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Transcripts For DW DW News - News 20180802 10:00:00


what about those who oppose the assad regime we hear from one syrian woman fearing for her future plus. there are children here and there but they just started attacking us even mean viciously my husband was lying dead in front of me after that i lost consciousness we have an exclusive report of a series of attacks by far right gangs from the roma community in ukraine what is fueling the final. hello i m terry march and good to have you with us symbiote ways president. has called for dialogue with the opposition amid high tensions following monday s elections his comments come a day after the military shot dead three unarmed demonstrators at a protest in the capital harare. deployed the troops to disperse the protesters who
allege the country s elections were rigged international observers have condemned what they call the use of excessive force by the army. soldiers firing live rounds and zimbabwe s capital. the army into district to harare midafternoon reportedly at the request of the police. the country s justice minister said the military had been deployed to maintain peace and tranquility and accused opposition supporters of going on a rampage however the protesters claim they didn t start the violence. it was going on it was. just you know if this is the demonstration that. the crackdown came after a day of protest in the capital people were taken to the streets to protest at the law and the release of the results of presidential polling. crowds gathered outside the offices of the country s electoral commission to demand the release and
did see. the government. crack again if there are any further anti-government protests what s it like there on the streets today. the situation on the streets does come out as of now but not on social media there are more pictures and videos appearing online of people being beaten up of people believing even of those shot dead. but in general we also can say that it feels like it is a state of emergency here just not a declared one the army is still out on the streets they have been saying that the police with seventy thousand police officers is completely on the stuff and the army will remain present in the streets until the police indicates there is no one really for them to be around. thank you so much for your correspondent melanie curry the ball there in harare. now let s take
a look at some other stories making headlines today the u.s. has announced sanctions against two top turkish officials over the country s detention of an american pastor turkey accuses andrew brunson of aiding the failed coup attempt against turkey s president wretch of time earlier on in two thousand and sixteen the u.s. is demanding brunson s immediate release. authorities in the democratic republic of congo say four more people have tested positive for the a bowl of virus in the country s northeast break in north keep who probably it s close to the ugandan border has already claimed twenty lives in cases come just days after another outbreak in the northwest of the diyar sea was declared over. and a twitter user has uploaded video of the aeromexico plane crash films from inside the aircraft the plane went down shortly after takeoff in northern mexico on tuesday more rocked it was all one hundred three crew and passengers survived many
of them resumed work or their travels just a day after yeah. lebanon is stepping up pressure on syrian refugees to return home some one point five million syrian refugees are currently in lebanon and officials there have repeatedly said that s putting the country under pressure hundreds of refugees have returned to syria in the past few weeks but many more are afraid of what would happen to them if they went back d.w. correspondent on child bora traveled to the town of arsalan where she met a woman who fled syria the assad government killed her husband and son she and her children fear for their lives if they return. it was not a voyage the ever imagined undertaking but the mother of eight and grandmother of three children was forced to flee has city and home. to take refuge in the town of
awesome just across the border in. although it happened five years ago the memories are still fresh this is my son served her husband and his son were killed in the syrian war. at the beginning of the uprising protests were not violent they were peaceful but my husband was killed because he took part in the my son was with the regime army doing his compulsory service and the syrian intelligence service killed him because he deserted. who fears the assad regime but the pressure from lebanon to leave is building some three thousand syrians have already registered to return there that i can never go back to syria. she is especially worried about this man. goes in by as
a member of the syrian committee tasked with collecting the names of billing return is and sending the list to damascus for approval who is suspicious of the government mitali the names with those who protested against the regime and neither of us them upon arrival or refuse them approval to return but goes on denies the charge. it s not a condition not an issue of approval it s just about informing the government of the names of the people returning. he claims syria is now safe and to convince us he asked one of the refugees who have applied to return to talk to us do you want to go back of course what s keeping me here but it doesn t go quite as he and the song which he is confronted by angry syrians. back to syria safely is impossible. that s all. he shows his bullet scars the military defectors white house today
leave. but lebanon s government is eager to stop one off million syrian refugees so many say they may be forced to look at europe again. and her friends are among those thinking about making the journey to you they know that it won t be easy but the risk of reprisal by assad security forces is high the third. one of the ladies has just heard of the arrest of her sister by the syrian regime. i want to migrate to europe for the future of my children and i applied to the u.s. but they didn t help me other than. smugglers want that eight thousand euros for the trip and i when i saw the film isn t it meant that i feel. who doesn t know what she would do yet and many here are facing a similar dilemma. it may be too soon to say if there will be
a second neighbor for a few days to europe but the conditions are right. for now despite all the hardship who last best bet seems to be levanon if the lebanese. was cross over to beirut. bora who filed that report joins us from there unsure how common it is the view among lebanese authorities that it s time for the syrian refugees to go home and how realistic is it to expect them to do so. well that s pretty widespread there is no disagreement when it comes to that. that the student refugees must leave and that it s time but it is realistic or is it not now from my experience and all of these years about being told to sit in refugees especially now they see these still don t think it s time for them to go back because they don t know what s happening in syria large parts of the country their homes their neighborhoods have all been bombed out and also because they fear the
regime they don t know what action the regime will take against them merely because they left the country so they may be seen as cletus and also because some of them or their family members likely will dusty s participated in a peaceful protest of the regime a dog with them these people are very scared that is why the spotlight three thousand and one a half million syrian refugees have will just start to go back these people are see the regime supporters or those who are ok with the syrian government but on the majority of the syrians like who are still scared of going back eleven on does have the biggest portion of syrian refugees in the world just how much strain has that put the country under. whether that is a very important question it s has put a huge strain on us especially on the civic infrastructure lebanon is a small country it s not a very rich country and also in the past it had palestinian refugees and eleven on since nine hundred forty eight so they feel that this is going to be
a repeat of the palestinian episode the palestinians came in they haven t left and that has occurred in the civic infrastructure it is all too also i think in part of all tour. the culture a little bit so the christians are worried about the culture changing because most of the refugees coming in are sunnis. and are seen as more conservative here so there are all these worries when it comes to syrians continuing to stay in lebanon and we saw in your report there that some syrian refugees in lebanon on who are afraid of going home are considering making the journey to europe instead of buyable prospect. well not as of now it s very expensive without tells us that there are smugglers and around these are local boys who can take them to greece for eight thousand euros for one person i saw a lot of people go she says maybe that price will come down but we have to remember that these people like who the who ve come to eleven and haven t come here on
a choice they ve been forced to turn into refugee so their first instinct is to go to legally and not opt for illegal rees who doesn t have the money but she would also prefer to go to europe legally so she s expecting if lebanon is eager to push her out and she can go back to syria then what is she going to do their only option is to go to europe and she s hoping that europe would come up with some sort of a structured response to facilitate. her visit to go to which we know is very unlikely to happen because the problem of syrian refugees is also change european politics significantly and so thank you so much correspondent bora there reporting from beirut. activists in denmark have held protests against a ban on full face veils that came into force yesterday the so-called burka bans prevent people from covering the faces in public denmark follows other european countries which have introduced such a ban including france and belgium. as. their faces may be
masked but their outrage is on display over a thousand protesters marched through copenhagen in defiance of denmark s new ban on facial coverings they say the lower infringes on freedoms of religion and expression and the right to dress as they choose i mean that is discriminating a lot of searchlights a lot that doesn t make sense in practice and i really hate this law i think is so embarrassing and i cannot stand being a citizen in this so-called democracy when this kind of. mosque protesters and those wearing burkas and the cabs can now be fined more than one hundred euros more than a thousand euros for repeat offenses opponents say the real price will be paid by danish society we actually live in seeing our freedoms our liberal freedom rights in a society to dress like we want to rightly want and so forth so so i think it s we
need dangerous step to take the majority in the parliament has done with this because what is what is coming next what is off of this supporters of the law held their own demonstration they say the band upholds secular and democratic values and combat s fundamentalist islam. where we want to take a stand against political islam against the fundamentalists in our society and we have some people who believe that they re in their group right to where it s got to call this all of the face so we re not able to see their faces or she s not able to see their face on this world and want to take a stand against. an estimated two hundred muslim women in denmark where facial coverings some say they plan to carry on despite the ban that i feel insecure now that i m going out and feeling facing people and.
everything. but in my believe in from hot and calm i think you know i will be in the same as i was doing it s now up to danish police to decide if and when to enforce the ban. to ukraine where right wing gangs have carried out a series of attacks on the roma community there they ve injured several people and killed one man twenty four year old david pup stabbing him to death in front of his children because nick connolly travel to the country s west to speak to pop s widow and two other victims of the violence. this is how it all began in april twenty eighth team you july auntie s attacked a room account in the ukrainian capital kiev a copycat attack soon followed across the country in late june twenty three year old david pap was stabbed more than a dozen times in the western city of leave his death provoked an outcry inside and
outside ukraine s borders the teenage suspect now custody but how could this have been allowed to happen i what has become the survivors. where in the village where david pappa grew up from here it s just a matter of kilometers to ukraine s western frontier with hungry it s a backyard the region is home to ukraine s biggest roma community many of them live in extreme poverty since the attacks people here become wary of strangers and it s only with the help of pastor fed your progress that we are allowed in it takes us to meet david perhaps with you boy it s the first time she s spoken publicly about her husband s murder. is that when those teenagers came to attack our camp they didn t say a word they just started going at us with their nods i beg them there are children here but they just started attacking us even move viciously my husband was lying dead in front of me after that i lost consciousness. on the day of our visit the
boy received a call from the police and we ve asked her to testify in court she refused to fear she says is too great since the attacks police have responded to requests from community leaders to step up their patrols and roam a district. miroslav heard about the roma community leader and a local councillor in the past most of his work was about helping roma people access to basic government services many here don t even have a birth certificate let alone a passport just said in recent months he s been confronted with a totally new set of problems as the victims of the attacks come to him looking for support. i don t understand where this hatred comes from we ve never seen anything like this kind of open discrimination these kinds of attacks. we need to get around to solving the roma communities problems now we re not just kick the can down the road. miroslav takes us on a visit to run
a roma community on the edge it was hot out there we meet claro a survivor of one of the attacks in libya. these old people and children they smashed my brother in law s head and just left him for dead but i don t want the attackers to go to prison prison doesn t make people any better like they were just kids after all. it s a point of view we hear time and time again where the people here are ready to forgive and simply fear further escalation we can t get a clear answer as we continue our walk through red bunker with miroslav the atmosphere suddenly turns there s been a break in the political church and suspicion this fall and the inhabitants of this roma community. if you watch them they ll give it all back. to someone broke into the church. do you have pictures we never do find out how the
investigation ends but now the police need rather go without making any arrests at a time when the roma community needs the police to protect them or the never relations with law enforcement attends a mob but suspicion. of authorities are considering changing the format a penalty shoot outs to make them there or and reduce reduce pressure on players going second the name of the new system has been inspired by a very well known swedish band but will football decide to take a chance let s find out. five fresh off the back of a world cup which saw plenty of penalty shootout drama young german play is a trialing a new system. with research revealing the side going second in a shootout loses sixty percent of the time a new format has been devised a.p. also known as ever sees teams take alternating pairs of penalties after the first
spot kick. too often high new teams have a style the win a title but what do they make of the new system. it s good because in the old system the team going second was under greater pressure which could make them lose in this system if the first person misses his teammate can still level the score. that is rated as well as a human count your own player on the way back which makes a difference psychologically so you ll have to wait and see if it s adopted by german football and in the next world cup people are going to live with the system also said to be trialled in english football this season it might not be long before abba takes center stage in football for ministers of ten southeast asian nations are meeting for multilateral talks in singapore today that s right area at the top of the agenda as in meeting obviously the escalating trade dispute between the u.s. and china it s become a conflict with
a potential to do harm to many of the region s economies and the latest salvo from the u.s. is giving today s talks some fresh urgency. the gathering is taking place amid continuing bad news for members of the association of southeast asian nations or. the u.s. just announced plans to raise its latest round of tariffs on two hundred billion dollars worth of chinese imports from ten to twenty five percent as part of china s growing export supply chain to as your nation stand to lose big in any trade war. a full scale conflict could slash singapore s growth next year by half the host country s leader warned the association to brace itself rules based multilateral trading system which underpin the us here is growth and prosperity is under pressure it s important that us and continue to support the multilateral system and work with like minded partners to deepen our weapon of corporation south-east asian
nations tighten their ties with china following us withdraw from the free trade trans-pacific partnership now they re pursuing a china backed regional trade agreement with pacific powers excluding the us singapore s prime minister said it could be signed by the end of the year. german engineering come along with zemin is planning a complete restructuring of the company is builds trains turbines industrial robots and medical scanners and will be streamlining five of their businesses into three according to c.e.o. job siemens wants to concentrate on the energy industry digitization an infrastructure sector the company wants each segment to act autonomously with less involvement from headquarters it s not here clear how the plants will affect their almost three hundred eighty thousand employees worldwide the company hopes to
improve its sales and earnings by two percent and early. spring in our financial correspondent paul blitz in our frankfurt. insists he isn t creating holding they ve been splitting up the company but it sure looks that way of feels that way doesn t it. the new verse structuring is pointing in that direction yes and you mention it the new plan that s called a vision twenty twenty plus and will begin enough tobar is planning to create three strong divisions one is energy the second one is infrastructure and the third one is a digital industry which will fall to focus on automation in the in the industry and they will be operating separately as in energy will be run from texas used in texas infrastructure from switzerland and only digital industries
stays in germany so head toward headquarters is probably going to shrink a bit here this is all supposed to make the company more agile more flexible of course or to react to the needs of each of these these sections and even if care is there says he doesn t want to split up the company he s leaving early twenty twenty one so he may be opening up that possibility to whoever follows is this what companies have to do these days to stay competitive internationally. it is certainly a trend we re seeing right now with german companies a lot. has announced plans to syncro prison the middle of it. also whom i forgetting miller yes also and internationally if you look at it in twenty fifteen google decided to create a parent company called alphabet also for more flexibility and that allows the individual divisions to be sold or given individually and that may be interesting
for markets. in the fund for thank you. starbucks is teaming up with online retailer ali baba to keep pace with china s growing coffee market the two companies will focus on delivering cups of coffee but via my. up beverage deliveries are set to begin in beijing and shanghai next month starbucks hopes to fend off a challenge by beijing upstart lochan coffee which has expanded rapidly on the back of base delivery style box remains the dominant force in china though it says it opens a new cafe that every fifteen hours. and that s it you re up to date you re watching news from a live a from berlin more coming up of course at the top all feel and it s very much for tuning in for i.
your room and it s next on totally. beyond the mouth of an infernal monkey in greece one week on from the devastating forest fire. villages of trying to god what s left of their homes against looters. while rescue teams search for bodies and survive. people here have been left to fend for themselves with little support materializing from the state. in sixty minutes. ago just couldn t get this song out of his head. musicologist began searching for the source of this captivating sound. deep in the rain forest in central africa.
to find their culture but he stayed. only a promise to his son to leave the jungle and return to the concrete and glass jungle of new york. the result of reverse culture shock. was the documentary from the forest starts august ninth w. i that welcome to the show today we re traveling all over europe from transylvania to scandinavia but it s cool off with these topics. cold blooded

Husband , Front , Attacks , Report , Gangs , Consciousness , Community , Series , Ukraine , Final , Roma , Us-

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Fox News Night With Shannon Bream 20180803 07:00:00


A recap of the day s headlines and a look at what s in store for tomorrow.
and others are not. the latest higher for the new york times editorial board comes with impressive credentials, articles in the atlantic, washington post and the times magazine but also baggage of inflammatory and racist twitter posts which had a fierce backlash on conservative websites. between 2013-2015, that white men are worse than goblins and bs, marking up the internet with their opinions like dogs blanking on fire hydrants. how much joy i get out of being cool to old white men. i do you to get on wikipedia and play things white people can take credit for, really hard. the times said in a statement her journalism and the fact she is a young asian woman made her a subject of frequent online harassment. for appear go of time she responded that harassment by imitating the rhetoric of her harassers. she sees this approach only
served to feed the vitriol. she regrets it and the times does not condone it. and she understand how hurtful they seem out of context. is a woman of color she has faced torrents of online hate such as if i saw you i would talk you in your lesbian face, shut the blank up, you dog eating dredging up offensive tweets, and they parted company. after an uproar over homophobic slurs with white supremacist. the atlantic hired and quickly fired national s kevin williamson over controversial tweets like the law should treat abortion like any other homicide. williamson said today places like the times should hold the line against mass hysteria and mob mentality of social media.
most journalists have a path if it is used against them. if they join the online vitriol the consequences can be just as ugly. jillian: let s talk about the media discussion. more from sarah sanders today during her back and forth with the press corps. when i was hosted by the correspondence association of which all you are members of, you brought a comedian to attack like appearance, called me a traitor to my own gender. as far as i know i m the first press secretary in history of the united states required secret service protection. jillian: steve brown and white house correspondent for the daily caller who was at the fiery briefing, there was more to it. outlining specific instances, they are factually correct. i went to say this.
the media, like certain outlets, are the envy of the american people. if you trace the historic analog of those comments they are not comments a us president should ever make. we have a first amendment that protects the media. 13% of the world population enjoys a free press, everybody else doesn t have one. those smack of dictators. they are inconsistent with rule of law with a democratic society that depends upon free press that holds our government to account. the president makes comments like that, he is delegitimizing the important work the media is doing. jillian: they are showing up and having briefings, they can t stop him from answering questions, he will take straight questions getting on marine one, it is good for your job, you are
there. he wants to talk and joust with the media, he likes the challenge of this going back and forth. how did it feel to you? the problem is as you discuss your issues with the president s comments, the president is not going to disavow that position. what jim did is put her in a situation he was trying to get her to disavow her boss. her job is to speak on behalf of donald trump. he said the fake news media is the enemy of the people, she is not going to stand at the podium and disavow that. is more matter of what you looking for in a question. the deck of the press briefings to extract information on the policy of the united states government. she answered that pretty clearly and in terms of what he was going for i m not sure. shannon: making the story about him knowing he was not going to
i don t know what his intentions are but these turn into protracted struggles, and shouting and that is what becomes the story whereas we did not get much information about what is going on with a host of different matters. people complain about the policy of this or that and in the briefing room we start talking about the squabbles. jillian: the media research center look at the first portion, abc, cbs, reporters and nonpartisan forces, 10% of comments about the president and his policies were positive, 90% were negative. it seems like a vicious cycle, the president feels attacked all the time by these networks. i feel for him, he is not well equipped to respond by twitter. shannon: he loves that, that is how he got people to vote for him, talking to people directly around the media. the washington post has been
rather, we can shrug off dan the first trump s attack on the press, they are undemocratic and incite violence. facing down hostile crowd, supporting colleagues, competitors and the general public is a must. we had this and many other things that happens, we reached a new level of vitriol. what i would say, why do we have so many reporters in the room if we are supposed to ask the same question and take the same advice from the so-called media gods? we have a free press so we can stand and interpret it and look at it the way we want to. jim acosta decided to handle himself one day, i decided to handle myself another, and ask about russian interference in our election. jillian: which we are going to talk about. the conversation will continue. it was supposed to be the main event, a dream team representing every major intelligence agency, national security advisors
answering questions about the strategy to metal in us elections. kristin fisher breaks down what we have learned. reporter: two weeks ago vladimir putin promised donald trump that russia did not meddle in the election and would not meddle in the upcoming midterms but today five of the administration s top security and intelligence officials said that is a lie. russia attempted to interfere in the last election and continues to engage in malign operations to this day. reporter: the trump administration is sending up red flares. 100 days until the midterms. the threat is real, it is continuing and we are doing everything we can. our democracy itself is in the crosshairs. free and fair elections are the cornerstone of our democracy. reporter: they insist the interference never affected the vote count but it had an impact in terms of sowing discord and
undermining confidence. they outlined a strategy involving teamwork with private tech companies, intelligence sharing between federal officials and ongoing operations most of which could not be discussed. democrats were quick to say they should do more and overwhelmingly apply the show of force and solidarity in the white house briefing room. and all government approach, great to hear the agencies, i was encouraged by what they said today. they had good command of what we need to do but do they have support from the president? reporter: donald trump had a chance to put the question to rest at the rally tonight and chose not to. shannon: thank you very much. in pennsylvania the president said russia is unhappy he won the election on the heels of a real morning from national security issues on the russian influence campaign, the president ask critics say too
little too late. remarkable that the institution, essentially moving around their leader to execute these policies, these things should have been done immediately after 2016. shannon: here to discuss, bradley maas and cia analyst and intelligence unit member, good to have you with us tonight. a lot of snark came after the briefing where the left has been pushing the president to get serious about this. they talk about it and one article said they produced no new orders and no new information. they are taking this seriously. mark warner is a ranking democrat, glad to see the white house do something about election security even if it is only a press conference. if only it was backed up by anything the president has said or done on russia. they have offered briefings to senate democrats on what is happening in the election and it is negative so far.
i was once an intern for senator warner many years ago. the problem senator warner and others have is there is no one seemingly in charge. what we heard today in the briefing with the fbi director, great descriptions of what they are doing as an agency. we can t flatfoot in 2016 but who is running it? we had someone brought in to compile all the data, be the person in charge, you handle this part. he was running at this time? shannon: you heard from secretary neilsen today. and former ambassador john bolton, national security adviser, he outlined everything. if you want to see the letter, talked about all the things they are doing, cyber security experts conduct vulnerability investments, provide expertise and incident response and facilitated training and
exercises for election officials and equipping them every way we can and readied themselves to provide rapid response for cybersecurity incidents and mentioned we are happy to brief the more sensitive classified nature of this to senate democrats. there are two important components of this problem, cyber hacking and intrusion. that is where you have public-private partnerships and others to make sure there are not russian attempt to get into servers or election voting machines even when there are ways to intrude on those. then there is the propaganda aspect, sock puppets on facebook and twitter trying to spread fake news or false information. these are not problems you ever illuminate. it reminds me of the terrorism discussion as you try to mitigate risks and working at a federal bureaucracy with lots of different pieces. that are trying to do their
best. everybody needs to understand there is no universe in which there is no propaganda on the internet from foreign countries, no efforts, pretty low-tech unskilled hacking efforts, things like fishing that rely on social engineering. you send someone an email, i m the it network, doesn t matter what dhs is doing, if you give somebody your password and don t realize it is in cyrillic you have a problem. shannon: we heard from nielsen, the way she estimates cyber attack and the danger of that versus a physical attack from a foreign country. here is what she said a couple days ago. i worry a lot about cyber. the cyber attacks are much bigger than physical attacks that affect all of us, teaching kids through a computer. shannon: what do you think of that? it is clear there are a mess of
problems. there is an aspect of this that will never go away. social media disinformation will always be there but there has to be a measure of leadership, a true consistent message. the one problem this administration has and what they are seeing in terms of how they are fighting back is you get these briefings which were great, which gave what the public needed in terms of reassurance for three or four hours later the president goes to a rally and talks about how it is all russia oaks and vladimir putin wants to be my friend. shannon: the president will continue to say there is no evidence of that. the president is clear there was no coordination between his campaign and any of these russian actors we have seen but you have to look at the broader context, the democrats who are complaining, you saw mark warner s tweet, the president is damned if he does and damned if
he doesn t, he has the most senior national security officials and a detailed discussion to the degree they can. they won t talk about cyber, doing everything they can to say we got this, trying to make this election as clean as possible. in 2016 the obama administration decided not to do more. that was a political calculation. it was a political calculation, not a national security calculation. keep in mind i have a feeling some people will be unhappy with the measures no matter what we do. shannon: great to have both of you here tonight. donald trump on the campaign trail and miscellaneous something for current congressman lou barletta and how the administration s successes. you have the lowest level of unemployment in history of our country but how does somebody fight that? how does somebody fight that? shannon: getting more fired up
on the campaign trail, conservatives or the anti-trump resistance, karl rove live with analysis next. with expedia s add-on advantage, booking a flight unlocks discounts on select hotels until the day you leave for your trip. add-on advantage. only when you book with expedia. maybe not. maybe you could trust you won t have to actually talk to your neighbor. are you watching the game tonight? or. .you could just trust duracell. when you barely clip a tpassing car.duracell. minor accident - no big deal, right? wrong. your insurance company is gonna raise your rate after the other car got a scratch so small you coulda fixed it with a pen. maybe you should take that pen and use it to sign up with a different insurance company. for drivers with accident forgiveness liberty mutual won t raise their rates because of their first accident. liberty mutual insurance.
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blackburn winning the gop primary and embracing donald trump, she has from the beginning. soberness in winning the democratic nomination, attacking the president on the campaign trail that the commander-in-chief won by 26 points and remained popular. donald trump rallying in pennsylvania in support of barletta s campaign to unseat bob casey. the president attacking democrats are going talking points head on. when bernie tells how wonderful things are he wants to raise your taxes, create massive amounts of crime, open the borders. think about it. when he goes out and i say one thing, african-american, hispanic, asian, you have the lowest level of unemployment in the history of our country. how did somebody fight that? shannon: is the president doing
more to energize the democratic base? senior advisor to george w. bush karl rove joins us from texas. good evening. shannon: i want to read something from an article on the whole, democrats are gleeful about trump commanding the spotlight with fewer than 100 days until the midterms. they know his approval ratings even if they picked up modestly in recent weeks, they contend his involvement will just democratic turnout which will outweigh any beneficial effects on gop voter enthusiasm. you see these rallies, tens of thousands of people showing up, isn t enough to make a difference in the midterms. let s be careful about taking rallies as an indication how the election might turn out. these are terrific rallies but in 1972 george mcgovern was met with huge turnout throughout the
country, in 1988 michael dukakis was well-received, walter mondale could have big rallies. got to be careful about this because in the foxhole that came out a few days ago, july 11, 46% approve of the president s job performance. only 28% strongly approved, 18% somewhat approved. disapproval, 51%, but 41% strongly disapprove. the opposition is energized. how does the president handle the issue of energizing these people and not adding to the way over here, a difficult thing to do for anybody in the white house but the president is smart to go out and do these rallies now to get people just up but at the end of the campaign it will be smart in many contests for the president to absent himself from the scene and the candidates shine through some people say if i like trump i
will vote for the person who stand with trump but if i m not so hot on trump let me make a decision between two people on the ballot. we have seen that with all kinds of presidents, president obama stayed away from races that could hurt the candidate but folks are going to look at 2016 and say the polls were so far off they were never told the president had a legitimate chance of winning, a 2% chance and look what happened. is that dangerous for conservatives and gop voters to say i don t trust the polls? is it better for republicans if they say i do trust them and i need to show up? three things. republicans can make that argument without having the president in every district or every critical contest at the end. the candidates can make that point. it is important to remember who
will decide this election. back to the foxhole 43% of the people in the july survey were democrats, 41% republicans, 15% independents, candidates have to have a message that at the end of the day keeps their base and it is a significant slug of independence, not just by the president but by them. he can help raise money, recruit volunteers but at the end the president going into these districts in the end they are running the risk of his message, i m donald trump, i m your president overwhelming their issue which is on your candidate and i will represent your values and views. the final point, running for president when your name is on the ballot like donald trump s was in 2016 is a lot different than a midterm in which people are voting by and large in a
midterm voting against the party in power which is why we had rare moments like 2002-1998 in which the party that holds the white house made gains. shannon: they may keep coming out. keep multiplying. i want to get you to respond, rudy giuliani representing the president saying i say this not as a lawyer but this election is going to be about impeachment or no impeachment, who wins the issue better? that issue if it is at the center of the election is they are wired up about it but if the issue is one in which republicans say if we go the other direction we are going to be in a bad place as a country, won t be constructive and i know enough about this republican candidate that they will do what i want needs to be done so
democrats make a mistake by beating the drums too much, republicans could beat them a little bit, don t drown out the noise of how strong the economy is an steps to make it stronger and things democrats want to do to impede or reverse this great economic dynamic. we had a lot of that from the president and he is looking forward to being in ohio and many other places, he is happiest on the campaign trail, thank you for weighing in. on day 3 of the trial of paul manafort, special counsel team questions one witness, manafort s bookkeeper, she didn t know he had any foreign financial holdings, the mueller team charges he could $69 of fees hidden from the irs and his money dried up for a while in 2016, that is when prosecutors
allege he doctored financial statements to get loans. no talk about russian collusion, no mention of the president. mueller s lawyers said he had every intention of calling their star witness to the stand. he got a plea deal and is cooperating with the mueller team. more news next. yea,that and homeowners, renters, motorcycle and boat insurance. huh.that s nice. what happens when you catch a fish? gecko: whoa. geico. more than just car insurance. see how much you could save at geico.com. i m ok!
mike tobin in chicago. reporter: a big difference between this and other demonstrations is it happened without the blessing of city leaders because a core issue was a call for the resignation of romney manual. rahm emanuel. but this was about money. they took the demonstration out of impoverished neighborhoods on the west side and took it to the nice part of town demanding economic development in other parts of town. one of the organizers tells me a primary complaint was violence prevention money goes towards organizations run by white people, something he frequently says, black death in the city of chicago as a hustle. they hire black folks to work for them but we can run our own organization. we don t need a go-between. reporter: the message got muddy, they demonstrated against black on black violence but this was about police involved
shooting, demonstrators invoked the mcdonald shooting blocking traffic, making sure demonstrators were safe even as they went to wrigleyville. there were more police on the street and demonstrators. reverend gregory livingston, one of the organizers says what was accomplished with the voices given to people who were disempowered and political will was created. shannon: time now for where in the world? white farmers, get stunning and catastrophic, the nation s ruling african national congress endorsing proposed constitutional changes to allow the state to legally seize land owned by white farmers without compensation. attentive land transfer to black ownership since the end of apartheid but that is only a third of the targets. force transfers of white land in zimbabwe, violence broke out in the economy crashed. google looking to launch a censored version of its search
engine in china. documents reveal the search apps names dragonfly blocks search terms like human rights, democracy, religion and peaceful protest. pope francis agreed the death penalty is inadmissible under all circumstances and the catholic church must work to abolish it. it is a change to the official church teaching and reflect his view that all life is sacred and there is no justification for state-sponsored execution, the new church teaching says this constitutes an attack on the dignity of human beings. when we return exclusive footage of some of the items returned from north korea, personal effects and military gear only on fox next. mike walsh also ways in on a provocative message from iran.
military quitman scientists say is authentic to us soldiers during the korean war era, buttons and helmets, campaigns have been recovered as government scientists working on identifying presumed remains of those lost in the korean war. we saw remains that were consistent from what we found from korean war recoveries over the years. we found remains that were consistent with being americans. shannon: colonel mike walsh is here to weigh in on diplomatic efforts with north korea. what do you make of this? the president says it represents the tough talks, negotiations in singapore, and they are getting rid of the nuclear program. before we get into the negotiations can i reiterate
when we go into combat we make a solemn oath to brothers and sisters to the left and right of us that we will never leave a fallen soldier and if the worst happens, our fellow americans, government will do everything possible to get our remains back to our families. i can t over emphasize how important it is to have that closure. they suffer the burden of our service. we think our veterans and take an extra step, it is a team effort to defend our country. in the broader effort, the previous high in terms of remains, and 5000 still missing. they would allow the joint teams of american forensic experts to
go in and help find these remains rather than trickling out a few dozen at a time. we have over 5000 to get to. shannon: noreen loper talks about her brother, james o meara, missing since 1953. she said it has been a long time. for most people it is a forgotten war. for me there was never any closure. i keep thinking am i going to find out in my lifetime? i have got to know what happened to him even if it is only bones. what this means for people who don t have answers or any piece of their loved one so they can say goodbye to them. i wake up every single day thinking how i can make that day worthy of the americans that we lost. how can we all be worthy of the lives that are sacrificed and my heart goes out to families that don t have closure and this is an important step. my hat is off to donald trump for putting it front and center
in his negotiations with kim jong un. shannon: we heard that iran left to have a massive naval exercise, that was no secret but we have a tweet saying u.s. navy can t find its way around our waters. perhaps they haven t figured out it s name, persian gulf as it has been called for 2000 years longer than the us has existed or maybe it doesn t know what it is doing in our backyard 70,000 miles from home. an age-old dispute between the arabs in the middle east and the persians with you, the arabian gulf for the persian gulf. and literary circles, the arabian gulf because our allies, the saudi s and others is what they call it but what this is is the uranium s saber rattling and diverging attention to the
united states because it is so bad internally right now in iran. donald trump rightly withdrew from the iran deal, reimposed sanctions because he knows, john bolton knows and others know the achilles heel of iran is the economy. the currency is tanking, inflation is spiking, the regime is in real trouble. the president of iran has been called to the carpet on not being able to find basic services to his people and i applaud donald trump for putting his foot on the neck of the iran he and economy and the regime which mind it s pocket with what he received. shannon: the people will make the difference and they are speaking out. we will watch closely. the trump administration kicks another obama era regulation to the curb. a number of left leaning, we
will see you in court next. from any one else. why accept it from your allergy pills? flonase sensimist relieves all your worst symptoms, including nasal congestion, which most pills don t. and all from a gentle mist you can barely feel. flonase sensimist.
economy standards instituted during the obama administration. reporter: the latest and arguably biggest potential rollback of obama era regulations to date. under the proposed rule the trump administration, at year 2020 levels, 40 miles per gallon, rescinding the rise to 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025. opponents see it as a bonus for automakers struggling to meet standards, some having cheated to meet them. supporters see it as a win for consumer choice. they will be empowered to choose what kind of vehicle they want to drive, not being told what vehicles to drive from bureaucrats from washington. reporter: 20 state attorneys general condemned the proposed change announcing plans to sue voting a final rule would weaken efforts to produce carbon pollution, improve water quality and save money on gas. the trump administration moved to withdraw california s café waiver.
california history 3 emission standards than 13 other states representing 40 million americans. california sued in may in anticipation of these actions. california will do what it takes to maintain the clean car standards. reporter: both sides argue saving lives is their primary concern, proponents noted to meet standards automakers have reduced vehicle weight. the lighter the vehicle the higher the risk for the driver. reporter: the insurance institute for highway safety finds two thirds of vehicles with the highest death rates were small cars but opponents of the proposed change site california wildfires, mudslides and childhood asthma as manifestations of climate change brought on by increased co2 levels spewing in part from auto tailpipes. the earth is not flat and climate change is real. can someone please inform the
folks at the white house? reporter: of the will becomes finalized it will not change the ability of low emission 0 emission cars, already making in rodents the marketplace constituted by 5% of sales in california alone with greater market share available. shannon: stay with us, our midnight hero is next. money right into the harbor. i m gonna regret that. with liberty mutual new car replacement we ll replace the full value of your car. liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty who we are as people and making everybody feel welcome. ordering custom ink t-shirts has been a really smart decision for our business. - [narrator] custom ink has hundreds of products and free shipping. upload your logo or start your design today at customink.com. upload your logo or start your design today the world is full of different hair. that s why pantene, the world s #1 conditioner brand,
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help them to live out their final years with dignity and love. call right now. - [eckstein] call the number on your screen. - what i pray is that you won t turn your eyes, but you will look at their suffering and your heart will be changed. - [voiceover] with your gift of just $45, we can rush an emergency survival package to help one desperate elderly person for a month. call right now. - [eckstein] call the number on your screen.

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Transcripts For DW Conflict Zone - Guest Mevlut Cavusoglu 20180802 06:30:00


foreign ministers have been working with me and i have been working with them i had been normalizing my the turkish way she is with us ria because the new foreign minister has to try charlotte don t know country let me know i am letting you are a big but no you are not i m trying to ask you some cause you are not yet you are not letting the speak you asked the question after my first sentence you cop and you make me. no comment then i put the question let me answer and if you have to respect you don t even have respect. to me and you don t have plenty of respect no i m just trying to get an answer to a question is not the way to make the interview you said ask the question make your comment and wait until i give the answer this is how we do the interview if you think that now you are trying to foreign minister late in the foreign minister of turkey like this this is not the way and i m not trying to humiliate her she said what you have been trying to ask you are in such a long ago that question here s a question here s
a question that put the question last july yeah foreign ministers in my gabrielle of germany complained about your imprisonment of the dual national journalist danny as usual and he said your president was trying to muzzle every critical voice so mr other one hit back telling him he should know his limits who are you to talk to the president of turkey he said how old are you. do you expect european governments to bow down and flatter your proud well when we can size the german authorities and we get also similar similar comments and they have been also insulting me from the time and it s victorious high unfortunately you see the statements coming from such statements come from both sides this is why i later on i worked with the same foreign minister league matter gabrielle to normalize the relations i visited him at his house he offered me a key and turkish did and we worked together to normalize the relations and we have
made a lot of progress why don t you focus and pay more attention to this process but only the negative aspect of our relations which was in the past what is extraordinary in the light of your comment over the last two years is that you are now pressing to join the e.u. within the next five years this is according to your deputy prime minister ratchet as tag what he told the german newspaper developed a few days ago he accused the e.u. of acting unfairly allowing several balkan countries to join first and he said turkey deserves to join the e.u. earlier than any other contest turkey has been waiting for sixty years and in the last sixteen years we made a lot of reforms when we had the best relations with the unification union i mean two thousand and six immediately after we started the negotiations and some countries france and also european union commission bloc several chapters and those
days we didn t have any better relations with the europeans it was excellent so what he is trying to do that is to say that my deputy prime minister is one when we do the reforms and when we reach the opening and closing benchmarks of the chapters unfortunately due to the political obstacles we haven t made any. yes so why don t you respect his opening he s the deputy prime ministers and you question every statement of one turkish politicians but the one you never question the european side or the obvious doesn t have of course we question the european side but you don t represent europe so i don t notice and we were i don t know because you are an incentive of turkey i must tell you about things i am planning member of the council of europe my friend and i share the parliamentary assembly of the council a beautiful two years when you are foreign minister and you are also a member of nato we are member of the o.e.c.d. and we are the party iotas we are not asking for us either we are part of the
europe major like it or not we re part of that you are mr foreign minister why if you want to continue did your president tell parliament in ankara last october to tell the truth we don t need the membership anymore so which is it you want to involve you or you don t want to do anymore which is a this is the reaction. this is a reaction. when european union behaves turkey that on the turkey needs european union turkey needs european union and european union needs turkey we are everywhere of this but some european countries unfortunately don t see the fact so why so you don t leave you any man or you said you don t need real time trees in the european union actually against turkey your membership may have big my shirt off the e.u. countries you member states actually are in favor of turkish if you were going to actually you know one membership anymore he said you struck not us last year as it
was the reaction to this is the reaction of the country who has been waiting at the door for sixty years ok sixty years so as a way that it is turkey s mistake so why do so many years so why threaten europe in march last year when the diplomatic pressure on what can what kind of threatening in march last year when there is a sematic route with germany was at its height your president said that if europe continues this way no european in any part of the world can walk safely on the streets that s what he said. that s a threat now it s a direct threat no it is not a truck and that not be a threat it is not a threat it is the actually he is warning the europe if you are in hypocrisy in our fight against terrorism and if you are allowed the terrorists active to be active in your countries if you. believe that the batteries but is the best one if you allow them to raise money forcibly if you are there illegal
activities in your countries and indifferent. then nobody will be safe because what the president wanted to say that do not support the terrorist organizations and take the same measures against all the terrors all sorts of terrorists without any double sided residency i think what is it is not that threatening this or are you like to interpret in april you received the most damaging assessment of your progress so far by the european commission they spoke of major steps in the wrong direction and said turkey had suffered serious relapses in the areas of justice rule of law fundamental rights and freedom of expression and cited measures taken since the attempted coup has widespread dismissals arrests and detentions all of which raise serious concerns though i do not buy i do not want to reject what these
critics is why should i what should i do with the persons who are actively involved in the attempted go. they re working into the two hundred twenty three thousand people have been arrested no that is not true not because of the there are people who are sellers up to banks there are murderers there are rapist there are the rock traffickers you know do you know took what they are what they do what do you do with this kind of people in your country do you have to tell someone that it s a guy right there was good question let me give you you asked me a question yes i cannot speak who has used it and i m trying to answer it and what would you do for the people who are involved in the crime in your country there are more than two thousand turks from turkey not the turks living in germany in the prison why did you put them in the prison then why because maybe they are involved in the crime i cannot say that they are innocent because you have the additional he rest of the world isn t buying these explanations is that the chief human rights if
you like and i justify it if you like i say the question if you don t like you don t you don t buy it this is the offer do you think a senior boss yeah not the boy i m talking about or syria i m talking about the senior human rights official of the united nations who is concerned by arbitrary mass dismissals of civil servants and private sector employees arbitrary closure of civil society organizations arbitrary detention the use of torture until treatment during pretrial detention restrictions on free expression and movement arbitrary expropriation of private property those are things that he is concerned about not me he s concerned i m talking about the chief security right sophisticated or my people is more important than what he s saying and he s a biased person and there s a conflict of interest i know him very well ok and these people this associations belong to the top which also which is who i don t know is for total federal and
that s all i don t know is a terrorist organizations and i was a motorist because people don t know because many. western countries were very happy. on that night ok because. he attempted to coup but he failed and in the morning many western countries who like him very much regretted that the coup failed therefore for you he is a good man but for turkish people which western country rejected for the core who is a good man and poor others and for turkish people and for many other friendly countries this is a terrorist organization that s why many countries are closing their networks and the schools in those countries which guess which western country hailed the which western country approved of the coup unfortunately the majority of which which was given a meal and even that no one even if you can t name me one no i can t give you which one which one of many european kind which one many of i love almost all of you
can t you can t give me one you walk a mile saying why nobody came to visit us after the coup you can t give me a single one almost all of them really yes and you can t give me a single name almost all of them you can pick one get one almost all of them pick one almost all are sensors almost all of the really yes you have no evidence for that whatsoever i have the evidence of that many ministers that night actually question me three o clock in the morning how turkey was going to treat these plotters instead of asking me how i was doing personally and how the situation was in turkey who do you think people are going to believe the u.n. human rights official who speaks out against human rights violations in the world or you representing in the ministration which is charged with massive abuses of human rights you ask it is going to going to be up to you and it is up to the people you think you think human rights are just artificial obstacles known to you
know because your president said in a recent interview i call on the e.u. to remove these artificial. obstacles artificial obstacle means the particular obstacles to the rise of racism islamophobia some countries are against turkey s membership this is a exactly what i meant you know president is what he s saying that turkey is ready to continue their relations with the european union on the basis off the stand that s democratic standards but if you look at it off the cols because of cyprus or because of sarkozy because of that all of them are after official and the political one ok mr foreign minister let s talk about settler girl and the islamic cleric in the states you ve asked the states to the terrorists are going to have values now that you tell me i know can i give you the question first
yes but you have asked that i have to disagree with you have asked us just as well that i didn t look it when you were close to us these are an authorized his is a he s a promoter and he s a terrorist i understand what you say you like what he did in china that s why you said islamic cleric this is exactly what i meant now you answer i m not you i m not going to use your leg now you are answering the here in that you put yourself you want the us to extradite him yes. what is causing increasing concern in the united states is the fact that in april twenty sixth you re arrested an american missionary andrew branson apparently to hold a bargaining chip unless and until the u.s. extradite school and the reason we know that is because you know that this is what s how this is what you re this is what your president admitted in the speech last autumn he said about the americans give us the pass the back they say you have one pastor as well meaning delenn given to us then we will try him branson and give
him to you what is that if not hostage diplomacy is not how all of this diplomacy my friend what is it that branson offering an example is accuse and the indictment is there if you have if you spare five minutes to read the indictment you will see what kind of accusations there are in the indictment it is a poorly judicial process it is not a politically motivated process so why are you offering to trade you know we didn t we never offered you get no we didn t give us a pastor back no have one we have given to us we never try and we re given to you he never did that but when that there are agreements with between the countries including between turkey and the united states actually to extradite the people or to xchange of the prisoners to him to sometimes when the prisoner a sentence for instance you can send it to him or her to. her or his
host countries these are the agreements it can happen but if you re offering not we had we didn t offer an i am telling you that there are a limited no no no no give you no support i gave you the quote this is how you are interpreted and really i have we have never been in this kind of bargaining with any country my friend and only sometimes the intelligence is actually walk together to. dight some terrorists or when there is a serious situation this is a kind of cooperation between the countries but pastor is has been detained he has not been charged but there are serious accusations you read the indictment and you can see yourself what kind of if you show how on earth an exchange minister let s talk about syria you re playing you said a leading role in the political process with syria you therefore have to take some of the blame for the fact that this process has got precisely nowhere has it geneva
a stand such as the russians have allowed president assad to basically keep winning the war and have cemented his position you said you wanted assad out you are further away from achieving that goal that any time or two well we believe that. cannot rule this country anymore because he has killed almost one million people and it is it is not only after me you know you re playing a leading role in the talks that i ll tell you it is up to the syrian people actually at the end to decide whom actually who should going to rule the country maybe that s why we need to prepare the country for the democratic elections turkey has been playing an important role crucial role at different platforms and since aleppo we have been working we started working with russia then we included iran as well because you re like it or not iran is also an important actor we disagree with
iran on different issues including as that but this is a major issue this is this is the issue and they are well i want your interest of but they now you have got your best friend this is that not they are not my best friend i have been working with them but you don t have to agree on everything with a country or person to work together sometimes you can put this this egg. it s in the brackets but asked on a process for instance have been very helpful to actually. consulate that the ceasefire the escalation zones and also extra to take some confidence building steps between measures between the regime and the opposition in libya the power law the man who has killed a million people to your by your accusation you cement his power that s no no no that s not true it s about that is after we have never changed our position the
russians are not going to let russia all in your know that this is a very serious problem syria it is not only my problem i m trying to explain what the situation is and what we have been trying to do ok asked an arcade such as it was only once and wheeling sochi to geneva the problem is nobody is paying enough attention to geneva i mean the political process now it is not only about russia and iran it is also about our allies in the coalition so without i mean get in without taking any steps forward all making any progress or achievements in geneva how can we be sure about the political solution now the constitutional committee has to be formed. and i am i pessimistic about everything year no not not very pessimistic in almost a year and a half we made a lot of progress but we still must do
a lot more together all right and if they re not already going out of time i can i just and then well you know there was racial pay it call attention to both fighting terrorists and also to the political process one last question in this to your elections are coming up in june parliamentary presidential elections you ve invited the o.s.c. e the organization for security and cooperation in europe to monitor these elections as we said before. as you did before and the ransome of europe and the parliament as you rejected their criticism out of hand when they said to you that the vote last year had not lived up to the standards of the s.c. and the council of europe your president said i do not see hear or acknowledge reports by the i.c.e. observer mission so why bother to invite them once again when you are going to reject any criticism no i don t object to criticism and we have been in whiting or e.c. or e.c. order and parliamentarism of the council of europe to monitor the elections in
turkey every single elections when there is a local elections actually the council of europe it again or observes the elections last year some of the members of this at the committees unfortunately participated to campaign or. prop ekk party d.p. including under who go who is a german policy you don t like what they say you accuse so of being pro peace or play saw the observers should be or projective and balance they cannot take a site they cannot part i also observe elections in many countries during my years at the council of europe so. should be objectively and balanced we can not take a site we cannot participate the campaigns of any particular party and no less than give all the results you want they re going to be by and large at your call go out if you participate at the p.k. k. propaganda you are biased if you support the p.k.
k. you are terror supporter very clear thank you mr very much for being on congress on . my my. my . the books the. globe you.
think that. the be. the big commitment. that s a reality in the us have been experimenting with both buying stem cells. as the cells divide and multiply. us could call should be
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look what do we really know about the man feet high and the dark shades what motivates him how does he think and feel private moments in the life of a great fashion designer when his son smashes. start september ninth w. where i come from we have to fight for a free press i was born and raised in a military dictatorship with just one t.v. shadow and a few newspapers with official information as a journeys i have worked all the strength of many characters and their problems are always the same for doing the social inequality a lack of the freedom of the press and corruption we got on the floor to stay silent when it comes to the fans and the humans and see them right through foals who have decided to put their trust in us. my name is jenny harrison i work
a day w. . this is you that readers live from berlin international leaders called for restraint in zimbabwe after the military opens fire on opposition protesters who say the government bring to the election look at the latest from harare also coming up eleven on this trying to encourage syrian refugees to return to their country but what about those who oppose the asaf regime we hear from one woman fearing for her

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Transcripts For DW DW News - News 20180803 16:00:00


the conservative c.d.u. c.s.u. bloc the social democrats would get less than a fifth of the votes only eighteen percent. the right wing populist if the would reach a record high seventeen percent the liberals and left each still rank below ten percent while the greens would move up to fifteen percent. according to this poll if there was a general election next sunday in germany the coalition parties would lose their majority in parliament but had to make up ford germans consider health and pension policies among the most important issues to be taken care of by their government so work awaits parliament after its summer break ends in september. that would be up to date but some of the stories making news around the wild yemen may be on the brink of a new break off that s a warning which comes from the in isolation widespread malnutrition and conflict could push up the death three. score for
a three day cease fire in the north of the country to carry out a vaccination program. at least twenty people have been killed in afghanistan after a suicide attack on a mosque in the eastern city of gardez dozens more have been wounded the attacker blew himself up inside a shia mosque as worshipers were attending friday prayers there s been no claim of responsibility as yet. lego has unveiled its first range of sustainable pieces at london s natural history museum the green colored range includes bricks leaves bushes and trees made from a type of plastic derived from sugar cane the new range will go on sale from november. students in bangladesh s capital tucker have held a fixed day of protests after two teenagers were killed by a speeding bus tens of thousands of demonstrators have blocked roads throughout the week to demand safer streets who fatality rates in bangladesh among the highest in
the world. now they ve been subjected to immense cruelty some seven thousand iraqi women and girls were abducted tortured and sexually abused by the so-called islamic state after the extremists over and iraq s northern singe on district four years ago now the heirs have been driven out but three thousand years view the women are still missing many who have been sold into slavery in syria a bigot or should commit to people trying to find them and rescue them. it breaks my heart she says. shareen children is showing us her hometown since the ruined city of the. she s just come back from syria where many young stooping held as slaves who stopped her olds who.
friends in europe and america and they give us the money to buy the woman free. show her around russia early was held prisoner for four years her family paid for her release. if they re going to get a job which she has got i saw her they killed my mother. it was awful. they tortured us and forced us to pray. they beat us and they put a price on us. since all of us from one man to the next. she says she was on the brink of killing herself but then she came across a mobile phone she secretly sent her family photos and a video three months later she found and shingle found her her family paid thirteen thousand u.s. dollars to get her back. one thing i want i want you to
meet all the prisoners from them they sell them to each other like sheep it s terrible. and they help themselves to ten year old girls get us back to the mosque . she van also tries to help the women afterwards in the absence of psychological support she has organized a number of self-help groups today she s talking with women about suicide what are the signs that someone is in danger of hurting herself how can others help you have to support each other she tells them. as i don t know i know we have all faced death and that life now is hard but we ve survived we cannot give up and let the muslim. brotherhood the sun is setting as we leave but she wants to go to mt singe or the years edis holy mountain to honor her friends who
are buried here killed while fighting i.r.s. for she van it s a place where she connects with them where she gathers strength for what lies ahead . that exclusive report by the w. s the judiciary there s some return to our top story election results in zimbabwe getting two very different narratives coming out off the country in detail the scars one hundred trees joins me on the line from the capital city of in this start with amazon mongan what he described these elections as a celebration of democracy and freedom is a short while ago he had a conciliatory was for his rival tell us more about his message and how it s likely to go down where we need to understand that someone god was sees himself as the reformer as somebody who s bringing democracy to the country although he has been part of the ruling elite for a very long time of the very party that has been running the country for forty years just last year he got into power when the military press quit chased out gaba
and since then he s trying to opening up things and he sees this election as another example of him opening up so according to him everything went free and fair there were no major problems and he once again said that even what to measure millet national service said but this is not fully true because it s a national observers have been saying that they re wearing these problems in the electoral process for example that your opinion is that there s an unlevel playing field and elect of trust was that the electoral process to be set in the cation that things did not go as well as you could trace it to be and the needs of the opposition m.d.c. in essence your misa has called this a day of mourning for democracy and he says his spot he simply does not accept the results of this election what does he and his party plan to do now. well indeed said that once again today that according to his numbers he won the election he
does not accept the official numbers by the electoral commission but he was not very clear what exactly is going to do basically it has two options right now he could go to court and she confirmed that he would use all legal and constitutional ways to challenge the result to one option would be to go to court to the supreme court to challenge the elections and the other option would be of course to mobilize his supporters to bring them back to the street because he has a massive support base but if we think back what happened when they the outbreak of violence when opposition people went on the streets this might be a dangerous option and this is probably the reason why you did not say that this would be an option right now for him and this is beginning to sound like a deadlock with two competing narratives they had me in such great hopes of this election on june the first one of the possible gobby into what to be able to make of these developments absolutely i talked to a couple of young people on the street today to get their opinion on this issue and of course they have different political parties they are supporting but almost
everybody was like well we definitely need things to change in the better the rich and you know the bab was almost bankrupt the country is heavily deficit and there s a huge unemployment number for young people extremely difficult to find jobs and most of those people told me well our number one priority is now to have stability finally so that our economy can get back on track and that we finally have a perspective again of increase in heart on it thank you very much for that update from that. ok helena joins me now and she has the latest on the tip for tat tat of between the u.s. and china thank you and we re talking about more threats on both sides of this off to donald trump s top economic adviser says that the united states and china have been holding high level trade talks but the two sides appear to have found well little common ground larry kudo described china s threat to impose another sixty billion dollars worth of tariffs on the u.s. as weak and said the wall second biggest economy was quote in trouble with
a trumpet administration accuses china of stealing intellectual property and not playing by trade rules china denies those allegations and says u.s. protectionism is a threat to go global trade. and we can bring in our financial correspondent for more on this now daniel coupes the frankfurt stock exchange and daniel china has said it s prepared to hit back with further tariffs do we have details on what. yes it all seems a little bit to be like kindergarten hell of a tree in those two countries first the u.s. president says i m going to hit you with tears than the chinese counterpart they re saying they re going to hit back as well and china is a country is just very proud and they know they have this big potential so it s clear for them that they need to react so yes we are learning that possible terrorists could be including natural gas peter turkey turkey s condoms yes you heard correctly condoms and helicopters and while china is saying
that the u.s. tears are completely an over reaction of the u.s. president they are calling their all in ones actually reasonable and also cautious after a meeting with his u.s. counterpart one of the chinese foreign minister stated that china wants to keep negotiating but let me tell you had another topic is going to be also the number one topic here next week at the stock markets we are quite we are expecting quite some volatility because of that and. also seemingly to imply that the white house is nearing trade deals with the european union and mexico tell us more about that yes exactly he is saying that they are making progress and that within a month new details could be released this would be rather surprised actually because there is still lots to talk about between the u.s. and the european union and also with mexico but i guess there s also another reason why it s saying this at the moment and many in the tram administration share the
view that china has isolated itself in this tears discussion and they want to send a message to china are making clear if that they don t just you know depend on china and if china doesn t get more flexible they will do more trade free trade with europe possible with mexico and that you know china really needs to rethink and maybe get a little bit more flexible all right diet coke for us at the frankfurt stock exchange thank you daniel. ryan is irish pilots have conducted a fourth day of strikes prompting the budget carrier to appeal for third party mediation to solve the dispute some three thousand five hundred passengers were affected by the latest industrial action which comes as ryanair faces increasing pressure to improve working conditions for the strikes are planned for this day next week with pilots from ireland belgium and sweet and hedging to walk off the job if their demands aren t met. well the summer heat wave is taking its toll
on europe s waterways as levels full but the temperature also affects fish and that s proving a headache for factories that rely on the water cooler for cooling like on germany s biggest river the high where one company is stepping up efforts to avoid getting into hot water with authorities. this is a cooling tower run by a german chemical company thing a s.s. into. the water comes from the rhine and lowers the temperature of the production line but before it s pumped back into the river the water itself has to be cooled down again to ensure it doesn t heat the river up that use of energy and it costs money with summer seemingly getting hotter being s.f. is investing in more thrilling towers. where thinking they ll be more of a need to cool down then in the past due to company expansion as well as possible climate change this kind of construction is about being prepared.
for. the rivers temperature and oxygen levels have to be monitored constantly it s almost twenty eight degrees in the brine near mines. high temperatures leave companies with the choice of either reducing production or paying for the continued use of river water. that firms are forced to pay for using river water we ve installed a measuring instrument the firms have to pay when they reintroduced the cooling water and that caused them to rethink the practice. low water levels are also proving a headache cargo ships are traveling almost empty and many goods have to be shipped by rail or road. now whether it is driving up beer sales are nowhere more than in china is now the world s biggest beer market and heineken wants to get in on the act and expand in the country over top spring giantess buying a forty percent share in the listed entity of state owned c r b which is the
country s biggest beer maker heineken will merge its operations in china with those of its new partner with more and more chinese raising a glass the world s second largest brewer hopes to tap in to that growth. was backers from region now and if you re missing the football world cup fear not exactly fear not hell or thank you and i think the fifa world cup finished a few weeks ago well think again the fee for each was campus taking place in london and it s a tournament for gamers playing the popular fee for football video game of the image of couch potatoes in front of the console is no longer gone it s now a multi-million dollar industry gamers train as much if not more than real for bowlers and they even have doping tests is more. this is what it s all about a trophy fit for a major tournament the prize money isn t but even the winner picks up two hundred
fifty thousand dollars gaming is now big business no longer the preserve of teenagers bedrooms. more than twenty million people competed globally in the fee for world cup but only these look if you made it to london for the three day grand final it s all very serious players keep in shape in the gym there are even doping tests to make sure gamers aren t using medication to lower their heart rates during the stress of a game is a good measure live thing everyone should be on a level playing field this was definitely something they don t really even really think makes a big difference than a video game but if you. buy into a competition you never you know he goes up and we shoot out. the growth of the sports was underlined by x. germany football the message those of announcing this week that he is looking for gamers from around the world to represent his team. footballers like the often train for just a couple of hours a day but gamers sometimes have to go to extremes especially when learning new
commands for new games or consols in the beginning that s when it s very heavy because that s when everything game is brand new you have to learn everything from scratch so it s a you know like thirteen fourteen hours referees or even on how to make sure everyone is playing fair maybe virtually this woke up this anything but child s play for you know is the one to formula one has been given a job to after the shock announcement that longtime red bull driver down the condo will be driving for renault next season ricardo has driven for red bull since two thousand and thirteen where he s won seven races and made twenty nine podium finishes they know who have struggled since rejoining formula one three years ago and will be hoping the australian canvas still wore them to their full monty henri they coude the looks set to replace carlos signed from on the event team. and now for cricket yes cricket on d.w.
the first test between england and india has seen england collapse to one hundred eighty all out in their second innings india now have a great chance to wrap up the win ishant sharma was the best of india s bowlers in birmingham taking five wickets india need one ninety four to win and they re currently on fifty four with seven wickets remaining not a something different some could call it a sport at germany s famous viken heavy metal festival has kicked off with music fans from around the world descending on the village now hamburg topping the bill this year british rock legend judas priest and with the sun shining the music screeching and the beer flowing freely visitors are already having a great weekend just take a look. at a faster vulcan lives up to its most.
seventy five thousand hard rock and metal fans from around the world have descended on this more north german village. i m here because i love metal and this is the mecca of metal it s my third year here. and like every festival worth its salt camping out on a huge field this part of the fuckin experience. but i love it it s like coming home it s a feels like home every time i come in. and i ll come back a million times. was we are from mexico. ok. keep picturing it is nothing better than coming to vulcan once a year to let it all hang out to give yours a good last and to enjoy life. these
days two hundred bands of performing on stage is. headlined by british metal legends to just priest. despite all the posturing fuck n actually has a reputation for being a very friendly festival there s hardly ever any trouble. perhaps that s because everyone here gets direct pression out in the mosh pit. and we ll have more on the back and heavy metal festival live ten about two hours from now robin metter from a to disc will join me and he tell us more about it you re watching d.w. news coming to you live from berlin here s a recap of the top story that they re following field in zimbabwe the opposition
movement for democratic change has rejected the results of the country s presidential election its leader nelson chamisa has said his party had evidence of election fraud. and would challenge the outcome in call. don t forget you can always get d.w. news on the gorgeous down good from google play off from the apple still doesn t give you access to all the latest news from around the one as well as push notifications when you breaking news and you can also use the after to send us photos and videos which you think might be up interest to us. that fit to me a myth that she might on the do you have been used to but i ll be back with you in half an hour to join me then if you get a bad. call
beyond a lot of them in santa monica in greece one week on from the devastating forest fire. villages. trying to god what s left of their homes against looters while rescue teams search for bodies and survivors. people here have been left to fend for themselves with little support materializing from the state. in sixty minutes. iran. wants an isolated theocracy now a major power in the middle east. airlines influence continues to grow politically economically and above all militarily. does

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Transcripts For DW The Day - News In Review 20180801 22:02:00


the meeting but this is something they can yell about what would. help moving his arms and you think about that and that we could excel. also coming up europe struggling to secure its borders and discovering that when one door is closed people desperate to get in will risk everything to open a new one. it will see it on a puzzle them in the over the course of the entire past year we ve rescued sixteen thousand people or so but this year after just seven months the number has already climbed to twenty two thousand and. we begin the day with that disturbing feeling that nothing has changed on the streets of harare the capital of zimbabwe the military was called in today to push back protesters demanding that
the results from monday s election be made public you can hear the gunfire from soldiers. and those bullets we understand were shot into the air to push back protesters at least three people confirmed dead tonight earlier today the opposition presidential candidate nelson commission accuse the electoral commission of stalling in order to falsify the results in favor of the ruling party he said we won the popular vote and we will defend it now a response came from president and in god was calling on everyone to desist from provocative declarations and statements he went on to write that we must all demonstrate patience and maturity and act in a way that puts our people and their safety first now was the time for responsibility and above all he said peace the electoral commission has declared the rulings and p.f. party the winner in the parliamentary contest but the commission now says the results of the presidential election will not be announced until tomorrow we ll go
live to harare in just a moment but first more of the day that proved it is the military that remains in charge in zimbabwe. soldiers firing live rounds and zimbabwe s capital. the army into just streets of harare midafternoon reportedly at the request of the police. the country s justice minister said the military had been deployed to maintain peace and tranquility and accused opposition supporters of going on a rampage how what the protesters claim they didn t stop the violence. that was going on in iraq because. it isn t just you know if this is the demonstration that . the crackdown came after a day of protest in the capital people were taken to the streets to protest at the law and the release of the results of presidential polling. crowds gathered outside the offices of the country s electoral commission to demand the release and
things quickly turned violent the electoral commission called for patience verifying the vote was more complicated that the opposition said the situation was unacceptable and suggested that something unusual was going on it is everyone the citizens right to demand that that is used in reasonable time ok the fact that the results far right essential that it s just next door to have not been released by off by by midday today is inappropriate and suggests that something wrong is happening we ve been hit before. as tensions remain high in the country the international community is becoming increasingly concerned with governments calling for restraint on all sides. all right for more coverage tonight joined by our correspondent melanie bolshie is in zimbabwe covering the elections for as she joins us tonight from the capital harare and the human rights lawyer doug cold heart he also joins us from orange to both of you well. let s start with what we
know right now on the electoral commission has declared the zanu p.f. party as the winner in the parliamentary elections we re still waiting for the results of the presidential election do we know why there is this delay. brant there is no definite answer to that question but the m.d.c. is convinced the delay is on purpose in an attempt in an attempt to manipulate the results of these elections and if you look at the history of this country in past elections they have all been rigged so this is a possibility what is happening at the moment is that the forms with the results from eleven thousand polling stations are being brought to harare that of course can take some time but the m.d.c. is can set on route to harare these votes will be subject to fraud we cannot confirm the claims yet but maybe it will in the future. dog the military it was
ordered onto the streets today. and extreme. do we know was it president who ordered soldiers onto the streets and do we know why such an extreme measure was taken. so in terms of the constitution only the president can. can deploy the military. and therefore we can only assume that it was going to go. to deployed. in recent in recent times we do not have a history of the military deploying themselves and we had a military coup in november last year of course the president did not deploy them to to oust him from hot so so with the military or perhaps even the vice president who still has close ties to domenici being one of the generals who came to power through the coup was the one you deploy them is unclear but certainly what happened
today is virtually unprecedented in recent history for god it was a brutal dictator but he typically used the that the riot police to the previous protests when whenever they really hades but but the firing of live rounds by the military seeing the military on cars driving through the city up to protest is is really quite unprecedented and and and and extremely and one of the ballots tweeted a video today which shows ballot boxes being stolen or taken away we re looking at that video right now and maybe you could walk us through this how do we know that these ballots are being misused i mean how do we know that we re seeing the rigging going on here. so this is there s a couple of things which will concerning about that video one that they they are
the question of legitimacy is going to be easily resolved well definitely looks like we have the makings for a very tense thursday in zimbabwe human rights lawyer and a cold heart and our correspondent melanie here and a ball to both of you thank you we appreciate your insights tonight and please stay safe. but varia has become the first german state to open controversial new processing centers for refugees authorities want to hold asylum seekers there while their applications a process which can take up to eighteen months they will deport anyone who is rejected critics say that this system will get a walk and new arrivals. for many refugees arriving in germany in future this is what home will look like this reception facility in a former u.s. army barracks in the bavarian city of bam bag is the model for the new refugee
finding a job or integrating into society. the residents of the anchor facilities will be able to leave to go shopping or for other reasons despite that critics say they are tantamount to deportation centers. the plan is to open these facilities all across germany or in most parts of the country that will lead to a massive worsening of conditions for asylum seekers. currently holds around fourteen hundred migrants if things go smoothly similar centers may be opened in other parts of germany. ard joining me for more now is your old kanellis he is the founding chairman of the european stability initiative that s a think tank that has worked extensively on the influx of migrants to europe he was one of the architects of the european union s refugee deal with turkey mr good to have you on the program these holding centers they aim to bring the steps of the asylum procedure under one roof to speed it up is that practical. but i ve seen
a nobody can be against accelerating asylum procedures least of all the people who want protection and get protection they have a decision to better but if these centers are presented as the solution to the problem of returning those who are rejected then it s a bluff because the real problem the returning people who have rejected for asylum is their relations with the countries of origin and not just read in the italy no france nor germany has solved this problem without cooperation by countries of origin. return is impossible right and the census will not change that all right stand by we want to talk about many of the migrants that we are now seeing come into europe are coming via a new route they re using spain as a gateway to europe now they re travelling the short distance by book through the strait of gibraltar from morocco spanish coast guard rescued nearly a thousand migrants last weekend alone the refugees there choosing this route as
other countries such as italy crackdown on the rights. rescue teams have just pulled another twenty one people from the strait of gibraltar off southern spain they consider this a slow day compared to most but these twenty one arrivals present a problem for spain the maritime rescue service wants to take these migrants to the nearest port but the port refused permission a common occurrence forty. of them are. over the course of the entire past year we ve rescued sixteen thousand people but this year after just seven months the number has already climbed to twenty two thousand. for . the ship carrying the rescued migrants docked at the nearby port of august nearest instead but the situation there is no better the migrants had been stuck on the ship for days now they re on land looking for shady places to rest.
morocco would be a better idea. by refugees want to go to say now before they chose libya or italy but that was. just thirteen kilometers lie between africa and europe that spain s southernmost tip with other routes closed the country has become the new gateway to europe for thousands of migrants. i m just using we ve got a new way for migrants to get into europe are we going to have to come up with a new dio the way we did was turkey i mean how does europe deal with this new form of migration. well it would be incredibly helpful if the european union would have or would not do the things it s been talking about for three years we need two things to solve the crisis like this the ability to quickly decide who of the people who arrive need protection in europe and who doesn t and if it takes like and it s only in recent years four years until
a final decision is made it basically we don t need insight into something anybody who arrives stays we need speed so we need speed and we need to organize this in the way the dutch have put it beside in six weeks including appeal but in spain or italy or multiple and this requires a european effort so that s the first thing to secondly once we have a decision and then a lot of the people who are now coming to spain who came to it s really are from countries with out high recognition rates senegal southern nigeria ivory coast these are not countries where a lot of refugees come from if we would then decide quickly that one in ten gets refugee status the others don t then we need agreements with those countries of origin they dined interest of those countries to work with us and then meet requires them to take back to us citizens after a fixed date so it s a limited number if they do that less people will come and in return we should offer them legal migration quote us that want to be done in a relatively short amount of time but i m sure we ll be talking about that again
a three d. printer at home and we were asking in the newsroom not many of the anyone does actually have so i mean how easy how expensive would it be for someone to get set up and start making three d. go. well it s not expensive at all you can buy the low end models for less than three hundred dollars and they re eligible on my and. various locations around the world so it doesn t take much to get started. at some point you can download the files for thirty percent guns then that would be virtually free so to get started. the barrier to entry is very very low. and talk us through the freshest in of making the different pieces for this plastic gun i mean is it as simple as downloading software and then hitting print. well yeah it s. pretty much as simple as downloading file
a data file three d. model date it represents the shape and size of the gun itself and then sending that to your three d. printer and let it rest work now the difficulty is not what i just described but producing a good quality got one that can withstand the heat and pressure of the of ammunition going up and that s the problem are at least one of a few problems with something i feel three pretty get is they can explode and they can injure not only not only yourself if you re firing but people around you that may be honest so that s one of the few problems. that we see. you know idea of three pretty. let s say that we ve got a crime that is committed with a three d. printed gun what would the police do you know if they were trying to track down the
weapon are these plastic guns are they are they traceable i mean is there something like you know with a serial number or or some type of tag in these plastic go. no to the serial numbers no markings whatsoever it would be it s. impossible to track down loads and the production of these these guns virtually impossible and we know that three d. printing is the future and the advancements that that report the report that all the time isn t it just inevitable that these blueprints will be made available to everyone i mean especially on the internet it s hard it s hard to put a wall up in the internet when it comes to information isn t it. well it is. inevitable i don t know that it is not we we
have laws regulations that healthy things like food drinking water driving safety even internet use some you know some good rules and laws around that and i think the same is true here that just because it can be done doesn t mean it should be so i would hope that. our law makers in policy makers in washington and elsewhere not only here in the u.s. but around the world they think through the implications of this and they fully understand that you make the decision to allow this to happen that there s no surprise that they understand could be some real safety safety consider consideration that these things could be very dangerous in many ways so that s i think that s where we re at today all right terry well as a three d. printing expert joining us tonight from fort collins in colorado tara we appreciate your insights and come back and talk with us again i m sure we ll be talking three d. printing in the future thank you you re welcome. well
the day is nearly done but as ever the conversation continues online you ll find us on twitter either at the news or you can write directly to me brant goff t.v. don t forget to use the hash tag the day every member whatever happens between now and then tomorrow is another day we ll see the never. try. to.
teams such for bodies. and survivor. people here have been left to fend for themselves with little support materializing from the state. in sixty minutes. they make a commitment. they find solutions. they inspire. africa on the move. stories for both people making a difference in shaping their nation. and their continent africa on the move the stories about motivational change makers taking their destinies can to their tenants. d.w.

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