrow. there is they are concerned, israel is concerned about the close ties with saudi arabia, but with that being said, you need to be able to have the communication with saudi arabia and the moderate muslim countries in order to ensure there is stability in the region. judge jeanine: mercedes schlapp, richard fowler, thanks for being with us. thank you. judge jeanine: president trump pushing forward with his first foreign trip. next stop, israel. pulitzer prize-winning
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abrahamic faiths, if these three faiths can join together in cooperation, then peace in this world is possible, including peace between israelis and palestinians. judge jeanine: president trump s next stop, israel. of course, stay tuned to fox news for full coverage of his arrival in just a few hours. what can we expect to see from the president s time there? let s ask pulitzer prize-winning reporter and fox news contributor judith miller. good evening, judith. almost as if the president has an impossible task to realign the middle eastern countries to possibly, you know, make peace between israel and palestine, convince everybody is on their side. how do they do it? right. the word kvetsch is not a
yiddish word, the reception will be warm because the united states is israel s closest ally, but also going to be a lot of complaining. judge jeanine: because of saudi arabia being the first stop? that and so many other things, judge, first of all there s the mossada issue, the speech e was supposed to give, mossada the archaeological site where jewish zealots jumped to their death rather than be conquered by the romans. the israelis said that is not a great place to make a speech about peace or prospects but we re not going to fly you up to the site, you ll take a cable car, so he s going to go to the western wall, and the western wall flap, and that is the wall in israel or is it in palestine and the state department of course got very nervous about calling that. there s the issue of whether or not the president gave sensitive israeli intelligence
to the russians when they met here in washington. that really disturbed some of the intelligence community. judge jeanine: my understanding is they said it had already been public, anyway. well, that s what mcmaster said, israelis disagree. we could go on and on. the thing that bothers and worries bibi netanyahu the most is whether or not donald trump wants to make the ultimate deal between israelis and palestinians, that s very dangerous for mr. netanyahu who wants to keep his coalition together. ultimate deal judge jeanine: look, our president can t impose a deal on them, netanyahu has to be a part of it. netanyahu has nothing to worry about. it seems to me that netanyahu should be happy that the president has said iran is the enemy, assad and syria are the enemy. we re going to give the saudis, the enemies of the iranians,
the enemy of my enemy is my friend. business, fundamental stuff. they re very happy about that. they re not an open kind of coalition. there were two israeli journalists left in washington because they weren t permitted to go to saudi arabia because the riyadh wouldn t give them visas. the cooperation that exists is not open. judge jeanine: judy, with all due respect, this sounds like petty stuff. we re dealing with bigger issues. by the way. i totally agree with you. unlike saudi arabia, israel is a democracy with a vibrant free press, and donald trump is going to read and hear about all of this because people talk and they air their grievances and this is not the way things are in saudi arabia. judge jeanine: the president made it so clear, i m not going to tell anybody how to live, and i think that was the mistake of president george bush. we re going to give you democracy, happy with the purple fingers. they don t want democracy. let people live their lives.
i think that s true, but i hope that mr. trump understands that this is not about real estate. this is not a deal that can easily be made judge jeanine: and he didn t sound like it was about real estate today. my friend judy miller, thank my friend judy miller, thank you so m
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Transcripts For DW DW News - News 20171025 18:00:00


protesting after the supreme court threw out a petition to delay tamar s vote with the country deeply divided there are fears of violence here in kenya with the latest also coming up a surprising twist in the case of a german human rights organizer on trial in turkey prosecutors are reportedly demanding he be released. and a german president can call their steinmeier says he wants better ties between berlin and moscow steinmeyer meets with president vladimir putin as part of his visit to russia will ask our correspondent in moscow what kind of reception he received. also the anti semitism scandal rocking italian soccer fans of rome s club a lot c.-o. left stickers in their stadium and frank wearing a rival teams jersey will examine their reactions.
city of it and you cough which happened recently but he also pointed out that dialogue is important and he pointed out these store called ties that russia and germany share and now it was similar with putin he also said there were difficulties but they didn t want to stand still on dialogue so both of them optimistic there for keeping ties and keeping the channels of communication open a lot of diplomacy they are taking place in moscow but the official reason for this visit to emily is steinmeyer participating in this handover of a cathedral to st peter and paul cathedral a back to the evangelical lutheran church of russia tell us more about that. yeah that s right the handover is actually part of festivities marking five hundred years since the protestant reformation and i went to the church to talk to the people there and see what this change of ownership means to them let s take a look. an air of celebration at
a normal sunday service the last one before this evangelical lutheran congregation in moscow officially gets its church back. lutherans are religious minority here in russia most in the community have german roots their ancestors came to russia centuries ago on the invitation of the czars who promised land and religious freedom but later the soviet government persecuted lutherans and seized church property including this cathedral the community led by archbishop paula has been using it again since the fall of the soviet union but so far it has remained russian government property. to be the. serenely used to shoo shoo news to tell you. that the more of the picture because that s the get the liberal. party that they need to work if that is it creates a situation. so. in the officially atheist soviet
union many churches were repurposed from nine hundred thirty seven this cathedral was used as a movie theater and a film studio by then all lutheran churches across the country had been closed and many of their pastors arrested and shot. here at video cemetery in moscow long known as the city s german cemetery the scars of that persecution are still tangible many gravestones here were neglected and destroyed after the second world war the lutheran community struggled with the additional stigma of its german origins often associated with the nazi enemy. which. most of the really new study released today is that each skipper nor. chester yeah they used to it nice nacelle nova it up as a strongly in the short circuit just outside cricketer. please put this into
context for us how important is the handover of this church. well the archbishop there was talking about the restoration of historical justice after all the evangelical lutheran were persecuted for a long time during the soviet union and after the second world war there their german past also came back to haunt them as it were and he also talked about this this church being handed over it means to them that they have their own their own home as it were that before it was as if they were inhabiting someone else s apartment this is a risk huge symbolic gesture and in fact it was the reason for steinmeyer visit and it s important to the congregation as we just saw but it s just the first step in restoring church property as the archbishop told me he hopes that it will set a precedent for other churches being handed back and other property being handed back and steinmeier also said that the church is
a nice gesture and also it shows the importance it s a gesture towards germany as well not just all right or very very important diplomatic just sure they re being made in moscow thank you so much emily a sure win for your reporting and we want to shift our focus now to some of the other stories making news around the world. in barcelona demonstrators have made new calls for independence for the region of catalonia this after catalan leader carlos turned down an invitation to address spain s senate this week will the senate is due to hold a vote on dismissing the government on friday. in austria coalition talks are underway between the center right people s party of incoming chancellor sebastian courts and the far right freedom party the a food led by high school came third in elections earlier this month curt s has promised zero tolerance on anti semitism and said future partners must be pro you re. a little in bangkok the five day funeral ceremony has started for king.
his son has been performing rights in the city s historic quarter while tens of thousands of mourners have filed into the surrounding areas to bid farewell to the monarch the king died last october at the age of eighty eight. all right we want to tell you now about some breaking news coming in from turkey the german the press agency d.p.a. is reporting that turkish prosecutors are calling for the release of german human rights activist peter starting there well our starters trial got underway today after he was arrested in istanbul back in july shatner is accused of having links to terrorism but berlin has made repeated calls for his release. and it appears during jones has been covering trial proceedings for us at the supreme court in istanbul all day dorian tell us so what you ve been hearing
well it has taken everyone by surprise the hearings are still going on even though it s late at night but during those hearings the prosecutor made an announcement that all the defendants with the exception of one turkish human rights defender should be released in two released in from pretrial detention now this is been a key demand of all human right defenders are. and seen as something that they ve been pushing very hard for but speaking to people international officials ahead of the trial there was this hope that some will be released but not the foreign nationals now the fact that the prosecutor does appear to be calling for the release all of those foreign nationals will be welcome but it s undoubtedly is a surprise and is seen as a result of probably heavy international lobbying but they have to say that the final decision will made with the judge who is expected to make that in the next couple of hours or so but they speak the hearings are still going on final decision will be with the judge but if the prosecutor has called for this is seen as
extremely significant i mean as you ve already outlined that this is a very surprising development were there any indications throughout the day that this was even a possibility. well not a toll him the the prosecutor was very tough in the cross examinations pushing very hard on this case even though it has drawn such condemnation paul the lack of evidence according to most observers so there was little hope that there would be a gesture made on speaking to observers have been following the case closely their expectation was of possibly some of the turkish human rights defenders could be released but little chance was given for the foreign nationals in particular peter storrie so this is seen as a major surprise but i do say caution the final decision will lay with the judge all right so the final decision is what the judge relations between her and berlin have plunged to the historic low how serious is the rift and especially if you
consider that in addition to start married there are ten other germans sitting in jail accused of having ties to mr gould and considering this development as breaking development do you think that this is one way of turkey to reestablish its diplomatic relations with for instance germany. well on the outlay i think if peter s story is released and crucially if he s allowed to leave the country which has happened with other foreign nationals that have been released from pretrial to say internet even though the trial is still continuing that will be seen as a very significant gesture i think the fact that there was there is is fear that the bilateral tensions were spiralling out of control and there is still the potential for that we ve rumors of berlin is going to push harder for more financial sanctions against iran that would undoubtedly have led to more retaliate in those if it is tit for tat would. these relations into the abyss now that this if peter storrie name is released him from from his prerogative and possibly
allowed to return back home i think that that would be seen as an opportunity for a reset a beginning of a new dialogue but there are as you said there are still ten other german nationals languishing in jail and they still remains a major stumbling block to improving relations but if story that is released that will be seen as a major step forward and least putting on hold this spiral into the abyss of tensions between the countries ok well let s talk a little bit about people in turkey itself how worried are turks about the direction of politics under mr. well i mean it is split more or less down the middle the president no one is still very popular is still the most popular politician in the country he deals secure around forty fifty percent of the support but equally the other side of the countries incredibly opposed to him and this polarized nation and and came to it with turkey s key
allies trading allies also relations the united states are very bad at the moment i think is causing alarm and feeding into this polarization but it has to be said i think that the eries growing evidence that even among president of one s own supporters there are factors that are starting to get appearing to be can turn a concern and possibly a softening in support among those for one and that is crucial because the president when it s facing reelection in presidential elections in the next two years and he needs every supporter you can get to secure what is it going to be a very close vote so possibly this gesture for peter storrie could be seen as a gesture to those concerned supporters within his own ranks dorian jones reporting on breaking news from turkey prosecutors calling for the release of german human rights activists peter start thank you. all right and now we ve got some business news now with the helena and lift tons that is flying high what can i say later profits at the gemini carrier have really were acquitted it recently enough towns
are reporting a thirty two percent rise in underlying fed quarter earnings that s before interest and tax now offer years of cost cutting the group is back on the offensive this also keeping its feet on the ground sticking to its on your forecast. business is going well for germany s largest airline look duns up in the summer the car being creased ticket prices and its cargo unit is booming. the sounds i was able to boost revenue thanks in part to its increased market share following the acquisition of brussels airlines last year the carrier is also flying more people. in two thousand and sixteen tons of flu some one hundred ten million passengers nearly two percent more than in twenty fifteen the growth didn t come from its flagship carrier but from its german subsidiary budget airline euro wins still for the first time with downs as passenger numbers were overtaken by dublin based no
cost carrier up the line air. the german airline now plans to retake the top position from ryan air in europe with its acquisition of a large chunk of rival air berlin and it s not stopping there with tons out also wants to apply a parts of italy s largest carrier tahlia but antitrust authorities could spoil the party they will be reviewing whether look tons is gaining a monopoly position on too many routes. well as you heard there is not the same success story for an end in the hopes of thousands of air berlin workers have been dashed many were hoping to keep their job spot also the carry being sold off by the government three german states and of tons have failed to agree on setting up a transfer company to keep them employed so that means that now only twelve hundred ground crew in berlin will be able to stay on authorities in the german capital say they will set aside up to ten million euros to help out local staff. and germany s
largest lender bank has agreed to pay out a combined total of two hundred twenty million dollars to forty five states across the united states surveys and edged manipulation of interbank lending rights now the state s investigation allegedly uncovered that dog. the bank along with some other big banks including barclays had inflated the libel rate now the libel rate is the rate used to work out how much banks should charge each other for boring money has already agreed to fines of two and a half billion dollars with federal authorities in the u.s. and authorities in the u.k. the bank says the payouts agree to today close the case. the e.u. has put a decision on the life of states on the back burner once again the member states can t agree on whether to renew the european license for the widely used herbicide over a million europeans have signed a petition against it worried that the chemical can cause cancer because studies
prove otherwise. it s the most commonly used herbicide in the world in europe farmer sprague life is saved on around half of all fields used to raise commercial crops but the weed killer is highly controversial due to concerns that could have an impact on human and environmental health today the e.u. once again postponed a decision on whether or not to ban it activists in brussels hit the streets on wednesday to push for a one year they say its institutions have colluded with the industry at the expense of the public they want the commission to come out with a non-renewal of full band any number of years whether it s one year five years ten years as long as it s revenue it s not a ban and european citizens have been clear they want to ban studies don t agree on whether glyphosate is a long term cancer risk or not the world health organization has said it could pose a danger the e.u. s food safety authority has proclaimed the chemical harmless but
has also been accused of basing that opinion on studies sponsored by manufacturers like monsanto greens in the european parliament say that s not acceptable. we need to look at independent studies not just ones carried out by the industry we have to finally end this thing with life i say there are standard farming methods that work fine without the heavy use of chemicals. by standard farming methods mountain hoisting means organic agriculture but many farmers say those methods are too expensive and think it s enough to only ban use of the herbicide directly before the harvest the battle will now continue as the e.u. committee responsible for making a decision was once again split at the conclusion of the meeting no vote was taken the commission took note of the position of different delegations often in the states a form in which you could now reflect and really knows the date of the next meeting shorty. the commission is in favor of extending use for another five to seven years
but it will have to reach an agreement soon life a state s controversial license in the e.u. expires by the end of december. meanwhile european or makers have called on brussels to investigate malta s anti money laundering system is in response to last week s murder of a multis journalist who reported widely on financial and political corruption and multis government is under scrutiny in particular for its handling of illegal business activities the adelie tiny island group lies in the mediterranean the tax system is also delivered to some and attracts many international corporations here officially at least they pay thirty five percent corporate tax but through a series of complex refunds most companies only pay around five percent felt as economy grew six point seven percent last year more than three times faster than the e.u. average agriculture accounted for around one percent of the island s gross domestic
product manufacturing around fourteen percent the largest sector by far was the service sector no surprise given this includes income from two risen in financial services a massive twelve percent of g.d.p. a multicultural online gambling these two branches of the economy are reportedly controlled by the mafia who conduct their operations out of nearby sicily experts say maltese are paid financial laws create an ideal climate for below board business something italy s anti mafia commission knows they re visiting malta this week. but it is necessary to close those legal loopholes that the mafia uses whether they use violence a when they use complicity or corruption mafia gangs always have a predatory attitude towards the areas they target. but in the.
crime tax avoidance and corruption malta s government has done little to change the situation and even the e.u. has turned a blind eye in the past something at least some officials here hope to change. all right inspired courageous or just downright crazy leyla has quite a tale of adventure and i bet when you were a young girl you dreamt of being able to fly well one guy actually has tried to do that in south africa where this man has sailed overhead for two hours camping chair held up by a bunch of bull and so he left off near the city of johannesburg the british adventurer spent days in flaming going around the head of the flight which he described as magical well after reaching a height of two and a half thousand meters he popped some of the balloons to float back down to earth. don t try this at home how come you re watching the news here is we re still ahead
. maybe not so tough after all the political parties trying to form a four way governing coalition in germany appear to be making steady progress but the thorny issues are still to come. paying tribute to a music legend we look back on the legacy of rock n roll pioneer fats domino who s died at the age of eighty nine. that and a whole lot more coming up in just a few. history books are brought to life. maybe the stories there are enough to get
a rewrite of. the story of the russian revolution. from the perspective of writers thinkers and to covent garden just what did it feel like to live in times of revolution. nineteen seventeen the real october forty five minutes to. the sling and the fresh d.w. that i may speak your language to talk about. for content in dari pashto and order prospects for returning to our web special meeting at the refugee journeys of life in germany and the prospects for those returning home. and join the discussion on g.w. dot com and on facebook. prospects for returning s w maybe for my. progress study with a. start to divide the country i think it s the only way they start to divide the
language your blood will flow for could. lead to. the soviet union disparate parts. of. the members of the russian federation would have to find their own way politically and economically would love something it was an incredibly difficult task let me. give you this democracy was a law of the sea for the lections where fraud sense of privatization was robbery. the soviet union territory where does russia stand today and moscow s empire were syrians starting november fifth. good to see you again you re watching it over your news coming to you live from berlin on the rock this is these are i mean stories right now. kenyan opposition
leader raila odinga calls on his supporters to boycott the worst days presidential election rerun the move comes after the supreme court dropped a petition to delay the polls due to a lack of judges the decision triggered protests by opposition supporters. or force coming in from turkey say prosecutors are demanding that german human rights activist peter start there be set free as trial on terrorism related charges got underway today the case has become a flashpoint in an already tense relations between germany and turkey. are going to head now to saudi arabia where that country s young crown prince has outlined ambitious plans to transform the conservative kingdom mohamad been some model promised what he called a quote moderate and opened saudi arabia speaking to investors at the yard the thirty two year old prince also pledged to end extremism and other. extremist ideas
. all right well lead dalia romney is a german saudi businesswoman she s also a former journalist who worked at arab news and she joins us now from dubai a very good evening dahlia the crown prince seems very determined to shake things up vows to return to a more moderate islam in the kingdom now as you know attempts in the past got a lot of pushback so how does he plan on doing this and why now. evening is doing it s looking in the timing is right. and so surely other ones. this of course also comes after the country made world headlines recently with its decision to lift the ban on women driving in the kingdom do you see this as being part of a concerted effort to transform a saudi society. we need it is the local work that needs
to be done. does not mean that women have their rights they still need their guardians mission. to work and for a. so taking that into consideration what you ve just been saying i mean how much should we attribute to where the crown prince is saying in terms of wanting to push through these reforms well you can take his words well yes sure he s very determined and in the last three months there has been in use. and social scene in saudi arabia. you mean the various years all right now crown prince oman of course also announced that he wants to reduce the kingdom s reliance on oil that would be a major feat for any resource depend on the economy did he outlined how he plans to do this. it is difficult to see how this can be done in the foreseeable future
trying to create jobs outside or by investing in truth in education and in large scale in many mineral extract since. this course is all on folding against a backdrop of continuing tensions with qatar do these play a role at all in these developments. up there has nothing to do with business it s hugely up would lead to. that the realization is that without transformation the future for saudi arabia is going to be challenging it is very challenging because you have romney were seventy percent of the jobs. sector direct in directly so we need to move there has to be a change done it s a tough one it s very it s very demanding and i think the confidence is really
doing that the best would be that it can be done today. is a german study businesswoman a former journalist who worked at arab news thank you for joining us from dubai. all right we have to do us now are documents related to the assassination of john f. kennedy over five decades ago or so to be released tomorrow by the u.s. national air archives well the trove is expected to include some three thousand classified documents which have never been released before and about thirty eight thousand that have been previously released with redactions well we re seeing pictures from that day on november twenty second one nine hundred sixty three when a lone gunman lee harvey oswald shot kennedy dead in dallas texas. that was a very very fateful day that that changed history in the u.s.
and of course the anticipation of what could be revealed in those files has arm chair detectives buzzing and let s get more now from the show from our social media disco good to see you. after all these years what are people hoping to find in these documents. well the assassination of john f. kennedy gave rise to decades of conspiracy theories one big question that people are asking up until today is whether lee harvey oswald acted alone or whether there were other gunmen so cia reports show that a few weeks before the assassination harvey oswald took a trip to mexico city and there he met with the diplomats and spies from cuba and the savia to union and us all conspiracy of fear is they say ok this is prove that there of the cia is trying to cover things up that theory has been dismissed by
experts and many of them actually say ok we re hoping that those documents tomorrow will put an end to this theory that there was more than one gunman and one person hoping to that s true as to come out is actually a former cia a story not cia agent but secret service agent actually j.f.k. s body guard yet clint hill he is the man who jumped into the car right after those shots fail and this is what he is saying on twitter i know what i saw heard and felt that in addition to all the evidence i ve seen points to one shooter lee harvey oswald three shots all of from the same position and now although we have accounts of people who are really there at the event there are still sixty one percent of americans who believe that there was more than one gunman so will this finally put
an end to all the speculation. probably in in there are books there are movies there are documentaries that are trying to counter the official narrative of what happened to j.f.k. and right now social media is actually giving a very big platform for a such conspiracy theories in fact we looked through facebook and we found a number of facebook groups where people are discussing these theories everybody trying to come up with their own sort of proof here for example is one group it is called the j.f.k. assassination research bureau and on the other hand we had people who are ok waiting for those documents to be released tomorrow and they re kind of having fun with this whole speculation they say ok let s talk about the unlikely things that will be in the j.f.k. if they say ok things that we won t find there for example are trumps a tax returns. and other thing is that every song that ever went
missing and i absolutely love this one here i m sure that you will remember that viral discussion about the color of this particular dress people online asking ok is it blue and black is it s gold and why it s will we find answers to that in the j.f.k. files that nobody knows but tomorrow we will have all the answers later right liz show thank you. i m back here in berlin political parties trying to form a governing coalition after last month s election appear to be making progress talks between shots on the american conservatives the free democrats and greens had been expected to last several weeks if not months while the parties say they ve already reached agreement on the outlines of finance policy including maintaining a balanced budget but there are some forney issues still ahead. so much concrete
agreement probably came as a surprise there s already an initial paper outlining common goals and everyone has been tweeting about it the main point no new debt. but for the green party that represents simply a notice of intention to avoid and we want a balanced budget but we also want to do something for people with low incomes for families we want to do something about the environmentally destructive subsidy it s about constructing rental housing. all parties involved want to invest and to relieve financial burdens especially on families with children and lower to middle income groups but is all that possible without new debt. the greens don t believe it can work and we know that it can and that is the whole point of the negotiations to determine how to make something sensible out of the games agree together and if you can that will require further discussion but the bavarian allies of merkel s
conservative c.d.u. party worry whether their expensive campaign promises can be implemented because as i hope this won t be a single capital solution that is the least amount of relief but then we should focus on making sure that relief is palpably effective reservations about and despite the common ground found so far the next round will focus on refugees and migration reaching agreement there is expected to pose fresh difficulties. tahlia police have identified sixteen people who placed anti semitic stickers iran s olympic stadium on sunday a fans of capital couple had sought to taunt supporters of their local rivals by making stickers of anne frank in a room or shirt obviously that shamed italian soccer and has stirred strong reactions across europe. troubling scenes at rome s a lympics stadium during a game against colliery last sunday some fans put stickers in the arena that showed
and frank the german born teenage diarists murdered in the holocaust wearing the jersey of their local rivals roma. reaction to the incident has been fierce on tuesday last year as president claudio the tito paid a visit to rome s main synagogue to lay a wreath in remembrance of holocaust victims said the club would take two hundred young fans to the auschwitz concentration camp every year as part of an education campaign. nor your we re here today to make clear once again our position of distancing ourselves from any form of siena phobia racism and anti semitism. more to do with the italian president and prime minister condemn the actions of a lot c.s. supporters the italian football federation said a minute of silence will be observed before all games across the country this week and a passage from frank s diary will be read out over
a stadium loudspeakers lot c.-o. have had a history of anti semitic behavior some twenty years ago lots of fans at a city darby held a banner reading auschwitz is your homeland the ovens are your homes. i want to get more on that story with terry daly he s a sports journalist based in rome and joins us right now what is been the reaction from italian media and fans. well italian media has been predictably outraised of what s happened it s not the first time in the last year fans of engage in this kind of activism is not the first time the fans in rome in general because these kind of attitudes in rome have a similarly nasty foreigner a group element in outliers. i would say that it was kind of strange to see that the main two main sports newspapers are going to sell us all and the girl didn t run with this story is a major front page story they ran it as
a sole story on the front page and then left it pastes world and thirteen in the newspapers while they still carried on with a regular news story so you know people have been outraged but at the same time it s almost like we ve kind of used his pavia now i mean that so and others of course in his lead carried on with this kind of nonsense for such a long time now that people must become so used to that all right let s talk a little bit about that then because that s actually quite worrying at would you say that this type of act anticipated behavior in general when it comes to light so is that typical of their fans it s typical of sort of fairly large subsection of their hardcore support yes i mean there s been a long strains the rage of far right now fascism within an old which is where the last or to congregate in the soul of the or for the best part for decades i mean the current group that runs there really runs their fan base in
every sense is the reader to believe their main guys are gods or beasts of the she said early and he s a noted fascist he s also. let s say on television you know you know sort of so we like the way that he s had problems of the law in part with other issues not related to focal and he s also been named alongside other far out terrorists who ve taken part in political violence in the seventy s and eighty s so there s a clear thread over that so however in recent years say this kind of obvious manifestation of near fascism is become less common it should also be remembered that the reason that s offense for the stick is out in the first place is because they ve been moved to go berserk which is the road and and they were moved there because they racially abused two sessile of clothes a few weeks ago and they had had their fill of the closed so you know lots of problems there that you outline. how has the club reacted to this scandal are they trying to tackle this problem. it s
a kind of hard problem to tackle in the sense that if you try to tackle it seriously you only against some quite nasty people i mean toilet seats as the president of the club who you saw earlier went to the synagogue and. he has been threatened seriously by these people number of occasions. toothaches he took when he took over the club around thirteen years ago. so it s very hard because they re living apart from sort of just outside the fact that they themselves don t agree with this star and that they don t believe that the wider let s say fan base is of this particular political opinion however i have not enough is being done at the end of the day because this problem persisted and it s problems on terry daly sports journalist based in rome italy thank you for having us. and we re going to take
a look at the financial fallout from hurricane maria now with helena thank you lated now it s been over a month since hurricane maria slammed into the caribbean many residents in puerto rico a still without electricity the u.s. territory was certainly hit hard recovery will take time not least because maria has also affected one of the island s biggest industries tourism. in the small city of jaco insult western puerto rico there s still a lot of cleanup work left to do hurricane maria struck some communities here with devastating force. u.s. military and emergency aid teams are only slowly beginning to gain an overview of the most pressing problems things look a lot more orderly in the capital san juan but residents here face another problem many rely completely on tourism to earn a living around five million visitors on average come to the island annually and they spend four billion dollars here but although high season is just around the corner the tourists aren t coming this year where the impact of the we are very
very uphill to see them but it turns. also out. for where the workers the ones that are open that is about one in three hotels on the island is still boarded up and a lot of restaurants can t open because they still have no regular power many beaches also remain closed after sewage systems overflowed into the sea during the hurricane still where to reconsider thrown in the towel some even see this as a fresh start. an opportunity to improve an opportunity to assess where we re at as a as an industry and really revamp our product address to the bottom line the brave words what puerto rico was struggling with serious budgetary problems even before maria hit and those missing tourists will make it that much harder to bounce back. right a vision or and there are saudi arabia s planning on building
a mega city in the desert oil pumped through the heart of this metropolis only alternative energy robots trains and driverless cars will dominate and the price tag off a train in u.s. dollars. i. blew berryhill was one of anton fats domino his biggest hit. at five foot five and weighing more than ninety kilos domino was not a natural part. but his wide smile and enabled and meaner one audience is over and then of course there was his music heavily influenced by his new orleans roots. my
contemporaries such as little richard domino was a black artist whose unique sound appeal to white fans in helped shape early rock n roll. fats domino stayed in the new orleans area after his home was heavily damaged by flooding from hurricane katrina in two thousand and five in his later years he rarely appeared in public aside from occasional performances in his hometown he remained loyal to new orleans until the end. and that is the want to know only rock n roll pioneer fats domino who has sadly died at the age of eighty nine the rhythm and blues pianist from new orleans who sold over one million records and helped change the face of popular music and our very own robin mel is here a true or rock n roll legend absolutely definitely one of the inventors if not the inventor of rock n roll i should mention. deadly and maybe chuck berry as well
but for me it was fast he always maintained that he played rhythm and blues but it was those triplets that you just had their little bit of and a strong the drum beat that actually was the beginning. rock n roll and he sold more records in the nine hundred fifty s. than anybody else in the world except elvis and then he actually his first single the fat man was the first song ever to sell a million records then in nineteen fifty five he recorded blueberry hill which wasn t his own song by the way it was an old song from the nine hundred thirty s. and he did these sort of trademark triplets on the drum was strong and the bass as well and that sold five million copies worldwide he s just such a towering figure here fortunately didn t perform that much in recent years but he is but his influence is undeniable oh yeah i mean not just to musicians i should explain he was the first one of the first black musicians to get white audience and
we re talking about a time in the one nine hundred fifty s. when the deep south was very segregated he comes from new orleans of course and he and other black artists really had a lot to do with you know to get rid of segregation via music when you talk about music the influence just where to start but i ll just give one example really the beatles they wrote lady madonna lennon mccartney it was said that they wrote it they wrote it in the start of someone and it was written for him but then they recorded it but john lennon said and i quote that couldn t have been a beatles with fats domino and if you just think of that couldn t have been so much rock n roll if he wanted to others maybe started it off as it changed it from rhythm and blues elvis cited him as an influence as well and he s really so influential to the sixty s when ronald exploded if you like but to this day in fact
just before i came on to philly around found on you tube a video of ladysmith putin singing blueberry hill we won t play it right now but you see he s even influence politics he said. you is universal and the fantastic thing is you have met the man the legend in person share with us how you re doing i did i interviewed him maybe thirty years ago now it was here in berlin and the funny thing was it was after a concert and i always got interviews before a concert i never got interviews after a concert because the people who play the concert whoever they were i want to relax have a drink and party well i had a an interview after the concert here in berlin and the man i mean such a humble wonderful gentle man in all ways really just a wonderful chap and i was quite a young reporter and he sat me down and chatted to me and he has a strong new orleans accent which i found difficult to understand really but
it was ok it was sort of ok and then he was talking about used to take ice to the rich people s houses in new orleans and i come and then i pressed the button i was a radio report from my tape machine and as i did to start the interview he went there and took his false teeth i think if the interviews that he did it was. i shouldn t really love i mean i didn t really understand much more of what he said and i took my treasured interviewed by city office and played it for my my colleagues who also didn t understand it so we really couldn t use much of it but it so sad to hear really that such a great man who has passed away reached the grand old age of eighty nine new orleans is in mourning the whole world of rock n roll is in mourning but a great legend we can definitely say that word tonight the legend of rock n roll it s a word that s often i mean used to in many contexts but in this context it s really
a pleasurable he s such a towering figure and we re going to leave our viewers with some fats domino thank you so much robin and thank you for spending this part of your day with us we ll be back at the top of the hour. freons. told me you. won t have any. plans you. say you. won t live in a. land. mine
. when. we. played. we ve been. told by you. we won t. you won t see a. hole you won t break. down low but.
a rewrite of. the story of the russian revolution. from the perspective of writers thinkers and just what do you feel like to live in times of revolution. nine hundred seventy the real october fifth. visitors. visit and saying this is my day you boys in the house the night you. came in vegas house of music stores up close and personal and unplugged. night groups starting over a third down d.w. week. they are going to unofficial estimates more than one point two million venezuelans live in colombia legally and illegally. already
morgan was returned to vast whaler. to visit friends is that i don t think i d ever go back there to live you know what i live there again i don t know so i m not sure . bearing witness global news that matters. made for mines. when cities are engulfed by the sea. then all victims walls and costly protective measures will be and. nothing. floods challenging our future starting november nights on g.w. . it s mr mission day w. we have school grounds around the clock marking its for the first three we re going
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earlier today that weinstein sexually harassed them. other actresses are telling the new york times that weinstein was making unwanted advances. heather graham is also speaking out. she told variety that weinstein said if she had with him, he would get a movie deal in the movie role. and weinstein s wife georgina chapman told people magazine she is now finally leaving her husband. according to the daily mail, weinstein is taking a page out of the clinton playbook. he s hiring a top hollywood lawyer in an attempt if you read it to discredit his victims. only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to allegations against harvey weinstein. with even more disturbing is the fact that people, many of them in hollywood knew what weinstein was doing and they knew it for decades and they did nothing about it. some in hollywood are even being accused of helping to cover this up. according to a former new york times reporter, there
is a 2004 story that she was working on about weinstein. allegedly point paying a woman to keep her silent after he sexually harassed her. that was killed with the help she says from actors matt damon and russell crowe. david is denying he played any role and says the conversation he had with the reporter was not about weinstein. there s also a fashion designer, want to be outraged? donna karan has apologized today after saying on sunday that weinstein s accusers were asking for it. there s also the fact that as we highlighted last night, weinstein is a huge, massive, major democratic donor. their estimate is that he contributed over $2 million to democrats since the year 2000. very key top democratic names and players. including an estimated $44,000 to hillary clinton. that s in addition to the
$15,000 that weinstein gave to her super pac. weinstein also donated over dollars to the obama victory fund. maybe that s why took clinton and the obama s five days to begin to speak out. that s not all. the hollywood executive dished out over $97,000 to the democratic national committee. he wrote checks for over $76,000 to the democratic senatorial campaign committee. some democrats to their credit giving the money back. others are donating to various liberal groups. really? not every single democrat isn t doing that. even though they should be. remember during the campaign? i made such a big deal about all of the money that hillary clinton, or foundation, was taking in from countries like saudi arabia, qatar, oman, kuwait. the uae. they treat women horror to make horribly. in some of these countries gays
and lesbians are put to death. christians and jews are persecuted. five days after the scandal broke, we want to remind you what the women who accused bill clinton of sexual misconduct said. i don t remember hollywood stars speaking out against clinton or talking about his issues that he had to deal with. or how hillary defended him. you may remember this. it he described a scene when he was biting on your lip and when it was all over, he was leaving. inside you better put some ice on that. yeah. and casually put on his sunglasses and walked out the door. it was a terrible ordeal for me. no woman should be subjected to it. sean: he assaulted you. he touched, grabbed, fondled and kissed you against your will. an allegation not made by one woman. it s made by many others.
next thing you know, she pulled down his pants, everything. he was exposed. and i said i am not that kind of girl. and i need to be getting back to my bed. sean: remember what hillary said? she said their accusations were part of the vast right-wing rig conspiracy theory. the ever so eloquent statement she put out about weinstein today. i was shocked and appalled by the revelations about harvey weinstein. the behavior described a women coming forward cannot be tolerated. their courage in the support of others is critical in helping to top this kind of behavior. really, hillary, really? three genetic sentences and your silence over the years? here s the truth about the clintons and weinstein. they ve known weinstein for years. they ve been more than happy to take all of his money and run
campaigns. foxnews.com is reporting that weinstein donated $200,000 to that clinton foundation. maybe that s why she waited to condemn weinstein. she never criticized those countries that treat women, gays and lesbians, christians and jews horribly. finally at this late hour, the obama s finally put out a statement about weinstein that reads this. michelle and i have been disgusted about the recent reports of harvey weinstein. any man who demeans or degrades women in such fashion needs to be condemned and held accountable regardless of wealth or status. we should celebrate the courage of women who have come forward to tell these painful stories and we all need to build a culture including by empowering our girls in teaching our boys decency and respect so we can make such behavior less prevalent in the future. okay, a obama loves to opine
have spoken out about the treatment of women, gays and lesbians, kristen s aunt jews under sharia. hollywood is a perfect example. we ve been hearing about this type of behavior, that weinstein is being accused of. he s definitely not alone. it s bigger than anyone is going to tell you. we will be investigating. people have been talking for years. ever hear the phrase the casting couch in hollywood? we ve all heard that phrase. guess what? hollywood has turned a blind eye to the systemic abuse. they just accepted it. all while attacking conservatives as being anti-women, feeding moral outrage, selective moral outrage any time a conservative is caught up in a scandal or an alleged scandal. hollywood does not care about the issue that they talked about because if they did, someone would have spoken out about weinstein sooner. people have known for years and they did not do it. hollywood, what do they do in the movies? they romanticize violence and
sex. and of course, cartoon characters. they slant left. this is why it s bigger than anyone will tell you. i have a video from 2003. remember? a guy accused of rape and even admitted to part of it? roman polanski. he went back and oscar for best director. the left its audience, how did they respond? he was in the 40s when the accusation took place. the girl was 13. the same polanski accused of raping a 13-year-old girl after giving her champagne and quaaludes. he fled to europe before he got the full sentence he deserved. which is why he was absent from this award ceremony. now that you know this, close attention. how did the hollywood oscars
crowd, how did they cheer for this accused child rapist? watch this. roman polanski for the pianist. [cheers and applause] sean: seeing that after knowing what roman polanski did to a 13-year-old girl? should we really be surprised that hollywood leftist liberals did not expose weinstein sooner? we also have to point out that some in hollywood, they still support polanski. back in 2009, he was arrested in switzerland. people wanted him extradited to california on the 1977 case. but over 100 leftist hollywood celebrities, we will show you some of the notable ones right there. they all signed a petition. demanding the guy that did this
to a 13 euro girl be released. there are also reports that harrison ford and harvey weinstein himself signed that petition. this hypocrisy is stunning. it s shameful. beyond disgusting. here s my prediction tonight. this harvey weinstein scandal is only the tip of the iceberg. for example, after terry crews, he announced he was sexually assaulted by high-ranking hollywood executive, we will have a lot more on the days and weeks ahead. here with reaction, fox news correspondent geraldo rivera. radio talk show host larry elder and monica crowley. i want to start with you. you knew him. in 2001, he worked as an editor and writer for talk magazine. it was half owned by harvey weinstein. and his first movie studio, miramax. he controlled half of the magazine. while i never experienced or witnessed sexual harassment
myself, i did witness extremely abusive behavior on the part of harvey weinstein directed to the editor in chief and others who worked at the magazine. he would come in that office once a week, a couple times a week. screaming. the vitriol that he spewed was so abusive. rather than being productive, it actually had the contrary effect. we all heard whispers about the other part of it. it s the abusive behavior in one area certainly tells us about abusive behavior in other areas. sean: how is it possible, geraldo? i have friends. they told me the same thing that live in los angeles. everybody knew. everybody knew and is far more pervasive than anybody knows. the guy in new zealand whose hiring attorneys to expose all of these people. i think this is going to get bigger. it s huge.
nobody can pretend to be surprised. you mentioned the expression casting couch. i ve done at least a dozen exposes on the casting couch over the years. in 2013 when seth mcfarlane, the very gifted comic was presenting the nominations for the academy award for best supporting actress, he said of the five nominees, now they didn t have to pretend to like harvey weinstein anymore. this was a generalized this was general knowledge. furthermore, to your political point, i don t think the progressive side of the political agenda, the liberals can in any way denied that they dropped the ball regarding these specific allegations. there s no doubt but if this was one of us, if it was bill o reilly again or if it was bill cosby, the left would have had it. it would have been the lead in the saturday night live monologue or the weekend update.
it wasn t even mentioned. the late-night comic didn t even mention it at all. it s a lamentable that a person who is a predator like this a pig but if you are a right-wing pig, they would have been all over this on friday. not waiting until tuesday. sean: so true. larry, you lived in l.a. it s different in this sense. everybody i know that lives out there, there are so many people, young people that go out there with dreams and aspirations and they want to be actors and actresses. and models and all of this. i am told by my friends there, this is so pervasive. it s worse than anybody knows. what do you hear from other people in the industry? that s why this is so appalling, sean. it s one thing for a young starlet, naive, the casting couch in the behavior of harvey weinstein.
it s another thing for an accomplished, established actors like glenn close to say yeah, i knew about this for a long time and never said anything. knowing about it all this time and not saying anything, knowing full well he s doing this to younger actresses? my goodness, where have you been? we are not to be surprised by this kind of hypocrisy. paula jones, she works at the national organization for women. she was told i m sorry, you are in bed with the wrong people. she told me she called gloria aldrich s office twice and they didn t even return the phone call. sean: the clintons got a pass. because they are liberal. all the things i ve been thinking about the money they take from countries that have sharia, the clintons got a pass on all bill clinton s garbage and they all knew that was true. sean, one more thing, there s a book called no one left alive too. it was written by douglas brinkley, a very respected
historian. by christopher hitchens. he said that bill clinton has been accused of greg: ser twice but three times. sean: it didn t stop them not a peep out of hillary. go ahead. hillary clinton said over the last year that these kind of women make these accusations should be believed. harvey weinstein in the first day of this scandal was telling people this was going to blow over because he believed as a good liberal throwing his money around that he would be protected. for a long time, he was, sean. it shows a very deep, corrosive moral degradation. not just in hollywood but in the culture. sean: i m not going to cast dispersions on one group of people. i m not going to cast dispersions on women that were afraid to talk. but so many waited and then thinking if you are waiting,
you ve got to know in the back of your head this guy is not changing his behavior. some were very rich and powerful. when it s happening to you, you think you are alone and it s only happening to you. that this kind of thing was only directed to you. sean: good point. when you walk out of a situation like this, you are terrified to tell anybody because you think you re the only one and you are not going to be believed. sean: geraldo. the partial solution to this as this emerges one harvey weinstein paid off these people, i have no doubt that he and his privately held company of which he and his brother own 42%, they deducted those payoffs, the silence money from their income tax. as a legitimate business aspect. that s a violation of tax law. the frustration that the new york county d.a. voiced
about the inability to prosecute him for the groping of the actress, because she may have been unreliable or whatever it was now the tax man can unpeeled a lot of this nonsense and hold people accountable for clear violation of the irs tax code. a felony, by the way. that s the way to go. many of the complainants coming forward, in the bill cosby case, many of the alley vacations were 20-30-even 40 years old. i suspect in the weinstein case, there are fresher allegations in which the statute of limitations is not so old. sean: i promise we ll get to the bottom of it. young people deserve better. the casting couch crap has got
to stop. i m sorry about what you went through, too. roger caddell, a huge announcement on the national anthem controversy. you re going to want to hear this. newt gingrich and studio as we continue tonight on ah, dinner.
sean: welcome back to hannity. nfl commissioner roger goodell finally responded to the national anthem controversy playing the league. hello, roger. in a letter he wrote. the current dispute over the national anthem is threatening to erode the unifying power of our game and is now dividing us and our players and many fans across the country. he continued. like many of our fans, we believe everyone should stand for the national anthem. we need to move past this controversy and we want to do that together with our players. meanwhile, dallas cowboys owner jerry jones repeated his position that he will bench players who disrespect the flag. good for him. watch this. the policy is if you do not honor and stand for the flag, a lot of the fans feel that you should.
if that s not the case, then you will not play. sean: remember, people fought bled and died under that flag. unfortunately, those on the left in this country were quick to accuse jerry jones of being racist. this is pathetic. watch this. jerry jones displayed leadership but i need to be with my players, he got down and linked arms. i understand that. it seems like that s where he was going. now it seems like it was as phony as a three dollar bill. the word that comes to mind, i don t care if he doesn t like me using it, plantation. the players are here to serve me and they will do what i want, no matter how much i pay them. they are not equal to me. jerry jones his decision in many ways, smacks of the plantation mentality. sean: what about nfl players?
are we restricting their free speech rights? and when they put on their cleats 9/11 oh oh two meg zero? they were forbidden from doing that. you can t twerk or taunt or do a fake bow and arrow in the end zone. author of how to turn good men into whiners, weenies, and wimps. burgess owens is back with us. there are plenty restrictions on free speech in the nfl. can t remember 9/11. you cannot honor dead police officers assassinated in the line of duty. one player wanted to honor his mother with pink but it wasn t the month of october. he was denied this request. why can t they make rules here without being called racist? here s the problem, i think
the nfl commissioner had it right. we have to remove the barrier and move forth and find a way for america to come together. i think the players should stand for the plaque. sean: this is about low ratings and revenues walking out the door. this is not about principle. people aren t watching it. the disrespect of the brave men and women who fought, bled, and died for that flag. to play its part and they get paid a lot of money. we need americans who stand with us for the flag to stand and erase the racial divide in our country. we have issues monday through sunday. sean: burgess, i mentioned this. robert kraft said to all his players, i will match you dollar for dollar. let s do something in our communities and help people. i am so excited about this conversation we are having. what we are seeing in the black community, as we pull back the
underbelly of socialism and marxism, you see people that don t have any hope. at the end of the day, we have a chance to have the conversation. where are the black leaders? all these guys who are now complaining, talking about racist owners. where have they been as we fed the misery for black people for all these years? it s been total silence. i m glad we are having conversation. americans do what we do best. we are going to give these kids hope. give money to the right organizations. not naacp. those are front doors for marxism. april giving these kids hope. doing the right thing for them. sean: i am all for i make my living with freedom of speech, daryl. it s a shame that no one paid attention in obama s adopted hometown during his presidency and 39 people killed.
18,000 shot. the final six years of his presidency. where was everybody? where was everybody when kids are dying? god s sons and daughters are dying. i ve scrawled their names. you need to hear from the nfl players. they are saying to america and our president we have a racial issue we need to talk about. we need to have that conversation. until we have that conversation, i don t think we ve properly responded to these players. the president owes it to the country into players in the league. all americans are going to stand for the flag, make sure we have this conversation to address the issues that so many of these players have brought to our attention. sean: burgess, last word. ever in the history of mankind, the black community, these people are telling these kids for 20-30 years that they can t make it. the conversation needs to be had but we need to tell them what the real deal is in our country
and not let the socialists run this. sean: we ve got to leave it there. i appreciate it. roger goodell statement about players standing for the anthem, a big win for president trump. we will asked newt gingrich about harvey weinstein, whether or not republicans can get anything done and the battle between senator corker and president trump. we have a lot of ground to cover on this busy breaking news
your wife has a new book out. she s going to beat you in ambassador to the vatican. remember the ladies. she now works for the american people. sean: congratulations. i think it was right to bring this debate on the nfl in the anthem. one of the things driving the elite media crazy is that trump has this instinct for taking the side of the american people in taking the side of american history. and being willing to stand up to every politically correct left-winger there is. he s gradually beginning to break through, i think. it s not measurable in traditional terms. if you go back and collect all the columns about how wrong it was for trump to do this, the
american people said no, that s exactly right. and winston did their poll and found out that the nfl had collapsed sean: dramatically. i m sure roger goodell in the moment of deep patriotism desired not to to go broke. sean: now you mean when the revenue is sinking and the ratings go down? they decided that they too wanted to stand for the flag. sean: they too. very clever. i want to go back to this harvey weinstein issue. it s a huge political component here. you ve known me all these years. i met you in 1990. the first time, a holiday in in decatur alabama. the thing that frustrates me,
that republicans are racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, islamophobic. every election cycle. poor met romney had resumes of women and was accused of misogyny. could not meet the nicer guy in your life. right? now, all the hypocrisy, hilary takes money from countries that practice sharia. they take money from weinstein. everybody i know in hollywood says this was an open secret. how abusive and horrible this man was. the the casting couch is not w concept. it did not matter that bill clinton treated women horribly. they still voted for bill and hillary. why the double standard? there s a great daily blog, pointed out two things. if hillary had won, this was still not be a story. they would have smothered it. it was so directly brings back
bill and hillary. this is a story that could only emerge when you had somebody new in the white house. in the old days, people like weinstein. this would make an amazing movie or novel, it s not just him. there were people who had the power they could go to the various publications, the women s publications and say i can get a start to be the cover of your next magazine. you really want to pick a fight with me? sean: they owned them. the democratization of media, there are too many small people out there to bribe. someone comes along and says sean: twitter, facebook. i am willing to report this and you can t do anything to me. what s interesting is, this is part of an ongoing process. you re going to see hollywood come apart at the seams.
just as you ve seen silicon valley. it becomes inappropriate for economic power to coerce and blackmail and bribe people it s been exploiting. sean: there is an ugly, hypocritical underbelly here, though. the left will tolerate the sins of the left. hollywood celebrities tolerated the sins of the clintons because of what their politics were. any conservative, even if it s not true, they will go forward with the fierce feigned outrage. what gets to people like you and me and the most of our audience is the left is determined to say they are morally superior. they have to come in and say whatever the topic is, you are a bad person. you are a bad person.
as you said, they come up with these nasty, big terms. i just saw a study that says the next generation of college professors, it s 12-1 democrat. 12-1. it says to me that campuses are gone. people that walk around smugly saying i am morally superior and you must be inferior because after all, you don t believe what i believe. sean: do think deep down in their hearts they know how hypocritical they are? no, that s what s frightening. they are totalitarians. this is what george orwell in 1984 wrote about. sean: they will tolerate the sins of their own. it s like leonardo dicaprio. a big green guy. not enough to celebrate new year s eve once with a private jet to australia. and that a private jet to fly back to vegas, you get to celebrate it twice.
of course, you can buy carbon offsets. the equivalent of buying a diamond watch, ring, and necklace if you are unfaithful to your wife and say it s just an offset, honey. no problem. that ll work. a carbon offset i can send all i want. put out all the admissions but you ve got to get rid of your caravan and drive a bicycle. you are not going to jump from there in a mean-spirited way and talk about al gore s swimming pool. sean: [laughs] i have a video of him getting off on goma street. it s only him and his wife. [laughs] i am the only person in life they can throw you off. i am sorry. i have no idea what i was about to say. sean: there s double standard hypocrisy. what drives him crazy is, and candidly, one of the things that saved bill clinton was that he knew he was a hypocrite. he s kind of cheerful about it.
it was the people around him who worked. it s a guy who went down and talk to a group of people and said i think i did too. he had this arkansas country boy all shocks, here i am doing the best i can. there is is not what these people are. these people would destroy you. not just you, sean hannity but but sean: any conservative. anyone on a college campus that speaks superficially. sean: i want to talk about the battle between corker and the president and the agenda and whether it can get done. and your new book. i don t know if it will do as well as understanding tromp. you can t do better than 30 weeks in a row. it s about north korea and terrorism. it leaps off the pages. i think it s going to do very well. sean: i will pull it up in a second.
i will start reading it tonight. and i have an ..
or have flu-like symptoms, or sores. liver problems can occur with entyvio. if your uc or crohn s medication isn t working for you, ask your gastroenterologist about entyvio. entyvio. relief and remission within reach. sean: as we continue, i actually got my copy right here. vengeance, he is upset because i said it s not going to do as well as understanding tromp.
this is a very important book and it s it s very important things about national security. sean: this is your passion. you aren t really a commentator. although you are one of the best speakers integrate political visionaries, you actually can give a course to these idiots in washington today. had to have urgency and get things done. this is your passion. it models right from today s headlines. i worry about our national security. i think it s the most dangerous period since the 1962 cuban missile crisis. i think it s partly a problem because we think okay, we are going to deal with north korea but it s not north korea. it s the terrorists and iran and russia. you have to think networks of behavior. in the point we make is what if terrorists got to swapped it to make dirty bombs?
sean: that s a possibility. or the old-fashioned way, building official. building a missile. and the marine major, or third volume. she works with a mossad agent. the three of them are assigned before this stuff can get to the u.s. or to israel. sean: can i get the movie rights? i have my first movie coming up. we have this battle going on. i know most people when you became speaker, you also would take out of your pocket a piece of paper, first 100 days we are going to do these ten items. you did them and kept your word. repeal and replace, seven and a half years. do you know how aggravated i am? now it appears they may not be ready for this moment in terms of the tax bill, the forgotten
men and women need. and bob corker, in a war with donald trump. this isn t going to help the country. by the way, they hate him. let s be honest. i talked to people in that senate room. what was exactly said by lindsey graham, senator mccain, mitch mcconnell and bob corker, they don t like this president. by the summer of 1940, the only american president to be elected four times was so disliked by the congress that he turned to general george marshall and said if we are going to get an extension to the draft, you have to go get it because none of them trust me. this was the president who arguably was the most effective politician in american history. sean: at least he had three terms by that point. we haven t gotten through the first year.
founding fathers designed a system for independently elected people in three places and it s really, really hard. i want to say something about patterns. he was a good example of what we were talking about. the paul ryan postcard that you could fill out. 85 or 95% of americans will be able to do all of the taxes on a postcard. it saves about 5 billion hours of paperwork and probably $100 billion a year. sean: the house has sent over 280 pills. it s only gotten a third of the presidents appointments. it s a year. what are they doing? part of what the problem sean: the brother talk. calm hannity down. i m not trying to calm you down. defending democracy, which is people i may do a course on how to legislate. sean: for them or for us?
for the country. including them. sean: especially them. that includes the white house. the first and you have to understand, this is a system designed to be hard and if you screw it up, it becomes impossible. sean: why am i having a hard time yet i think i speak for a lot of people, you ask for the house in 2010 and you get it. in 2014, you get it. 2016, you get it. you ve got it all and then you have all this lead up time. you are right. people have every right to be frustrated with the republican party, which institutionally has been unable for ten months to get its act together. sean: how is that even possible? you have a brand-new president who has never served in public office. a whole bunch of senators that are skeptical. sean: did you hear how pompous and arrogant and how
much of a jackass bob corker sounded in the interview? those are my words. those are your words. all i can say is. people when they get unleashed, there are moments that night i set a whole bunch of stuff about the fact that hillary and bill were mcgovern knights. that becomes page one on the new york times. why would you say that? i would say my advice to senator corker who was a very bright guy and president trump is sean: keep your promises. not just that. call each other. have lunch. decide that serving the country is more important. sean: thank you for being with us. we will see you soon.
coney island has been around for a long, long time. reminds me of how geico has been saving people money for over 75 years. hey, big guy! come on in! let me guess your weight! win a prize! sure, why not. 12 ounces! sorry, mate. four ounces. i ve been taking the stairs lately. you win, big guy. sorry, scuse me! oh, he looks so much more real on tv. yeah. over 75 years of savings and service. get your rate quote today.
sean: a couple of reminders before we go, you know what? i m so sick of hollywood. about two years ago, i had a meeting i got involved as an executive producer. my first movie, i think i m out of my mind. the project is down and is, in out. it s not formulaic. it actually has values that you and your whole entire family can go see. it s got a great story. it s going to be in theaters october 27th. take a look a look. the basic tenets of christianity. timeout. don t you dare tell me about the love and compassion of your so-called god. if you felt like sacrificing his only begotten son. that s his business. he should have plenty well keep his hands off off of mine!

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eighty one after a long illness while the news was announced by her personal assistant when mandela was the ex-wife of the late president and anti apartheid icon nelson mandela her legacy in south africa was mixed for decades she was long admired as a determined fighter against white minority rule in south africa but women to his reputation began to suffer and later years due to a number of controversy still she does remain one of south africa s most of fining figures and tributes have been pouring in for her this is what one member of the current government had to say she was really it was. solved in african names. is the sea deep our evolutionary pain. of this great i call of regimes drug. serfontein is a south african journalist author and documentary filmmaker she has reported extensively
on her country thank you so much mr serfontein for being here with us who was winnie mandela well she s obviously in the former wife of nelson mandela but she was so sort of a very strong figure in a own right she was a social worker one of the street to go and study in the united states in the nineteen fifties and married to mandela. and then off to he went to prison and she became the voice. of nelson mandela because he was in prison and with twenty seven years she kept his legacy alive and i strongly believe without him he would have not have been that i can he became my so it s about that because she s been so tainted in the past couple of years but this is a very interesting point you think that well everyone was in prison the a.n.c. was in exile his organization he was in prison his comrades when prison and she was still there and they slammed her with banning orders but she kept on breaking her
book banning old is she kept on speaking up she was beautiful she was well spoken and she was not scared of anyone she was really feeling and that got into trouble in later because no one could control her not to watch apartheid government the nato not to see that she was when he was one of the most fearless people have ever met fearless woman fearless activist you know her personally what kind of impression that should make on you know well she was incredibly charming on a one to one and you know like if you would speak to her you had the full attention and she was just the sort of very charismatic person more so than when they re lively she just had. this charm and with charm people but then when she was angry she just always have vicious as one is seen in the townships and that when she confronted the security police right so where did it all go wrong i mean you refer
to it already shared this fierceness which couldn t couldn t be bound i think when they benish ten nine hundred seventy seven to bring forward to an area which she didn t speak the language where people would politicised and she was very very isolated and she did start to have a drinking problem and i think that broke in addition to have early as sort of spells in detention which she was sort of kept without trial for eighteen months and raped in that time and that must have broken her just when the people were not treated for post-traumatic stress syndrome in those days so she was a very lonely person when she was invented and she spent about nine years. she was also been active being a social worker she started like feeding. feeding the people. organizing them getting sort of activities for the trold wron getting foreign governments to fund have projects so she was also very eco active but she was very
lonely in that time and i think that broken in she went back to see a way to she was surrounded by the wrong people she was not a with the judge the best judge of people s character a very complex history of a complex woman what will her legacy be i think her legacy would be that at the time when everyone was in prison or when exiled she kept the legacy of the anti-apartheid struggle alive for many many years all to great extent be aren t only answer from time south african journalist talking to us about the legacy of the now late winnie mandela thank you. all right and other news reports are coming in from see. that rebel fighters are leaving their last stronghold in isa hotel syrian media showed us is said to be carrying militants and their families leaving the area persian forces say they ve cut a deal with the largest rebel group the army of islam but some members of the group
deny that sources also tell the news that hundreds of wounded fighters from a different group have been bussed out of the area it s on now an anti government and activist and citizen journalist nor adam has sent news exclusive footage of video diaries showing the final days of rebel control in the besieged area. different species. you can. see it for us they force us to leave that s our goal. that s where we are. they destroy our. our goal how do you conceive that suction this terrible. thing to now there are families. that are of going to have this thing.
going now we are actually. we don t know really getting back to that what we were what he was doing. our city is how we fight i would do if i didn t know what happened to the feeling like oh. i was being arrested for any of this and jane and oh exactly it s going to be done there i should and the us and them to see our we know we ve. got three countries feel the power of all the court going to the fight. and russia . as. my mrs. did you. instead of.
yes if i write. my dad he. said simply. i ve been lost like more than twenty five or twenty six right. and right now. a lot of them is going. for nothing but it is my life i want to sponsor the taliban for the sick winds. and to say it s a. window that is going for nothing. personnel a video diary out of some hotel there all right now to some of the other stories making news around the world. israel says it has agreed to deal with the united nations on resettling thousands of african asylum seekers israel had faced criticism for previous plans to send the migrants back to africa and mass
forty one percent then in the previous presidential election critics also argue as sisi had just one opponent a token candidate to give the election the appearance of a genuine contest opposition groups that called for a boycott of the vote. well with voters handing a second term to president have to have sisi what does this mean for the arab world s most populous nation going forward ruth michaelson is a correspondent based in cairo and she will be able to provide us with some contacts was this a vote by egyptians for a sisi or for stability in the country. well government and c.c. himself bill this vote as a vote as a vote for civility a vote for the country a kind of vote for egyptian patriotism as a whole but of course high turnout for turnout of any kind benefits he says will he wanted
a strong mandate going into his second term in office to be able to push through further reforms perhaps even constitutional little ones we saw that there was forty why i m just on forty one percent turnout which is about a four percent dip from cc s last victory in twenty forty but he got roughly the same amount of votes ninety six point nine percent in twenty fourteen and this time around ninety seven point zero eight percent of the vote so roughly the same between twenty forty and now alone of course we have no way of knowing if these figures are correct all right now let s talk a little bit about what is ahead of him now egypt s economy is in dire straits inflation is pretty bad ordinary people are in area the gypsies are suffering many many hardships what has he promised to do to turn the economy around for his people . well we see that season at some. economic reforms following. egypt s acceptance of
a twelve billion dollars loan from the international monetary fund twenty six and this led to the cutting of subsidies. to a subsidy there are. then widespread contemplation that he s going to cut subsidies including natural gas subsidies when we see a new budget. that there s no clear confirmation of that yet and c.d.c. is also frequently lent on the mega projects that egypt has enacted over the past couple of years and new capital city a second series cannot have a saying that these are going to bring prosperity to the country but that hasn t necessarily been the case just yet and there are a lot of people who are worst a whole society who say they re not seeing the benefits of any of these reforms just feeling the pinch. michael some reporting off from a cairo thank you. because presidential election has resulted in
a resoundingly victory for the governing party the winner is also being seen as a victory for gay rights carlos over otto of the ruling citizen after party has vowed to legalize same sex marriage his opponent an evangelical pastor campaigned against gay marriage polls had predicted the runoff would be taped but in the end it wasn t even close. the crowd went wild when carlos alvarado was announced the winner. my responsibility is to unite all the people in our country move the country forward and enable it to become a leading nation in the twenty first century. carlos alvarado the candidate of the ruling citizen action party had come in second in the first round of voting behind fabricio alvarado of the national restoration party the two men are not related fabricio alvarado ran on a platform of opposition to same sex marriage that became the main issue in the
avocados are destined for the chinese market but they might not sell so well anymore now that china has imposed tariffs on fruit and meat while steel pipes and scores of other imports from the usa the rates of fifteen percent on one hundred twenty items and twenty five percent on eight others. the chinese government says that people support its move some in china regret the ensuing rise in prices. can you it s definitely going to have an impact many fruits that kids love only grow in foreign countries we don t have them in china that is a direct impact. it s absolutely right to impose tariffs because i ve seen the news about the us crapping trade deals with us it s right to fight back. the new tariffs are china s initial response to the u.s. move to slap tariffs on steel and alimony i m imports the u.s. is also threatening to impose further tariffs on sixty billion dollars worth of
other chinese imports a year over what it terms the theft of intellectual property china by contrast is raising tariffs on about three billion dollars worth of u.s. imports. beijing says it will never submit if the u.s. launches a trade war and says that tariff increases are in line with world trade organization rules to protect its interests still the scale of china s new tariffs is modest the move looks more like a warning shot than a major counterattack the u.s. is china s largest single market a full blown trade war is the last thing china would want. now when it comes to rolling up its sleeves and doing some serious hard work portugal is a country that know something about that the financial crisis hurt austerity even mall. but the country pulled through and started spending again well before everything looks rosy growth is now two point seven percent so we took a trip to
a warmer and brighter looking part of europe. business is going pretty well for eva organized his co-operative has been making wine since nine hundred fifty seven but sales haven t been this good for years. in the beginning there were only this part and then you have to upgrade it to increase the capacity then we. will double the capacity we ve put. just side by side because we are in the maximum capacity of production and we have more demand than with what can you produce around thirty people work on the cover where a cooperative. working conditions have improved for most portuguese in the past two years thanks to a raft of reforms including a higher minimum wage instead of starting economic growth it s accelerated it at least that s how the portuguese finance minister sees it we have done some
profiting from the new wave of tourism rising property values are changing neighborhoods low income locals are being forced out like fernando tex era he grew up in boulder on the banks of the river he can only afford to keep the studio as the new bars and restaurants drive up the prices. bought a new one to me there are no portuguese people that can afford to pay rent in this area not one i was born here and i was thrown out so a hotel could be built and i have to move way back. probably even things the government should make sure everyone benefits from the economic upswing but he remains optimistic that portugal can find prosperity without the need for staring. the gulf nation as battering has discovered its biggest oil fields since one thousand nine hundred thirty two it s located off the country s west coast and will dwarf back rains current reserves that s according to the
country s government now the oil ministry will release details about exactly how big this site is and how easy it will be to extract the oil later this week is a major oil producer is only right fifty seventh annual oil production pumped out about forty five thousand barrels of oil a day. and out thank you hello today marks the fiftieth anniversary of the beginning of a traumatic shock turn germany s post-war history on april second one thousand nine hundred eighty eight bombs went off into frankfurt department stores one of the perpetrators was andreas bader who went on to found the left wing terror group known in germany as the red army facts on it s also known as the bottom line hall after carrying out deadly attacks spanning three decades the organization disbanded in one thousand nine hundred ninety eight the bottom i have going may have broken up but police believe that three suspected former members are still active.
police are searching for this trio in hiding for two decades they were last seen by surveillance cameras june a robbery in northern germany in twenty sixteen they thought to be the remaining members of the so-called red army faction and stop both cut and daniella cleta. they belong to the factions third generation they re pretty says a spot to national crisis in the one nine hundred seventy s. with attacks government blackmail murders and kidnappings terrorist activities peaked in one thousand nine hundred ninety seven with the murders of germany s federal prosecutor general secret blueback bank manager yogen panto and the kidnapping of the president of the german employers association hands martin the terrorist shot him dead germans clearly remember that wave of terror. despise what they believe the main topic on t.v. and in the newspapers it was as distressing as the islamic state activities are now
the fashion it was a shock you just didn t think they would become as radicalized as they did about the student protests of nine hundred sixty eight defined germany s political climate at the time extreme left wing violence also took shape that year two department stores in frankfurt was set ablaze symbolic acts to protest against capitalism and dress but and could written ensley in took part in the crime they would later found lead the red army faction hans christian scribbler was an active member of the student movement who yelled apollo back then a.p.o. the non-governmental opposition students movement wasn t just a movement for revolutionary change in germany i also wanted that it was an international movement was. wrong and the left at the time sought self in that context. but some people a minute percentage said that we should not simply accept things that we had to
take up arms. of. the buddah mine health group officially disbanded twenty years ago it s believed the trio s recent robberies were more likely carried out for the money than for political reasons discussions about the factions still divide germany today former conservative parliamentarian votes gangbuster worries that they may still hold a fascination for some up to us and no one can seriously claim that the end of the red army faction would also be the end of all if we need stream of lift to six trimix who are prepared to be violent so you should never say that chapter is closed forever on its. shriven of pleads for a more differentiated discussion. it would help us work through this history and a discussion about it today if people debated these incidents more calmly without blinders and without prejudice or do it for
a laugh and laugh and. the red army factions wave of terror a shocked germany during that era the country was an agent ideologically divided even now the group s actions of the subject of passionate debate throughout the country. are now to something altogether different a very insidious puzzle in the southeastern corner of germany is experiencing it for a city the world s first museum devoted to ducks and they re known as the sausage dog opens its doors to the public while the museum s a founder says about time that sausage dog fans had a shrine dedicated to their beloved breed. excitement has been growing ahead of the museum s opening. man s best friend has already been having a sniff around the premises which is filled with some two thousand objects inspired by the sausage dog. museum founder and director is. a proud but
very and can hardly believe no one came up with the idea before him. but often the world needs a sausage dog museum once captured the essence of bavaria you know the dog in the world enjoys the same kind of recognition or popularity here as a sausage dog. some of the pieces on display might be considered kitsch by most people but probably not for ducks and lovers. one of the more serious exhibit pays tribute to famous sausage dog lovers among them nobel physicist albert einstein and actor leonard nimoy better known as spock from star trek. there s even a drawing of the sausage dog sketched by none other than pablo picasso. and of course no museum would be complete without a gift shop visitors searching for the perfect souvenir for themselves or others and purchase a gift box that s sure to bring
a smile to any sausage dog lover. i must say ok you re watching you have unusual still have a lot more to tell you about including life as an immigrant in saudi arabia some foreign workers are facing new arches because of country s ambitious reform program and frankish our files a rebel court of the kingdom on the cusp of change. that coming up and a whole lot more in just a few will be right back. meaning that it s connected to being realistic martin luther king jr. just legendary speech for our area. this edition of a society free of racism. was written in one dramatically good night on the fiftieth anniversary of his death the dream of martin luther king jr to. close up in forty five minutes to tell the truth.
we may come over a week or times of office that found out that if we are the civil service or. the want to shape the continent s future or to. be part of it and join african youngsters of testing share their stories their dreams and their challenges. to seventy seven percent of the platform africa is charging. one hundred million tonnes of. devastating interest in its. mission to the consequences. the storm. coming to america two frequencies.
one spin stuart. no stopping them. just starting to pull something d.w. . great to see you again you re watching the news these are main headlines right now sells the africa and the apartheid campaign when he mandela has died at the age of eighty one the ex-wife of the late president nelson mandela was seen by many as the mother of the nation but only years her legacy was tarnished by a number of controversies she died peacefully in a hospital after a long period of illness syrian state media says the rebel fighters have agreed to a deal to give up their last stronghold in near damascus eastern who took has been
in rebel hands since the start of the conflict. china has slapped import tariffs on ports and a whole range of other u.s. imports the move comes after president trump imposed punitive terrorism on china u.s. stocks are down intriguing amid fears of a possible change for. saudi arabia is known as one of the world s most conservative societies but falling oil prices have hit the kingdom hard and that is triggering change his wallet was home on has unveiled an ambitious program of economical for known as vision twenty thirty thirty eight and our reporter funny for sure travel to saudi arabia to find out what his vision really me. riyadh is an international city a third of the population comes from abroad many of them manual workers they helped to build the saudi capital but the wall khan they once enjoyed is starting to fade
. saudis first know that the saudi government s plan to reduce unemployment among native saudis employers who hire none so ds will have to pay higher fees and jobs in shops like this one selling electronics for example will be restricted to saudis only. foreigners will be banned from at least jobs. stores selling instruments has already put up a sign for saudis only be looking for a salesperson male or. how does asian is a good idea there are more job opportunities here for saudis than for foreigners. but he and a lot of service return from the u.s. and germany with degrees only to find many jobs already filled by foreigners after their own country should benefit from them as saudi arabia should benefit from saudis. we are in a neighborhood in the south of the city it s
a tough area most of the people here are foreign workers want to here is from bangladesh here i ve got a month ago to work in this shop learning how to assemble picture frames everything is getting more expensive in the salaries aren t enough for everyone it s hard to it s if that had to survive for the person s life for manual row course was never easy in saudi arabia just as in many parts of the world but falling oil prices have made it more difficult and as your prices doubled in a year pushing up prices and recently new taxes on basic goods added an extra burden it s even more to here has just finished his shift how many hours did you work today i swear words sixteen hours that s a lot. maybe it s a lot better and i need to do that for the salary he makes one thousand three hundred saudi ryall a month that s about three hundred fifty u.s. dollars on the way home he tells me he used to have
a good life until his father got very sick. you know we lost our almost all of our money in his treatment so i just thought that i should come here to. keep them alive being the eldest in the family he border responsibility he dropped out of engineering studies and came to saudi arabia to earn money but it wasn t as easy as he had expected life is becoming more difficult for foreigners most of the people of other countries. and even here here s the cause. because there are now just and they can t live like that maybe my boss gave me a place to live. there was a not like that even some people don t have a job sometimes the slaves near the road don t have time money to buy food. i want to hear chooses not to show me the room he lives in with three others he
doesn t want to get into trouble and be sent home he wants to stay as long as he can to make money for his family he s just one of millions of foreign workers in saudi arabia they are realizing though that the future here belongs to the saudis. some examples there of the work of iran the artist is surely in the shots who is the subject of our culture for our parts twenty one this week and there on your own mail is here from our culture desk i mean i have to disclaimer here she s one of my favorite artists i m so happy that we re talking about her today she lives in the u.s. how did she end up there tells us that well she went to study in nine hundred seventy
five at the university of berkeley in california and in nine hundred seventy nine islamic revolution happened and this was a real shock and it obviously changed the role of women in iran. immensely i mean overnight they became almost second class citizens the shots prevented her from going from britney and then in one thousand nine hundred she went back to iran eleven years later and that was actually what sparked it and you know how to create evictee as an artist and ever since it s her art that prevents her from returning because she often focus on the injustices especially of women in iran anyway let s find out more about this wonderful woman. in this truthful. it deals with contrasts between islam and the west men and women light and dark
where reality segues into train. and sure enough shots work always uses the female voice. it s always this the ballots here in extremely fragile and vulnerable and yet extremely strong and defiant the female experience in iran was the subject of her first feature film women without men about four women seeking to escape their lives . that i. guess is that if i have. yes.
in twenty seventeen nesha turned her focus to the world of opera when she directed aida for the salt spec festival. was an art are. sure initiates work is constantly evolving mirroring the trajectory of her life. werman tell us about her new film love that s coming out about a legendary egyptian the singer known as star of the orient yeah i d starve the audience just where you know she is better than me. i now i mean wonderful. was legendary in the twentieth century is even legendary to this day is the greatest singer ready of the middle east and apart from the film telling us about
this extraordinary musician it shows the major sacrifices a woman had to make in islamic society if you want to be an artist of any car and. own cultural by the way is not outside the middle east by certain musicians bob dylan evidently is a big fan as is maria callas kind of even called her the woman with the in comparable voice let s hear it now this is an actress actually in the film but the voice is the of the original voice that she. was. some wonderful way of saying and i must say old it s only songs i m told a about unrequited love with a very sad or happy yes i ve seen some with trans i just love it it s really not sort of long and yeah. let s talk about the other movie that s coming up that she s
also making about iranian women in us in the us in exile this is a quite a change that shuttles come out next year meanwhile if people are interested as you are you can see an entire program on a program outs twenty one about it s running up this week or it s available on our website at d.w. dot com slash culture yes awesome we re going to definitely to you know i definitely well thank you so much ellen greatly appreciate it all right and i m going to hand you over now to helena. shares in emerson fellow shopper monday off the us president donald trump renewed his attack on its relationship with the united states postal service dragging the dow down almost three percent natural claims that u.s.p.s. is losing money on delivering for amazon and taxpayers he says off financing the losses will analysts point out that the online retailing giants payments actually
support the postal services other money losing businesses and it s not says pension obligations they say amazon is helping the u.s.p.s. stay afloat but estimates say amazon pays the u.s.p.s. roughly hope of what rival postle services would be charging. now twenty five years after the end of apartheid in south africa white farmers still own most commercial farmland to fast track land reform the governing a.n.c. party had adopted a policy of land exploring creation without compensation but a closer look reveals it has less to do with correcting historic injustice and more to do with winning back voters ahead of elections. the northern part of free state province is one of the most fertile areas of south africa it s here that yucca owns a large farm he s one of about thirty five thousand commercial farmers in the country for me about three an authentic this is my new my soybean sunflowers and
from. produce about fifteen thousand tons of grains per year four hundred days of cattle. twenty five people permanently and all those helping south africa being the only food secure country in africa white farmers like me are the backbone of south africa laggard culture but the original black owners of many white owned farms were pushed off their land during the colonial and apartheid periods after the end of apartheid the government addressed this injustice and created a land reform program on a willing buyer willing seller basis but only around ten percent of white farm land has been transferred back into black ownership. many like julius malema and his left wing economic freedom fighters all find that this is not enough. to know what all this is why it is so hard to know. if you are why you re. so.
well it s real really we are we. are only since such demands have proven popular with many voters the governing n.c. has recently adopted a policy of land expropriation without compensation and wants to amend the constitution accordingly. so south africa is headed for national and provincial elections in twenty nineteen and the debate about land an expropriation is entirely situated within that issue between the a.n.c. and the year if if if for making this their number one election issue but i don t think we are ever going to see land express expropriation without compensation in south africa the constitution provides ample scope for government to implement responsible land reform without having an impact on the investor confidence or
indeed on challenges with regard to food security in south africa but given the heated debate about expropriation and uncertainty as to what the future may bring farmers like you are holding on to their money rather than investing it. because we run a big farming into process we need to constantly put capital into the business and that this moment we re not sure we will that we are going to do it because of all these procreation thing i m still very positive about the future and i think there s a great future of the eight of us if we can all work together in this country economic growth in south africa is slow and the country faces many financial challenges so the government needs to consider carefully if it can afford to lose farmers like minnaar and foreign investors who fear instability. well did you know this month kicks off frankincense season in oman in the middle east resins harvested this time of year to create your own bed that many may associate with christmas and the trade has survived the centuries but modern life is now taking
its toll. frankincense is using essential oils in french perkins and that has partly helped drive global demand you know eskil declared part of the deal for region it s not a no man s land of frankincense a weld heritage site. but if you go. to what frankincense is still considered a precious well the trees are rare in order to protect them we collected trees from many places in the door for products we protect them at this reserve for natural frankincense trees. you need to look. you ve got but you. efforts here could help protect the bones will your trees that produce the resin for frankincense for trade in the future demand is so high that the trees here do not have enough time to regenerate. but there s more to the you know school site here this area was also an important stop on the ancient silk road which runs all
the way to china in those days frankincense was traded in exchange for spices textiles and silk. from ancient frankincense to new technology of course tech usually comes with a few teething problems and drones in a different russia s postal service has been taking them for a spin to deliver apostles but things didn t go quite as planned during the day. a russian drone was supposed to deliver its first parcel from one remote village to a neighboring want. the postal service wanted to celebrate the occasion. you know it you but i m very happy that we re launching this project here today which would undoubtedly be successful. however the drone didn t get far. crashed after just a few seconds in the air. nobody was injured. but the
dream won t be flying again any time soon. all over the firm date of us forces here to talk us through the soccer weekend action all the things are starting to crystallize some things are leyla certainly by and for example they inched a little closer to the title but a lot of things are up in the air to especially the race for the champions league places all right well sunday s big game saw frankfurt to travel to brainless take a look. craven s florian cofield has been working to emulate the kind of success nico kovach has had in frankfurt unlike the former croatia international though cofield builds his team around attack thomas delaney with a pinpoint cross not to lose of its. one nil to brain in the twenty eighth minute a high quality goal you know high tempo game. in the second half frankfurt struck
back with some style as well. kevin prince boating with a snappy back heel assist for a look at your age. three minutes later the eagles nearly soared into the elite your bitch threw on the republican who pulled a crucial kicks in how crucial this crucial use of it is crossed deflected high into the air by dabdoub around. and into the net. lucas with its key tried and failed to control the ball perhaps down by the sun. frame and walked off to one winners the trend under cofield just keeps going up. right to all the fifty dollars first here still with me how big of a blow is this for frankfurt it s a pretty bad weekend from frank first point of view you know that was fourth at the start of the weekend in the champions league places they finished it six out of the champions league places as we say here but you know the good news for them is that it is very tight as i said at the top that by an obviously way out of and shall
kill i think an album for a champions league place now but below that dortmund down to six by frankfurt you ve only got three points gap between them and it s only another three points further down to hoffenheim in sevens so there still could be a lot of movement there you know and i think the head to heads are going to be really important also saying that they re allegations i m braman i think after that when i now saif i think they can stop worrying so they say and i think the head to heads are going to be really important in the champions league rights and next week as early as next week with one of those levees and playing leipsic fourth against. those are the games that people really need to watch out for now i can t help looking at that sherry look at byron my god that gap couldn t even get wider just how did i say bye and you know just on another planet compared to every other team in germany right now for years we ve been talking up dortmund is that being the big rivals and you know every time the two meet we call it deck classic you know the classic and and we try and drum up this rivalry because we want it to be true that there are these two titans in german football facing each other on saturday that
now this season that is just the fast it s not the case anymore that being said it wasn t the perfect weekend for buy and they were hoping to win the league at home for the first time since two thousand and one eleven leads final since then always away from home that was confirmed the title away from home so a bit of a disappointment and we ve heard from some of the let s hear what muscles the defender were here to say. yes i think most of the fans and most of us would like it to ruin the retired lads home. but of course you know we won t try to win it in our school kids to close this game to home so maybe that s ok. all right not too bad not too shabby ali but what about dortmund can their coach survive this i think it s the end of the season probably you because it s very late in the day to change coaches now but beyond that i don t think goldman have been anywhere near good enough and i think it s been mediocre at best he did steady the ship after the disastrous baseball but it certainly doesn t look good enough to really build on
what they ve done this season and in fact dillman do have a couple of really big games coming up the next three games are against the shock of the big rivals and late because none of the champions league contend and like i was saying this head to head games they re going to be what s really important the rest of the season if they lose all of those then it could be gone even before the end of the season for whole of britain s mind out there thank you so much ali for talking to us about this thank you art and i m going to head to some surfing now because australia s surfing great mick fanning is in fine form in his final event before retiring the thirty six year old who famously fought off a shark while competing in twenty fifteen progress to the fourth round of the world surf league event at bell s beach in australia the three times world champion produced a near long list performance in front of his home crowd you ll hope to secure a fair well victory later this week.
are the defunct chinese space station has really entered the earth s atmosphere years after scientists lost contact with it this young one was launched in two thousand and eleven and serviced china s first space station astronomers say it mostly disintegrated upon their entry but people were fortunate not to have been hit by the remaining debris. after orbiting over a year and asia the chiang gong one disintegrated above the remote south pacific far away from human settlements astronomers a calling it a lucky escape. launched in two thousand and eleven the station had mocked a giant leap for china s celestial ambitions astronauts on board conducted experiments and practiced space dockings but the vessel stopped working in two thousand and sixteen and began orbiting closer and closer to earth west in space
experts think china had lost control of the station something beijing denies. astronomers say the spacecraft mostly burn top upon re-entry but ditched some debris to the north of tahiti. they say the fear is over where the station would reenter the sammis fear point to an issue that needs into tension. sincerity as i m honored to have something like a degree removed because we are more than a force of five hundred set of lights in orbit only once are far from it are you that means we have three solid objects or bigger stars which may later already into the atmosphere and i think we have to do it. with space junk only likely to increase the question is to whom does it full to regulate the outer reaches of our world. they re watching the revenues from iraq more coming at the top of the hour now we ve heard about museums first sausage dogs that to pails of biggest
annual pet fair has something for all creatures great and small healthy through fancy clothing and even massage techniques so i ll sign off with some pictures from tokyo as these pets have apparently. and. blah blah blah blah. blah. blah blah. blah blah blah blah the biggest mistake the business the books you and the guy that cut me off stop the bad. news. the
begin . to get. the book. the book book.
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where the world of science is at home in many languages. on issues that i ve been growing. our innovations magazine for in. the us from every week and always looking to the future on t.w. dot com for science and research for asia. time for an upgrade. that grows only by. house with. poor design highlights you can make yourself. trends tips and tricks that will turn your home into something special. upgrade yourself with t.w. interior design channel on you tube.

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Transcripts For DW Global 3000 - The Globalization Program 20180728 12:30:00


with the old man for three weeks he sexually abused her in a hotel in hyderabad then he disappeared when the man was informed that munir was pregnant he divorced her over the phone from oman that was eight years ago until recently the muslim practice of instant divorce was legal in india when there is still so much khan has never seen her father. suffered a great deal whenever i think about it it still upsets me mentally i don t want to cry here in front of my daughter. which can should and have to ask why her mother is unhappy that would upset her too much. so we had to go. near it takes us to her parents she had no choice pregnant and still a child herself than a single mother who never had to move back home. how mother refuse of big tells us how much she has also suffered because of the story but she means had dalton s
the founder of shaheen she doesn t accept poverty as an excuse she says the problem is that many muslim families few women as property it s not just poverty. because there was poverty a little also but greed is one of the things and especially as the girl was married many they were getting so much of extra money supposing she s married one day she may get fifty thousand. and fifty thousand and if she s a good looking she s been. to less. or thirty even hyderabad have recently started to crack down on the trafficking of women and girls earlier this year police arrested numerous people including indian marriage brokers and men from the emirates seeking a child bride many of them are already married and wanted
these women are learning how to shoot their housewives similar mothers and pensioners their middle class a most of them have never held a gun before. i mean it s marcy watching their sister show she might have been teaching for about a year to happen outside of the military shooting right. washington s courses cater to african-american women who workshops across the country are always. well you book less than one safety training with a gun this may look like fun but the participants take it very seriously i have never shot a gun before but with the way things are going now it s really necessary that we all learn how to protect their sales meetings and after the incident a few weeks ago in charlottesville it just occurred to me that we can t totally
depend on law enforcement to protect us to believe there is more as. the white supremacist rally in virginia this summer confirm for many that open racism remains widespread in the u.s. it s a factor started by many of the women flocking to martial washington s courses. once they re at the shooting range the first step is learning how to load a gun. the next step is sparring with live ammunition it s not as easy as michelle makes it look. we. know this participant got off to a good start after her very first go the target figure is riddled with holes. everyone gets ten shots and encouragement as well if needed. we. these aren t going to use yes they re women who are afraid.
that s only takes. no getting back that. that s right here in this all right here let me use the loser collapse. so how do participants feel. how do you follow. their serious a leader. and i fired. i i mean. but it s. just i. think it s all smiles for the souvenir photo. none of the women are great shots yet but they do feel more confident. like marshall take washington belongs to the national african-american. the first group of its kind for african-americans. the atlanta branch alone has grown from five hundred to one thousand members within two years and six hundred of them are women. and the industry is happy to supply them gun
stores now also stock products specially designed for women. and shopping time the pension amassed. she wants advice and a hunger to bring along to the next far on this course. become the ever growing number of weapons really help in the fight against racism. is especially minorities we can be easy targets because a lot of us don t have firearms education so i think with firearms education we can learn how to legally defend ourselves and we won t be targets of hate crimes like we are now. lives in rural georgia the women attending the gun classes say that in the southern states of the us racism has never really gone away it was just less visible. they fear the trump administration is empowering the wrong people and the racism is even becoming acceptable again. mass you re still remembers the segregation era as a child she wasn t allowed to cross these train tracks because the other side was
an all white community. now at the age of sixty five she feels she needs a gun. but that one million assessors carry a state a large portion of their day that just again with the culture changing we can t say that. status quo. meets up with her sisters none of them have been subjected to actual physical attacks but they feel threatened by unpleasant remarks in the past has left a deep legacy of fear. most you will be booking a place on the next concourse and bring some friends were there oh yes i m taking you to my cherished i m going to put a. couple of car and women that way to me often so i want to crusade. these women are seeking reassurance from guns because they no longer trust the government to protect them and their families.
this week on global ideas we go to mauritania national park an undeniable paradise for but nowhere else in west africa can you find so many different varieties of birds in such a small area the pump is located at the border between mauritania and senegal around the senegal river delta the region is highly vulnerable to climate change. henry waxman went to find out more. year for year the sea level here has been rising as locals can see with their own eyes a growing number of them are having to leave their homes along the beach the older generation still remembers what it used to look like here. now what you do have the village used to be here there were even houses on this very spot before it was all flooded there are probably the remains of houses on the seabed over there.
under. the village in south mauritania is bordered by a river on one side and the ocean on the other. there s very little infrastructure . but where are local supposed to move to. a dean works in the nearby de walling national park he confirms the gravity of the situation. did speak. to an old miner who told me that in the one nine hundred eighty s. the ocean was two kilometers for the bog. now look at the damage that the sea has done. to. the government is trying to ensure that people are relocated to a safer area. but the older generation refuses and says this is where our ancestors
lived we re not going any way. living from farming alone is increasingly difficult land is in short supply due to the ground becoming oversalted with their livelihoods destroyed people are having to move inland but the national park twelve kilometers away provides alternative sources of income a few years ago it was home to far fewer animals today it s a breeding ground for over three hundred species of birds including flamingoes crocodiles live here to. the warthog population is flourishing because the animals are not hunted here. there s both fresh water and salt water in the senegal river delta. nature conservation makes sense here protecting the ecosystem also creates jobs. so that is the goal of the park is to restore the ecosystem and fight public. policy in this
region. because the local population distributional work. they harvest whatever nature provides. the local economy is based on fishing and farming. fish yet if there s no more water there will be nothing left. but this is activity. locally caught is hung out to dry in the open air. many villages have no electricity let alone refrigerators fishermen sell their fish across the country and even in neighboring senegal. be they ve been in the past people lived here from farming to. but really fishing makes most sense we can make a living from fishing all year round and they benefit from the loch in the basin there are lots of fish here. the abundance of fish is
a recent development thirty years ago the region was left ravaged by this dam built in the one nine hundred eighty s. to supply mauritania senegal gambia and mali with fresh water. it devastated the natural environment. because it was time. that the construction of the dom completely destabilized the ecosystem it was destroyed. the natural balance was destroyed the balance between sold water and fresh water. wasn t fresh water was blocked and couldn t reach the national parks. years later the problem was addressed with the construction of these locks built with the help of the german k f w development bank and the german development agency. as. these guys can be what it does is imitate ebb and flow salt water and fresh
water are combined here so it s a perfect habitat for fish to spawn in perfect one. that s a protected area because these are three flood basins. so it s a perfect spot for resting and breeding not only for this but also for birds. that. the park authority has demarcated fishing zones and make sure the fishermen respect spawning seasons. fresh water in the basin has helped revive the local fauna to. lotus s have begun thriving again. local women spend two to three hours a day in the water collecting seeds from the lotus stalks. then the. sort them shell and dry them and over a period of several weeks turn them into cous cous. i was after the dam was built until last year we couldn t harvest anything but now nature has started to recover
the lotuses have returned and we can collect the seeds again so. they harvested some six hundred kilos last year and up to feed their families for months and sell the excess another successful venture made possible by the park local craft traditions have also made a comeback these women make jewelry they are planning to sell the raw materials come from the national park service and in the past these are tiny beads that they make from tree resin. boy on the interest of his and we help them to extract the resin without destroying the trees. back in the delta biologist but dean is out on the water almost every day taking a look at the nesting sites in. his was open i love these birds they re my favorite animals. they re beautiful and
they re also proof that the environment is in good shape for the if they re here then we know there s no environmental damage. and they don t make anything dirty. i love them. to do well in national park is home to the greatest concentration of birds in west africa and in addition to rescuing animal habitats in the region the conservation zone has also helped to secure human livelihoods. now it s time to meet the battle in global people from around the welds he s made the german capital plan ahead. of the berlin five years now they make the in the vibrant metropolis that we tell their stories everywhere. say on off facebook page local society. today all but comes from slovenia in.
the middle are people. i mean. they would. call it s basically you making sure that the people have a good time when you take them to pubs and various bars and with us we also take you to the club at the end. so it s like a guided tour of the nightlife for lent which i know many berliners frown upon but i think they should give the chairs at least once. if they can t you find spray paint on one wall even a single time the fine is around seven thousand euros just for one yet because it s considered vandalism if they can choose putting up a poster on the wall like this the fine is robinson s euros because it s considered littering.
and this is one of the prime examples. it s really famous it s called it s time to dance it s been done by a guy called sober. i studied media and communications science and you ll be on your first university ljubljana which is something you go to study when you don t know what you have to what you want to study or what you want to do with your life. i was basically staying with my parents and till i decided i want to move to berlin so it s like i wanted to become an autonomous person and move out at the same time to another country so one day i just got up and left.
but. why are there like certain people who decide if you re cool enough to get into a club what s up with that i mean isn t berlin all about the left wing and democratic and i never understood that to be honest and you can. they get a couple of those walks of shame when they tell you you re not cool enough and you have to walk you know in shame because i didn t get in i was like man that doesn t go so nice and the football is that is the exec opposite of that you know everybody s welcome at the end hybrid so everybody is welcome come join us have a party you know even if you re not cool or whatever. find out about our other labels and mole on our facebook page w d label
society. for the us. and that s all for today don t forget to send us your comments and if you use write to us a label she sounds in to come over on facebook see you next time take cash. cliff
a horse. lifestyle during. the match. thirty minutes strong. sarno just couldn t get this song out of his head. the music ologist began searching for the source of these captivating sounds and found that deep in the rain forest in central africa and electability was a valuable lesson with the why and the one thing. money little costs he was made to buy their culture that he stayed. only a promise to his son mates are not only the jungle and return to the concrete and glass jungle but. the result reverse culture shock.
the crews we. saw from the forest stars caucus night w. . such. odd little play money in the city. tomorrow today. w. . most will. not open their festival in northern germany. marking a medal battle will show g. s dozens of newcomers from the old. g.w. and the taxpayers are going to the to. fucking over there and she doesn t take
charge of the insurgents he s going to double up on one leg. odd . line from berlin forest fires raging across the northern hemisphere amid the record hot summer flames are engulfing forests and threatening the lives of california to sweden in greece residents mean homeless. the government failed to warn them of the impending danger also coming up on the campaign winds down ahead of them bob waves

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