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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  October 2, 2023 2:00pm-2:15pm CEST

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[000:00:00;00] the, this is the w news live from berlin, a surprise diplomatic mission of solidarity with keen european union and foreign ministers hold a historic meeting of ukrainian capital. it is the 1st time that the blocks foreign affairs council has met outside of the borders of the e. u. a still coming up. a united nations team arrives in the car, no cover box to monitor the situation, but nearly the entire our medium population of the territory has already flood. and
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the swedish academy awards this year as nobel prize for medicine to the 2 scientists who enabled the effective development of m. r. in a vaccine against cove and 19 the i'm sarah kelly walked into the program. you ford ministers are on an unannounced trip to the capital key. that is the 1st time the use top diplomats have met outside of the blocks borders. the show of solidarity comes as you crane faces, a sluggish counter offensive and waving support from its allies. that includes the united states where congress has paused new funding of ukraine. and so vakio where a party valid to and the support from keith has just one parliamentary elections to know ukraine's foreign minister underscore the significance of the visits by his
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counterparts. this is a historic event because for the. busy time for the 1st council going to sit down outside of that score and borders of the board associated with in future borders. and this is a message in itself. message of support and the german foreign minister, adelina barrow. buck reiterated the use support for keith. the future of ukraine lies in the you know, what a community of freedom it will soon stretch from lisa, born to hands with every village and meter that ukraine liberates. and the people it saves. it is also paving its way to the you as you to pm partners and friends,
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we will continue to support ukraine every day. we tested and our correspondence in chief, i'm going to ranko, told us more about why hosting this meeting is so important to you. green all those words by on the bare block about europe stretching from a list of on to a little hans out of course music to ukraine and this is what ukrainians are hoping fault. this is what they've been fighting for here on my don and keith during the evolution in 2014 and ukrainian. it's on its way to the european union. it's now a candidate and helps to start negotiating by the end of the. so this is definitely one of the top issues here in key of doing this informal i have to say meeting because your brain is not n e u member. no documents will be signed, but it will be a very important an exchange of ideas. how you can support your crime. so ukraine is hoping that the support will continue to it will be flowing. i, i'm speaking about the military support, all those 1000000 shelves you,
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you has promised to deliver to your crime by the end of the and all the promises, but also economic financial support to reveal to ukraine. you is already helping you create a lot. and here in key, if people are hoping that this whole, this, this, this financial support will continue despite some problems with somebody you member states. but unexpectedly, that is also the nature of, of america, the united states. pausing with the financial help for ukraine elections in slovakia that you've mentioned that we are seeing cracks in the west and support for ukraine. so this meeting will probably be even more important to show that those corrects are not big. and there's ukraine still to do, can still count on the you talk with us a little bit more about that timing because i mean the ukranian foreign ministry here really took a one step further in this framing of this meeting, calling it's historic. and it is so important, especially right now for ukraine, isn't it?
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is it is an absolutely important and timely show. demonstration of solidarity with ukraine as the counter offensive is grinding on. it is very slow. are you currently suffering? half of the heavy losses as it is, is trying to recapture the occupied territories. it is actually very, very issue started. so those that haven't been any meetings like this before, outside the u. s. we have to consider it's, it's the biggest war in europe after the 2nd world war and still nearly 27 ministers fort administers from european countries have come here to show up here and see if they sample what you're getting to their countries support your crime. this is very, very important. i'm. i'm going to rank of good to see you joining us from keith. we appreciate it. and united nations delegation has arrived and the goal, no kara box to monitor the situation there. it comes just over a week since also by john seize control of the break away region from armenian
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separatists. but the un delegation has arrived after a mass. exodus of the ethnic are medium population, nearly all of whom have abandoned their homes to head across the are medium border . after days of traffic jams, the rush of refugees leaving the corner of kind of a nearly run else. theory is repulsively, does this it to of, to more than $100000.00 ethnic medium slid in just a few days fearful of a future. and the other by john's room maybe with go to you, but tens of thousands have arrived in the armenian border town of gorgeous meaning, having enjoyed harrowing genies diagnosis. some of it stuff. solve it.
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it was very difficult. we were on the road for around 29 hours. i it and put some metals. there was a lot of traffic stuff. this must've been cut the number. it was hard to get here. my mother is sick and this is my brother has children and grandchildren. it was very difficult on a mania, a country of 2800000. now face has major challenges and accommodating the sudden influx of arrivals. the u is refugee agency is cooling for agent international assistance. people arrive exhausted, having left all of their belongings and their homes behind people are in urgent need. a united nations mission has now being able to access nicole know kind of us the 1st visit from the group in 30 years. as the by john maintains it is respecting
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the rights of those living there. it continues to confiscate, sees from nicole in a car box the protests, and has detain, senior figures from the form of government and military command. and who are more, i'm joined now by the w. a reporter, dimitri pulling job in who is in the armenian town of de leon, and has been meeting people as they arrive from new gar. no kara box. so dimitri, what is the situation where you are right now? what have people been telling you? so exactly, we're now here in, in the town of dylan john, in behind me is a building which was used as a boarding school during the soviet times. but now it is being used at the temporary reception center for some of the 10s of thousands of refugees who had left in the garden and call her back in just a week. and we met some of them here. there's a lot of people from the vulnerable categories, a lot of people with chronic diseases. some of them even have cancer and the
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situation here is pretty desperate. this center is mostly held by efforts of local activities who are trying to collect to food and clothing and everything they can do to help these people here as we arrived here to feel we just so to man who arrived here caring nothing but just just a small bag with them and they went here by here, yvonne and we hear stories from a lot of people who have arrived here. like on friday saturday we spoke to a couple of families and i would describe the basically, i think the main feeling that we have here is that many of these people are in the state of deep shock. so they can speak about, they are deal and they can a joke, a little bit about the future and the difficult situation. they're reading, but you can't escape this feeling of desperation, interest, disbelief at how fast they change their lives. changed in just about a week time. absolutely. um and you know, how about their most immediate needs?
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can you just give us a sense of how those are being cared for? is the state of armenia able to handle the situation? is more international help needed just the government of armine, it has promised a one time payment of about 100 euros to every refugee from the garden to cover above all it is as it's known, are soft, but volunteers and human rights groups here say that's nowhere near enough from what is needed, so they're definitely calling for international help and helps within armenia and neighboring countries, to bring in basic necessities and foods. so everything that is needed for the 1st time for these people is welcome here. the w reporter dmitri upon y'all been in the armenian town of dylan. john, thank you so much for your reporting. we appreciate it. and here's a round up of some other stories making headlines. at least 13 people have died in
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south eastern spain after a night club fire in the city of marcia. if the country is worth fire in decades, the cause is being investigated. 3 days of morning have been declared or at least 10 people have entailed and 25 others injured after a truck carrying migraines crashed and southern mexico. officials say that the victims were from cuba. the driver of the truck reportedly lost control of the vehicle while speeding causing it to overturn the week of nobel prize announcements has kicked off with the award in his he ology, or medicine. details of the winter had been announced to sweden with the years price going to very important research or got so the and how do you call us scientists for true weisman for their work that enabled the development of effective m. r and a vaccines against cove and 19 the award has previously celebrated ground freaking work,
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including the discoveries of dna insulin and penicillin or university. let's bring it at a carriage house from dw science has been following all of this. so, you know, this seemed to be a very close race for this award in particular, is this a surprise? well, as always, with a nobel prize, so security doesn't know, you know, never know who's going to win the prize this year. and the m r in a technology, it definitely fulfills the criteria for of all for the bell, so it's contributing the greatest benefit for mankind. but at the same time, everyone or a lot of people thought they would be worth the price already. 2 years ago when we were on the peak of the corona virus pandemic, and the m r n a technology ready read the benefits. many people at the time so, so yes, it's coming as a surprise today. and for me personally, also it comes as it comes as a surprise because i had the chance to talk to drew weisman just a couple of months ago. and i'm really happy for him and credit inquiry go through
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when the price right now. tell us little bit more about their work in particular and how it contributed to the m r. renee vaccines. yeah, so for a long time, we use that a weekend. viruses when we go to explanation or, or we used large scale score cell cultures. but these technologies were not really flexible, not adaptable, and not, yeah, they could not be adapted to, for example, a pandemic, m r in a vaccines where read it a paradigm shift in this regard. but they had a couple of problems. and one of the problems was that they elicited a great immune response in the human body and cut an inquiry co. what's really frustrated, she said when she saw this. yeah. her research of 10 years coming to an end because it didn't seem to be translatable into the human body. and this is where meetings were. weisman and immunology. just came really as a, as a benefit for her because this team together was really passionate, had
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a vision that their technology or the technologies they were working on could be expandable to humanity. and as we saw the last years, it really was something we all benefit from. have we heard from them yet yet? so we didn't hear from them directly, but thomas pearlman, so the noble prize committee member spoke to them just before he announced the prize. and he said that's true, weisman was enormously thankful. and kimberly, and kyra co even said she was over whelmed and refer to her troubles, career. she as a women and the us kind of reached the glass ceiling a couple of years ago, she had to leave university of pennsylvania because she didn't get enough financial funding, which is crucial to do your research in the us. so everywhere basically. and she had to join biotech, a company as a fight vice president where she still could work on the vaccines and on the technology. and we also got the benefits in the last years. but yeah, they're both very happy to that they receive the,
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the work now at the courthouse from dw science. thank you so much. up. next. take a trip down the me con river south east asia is mother of water and that's on doc film. a very short break just do with us and you can get up to date on the date of the news. i'm sarah kelly in berlin. thanks for watching the, the charlotte the currently more people than ever on the world wide and such a bed nearby, facile jessica middle castle josh. find out about

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