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saw the new york police department running team of the this is really a great event so it really is a great event mark and what else makes the berlin marathon so special do you think . well there is this mythology about the virgin mary for the last six men's marathon will records have been set here in berlin demis connect so did it in two thousand and fourteen in two i was two minutes and fifty seven seconds to beat that is going to be tough today we have the reigning champion and olympic champion elliott kobe of kenya out there at the moment he's looking to beat that you might remember a year or so ago he did almost break the two hour barrier but that wasn't actually an official marathon recalled that was because it was done with a sports win manufacturer and with a pacemaker but he's looking to try and smash that record today and then among the women we've got to baba she's won gold medals at olympics in five thousand meters ten thousand meters she's now doing marathon running the women's marathon world record is very complicated because it depends if men of the pacemakers but she's looking for a big time as well mark thank you for your time enjoy the race and we'll talk to later. and the same for ground three takes place later on sunday with formula one world champion new as hamilton on pole the only just astounding leader it was a mere three hundred of a second quicker than his rivals but that proved to be enough. lewis hamilton struggled at times on saturday losing his line on a number of occasions his missing eighties boss toto vote was not best pleased. but britton hamilton is not world champion for nothing he pulled a laugh out of nowhere to top the time sheets and he stayed there max for stuff and ended up being second quickest in his red bull. hamilton knows pole could be gold dust on the tight singapore street circuit especially with title rivals the best in fettle third on the grid. wow wow that was a hard boiled fish and. that felt like magic. i don't really know where it came from but it all came together. naturally want to say thank you to all the feedback effect for you know i was working so hard really really so hard to put out there should be it's. singapore and the throngs of fans already for an epic race on delights. and this reminder of the top stories that we're following for you. at least eleven people have died along the u.s. east coast as tropical storm florence causes catastrophic flooding authorities there say that the worst is still far from over and in the pacific type in mongoose is now barreling towards china lashing the philippines and at least twenty eight people have died there mostly on slice. that's it for me for now you are watching detail the news coming to you from berlin and more again at the top there and don't forget you can get all the latest news and information around talk on our website that's on t.v. dot com. jane museums. schmidt's the ones. it's a call to change heads up. so i bought some. people who put big dreams on the big story in. the magazine on the w. i dreamt of going on empowering swedish and then don't miss this story for john j. should johnson takes you along on a thrilling of bone chilling journey each week you can scan the few stories and looking. to tell your story on instagram. dortmund fans were delighted as the black and yellow summer signings stole the show and kicked off much they treat with a three one win against frankfurt. obs do diablo open the scoring for dortmund in the thirty six the minute it's the frenchman's first goal for the black and yellows since signing this summer from the mines now in the sixty eighth minute sebastiano they are equalized for frankfurt powering home i've done either cost across in style. but just four minutes later dortmund re took the lead thanks to my wheels fall two minutes from time buckle outcast said rendel at the home victory with a debut go. no three stoke welcome to the win this league on d.w.i. public. dorman's victory set us up nicely for an exciting weekend a full pull and there's been no shortage of goals so let's see what's coming up on today's show. we start with labor couzens quest for points we'll see if they could end miserable start to the season by shopping by. and a tighter fare is expected between vulture and tatar berlin two sides that have been flexing their muscles this season. now leverkusen were full of promise before the season kicked off but their start the campaign has been dreadful two back to back defeats and this weekend they faced an uphill battle against biron in munich could they surprise their solid hosts and finally pick up some points let's find out. they've accused coach heiko heloc went on the defensive against by him and even left out germany for what a union bryant. but the first good chance fell to laver cozen giago handled the ball a penalty was awarded by him protested but the decision looked to be correct. couldn't follow and stepped up a man you'll know you're saved for the spot kick had to be taken because the referee but not whistled. this time ventile made a better job of it one nil to lay the q.'s now after five minutes. i managed reply though came just five minutes later france will cook in a column time to least so showed the greater desire to equalize but his game would later turn sour recalled champions by and began to press hard labor couzens defense crumbled and iron rubber and made them pay the dutchman taking full advantage of yonathan towers mistake by and had turned the game around but lost aliso to a knee injury. again petered out after the break but it came alive again on eighty minutes. read for caring about the just eight minutes of becoming on pulling this ugly challenge on ruffy near by and were incensed. by those that no chance of ten men and by and sealed it late on through time as rodriguez later cusanus furred loss in three. no one to this of course but it is how it is so it's we have no points from three games but we mustn't lose our cool. by and celebrate that perfect start but halak side are in dire need of some inspiration. now two games and two wins that's have all spirit and berlin have kicked off their season the world surprisingly strong start to the campaign has their fans feeling rather optimistic after struggling through the past couple of seasons now their opponents had to have also looked pretty nifty and evenly balanced much was predicted but could one of the to inform sides edge head. those first and hats they were both hoping to continue their flying starts to the new campaign the hosts were in control alley on with your own receive your trying his luck from distance on several occasions the frenchman's efforts were less of a threat to the go and more to the camera man beside it that bum to the head meant he had to clock off early fortunately there was no lasting damage. for much of the game the two sides cancelled each other out but just after the hour mark just fire odell rowson capitalized on a way would pass to put hats. in france by the opening goal was the dutch win his first in the bundesliga observe it stayed until the eighty seventh minute when on a my it clattered into max arnold right on the edge of the box. the referee eventually gave the penalty. dispatched by the stuttering unit smalley. by one one the score abut the drama was just beginning in the first minutes of stoppage time on dry due to slip an ingenious free kick under the wall to put half step back in front of the buy it was due to a second goal from a free kick into games. but if but with time running out john brooks headed on to admin at midday and he level things up again by bruno levante is team snatching a draw from the jaws of defeat thanks to their new founds never say die attitude. is telling the test his image of the team has gained confidence they know from the last few weeks and some situations at the end of last season that they can come back from behind that gives you belief who comes into. the home a point was the least the sides deserved after a match high on drama. now it's time to take a look at some of the other big toys this weekend in a moment we'll see when this leipzig and hanover fared but first we look at the clash against childhood the royal blues have lost both of their opening ties leaving coach to many go to desk of feeling under pressure so let's take a look at how they got on against a glass that hasn't tasted the feat yet this season. the answer is quite poorly the players were barely on the pitching block but we're ready in the lead ins here skins are with the opener in the third minutes the but shell who were poor on the attack but when they did get a chance on goal from a corner they came bitterly close. just keeping sally sending back the be made way through the second half block but came close some cells for months a night by the woodwork the but the foles ultimately poured more salt in the royal blues wounds when they got the second in the seventy seven minutes i ask of vince cross in the box was not some but only some play to set up to take him on the bus shall because brill mbulelo pulled one back in the dying seconds to one of the final school i be the be manic go to desk assigned me as their third on the bounce and find themselves in a minor crisis. over and leipsic up the start of the game on the front foot good him a shot deflected for use of pull since ahead in the open and in the night minutes the the it was the danish internationals first of the season. four minutes later the guests were back in the game nicklaus fuku with a superb volley to level the score abut the by six steps up again him a forsberg and team of then it began to shine in the sweet set up the striker to reestablish the host slender lead on forty minutes was the but after the break they teamed up again a team of bennett with his brace and leipsic with three one up if the band over weren't ready to go down without a fight though because auburn always pulled one back for the gas in the same. the fifth minute but that was the end of their resurgence how diverse still without a win this season while leipsic win their first game of the campaign at the third time of asking i. well let's round up all the action so far of course on saturday and as we saw byron beat there's a draw between volves and had to berlin got the beach. and it was good news for new comers fortuna dusseldorf. secured the win with a late strike he converted from the spot in the eighth and seventh minute to give the promoted side their first victory of the season it's a bitter defeat for hoffenheim who had equalised just a minute before just indorse winner of the of course i forgot to mention there that of course leipzig get beaten over three two minds to hosts managed to beat but it turned out to be no easy task the winner came in the nine hundred thirty minutes with alexandra not seen firing home that marked the end of a chaotic and eleven minutes in which took the lead before minds turned the game for keeper fabio to enjoy watching the replays back he was a fold for both minds goals. now there's dortmund victory against frankfurt on friday night of course on sunday braman host nuremberg and stuttgart travel to freiburg. and that's take a look at the table of course what a shocker byron munich up there at the top but there is a little bit of movement dormant move up on volves bergen had to move down a little bit then the other end of the table we have somebody new down the bottom laver coups and what an absolutely shocking start to the season they're having stuttgart move ever so slightly up shall be looked and they're just one spot above those relegation places really not good results for them now it's time for the ball in this league is play of the day as voted by our followers on twitter and the winner with fifty nine percent of the vote is barnes are you robin the dutchman meant jonathan todd's clearance and hammered home this past week fairly early in the opening half put munich ahead never couzens lucas for a decade was left absolutely stunned are you and robin is your play of the day. surely one of the best goals of disease and i would say. well on sunday we'll be joined in the studio to discuss this weekend's bomb the sneak action by bundesliga journals kid holden will be asking will shock and labor manage to win a game sometime soon i'm sure their fans really want to go to roeser of for them so do send us your questions for him to be addresses on your screen now it's time to say goodbye will be back of course since it's hard to over on tilt than here so many great moments from the weekend so far so for me and the rest of the bundesliga team here in berlin. for. me we talked to. a choreographer constantly pushing the limits of dance theater the funny thing was course that a lot of us got high school she's been dancing against the current for twenty five years where does she get her energy from me. next w. . the pain still tangible. for god. to cities and strive more may have survived but do they also have a future. out of darkness cities after war in forty five minutes on d w. the first sign doing its detailing. the part where you have incredible it's a whole new world of. online insiders space it's real it's a new era sexuality. will lovesickness be a thing of. sexual frustration too much i still have to get used to these robot noises exploring the new frontier is in sex and love three point zero. good stuff of ten to twenty finished on to w. such a bouts has liberated contemporary dance by crossing boundaries germany's renowned choreographer is in constant search of new challenges and collaboration is with other artists. for twenty five years she's led her company about and guests on journeys into the unknown. caught in the stack of those i mean the strength of dance lies in the freedom of its language but if i wanted to work in a way that was more linea i would just work in theatre. in the early one nine hundred ninety s. about's left new york for a newly when you know five berlin since then voters had one success after the other we set down with the energetic choreographer to talk about her rise from the french to major opera houses and her next job as courtis to director of the berlin state ballet. performance was used to your company twenty five years ago with your hands under it could you ever have imagined the international success you've had since africa. nonce entire noises and after in one thousand nine hundred three after the fall of the berlin wall and shortly after unification the central district of measure was a place of seemingly endless opportunities. we any opened our venue in the fields area three years later and nine hundred ninety six. before that we were like nomads wandering from one industrial space to the next and each time we started up a new studio there is an unfun from the outset we toured internationally we toured the u.s. in our second or third year we traveled to india and toured a lot in europe feeling or. so right from the start travelling was part of our identity it was our aspiration and our concept. of the insult on our consul says first that nestles at us that we wanted to build bridges with our art and take it to different audiences to countries and cultures that also inspire our work. for the new york is so in that respect our life today isn't all that different than it was twenty five years ago. isn't anyone gets nice who. was it's our. sophie and zillah emitter once hosted meetings of left wing revolutionaries later it was used by the nazis then it was a feeler workshop with its dilapidated charm and checkered history it was the perfect setting for the shots as breakthrough production. and offbeat provocative production part of a trilogy on the absurdities of domestic life the company research for months in communist era housing complexes. initially of arts danced along with her ensemble but she was always striving for new forms of expression and cooperation with other artists for her dance along with never enough. ask mine that i know. ten seven i began downs lessons with one teacher i started taking classes from the age of five and the teacher i was with tell the age of twelve had studied under mary whitman so i have a very very deep connection to german expressionist dance kind i just got up but it didn't really influence my decision to start dancing professionally because at the time i wanted to pursue a career in the visual arts. that's it was only three my discovery of post modern dance and contact improvisation and all of these consciousness techniques that i developed an interest in studying dance. this and. intricate consistently in the life i love you generally don't produce strictly narrative pieces it's not dance theatre which some critics hold against you. they say your work is to associate ivar serial. are you bothered by such criticism or. that isn't the critic . to be honest i can't remember reading such reviews and normally i don't read reviews anyway. i see if areal dimension that is accessed through association is very important to me and in our communication with the audience then us and i think that's purely one dimensional way of saying just one thing and everyone understands the same thing i find that boring. through. it has to be something that speaks to each individual in a unique way. the touches something deep down in each person and the audience. but it has to be entirely free. of us with gunfights that's when the work becomes profound as it does when it touches on the mystery inside you or that the money is gone and that doesn't happen if you're simply telling a linear story. for us let's hear it. first developed one of the most significant productions kerber during her five year stint as courtis to director of berlin's shall be in a theater it's an exploration of anatomy that delves into every aspect of the human body. time and again the company conjures images that sear themselves into the viewer's memory like a nightmare. at the same time vult isn't afraid of venturing into more abstract territory in her piece from now on she takes dance back to its origins in ceremonial rituals. while her early works were wild her later choreography is feel more crafted for a three hour tour she transforms dancers into animalistic creatures and explore social issues like power and helplessness freedom and control. your mother was a gallery astin your father an architect so you may have inherited your talent for strong visuals from the one side. but space has also always played a key role in your work it's very central. what do you look for in a space could you imagine staging a production for example at the building site of berlin's new international airport to look up and salute. your outpost and boys. in the ass building sites are certainly intriguing spaces and we've often rehearsed at building sites the jewish museum had only just been completed it was still empty while the collection hadn't yet been installed and boyd had usually we perform at that intermediary moment before the space assumes the function it was designed for so before the exhibit moves them spun out of it exciting because it's really a moment that breathes life into a space it's a real integration. by that i can really clear to me with our work for balance noiselessly on. how to off the space have this incredible energy that had been abandoned for so long and then undergone twelve years of reconstruction. on the spot so it was intriguing for me to envision what it would become and to awaken it to life with darts past as i know what does tense others. as a device be for example we focused on the cult of the dead in a room that would display the past of queen africa. the noise in the same house as a large injection collection and that's why i did a lot of research on ancient egypt. want so it also says inspiration not just the building in the architecture such it's the site in its entirety that shows me how to put a space and motion that all done vehicles at the me. in twenty thirteen the company was invited to call carter then calcutta to cap year of cultural exchange between india and germany off the production was staged in the courtyard in wings of an old private power. us dating from colonial times. such about's collaborated on the project with the indian choreographer apartment each a tour and her ensemble. and sons that was out of the project in kolkata was very unusual it was an old palace so naturally a different way of telling stories a marriage because the rooms had simply been sealed off and there was this life that had taken place previously as have time it stood still like a fairy tale when everyone's fallen into a deep sleep and time goes on and the pictures on the walls fade to black and dust settles everywhere on to papers on the bed it was really a very interesting experience. family noises all across the off without you calling to new genres the choreographic opera it incorporates elements of contemporary dance into operatic stage productions but it treats all parts as equals music the dancers the singers in all embarrassing art form what appeals to you about working on the stages of major opera houses and institutions. in your thoughts. the misfires and then when telephone it was a great experience for me to be able to choreograph a body of people as a whole i and then of course incorporate copy. so it's not about the dances and a choir and soloists anymore but about the group. it becomes an entity and you can't really identify who is doing war all and i extended that idea and began working with august recess so that they also start moving start dancing so that the oldest try would also become run body once you can achieve in main the. using dynamic in a room where sound literally moves. then clung this. in the air was an am. many of the world's major opera houses were now open to her and parents tokyo and berlin. she would oversee the entire stage production managing to transform even the unwieldy medium of opera and give it her own signature. is that. after all you said you often look for female protagonists in opera to do was one of those how did you deal with her character who was on the difficult issues usually condemned as the barbaric child murderer. in the murder than once alive the production coincided with the case of a mother here in germany who was on trial for murdering her children what approach did you take for the piece medea. if in this i think there's no c.s. bond flick well i think she's a very interesting character but she's also very ambivalent i wanted to take time to think about her intensively without judging inconceivable by now just imagine at what point as a woman capable of killing her children what extreme pain or despair do you have to experience to reach that point as a. so they since high point. i found it very difficult to put myself in that position and direct the production. of course i had to imagine. and be part of it which at times was unbearable. this hits a few and as a sniff it was really hard to give myself a literate. sponge as. a case. of clients a big. mid-air is one of the best known characters in greek mythology she famously helped jason and the argonauts retrieve the golden fleece jason then married her only to later leave her for another woman the daughter of the king crayon medea took revenge by killing crayon his daughter and her own two children to eat. in this production the children of the shovels and her husband york in zandi were part of the cast further intensifying the emotions felt by their mother. for the kenosis and for the children it was like playing it was a great experience for them they learned all the songs and the wonderful thing about theatre is that it is a lot like playing we play dead and then we all get up again. and then the mark with your children more often with you during productions and while travelling or on tour and the dancers were with you to. buy it was like one big family for you also for me if you visit. the visitor and the tourist i always had babysitters with me. but they did spend a lot of time with the dancers during rehearsals. and when they were dancing too they were just part of the cast they didn't get any special supervision oil or i always tried to have them with me. i never forced them to come out so i always asked of that's what they wanted one but i just wouldn't see enough of the children otherwise because we spent a lot of time working and at the theaters and were often out in the evening. out of obviously we've tried to strike a balance. but fortunately both the children love dancing and singing i'm going to go theater i'm playing theater. scene so it seems that passion has been passed on to them. after but. you have invested a lot of time in promoting young talent start you have the children's dance company . parent company you've also been involved in dance in schools how important is that to you. the this this is. yeah does as is. my interest in children stance actually came with my first child last night my. last little i got on a workshop at a school and it grew from there that's what the love i couldn't help busy i found more and more interesting as i realized how important artists particularly for children approaching puberty and the cop on interacting with other people's bodies with their own bodies their own self-image is because you're very much confronted with yourself unless process because you're working in a group to lance if you're single and a lot about group dynamics you get a new spatial awareness how do i move within a room how do i stand in relation to somebody else i'm at least likely a great help in everyday life it's not that everyone needs to become a dancer it's about learning to live in your own body to feel your body and to feel at home when your body. is. the whole thing. if you ever. last year you yourself danced again here at the ready as is tim for the project to her and. do you miss dancing would you like to do it more often. but. anywhere on the i love dancing on stage but i can't do both if i'm choreographing a big piece i can't be on stage myself as well that's just the way it is but if i can dance for special projects now and then i'm happy and. out of work it's been a pleasure. the sun one of those special projects super fun or listen it offers dancers and artists from various parts of the world scope to interact and explore current political and social issues through art an opportunity for the shovels to explore and improvise to. get them as took at the roots as i did you know passing on a growing number of pieces to outside companies including some abroad where your dancers oversee the rehearsals and if there is this an opportunity to release the ensemble to work independently of you align our bad work and garden is. yes this is a new branch of my work you could say. i think it's good for experienced dancers to pass on what they know and that these compositions continue to live on and the younger generation feel it and said that many dancers who pass on works continue to dance themselves i think it's good to give others the opportunity to be involved but it becomes like a whole new production you think you just passing something on but that's not actually the case. it's our county marginalise i usually do a workshop of the dancers where i go through the entire piece as it's intended with all the moves so that i know what it's all about. these boys in that intense and that the are not just that i can't do that a lot. but it's exciting to pass something on and watch it take on a new life and. it is that noisily. in the spring of this year but hey i love you in lisbon performs national passes peace to. the dancer spent five weeks rehearsing. then turned up to add the finishing touches. to of her experience dancers had overseen all the rehearsals. from israel. then cloudier show others from portugal. it was their job to help the dancers find their own style rather than just copying certain moves suddenly the two were working as equals alongside their longstanding boss i think it's working relation of many years and the personal relation also you know so. i think in that case gives a lot of trust like she gave a responsibility to hand over the piece and she gives a trust and also we have been working with them for five weeks so we can actually we know them better than her in this situation so it's it's a good thing that i still stay. in communication with each other for certain things and then some things she comes and she wants to bring it from the outside more her own or her own or sensations and smell and to put something on top of what we brought but it's it's a long time collaboration so we are communicating in a very natural way that truly happy on my side i still see things differently sometimes and i pass on the specific details that are important to me that season and also but i know that the dancers i've chosen a very precise and that i can trust them and so far it's worked very well touch wood and there's been no problems if i enjoy being able to let go and step back a bit the end of the piece takes on a life of a time and it's not a fun. creation grows and moves away from a back. twentieth. let's talk about your new production exodus which you did for the twenty fifth anniversary of your dance company. exit those exodus from the greek both in the sense of departure and escape what led you to this idea. of. i was weak it was this idea of fleeing from more scraping from side trying finding a way out that obviously we associated on the one hand with the bible and the exodus of the israel lights from egypt. but when you're in greece for example you see it written in every subway station many clubs and bars have adopted the name exodus. fascinated me and that's after i decided on the one hand. you have this idea of a group that's running away their corporate fleet leaving one place and moving somewhere else or when i. see it on this and i gotta get this process that takes place more in the mind. as often coupled with all step out of your body and into another dimension and to this technique trance or ecstasy patient. or at tesco express bus gets very much about a group experience it includes going to and past the point of exhaustion what the audience. and so that's like a journey to. a journey that last two and a half hours involving captivity then finding a way out and escaping it raises questions such as what we're fleeing from and where to exodus is intense and heavy going and for now at least it will be the last production that sasha stages with her company. she will remain the official director but she will leave the body as this dame it will continue as a production and performance venue for the company but she now has a new position she'll become the first woman to head up the highly traditional berlin state ballet. that is nonsense in twenty nine thousand you'll take over as artistic director of the berlin state ballet alongside johann assume and are you excited maybe a bit apprehensive. now there's no cause at all for on the start taking on the state ballet is certainly a major challenge so i've been preparing for it for two and a half or nearly three years i think. it's a very long process and yes i want to actually stop a job until two thousand and nineteen common. there were initially huge protests over the decision to appoint a contemporary choreographer to co-direct estate ballet the traditional dancers were not happy with the actual votes had actually worked with the state ballet before writing a solo piece for its former artistic director of light in their mother called to great acclaim. these angry protests have now seen just. one thing is clear taking over the state ballet is national vox's biggest breakthrough today and a huge challenge. this is for ten times not qualify think it's a great opportunity for dance in general to explore these extreme positions. booklets books are on the one hand to really preserve classical ballet and the whole history and to stage classical productions that are very high level because one of the island's ited i don't they have a hand to have contemporary choreography is where the contemporary language with all that arise easy to shoot at least in all the different ways of using the body. again and so creation ensemble that is capable of working with both these extremes . is extreme or it's definitely a fascinating project. the other thing this isn't into some of. these written gathered off from i would like to end by asking you what comes to mind when i say. borders. do you have also the challenges we face today yet you know your reality to be as free as children now i mean. our brains. really since learning so quickly i don't know ninety percent or ninety five percent of. the be. the be. the but. the be the be . the be. the best. the be. the best cities trying more the back of suppliers tube the bus you true above. cities after more than fifteen minutes on. in may nineteenth sixty eight and crying and going around the world. young people who build against their parents generation make up was an honestly dusty full of stupidity existence. they demanded nothing less than a home. might maelstrom of in syria violence. those who remember the. system for the first time had a feeling of being part of something in. the seeds of civil rights. peace movement women's movement or a plan to disappear. sixty. global. this week double. the contentious figure at home. europe and germany. from the home of the permanent. to german reunification. and the end of the cold war. or much office one of the great heroes of the twentieth century mikhail gorbachev the last leader of the soviet union was an agent of change quickly met his downfall i have decided to resign my jute is as president of the soviet union. he continues to fight for world peace with the reminder unit you have to comprehend when he says taken us today there is a new arms race. the hour of time gorbachev and the opportunity for peace wasters starts october third on d w. this is due to the news coming to you live from berlin tropical storm florence jokes and picked up massive rain on the u.s. banks of north and south carolina at least eleven people have died sometimes the devastating floodwaters are still rising. a world away typhoon one good doctor is hong kong on break to mainland china a softer killing at least twenty eight people in the philippines where authorities are now assessing the damage but also coming up. a russian antigovernment activist has reportedly been flown to berlin for medical treatment options suspected poisoning first of all that is one of the forklifts you write protesters who stormed the pitch during this year's world cup final in moscow. and it's good to have you with us. well at least eleven people have died in the u.s. as epic rainfall from tropical storm florence causes severe flooding in north and south carolina authorities say that the devastation is far from over there warning residents not to attempt returning to their homes due to my a schrader visit at a trailer park where people are struggling to cope with the effects of the storm. this is not supposed to be here this is broken so is that. new bern north carolina bore the brunt of florence's fury hundreds of people had to be rescued from flooded homes and cars across the river on the edge of town one park of trailer homes can't even begin to dig itself out. a small trailer unlike a solid house is nearly defenseless against the torrent of wind rain and floods that the hurricane unleashed in this neighborhood it was pure destruction for many people here this is all they have and the waters may have receded some now but this is how they got so much of this sent his family to safety a state away but chose to stay behind in his trailer saying he had worked too hard to simply abandon a go go go go go which i had those are people saying that we should wait for a week for a i need to rebuild it but i because if i going but i need times to get to know who and i'm going to fight the give you know. francis tycoon just arrived back. he and his wife took shelter for two days at the country club where francis works and this is how they found their home. we're going to see if someone will help us maybe this he or the further our government will help us because we don't have any other option for to go for now. francis and tammy don't have insurance they can't afford it they're not expecting any help from the government tammy suffers from chronic health problems meaning her husband will do whatever he can to clean up alone even though they might not be enough. i'm not sure i don't feel like this will ever be back to normal because i just don't feel like after all this damage it would be safe. just don't know what's going to happen to be truthful and i don't know where we're going to go. i'm just at a loss i'm standin in the days and i know it doesn't help. i'm lost . forecasts even more water could flood here in the next days no matter what happens people here say they'll come together to help each other out . meanwhile in east asia is now roaring towards the chinese mainland after battering hong kong with its gale force winds and torrential rain the storm has already caused major destruction in the northern philippines authorities say at least twenty eight people have died most of them in landslides. nature smacks the coast of hong kong with. and one onlooker gets a little too close for comfort. as hong kong issues a maximum alert for time of food among could the territories government has warned people to prepare for the worst storm surges were expected to raise water levels at the city's famous victoria harbor by up to four meters. hundreds of residents have been evacuated to shelters while others hope to ride it out. for those who had hoped to leave hong kong before the storm there was little chance almost all flights in and out of the island's airport have been counseled. and frustration too for travelers in southeastern china all flight traffic has been halted to and from shands an airport until early monday morning many other cities have also been paralyzed by the typhoon or the king of storms as chinese media are describing it. earlier among goot barreled across the philippines island of luzon where it claimed dozens of lives and as the country begins to count the human cost of the typhoon manila residents are left facing a unique cleanup challenge. tons of plastic rubbish washed by the storm surge back onto the island. now which is that of the other stories making news around the worlds. fighting clashes between anti-government protesters and riot police have marred independence day in honduras demonstrators in the capital were protesting against president juan orlando hernandez a ques him of manipulating the vote count in last year's presidential election allegations have sparked a political crisis in the poor central american country. syrian state media say israel has launched a missile attack on the main airports in damascus the claims were backed up by the syrian observatory for human rights is said that the attack targeted arms warehouses causing heavy down and no cost of teams were reported. several thousand animal rights activists marched in the spanish capital madrid to call for a ban on bullfighting the protest was organized by an animal rights political party and people fighting campaigns have won bans and restrictions in some countries but it remains legal in most of spain. a russian anti government activist associated with the protest group pussy riot has reportedly been flown to berlin for medical treatment. was taken three days ago and admitted to a moscow hospital members say that they believe he was poisoned. this video appears to show prominent anti kremlin activists. arriving in the german capital that was posted on twitter but not via tolokonnikova a fellow member of pussy riot the group believes the love was poisoned in an attempt to intimidate or even kill him right member of an economical she says he is in berlin to receive medical treatment versus the love was one of four protesters who invaded the pitch during july's football world cup final in moscow millions of people were watching live the four protesters later appeared in court and they served fifteen day jail sentences. d.w. interviewed verzilov another person right members back in august. for the love explained the group's approach. to sin on tuesday can political collective we don't have a fixed number of members of the different people come together from various factions you would see just to the young activists talked of a harsh climate for opposition groups who are frequently condemned by state media i mean that other than us daytime goes because they have to because pussy riot don't do what they want to me that's just the way it is the state media always attack opposition groups but there. was hospitalized in moscow three days ago a pretty right activist was quoted as saying he had lost his eyesight and ability to talk it is not clear what caused his illness but some fingers have pointed to the kremlin several high profile poisoning cases have been blamed on the russian government in the past fifteen years though it has always denied any involvement so far the kremlin has not commented on those he loves case. and the burden marathon is taking place right now through the streets of the german capital it is one of the world's top marks ons and a field of big names are pounding the tarmac as well thousands of foreigners are also taking part mark meadows from. close to the finish line at the brandenburg gate mark has been looking at there right now. well there's a festival atmosphere in berlin and it's a great day for the city there's so many fans from all around the world i've seen lots of mexicans we have some hearts some finnish guys have enormous flags i've also seen the forty seven iceland those who are taking part in this race and also the new york police department running theme now obviously the race is a lot about the phone runners lot of people making money for charity but also it's about the pro runners who are trying to break the world recalled and i have to tell you that kenya's any cho gay is on will recall praise in the men's race we've had the wheelchair races come by the humbert races and quite soon showed is going to come here go through the runner book gate head to the finish line and by the looks of it he's going to smash the world record amazing so it looks like we might just have a world record there today now berlin is also a very special place for this marathon tell me why that is mark well yes there's a mythology around the world in marathon the last six men's marathon world records have been set here the last record is in two thousand and fourteen dennis cometti so he did it in two hours two minutes and fifty seven seconds at the moment is way below that you might remember about a year ago actually nearly smashed the two hour barrier in a publicity stunt for a sports one manufacturer but it didn't count as official world record because he had pacemakers he's dropped his make has now here in this race is just bombing along in the women's race we had a barber in front who was the favorite but she's now being overtaken by gladys churro know of kenya last year's winner so that's looking like it's going to be a really tight finish we could be in for a collapsing building marathon mark manolo's thank you very much for that and we'll talk to you later. leverkusen were full of promise before the bundesliga season kicked off but their stash of the campaign has been dreadful two back to back to feats and on saturday they faced an uphill battle against buy in at have a look. they've accused coach heiko haley went on the defensive against by and. even left out germany for what union began. with the first good chance fell to laver cozen giago handled the ball a penalty was awarded by him protested but the decision looked to be correct. couldn't follow and stepped up a man you'll know you're saved but the spot kick had to be retaken because the referee but not whistled. this time ventile made a better job of it one nil to lay the q.'s now after five minutes. reply though came just five minutes later france will cook when a common time to liesl showed the greater desire to equalize which is game would later turn sour recalled champions by and began to press hard leverkusen defense crumbled and i and robin made them pay the dutchman taking full advantage of yonathan towers mistake by and had turned the game around last aliso to a knee injury. again petered out after the break but it came alive again on eighty minutes. rich. just eight minutes after coming on holding this only challenge on raw femia by and were incensed. the hose that no chance of ten men and by and sealed it later on through him is rodriguez leave accuses third loss and three. no one to this of course but it is how it is for it's we have no points from three games but we mustn't choose off. by and celebrate that perfect start but halak side are in dire need of some inspiration. and it was billed as the feis of the century three hundred and sixty four days after their controversial draw. canelo alvarez faced off once more in a rematch in las vegas. but also one at middleweight belts to the table and started slightly better while a lot of ken who owned two well looks to have secured victory with a dominant display in the later rounds of the twelfth and final round to secure a narrow point when both fighters have said that they would return for a third. and just a reminder of the top stories that we're following for you. at least eleven people have died along the u.s. east coast as tropical storm florence causes catastrophic flooding authorities there say that the worst is still far from over and in peace asia typhoon my goods is fostering hong kong with gale force winds out of barrels towards mainland china the superstorm brought devastation to the northern philippines where at least twenty eight people have been kents. you're watching news from berlin more coming out of the top of the hour and don't forget you can get all the latest news and information around the clock on our website that's on d w dot com thanks for joining. us what do we wet when we want to. give you percent of americans at some point in our lives will experience hardship but listen all. that matters to. the minds. rising from the ruins of war are daunting task for cities traumatized by conflict a little more than two decades ago redeemed their roots can go early in sarajevo or places of darkness on this journey we meet young residents of four war torn cities that are emerging from the shadows of violence into the large. in my book on the snowy way in the one nine hundred ninety s. there were about twenty soldiers hold off for a corner by my house helicopters tanks that march you never forget to come by there you have to sit there and be a. good thing. if i film inside over there's always going to be some aspect of the war if i film in the street there's always going to be bullet holes and i don't need to talk about the war to show the war. any moment if nine of my mother's siblings were killed she was the only survivor in a family. while docked in the hollow was nothing else when the situation got really bad and i left power my father lost and. anything and there was nothing but destruction around us and we decided to come to lebanon to find safety and work that money and innovated not. just for. ethnic tensions existed for decades in rwanda between the hutu majority and tutsi minority to ethnic groups that have many similarities. they speak the same language and share the same customs. but in april one thousand nine hundred four those tensions erupted into horrific violence with this is dramatic campaign by looters to eliminate tutsis and moderate who do country men who refused to take part in the genocide. in the space hundred of one. days up to a million people were slaughtered many of them to death with machetes or. food or. if. we. get it down there now i think i've inspired female cyclists here in my hometown and around the country now they want to do the same and be possibly team. please. come on. the training center is a good example of how rwandans have a site sex on the future. for him. when i came to rwanda in two thousand and six i did not know anything about rwandan cycling. we saw some riders very few but we saw a massive amount of transport bikes and taxi bikes it's their major means of transporting goods you see up to two hundred. two hundred kilos of whatever it is they're transporting going to the market on the bike. these guys have already been riding a bike so they have an aptitude for riding a bike before they even get to our center. he's a great. rider he's one of the captains of the team. she spent a lot of time in congo and a refugee camp. actually was a total surprise to all of us she's going to be the real spark for the future generations of women to say hey maybe i can make it a cyclist. did not go. on that. i think there is a massive amount of trauma even within our riders you know. who took over and i think cycling has been an amazing outlet for them a way of giving them meaning in life and a way of helping them reconcile their past. see. my genocide no one could bear the sight of a machete want to go through losing me just terrified people to even look at the till. me kind of who clearly made me just of the genocide for evident into my mother's mind when she tells me stories about those terrifying days when her last remaining siblings and their children were mass without messing. with. her daughter on her. border who were little. i was under the siege for four years and for me destroyed means freedom. the only hope we have is that this road is open and people and food and everything comes coming through distraught. and i know many sad stories about the people who was killed on this or old. during the siege of sarajevo the trail known as mt egan road was the only route into the city. they was shelled on this particular part of their old. destroyed has the meaning of the life for sorrow. no place in the city and city from mortar fire. the conflict began during the breakup of yugoslavia when bosnia herzegovina declared independence bosnian serbs took up arms. the siege of sarajevo started in people nineteen ninety two bosnian serbs and croats stopped being good neighbors and became enemies. you finished with this war but in the minds of the people the same problem still exists. my generation is back in the time that we out to all to go are brought to find to have contests or be out to young to go to the pension and to give up from our life. i really understand people who say they don't want to stay here but i also admire people who want to stay here and who decided to create something to subvert set over it. i believe the younger people are really starting to be more active than to bring change. in divorce it was the way of living under the shelves all artists still working during these forty years and it was real how do you resist as a serial e m and intel actual. site of a film festival begin under the siege been dealt electricity's few people from the academy of forming decide to bringing the new films. be something which will help people to feel as a normal people. so that these stocks feel films in the small saul generator who are on the project it was really magic and this festival and. that freedom exists even beyond. thank you very much enjoyed yourself. and. what. reorganizing our life in syria was very different to our life in beirut we had everything going on i was a law student and i would train every day. my father had work. we never thought all this would happen to them on. the economy how. for decades beirut has been at the epicenter of conflicts in the middle east. are known saw a lengthy occupations by both syria and israel. since the beginning of the civil war in syria and twenty eleven more than a million refugees have fled to lebanon. a. little bit. and. thanks. you know what most me is to see people coming to iran that it begun with math and people from all walks of life eighteen different religions to see more than one hundred nationalities all come together to show solidarity through the power off sports. we lived through with almost thirty years of war in lebanon and definitely scares me. we will continue. fighting for peace until we reach but as they say peace meaning is not the spin it is more of the math . thank you. you know on this and we arrived in lebanon in twenty two and in the same year i left university. for months we had moved from one place to another in syria in search of safety will hit in my life. six. and i never did know and. they all when we got to lebanon there were seven of us in my family my parents four brothers and one sister. now there are five of us two made an illegal crossing across the sea and got to europe after facing many dangers. the full. o. . k k k how can we. go. so . i think. it's. in the one nine hundred ninety s. the colombian city has made a neat was trapped in a spiral of violence a place where drug lords far left guerrillas paramilitary groups and police fought each other for control of territory. in the slums the state was conspicuous by its absence and adolescents were recruited for the confrontations between rival group. my nothingness who we all imagine a city we couldn't cross a city we couldn't live it all feel was ours simply love. it i'm with ella very few opportunities really and hip hop came along and showed us there was a way to express ourselves and to get out what we felt inside specifically through graffiti coming out and then with breakdowns that followed closely by rap this is a code. tech it. could also say hey kid group telegram sauce and heck a on the group around them represent the revival of local hip hop. know we come here to show breakdowns from another angle but this time we're staging a big show at the public a bone theater we've been working on it for months we're also trying to change the way people in this country see street deaths tragic event by. i. was crew pretty girls was served tell a girl so stands out because it has the four elements of hip hop music graphic art that other acts or poetry and then she becomes a boy see if he does see. it. there but i loved it and you could say there's a fifth element knowledge disseminating knowledge as part of our concept that it was like a. but i mean he would say of the school for me hip hop is always about building something and sharing it with others although anything can be important if it offers kids an alternative she calls they've got that they are. in it and you need to my passion for cycling was not the first time i watched the tour for one that back in two thousand and nine. eleven actually stated that i didn't start competing officially until twenty twelve nuns you need to plan a twenty minute connectivity. having heroes in the country he would succeed to go to foreign countries that do races internationally that are successful is gives a whole sense of pride for the public. the public has taken on to cycling in an amazing way it's actually very shocking to see the crowds out there and how much the public is behind the tried to. cut the. internet for to overcome ethnic hatred the rwandan government outlawed ethnicity a decade after the genocide. distinctions between hutus and tutsis have been wiped down by the creek. there are only one. people seventh is the annual day of remembrance of the victims of the one nine hundred ninety four genocide. such media talk even can see the exhibition center yesterday during the siege it is a permanent exhibition. hall i want to. travel quick because this section shows the worst part of the world the two worst massacres the most well known soccer. smart cars the two massacres occurred in the market a meeting point for people where you could find food and get information from odd sell. out of. me and i don't give much thought to the second mass again later when the international community decided to intervene and it was the beginning of the end of the war and a cup of tea at the. circle to keep our place specially in trouble and. when you confront in a museum with the truth it's something that makes you really aware of your. anchee and aware as a person. but also it made me proud it made me proud of the people i live with it makes you part of people's real to survive. young people down not learning anything about the ninety's and the only information they get you from the parents and from media and that makes the museum strong even more relevant because i mean that's the only information they get of the c.h.b. area that. there are a lot of versions in textbooks about what happens. if you went to some other city in bosnia and there's a textbook that's completely different from what is being taught in china. i know i'm a buzz you know woman but other than that. because even difficult to talk about it misty here. buzzing in means to be muslim serb means to be orthodox and question me speak christian. before the war it didn't matter what religion you were. i. just leave them to look at the polls would say sixty six tell me. here's your host which was you know. that the grand jury prize presented by class i i i this is a film i could see from some parents and understanding to assume and. i. was going to. let me say. that if this is the barack have building. they should make it into music. yeah. there was a lot of fighting here during the war it was the dividing line. i have been you know was. the marathon starts at this point in the game in how much so now it's not about eventually it's about unity. for. thank. you. for. your honesty sparking with hope it's the first time i've seen you like this since we arrived in beirut and it was in. the. u.k. in the box with over forty thousand people who've been in the message of peace. who believe in making a difference through sports. the cook is another. name which i think the transformation is being fueled from many different directions that we have a lot is changing. but people are very adventurous trying to improve all the time. in their lives three and we've watched our parents as they started building real houses and turned roofs into terraces. you know so well meant those but they're cool right now some of my classmates and childhood friends are working at the mayor's office and i have experienced a lot of things firsthand and they have the answers for the problems on the street you're not i suppose thought and that leads to positive change yeah that's initiated by people who see the city from a different perspective and understand its diversity. in. people as you come. to describe it and they discriminate of the sexes. kind of what it. was. he said. and i'm. guessing. that's he's. just we have and i'm grateful to those in the neighborhood who tolerate and we do and share what we do and it's not easy to listen to our rhythms or see the walls covered in graffiti and still say you can play music at my house or when are you coming over to paint because the morons will come and spray graffiti up my shop that my son wants to go to your school. that. i. i. found. make it out i got it is what he said the die hard pop purists may say this is not hip hop but it's thanks to the pop that we arrive in a place we are today and we can show other types of things and we can express ourselves on stage. thank you. ron. this river. goes through. kind of. as a factor people pay a lot of money to watch us dance is pretty amazing for. a letter and a hundred honey i've achieved what i set out to do that it does. i think i've improved as an athlete and it was not available now i can run a longer distance. delay is a step toward achieving my dream. ladder me. my dream as a cyclist is to keep working hard and to become a successful professional in that way i'll help inspire passion for the sport among other race and cyclists and wonder. where else is difficult if there's not in the news. the younger generations are not see anymore repeating the past story not talking to someone because they're not the same ethnic group. she made it is it as you as a city where violence has dropped a city that's resisted violence and created new things you've got to ask the question how did we do it. i have the answers because there are other forces in the city that have not been poisoned by politics and that are working for the good of society it are hopeless. because secret is going forward always what has been done here for the last twenty years is remarkable on you don't see a turnaround happen in many countries that have been in war ravaged and and pretty much decimated you know to the ground. lebanon is in the middle you have syria from the north and you have israel from the south when the problems in that agent come to and i think lebanon would be like the phoenix and lebanon would rise again. we should never forget what happened but we should forgive because how can a city grow how can the people grow if we are stuck in that mindset. lesbia lanes yes we've all experienced so many different types of violence that it's really hard to say these words forgiveness reconciliation forgetting it's like a lump in your throat. when you are not god. well. if you. just judge. people. max this week's highlights. intimidating flying with the little bomb behind us is. intensive drinking block wine in southern france. interactive playing video games online to. your romans. thirteen minutes on don't. take it personally you went with a little gender fifty to one stories that make the game so special. for all true fans. because more than football online. her first day of school in the jungle. first camillus of the. band doris crane the moment arrives. join you ring a tank on her journey back to freedom. in our interactive documentary. store on the right a ten returns home on t w dot com tang's. yes that is due to the news coming to you live from berlin tropical storm florence domes and takes a man's a brain on the u.s. state of north and south carolina at least eleven people have died in the devastating flood waters are still rising. meanwhile hocker graduate type in mind your sponsors hong kong and there's a good soldier in china the stakes in the philippines where authorities in spirit dozens of people have been killed also coming up. a new marathon a world record for example and kenyans and chill day finishes the race in just two hours and one that is on thirty nine seconds of our sports or border joins us life with all the tests. and it's good to have you with us at least eleven people have died in the u.s. as epic rainfall from tropical storm florence causes severe flooding in north and south carolina authorities say that the devastation is far from over there warning residents not to attempt returning to their homes did open is my issue rater visited a trailer park where people are struggling to cope with the effects of the store. this is not supposed to be here this is broken so is that new bern north carolina bore the brunt of florence and. hundreds of people had to be rescued from flooded homes and cars. across the river on the edge of town one park of trailer homes can't even begin to dig itself out. a small trailer unlike a solid house is nearly defenseless against the torrent of wind rain and floods that the hurricane unleashed in this neighborhood it was pure destruction for many people here this is all they have and the waters may have receded some now but this is how high they got so much of this sent his family to safety a state away but chose to stay behind in his trailer saying he had worked too hard to simply abandon it was go go go go go but you had those are people saying that you should wait for a week for i need to rebuild but because if i going to get the hope i'm at the end of the you have you know. francis tycoon just arrived back he and his wife took shelter for two days at the country club where frances works and this is how they found their home. we're going to see if someone will help us maybe this he or the further our government will help us because we don't have any other option for to go for now we'll stay here other than a month on the you know we don't know. frances and tammy don't have insurance they can't afford it they're not expecting any help from the government tammy suffers from chronic health problems meaning her husband will do whatever he can to clean up alone even then it might not be enough. i'm not sure i don't feel like this will ever be back to normal because i just don't feel like after all this damage it would be safe. she says don't know what's going to happen to be truthful and i don't know where we're going to go don't i'm just and a lot i'm standin in a daze and i know it doesn't help that i'm lost. forecasts even more water could flood here in the next days no matter what happens people here say they'll turn together to help each other out. in east asia. the chinese mainland after battering hong kong with its gale force winds and torrential rain a super storm has already caused major destruction in the philippines authorities there say dozens are feared dead in flooding landslides and collapsed buildings. nature smacks the coast of hong kong with full force. and one onlooker gets a little too close for comfort. as hong kong issues a maximum alert for tunnels food monk route the territories government has warned people to prepare for the worst storm surges were expected to raise water levels at the city's famous victoria harbor by up to four meters. hundreds of residents have been evacuated to shelters while others hope to ride it out. for thursday's who'd hoped to leave hong kong before the storm there was little chance almost all flights in and out of the islands airport have been counseled. and frustration to travelers in southeastern china all flight traffic has been halted to and from shands an airport until early monday morning many other cities have also been paralyzed by the typhoon or the king of storms as chinese media are describing it early among goot barreled across the philippines island of luzon where it claimed dozens of lives. and as the country begins to count the human cost of the typhoon manila residents are left facing a unique cleanup challenge. tonnes of plastic rubbish washed by the storm surge back onto the island. nazism of the other stories making news around the world violent clashes between anti-government protesters and riot place have marred independence day in honduras demonstrators in the capital who are protesting against president juan orlando hernandez they accuse him of manipulating the vote count in last year's presidential election the allegations have sparked a political crisis in the central american country. antiglobalization activists have staged a protest on the tenth anniversary of the collapse of the us investment bank lehmann brothers in paris protesters gathered in front of a bank to blast investment policies and tax avoidance schemes activists also protested in front for its financial districts they say international banking practices have not been adequately reform since the two thousand and eight financial crisis. several thousand animal rights activists marched in the spanish capital madrid to call for a ban on both sides saying the protest was organized by an animal rights political party people fighting campaigns have won bans and restrictions in some countries but it remains legal in most of spain. and of russian government activists associated with the protest group pussy riot has reportedly been flown to berlin for medical treatment first off was taken three days ago and admitted to a moscow hospital pussy riot members say they believe he was poisoned. this video appears to show prominent antti kremlin. arriving in the german capital that was posted on twitter but not via tolokonnikova a fellow member of pussy riot. the group believed. in an attempt to intimidate or even kill him. to receive medical treatment. invaded the pitch. and. millions of people were watching live the protesters later appeared in court and they served fifteen day jail sentences. and other members back in august. political. we don't have a fixed number of members. for. the young activists talked of a harsh climate for opposition groups who are frequently condemned by state media. i mean they're nasty attack us because they have to because pussy riot don't do what they want to me that's just the way it is the state media always attack opposition groups but never get. the loaf was hospitalized in moscow three days ago a prissy rights activist was quoted as saying he had lost his eyesight and ability to talk it is not clear what caused his illness but some fingers have pointed to the kremlin several high profile poisoning cases have been blamed on the russian government in the past fifteen years though it has always denied any involvement so far the kremlin has not commented on those the last case. of the brain and marathon is taking place right now through the streets of the german capital it is one of the world's top marathons and the man's world records has just been smashed by kenyan any old kid chill day thousands of foreign runners are also taking parts and returning back to their ranks well mark meadows found detail that he sports is close to the finish line the run to break mark the new world record holder run right past you just a little while ago talk us through his role and how big of an achievement this is. it was very very special for everyone here today i mean keep showing he hasn't just broken the world record he has completely destroyed it he did it in two hours while nine minutes thirty nine seconds now the previous world record which was set here in two thousand and fourteen was two hours two minutes fifty seven seconds so he smashed it by well over a minutes i mean people a few years ago were thinking was that even humanly possible it is quite incredible what he has achieved and he's only thirty three so he's not a spring chicken but overseas chaining in kenya in high altitude helps him but still this is something massive in the world of athletics you might remember a few a few months ago he tried to actually break the famous to the area which no one thought was really possible it was a publicity stunt for a sportsman manufacturer he didn't quite manage it that day and it didn't count as a will record because of the pacemakers that he used but given what he's achieved today you have to wonder whether that two hour barrier could be smashed by in the future the last seven men's marathon world records have now been broken here in berlin berlin is the home of the marathon fantastic a phenomenal win for elliott can chill they now like he wasn't the only one breaking records today the women's race was a lot tighter who's come out on top there well defending champion gladius churro no of kenya has won the race and she did it in a course record it was a very tight race to initiative bar but was the favorite from ethiopia she went out in front but then sharon amended managed to capture overtake and then power to the line so a great day for kenya where the two top kenyans retaining their titles and it has been a fantastic day obviously we've had the wheelchair races as well the bike races you can get all the results on deja vue dot com mark meadows thank you for your time allan talk to you later. they were kids and were full of promise the for the bundesliga season kicked off with their starts the campaign has been dry for two back to back to feats and on saturday they faced an uphill battle against buy in munich whatever. they've accusing coach heiko helic went on the defensive against by on and even left out germany for what union brandt but the first good chance fell to laver cozen giago handled the ball a penalty was awarded by him protested but the decision looked to be correct. kevin fallen stepped up a man you'll know you're saved but the spot kick had to be retaken because the referee but not whistled. this time vandal made a better job of it one not only because now after five minutes. reply though came just five minutes later france will cook in a continent aliso shield the greater desire to equalize but his game would later turn sour recalled champions by and began to press hard there because his defense crumbled and i and robin made them pay the dutchman taking full advantage of units and towers mistake by and had turned the game around last aliso to a knee injury. again petered out after the break but it came alive again on eighty minutes. ridge the country may be just eight minutes after coming on holding this only challenge on ruffy near by and were incensed. the hose that no chance of ten men unbind sealed it late on through time as rodriguez later cusanus third loss in three. with no one to this of course but it is how it is for it's we have no points from three games but we mustn't lose off. by and celebrate that perfect start but halak side are in dire need of some inspiration. now it was billed as the fight of the century three hundred sixty four days after their controversial draw. canano alvarez faced off once more in a rematch in las vegas mexican brought us one middleweight belt to the table and start it's likely better and who owns two world title belts looks to have secured victory with a dominant display in the later rounds can and when the twelfth and final ran to secure a narrow point when both fighters have said they would return for a third backs. and just a reminder of the top stories that we're following for you. at least eleven people have died along the u.s. east coast as tropical storm florence causes catastrophic flooding darcey say it's the worst it's still to come and in east asia type in mind is has hong kong with gale force winds of arrows into southern china storm brought devastation to the pains for officials now fear dozens of people. here today and you're watching the news coming to you from going to stay here. every journey begins with the first step and every language but the first word published in the book. rico is in germany to learn german and why not live with him it's simple online on your mobile and free cell d w z e learning course nikos free german made easy. time for an upgrade. our furniture there grows old by. house with no roof. poor design highlights you can rate yourself. against tips and tricks that will turn your home to a special. upgrade yourself with d w's interior design channel on you tube. i'm talking today about xenophobia integration and how people identify with germany she is secretary of state for integration in north rhine-westphalia. is there a way to end a great into german civil society the hundred. it's of germans who recently joined violent anti migrant protests in cabinets. to block that's a very good question there was much discussion in germany for example after the attempted coup in turkey. when people of turkish descent gathered in cologne calling for the death penalty. that sparked days and weeks of debate about how integration failed there but the n.t. immigrant protests in chemist's are never discussed in the context of integration. it's not just kemet. remember two years ago and right wing piggy the activists tell the gallows marked for and the american insignia got real. off done that too is a problem arising from a lack of social integration and needs to be discussed in the context of integration just as much as other events would just give it up. to if you were born in germany to turkish immigrants did the incidents in saxony where protesters chanted neo nazi slogans remind you of your childhood when we'll not seasons alling and elsewhere set fire to foreigners homes the horrors of home on top. and of life i was thirteen at the time of the arson attack. and i observed my parents fear and voices in the turkish community questioning whether it might be time to go home where it was safer since evidently they were no longer welcome here as this way and it wasn't just insulting and before that there were attacks in moon rostock and. i might not have been as conscious back then of what was happening as i am now. on. other day i was talking to my mother and she's one of the strongest women i know she's my idol this for me i know they. can and this was the second time in my life that i saw her scared. the. first time was after zoning in and now after the events in camden. she. happened to be nearby with my father at a health resort and told me they were too scared to go into town that weekend and. start. and these things are troubling him need to be taken very seriously and i don't absolve them of induction bonus participants any protests were triggered by the deaths of two germans. in one case the main suspects are asylum seekers who are due for deportation just like. the tunisian behind the attack on a berlin christmas market. how much has the failure to enforce deportations impacted integration efforts you'd have been the woman to get. then monday. only to the extent that two issues are blended into one in germany we abide by the rule of law and other recent examples have shown that it's not always legally possible to deport an individual even if it's already been mandated. let's. look at sainct are bad course those individuals should not have been here and that's why people have now turned their anger against refugees and let the hits the water off . this is just an attempted instrumentalists ation deal and he actually using the death of an individual to vent their own resentment so it's mixing apples and oranges. ya. think it's true we need to be more rigorous when it comes to enforcing deportations especially when the individuals concerned pose a threat to the fear out of the safety but we also have people seizing on these incidents to advance their own agenda. and we need to make it very clear that that's unacceptable. but each new case attracts new members to right wing nationalist and extremist groups what are you shocked by the large turnout in saxony shouldn't we be concerned about a growing xenophobia in germany. and i understand about you might know it's true but let me counter with a question then if it hadn't been a refugee due for deportation wouldn't this case still have been misused to push a personal agenda and five. we've had other similar cases elsewhere in germany where people didn't react the same way war mention east. and. so again yes we need to be more rigorous in deporting people especially when they pose an imminent threat but i'm against abusing these cases to broadcast xenophobic ideology of private individuals and. look professional from. these into your parents were turkish guest workers you studied in are a member of the conservative city use executive board. you are a poster child for successful integration. and yet you were hesitant to apply for a german passport why. doesn't it wants an article on the grounds it was mostly for emotional reasons mentioned talk wish i had i resisted giving up my turkish passport for a long time. and. i don't want to feel divorced from the identity of my parents whom i look up to. and have. already lived in this country for thirty years as a turkish national without feeling i wasn't integrate at. all but then it came to casting a vote and as my interest in politics grew i finally decided to apply for a german passport one week after the state elections in two thousand and ten when i was left on the outside looking in. the door to start. talking but again it was more for emotional reasons plenty of people who don't have a german id still feel like they belong to this country while on the other hand you also have people who have held a german passport for years or even decades and still don't feel like they belong. and that's one of the but there are still many people of turkish origin in germany who feel left out when switching schools trying to enter higher education or applying for a job in mind they say their foreign last name is problematic. today we have heard or fourth generation turks in germany. are they more integrated than previous generations. what. about these they must live for the longer the debate continues the more evident it becomes that we've made great strides in integration policy. that younger generations feel much more likely belong and fatah are. quite off you ask my father where he was from he wouldn't take it as an insult. i think i'll stay in the middle east from turkey. if you ask my generation the second generation. of the of the flock said the question. an answer it accordingly but we find it annoying. when they think and what's one line i mean if you ask my nieces generation the third generation. then you get a snotty reply like where do you think i'm from i'm from germany just like you and although we also thought. i was that people don't want to concern themselves with such banal questions anymore because they unquestionably feel part of society. and that's what's happening. in the slums of what if so many identify with germany why do two thirds of the turkish community in germany back the turkish president he's dismantling the same rights in turkey that turkish people take for granted in germany. took. is this an example for how integration has failed. i'd say it's a perfect example of how we've pursued a failed integration policy for decades but if you say two thirds of the turkish community in germany voted for president everyone by i need to correct you two thirds of those eligible to vote elected him. there are about three million people of turkish origin in germany five hundred thousand of whom voted and it was two thirds of that figure who were not and it's important to note that the third generation isn't necessarily reflected in that calculation. why do you think they voted for one. of the one i think in many ways everyone has filled a vacuum and reasserted turkey's stance is a strong nation with economic prowess which it certainly demonstrated in recent years. i think. he also filled a vacuum by making people feel like he was there for them he was taking care of them. that's. what i call a vacuum because no turkish president before him had done that kind of lazy thought no german politician had done that before either gentle or until america was the first person to say i'm your chancellor. to. all i have looked. on and might make sense to everyone because it seems so self-evident that sometimes the most obvious things need to be emphasized to. the council what the chancellor says is one thing but what needs to be done to prove it looks like it's really one. of course we also need to promote structural integration you've just mentioned several examples. there for instance there are still many migrant children who don't advance into higher education the hoped for i thought if you compare it to do with how things were ten or fifteen years ago you can say that now many more migrant children attend high school than before. them i mean you know compared to the majority of society there is still lagging we also still have problems with the job market where people are being discriminated against because of their foreign names or even their religion and they have to apply many more times than others with similar qualifications these are things we need to work on. in divide between to what degree are muslim traditions hampering integration like parents keeping their daughters from joining sports classes and making them wear headscarves. god if you it's not a hindrance to integration i'd say it's a hindrance to civic inclusion. in tyler. since it is a problem when parents invoke religious freedom and i wouldn't put it any other way restrict their children's rights. and that's mushy stuff. on and i think we need to be demanding here as an open society. and can't just accept parents arguments that is their freedom of religion or their freedom as a parent without questioning it i'm for one only in florida. we've reached the end of our interview and i have three unfinished sentences i'd like to ask you to complete me to anyone who says i'm a city used token migrant i say you don't understand a thing you still don't get that we live in a country of immigration. so i expect migrants who want to live in germany to this is not only demonstrate loyalty but also affirm their commitment to germany. canada . though i mean germany is the country and then i would like to remain in because i enjoy living here very very much. thank you for your time thank you. him being a. hero max this week's highlights. intimidating flying with northern paul highnesses. intensive drinking black wine in southern france. interactive playing video games and. your romantic. comedy double. play some hot. chili. german come sunday dinner nine hundred sixty. one slain for torture and even children its members just fought under that was the beginning of how the torture itself is or. most of my business to justice continues to this day in sixty minutes on d w. the first time doing detailing. a record of incredible it's a whole new world. on the mind of the consumer space comics real harm it's a new era of sexuality. will laughs they can is a bad thing if and sexual frustration too much i still have to get used to these robot noises exploring a new frontier in sex and love three point zero. on the list on september twenty fifth on t.w. . we want to welcome to our highlights edition with the best picks of the week here's a look at what we've put together for you today. dizzy heights the magical cliffs of media your are in greece. digital art video games on show at london's victoria and albert museum. in wings of desire saving one of the world's rarest birds. we got the show on the cliffs of meteorite they're located in central greece and play host to one of the largest complexes of eastern orthodox monasteries now you might know these clips from a james bond movie he climbed them in an action scene in the film for your eyes only all the media or clips attract climbers from all over the world because all of the routes and on peaks with amazing views of the landscape you're actually joined a group of climbers for an exciting adventure captured on film thanks to a cooperation between this broadcaster and the so-called multi drone project. the make up formation in central greece is a magical place a stunning. paradise for rock climbing. back again from the nearby village of love's climbing hand like so many others. let me use my life david because every morning. i see that oaks and they say. i hope must go there climbing all over the place it's my life. it's the one these cliffs were formed over twenty million years ago from deposits of rock sand and money left by the stream which flowed through time. to. day natural caves in the region still bad traces of former hermitage is this is where since the nineteenth century pius individuals chose to live in total isolation the caves could only be reached via two wooden lattice in the twelfth century monks began building large i'm on the streets in the area today meteorites best known for places of worship perched atop the rock peaks up to three hundred meters high and then they could be accessed only with rope ladders all windlasses of the twenty four monasteries once built most line room today just six and still inhabited what made pious people flock here writers of the rock and short protection against intruders and brought you closer to god and the rock formation of their spellbinding effect on people. for a long time meter not seal with served as the president of the meteorite climbing club he still enjoys scaling ropes today and often meets other climbers here. but. back us up are pairing to climb the iconic spindle monolith. two germans kicked off the meteoric climbing crazy hearing the nine hundred seventy they set the first time in roots and drove safety hawks into the rocks. christos saw vaca us is the first one to reach the peak ensuring that bungay less baths can safely follow. the hazard scale the spindle in twenty years. one is there every climate signs the summit register. spots he always says he scaled his very first rock as a ten year old. free solo because we don't curve. if think of what the old we saw that month. and they look at us the crazy young boys. i mean with what they see. it's all that counts is taking one of the region's most scenic climbing more tips that. comes to us but you know young is making sure . it's saying. it's freedom it's know yourself and know your limits and go above them it's. out of the books it's. like trying to relax when you are not been like sports recently i kind of think my life we thought. of the coming years can still survive some crystal especially young and plan to explore more and more of the school just landscape he looked at. video games have come a long way since pac-man or space invaders to become a large part of today's popular culture while here in germany it's estimated that forty percent of the population play video games and that number seems to be growing like them or not there is no disputing the video games play an important role in many people's lives so much so that the victorian albert museum in london is devoting a special exhibition to the subject and shows the diversity of modern videogames and how they impact modern culture to this day. video games have become more than just a way to pass the time in fact they're currently being presented as an art form at a museum in london the victoria and albert is dedicating an entire exhibition to deal games focusing on their development since the early two thousand. there is a turning point around that where access to broadband to social media to new design tools new commentry online new whites talk about video games help and it's really changed the nature of the medium and moved it from a particular direction for it so much border wall but can explore different ideas. that applies to games with a million dollar budget. as well as small independent productions to show with the b.n.a. pays special attention to how games look for an exhibition about all the design and so not said to you video games make perfect sense to be explored pit right now digital design is one of the most important elements of contemporary design and that's why we're at the forefront of exploring these things one example of outstanding design is that twenty thirteen gaming epic that lanced of us. what are you still free to attribute that. players assume the roles of father and daughter trying to survive in a world ravaged by an epidemic. thanks to an exciting story line matched by deceptively realistic graphics the game is sold millions of copies. exhibit reveals the months long painstaking work that goes into developing stories and game design. design is also key to the success of journey a surprise hit from twenty to twelve. players room of virtual desert that's why the games developer. went to a real sandy environment to design and. it went to the piss more dunes of the store through l.a. and decided to spend time running in the sand and you could see me playing with a scarf in the air and you know just sliding and walking and chilling with the sand felt like because we really wanted to build this summer said world where the stand as a unique feature. journey was the first video game ever to be nominated for a grammy it soundtrack was a contender in twenty thirteen. coming. i think one of the biggest things that you can do is you can really reach for something new and different go into the blue ocean and try to find other things unique feeling or unique style or unique way of interacting that really captures hearts to the exhibition also make space for games that dive into topical social issues like the game how do you do it with its playful take on gender issues. through. the graveyard tackles issues of energy players take on the role of an elderly woman a big contrast to brutal first person shooters. a real harvey and michael so i mean developed the game a lot of video games deal with death but they deal with them in very artificial ways and confronting a gamer with the idea of death was sort of in a way we were playing with their expectations of what david gest is and then also making them think about well the human condition at the same time just what we wanted to show this is this confrontation of life and death in the city on the harmony between the school. and the virtual and the real worlds are growing closer for example game fashion scene spired car design. in reality vice versa. players go beyond just playing it they create they they take the characters from these balls all floyd and create calls play and they create communities and you know i think both of these there isn't so topics are superphosphate for the future of video. to show with the victoria and albert museum and back at the beginning at least in appearance it's an arcade retro style hands on that you can touch and trying to cultivate really experimenting and having fun is what real games are all about and in this case in a museum. we turn our attention now to some wildlife and the northern bald ibis may not be the most beautiful bird in the world i mean look at it it is not it's a phase only a mother could love but it is one of the rarest now the species was almost entirely extinct with an initiative between the european union and the world wildlife fund was launched to save it now a unique resettlement project is underway and we take a look now at how things are going so far. it's an impressive sign when thirty one northern border ibis is flying from a building in germany to their winter quarters in italy. faster mothers. and car and esther are showing the parents the way down. to two women a part of a team dedicated to saving more than bold ideas from extinction. after working with the birds for months they know that beauty is more than skin deep even for but it's . fun for a lot of us them unfun with a hell of a lot of people say they look ugly for the life but when they see the birds live they realize that's not true and they're really lovely birds never. act each one has its own character each one is special what is this or that and that's what gives them the beauty that these birds radiate. the so much because i ask ideas so much and this is asker he always wants to be close to you to be beheaded for that you can recognize him right away from his behavior alone. so even if they all look pretty much the same we can tell the difference although wasn't that she does her work with them every day. whereas now to this on. the northern border i bear says one of the grammar is on the planet it's been an endangered species for for centuries but now some birds are being reintroduced into the wild. they are made an ultralight aircraft too fast to moms in yellow t. shirts to aid recognition a megaphone and team boss your highness fits the behavior biologist and initiator of the reason for hope project explains what else is required. if you're going to be an or hire the birds we still have are kept in captivity so when you want to release them into the wild you have to show them the migration route or create a new migration tradition. now going. and that takes a lot of effort. i know schmoe speak and call him out esther start working with a bird shortly after they hatch the foster mother to teach them to react to certain calls oh he's. fine the kind that is kind. of the northern border is his get very close to their foster mother's. the young birds are supposed to follow the women everywhere because they have and it's person and we get them when they're between three and eight days old and that how as soon as they learn how to take food from a sudden we start calling them like this at every feeding they hear it so they'll connect the food with the call that's what i've been the one where in the ultralight aircraft we use it so that they'll follow us around them it sounds and a half legal. you can call and i asked i have spent half a year training at birds to fly with them the project is supported by the worldwide fund for nature of the fault doesn't always follow the plan it takes practice. yeah funny i'm a fan of plans but again we start off in small steps and we take really short flights and slowly increase them and then when we've been in the air for a while we circle around and keep calling them and entice them to faraway meadows and eventually when they notice that we're taking them on outings that we're flying to new meadows with them that spurs their interest then they get it and follow us everywhere that's why i'm a tin foil. now they have an almost one thousand kilometer journey ahead of them the e.u. finances the reason for hope the project for your highness fits the plane journey is something special. this is being just moving with the birds in three dimensional space crossing the alpine divide as an elevation of up to two thousand six hundred meters is fascinating almost surreal to not see all. after exactly two weeks they land at the lagoon of all the tallow and nature reserve in south in tuscany. and as i have they are here just happy to have arrived at their winter quarters and succeeded in showing the ibises the way south. but the joy is tempered with sorrow because soon the phones to mothers must bid farewell to that challenges not them so both without it is a bit sad but then that's the aim that they're free and independent and that doesn't work if they're relying on us and the amount of friends out picnics and to foster mothers will stay with them feathered friends until november by next year at the latest the burns should be able to fly so. normally the colors of wine are rosy white or red but did you know that black is also an option black wine stems from the mild back grape and was given this name because of the extreme darkness while here in europe it's mostly produced in southwest france and that is where we are headed for our next report so let's find out if black wine is really black and see how its rich color affects the taste. the core region in southern france is one of europe's oldest wine regions its claim to fame is the mud back grape. prize for the best mother of twenty eighteen went to the chateau de meco as vineyard owned by bedtime for gold. now that from core is also called the black wine it isn't hard to see why there's a saying if you can look through it it isn't amount. is a diva it's a grape very very difficult to do to grow bird here in. crikey mate. very. very. bad target holes father bought the chateau de mega whereas in one thousand nine hundred three. he turned it into a four star hotel with thirty rooms and a michelin starred restaurant. the castle ambience is part of the appeal. of the bishops' of. twenty some to read so you don't have a lot of. initiative from the certain sundry. call was growing my back even men. but during the nineteenth century a fitz plague the region and destroyed most of. them out back break from co or was only rescued from extinction by the vintners hard work in the one nine hundred forty s. . lydia and claude studied agriculture and dedicate their efforts to replanting nutbag they bought land which was once used to grow wine but was then abandoned because it was too hard to reach a fossil in france feeble. and talk about preserving cultural heritage france restores churches castles even old factories and now we're restoring our agricultural heritage but the one. we tried to do for was a customer what the how big. and then the can taste really what people drinking car during. before they started their own vineyards the couple worked for other wine growers for years with great success as experts in soil analysis they advised hundreds of the world over for their own slopes they chose that very traditional. works in so long time for. some yes said we make we make we help people to print was a word in graph nothing and so she said why we can't. so that's a. decision. the chateau de meco as produces on a very different scale it is more than six thousand five hundred ten tonnes of land . also takes center stage at the hotel restaurant in twenty seventeen is the shift so was awarded a michelin star preparing regional dishes that get perfectly with the wine. i like to serve fresh water fish with a mile back. to the wind goes especially well with. the support from. actually originated in the coal region but it's not only associated with french wines about seventy percent of the world's most of that great song grown in mendoza argentina. the difference between a. quite important. this is. the differences between because who are. both are great that's there are difference . that wind from the south or from. one of the plants and as time on it's europe has to offer. and finally we stay in france and head to the northwestern part of the country to brittany for a kolesnik dish now these are crab made with buckwheat but while cups are normally served with sweet drink jam or even chocolate spread lead or rather salty we want to take a closer look now at various versions of a traditional cup randy. brittany is famous for its rugged n.p. to full coastline this region in northwestern france is home above all to fishermen and farmers. locally grown wheat is plentiful here good news for the region's many cup of tea and there's certainly no shortage of those here in the small town of compact which dates back to the middle ages. the clerk of the defeat is one of the oldest here it's run by audrey green day and her colleague. for her craps she mixes different types of flour in addition to ordinary wheat meal she also uses flour made from buckwheat. known here as blaine wa or black wheat it's a key ingredient in the proton gallons. let me know was says and i've added salt to my various types of flour mills and now i mix it all up with my hands. so i add one ache. and finally water. she looked. the mixture is needed to form a light batter. then it's ready for cooking. that's actually so this is a good idea. the griddle is coated with egg yolk for cooking rather than fat. that's how we wait. only if we use a lot of butter in brittany butter with salt. and then eggs it goes in the center genially and then kill your cheese over the top father and then our adham and fold it. up. then you brush it with salted butter. and it's. all kinds of toppings can be used for the. favorites include goat's cheese or rock for sausage bacon or slices of pork loin. the gullets are traditionally served with cider. was first introduced to france from asia in the middle ages it quickly became popular among farmers to. the plant thrive even in brittany's acidic soil and rainy conditions. today in the uk wheat takes just three months to grow that's very fast and that's what made it so popular. it was duchess and of brittany who really brought it in. and she divided the region into an upper and a lower brittany. so in upper brittany their work i let and in lower brittany the more refined clip. are not just popular with the locals but also with tourists diners at the cracker very different g. get to select the ingredients of their choice. and as the meal is very inexpensive it's common to have multiple courses. for dessert many opt for a sweet kind. it's usually served with a homemade caramel sauce. but the company to floozy offers a huge selection of sweet cups including with chocolate or fruit preserves. for the more exclusive credit was common yes. and that wraps up another week of euro max you can always keep up with the show on our website or by following us on social media for me and the rest of us here at euro max thanks for tuning in well seeing and sinker. place some hot. colonia dignidad in chile. german come down to dinner nine hundred sixty. slangy. and even shows its members just fought under that was the beginning of hell the torture itself. the survivors quest for justice continues to this day in thirty minutes monday w. . a contentious figure at home. in germany. gorbachev was one of the great heroes of the twentieth century. mikhail gorbachev the last leader of the soviet union was an agent of change. who quickly measures downfall. i have decided to resign my duties as president of the soviet union. he continues to fight for world peace with a reminder when you actually have to comprehend when he says taken us today there is a new arms race. arrow of time gorbachev and the opportunity for peace which to chart october third on g.w. . may nineteenth sixteen and i'm crying echoed around the world. young people have voted against their friends. generation. it was an awesome place dusty from the stupidity and teachers instruction to the bottom into nothingness the homes are slaves from up the incident with to be a moment for playing a key role in the larger issue and watch the bomb work every day play out of those what the are going to be most of the first time i had a feeling of being part of something other than. the seeds local civil rights the peace movement the women's movement for a whole planet during this period. sixty it. took little. this week to double. dutch. players . this is due to the news going to live from very late after breaching how hot in the philippines typhoon my case makes a lot all in china fostering hong kong with gale force winds and torrential rain more than not the native people have been evacuated across several chinese there seems as they brace for impact also coming up. a russian government's activities has reportedly been flown to brand name for medical treatment up for suspects a poison and just a great lump is one of four pussy riot protesters who stormed the pitch during this year's world cup final in moscow. and new maurice on a world record in violation of kenya's anya's could show that finishes the race in just two hours one minute and. because you know i think. it's good to have you with us. in mind is now hazing southern china battering hong kong and dong province with gale force winds and torrential rain the super storm has already caused a major destruction in the philippines authorities there say dozens are feared dead in flooding landslides and collapsed buildings. nature smacks the coast of hong kong with full force and one onlooker gets a little too close for comfort. as hong kong issues a maximum alert for time could the territories government has warned people to prepare for the worst storm surges were expected to raise water levels at the city's famous victoria harbor by up to four meters. hundreds of residents have been evacuated to shelters while others hope to ride it out. for those who hope to leave hong kong before the storm there was little chance almost all flights in and out of the islands airport have been counseled. and frustration to travelers in southeastern china all flight traffic has been halted to and from shands an airport until early monday morning many other cities have also penned paralyzed by the typhoon or the king of storms as chinese media are describing it. barreled across the philippines island of luzon where it claimed dozens of lives. and as the country begins to count the human cost of the typhoon manila residents left facing a unique cleanup challenge tons of plastic rubbish washed by the storm surge back on to the island. meanwhile at least eleven people have died in the u.s. as epic rainfall from tropical storm florence calls a severe flooding in north and south carolina authorities say that the devastation is far from over there warning residents not to have returning to their homes you know is my issue there's a trailer park where people are struggling to cope with the effects of the storm. this is not supposed to be here this is broken so is that new bern north carolina bore the brunt of florence's fury hundreds of people had to be rescued from flooded homes and cars. across the river on the edge of town one park of trailer homes can't even begin to dig itself out. a small trailer unlike a solid house is nearly defenseless against the torrent of wind rain and floods that the hurricane unleashed in this neighborhood it was pure destruction for many people here this is all they have and the waters may have receded some now but this is how high they got so this sent his family to safety a state away but chose to stay behind in his trailer saying he had worked too hard to simply abandon them go go go go go. those are people saying that you should wait for a week for i need to rebuild because if i go. and at the end of the you know. francis tycoon just arrived. he and his wife took shelter for two days at the country club where frances works and this is how they found their home . we're going to see if someone will help us maybe this he or the further government that will help us because we don't have any other option or to go for now thinking. france or some tammy don't have insurance they can't afford it they're not expecting any help from the government tammy suffers from chronic health problems meaning her husband will do whatever he can to clean up alone even then it might not be enough. i'm not sure i don't feel like this will ever be back to normal because i just don't feel like after all this damage it would be safe. just don't know what's going to happen to be truthful and i don't know where we're going to go. i'm just at a loss i'm standin in a daze and i know it doesn't help. i'm lost. forecasts even more water could flood here in the next day no matter what happens people here are saying come together to help each other out. a russian antti government activist associated with the protest group pussy riot has reportedly been flown to berlin for medical treatment. was taken ill three days ago and admitted to a moscow hospital was the right members say they believe he was poisoned. this video appears to show prominent kremlin activist. arriving in the german capital it was posted on twitter by not just. a fellow member of pussy riot. the group believes verzilov was poisoned in an attempt to intimidate or even kill him member veteran economical she says he is in berlin to receive medical treatment. was one of four protesters who invaded the pitch during july's football world cup final in moscow millions of people were watching live the four protestors later appeared in court and they served fifteen day jail sentences d.w. interviewed verzilov and other perceived members back in august. explained the group's approach. taken political collective we don't have a fixed number of members the different people come together from various factions . the young activists talked of a harsh climate for opposition groups who are frequently condemned by state media i mean they attack us because they have to because pussy riot don't do what they want just the way it is the state media always attack opposition groups. was hospitalized in moscow three days ago a prissy riot activist was quoted as saying he had lost his eyesight and ability to talk it is not clear what caused his illness but some fingers have pointed to the kremlin several high profile poisoning cases have been blamed on the russian government in the past fifteen years though it has always denied any involvement so far the kremlin has not commented on the case. for more on this story now we're joined by our moscow correspondent. has there been any reactions in russia at all to reports that. has been brought to berlin. well there being no of the reactions from the russian government so far the state controlled media like for example re enormously they just reported that he has left russia for medical treatment and burling rian office deep quotes and maria and locking up who is also a member of course the bride and she said that carter their seat of his going to stay in germany in the early in the days to come. why did the russian authorities and him to leave the country to fake well known formation on that for that reason i can only speculate we may say that the russian government has no reason to keep him in russia right now he walks if he wants to be treated in germany by german doctors not allowing him to leave russia would raise suspicions for example that the police of that act as be the secret service even russia that they could have poisoned him governesses of has spent his childhood in canada so he has a canadian and russian citizenship this is another reason. that's at least my opinion to let him. not allude to it to allow him to leave the country if he wants up and a couple of weeks ago you actually met p.r. staff resi live in moscow so can you tell us more about his ham and his role in the grape well he's very funny he's a likable person he's someone where you and i would say words just great to go out on a sunday evening he's a member of course you're right and definitely a very smart guy he seems to me that he's one of the organizers of their events he is. it is old and also the publisher of that of a news website i need years on up which fulton conducts damning reporting on russia's criminal justice system and when we met in his kitchen he was taking pictures with the stone because his cat was playing with our t.v. camera. mitterrand surratt in moscow thank you for your force. of the burn and marathon is taking place right now a through the streets of the german capital it is one of the world's top marathons and the man's world records has just been smashed by kenyan any day thousands of foreign runners are also taking parts and returning back to their ranks well mark meadows from sports is close to the finish line the run to break mark the new world record holder run right past you just a little while ago talk us through his role and how big of an achievement this is. it was very very special for everyone here today i mean i could show you hasn't just broken the world record he has completely destroyed it he did it in two hours wall nine minutes thirty nine seconds now the previous world record which was set here in two thousand and fourteen was two hours two minutes fifty seven seconds so he smashed it by well over a minute i mean people a few years ago were thinking was that even humanly possible it is quite incredible what he has achieved and he's only thirty three so he's not a spring chicken but overseas chaining in kenya in high altitude helps him but still this is something massive in the world of athletics you might remember a few a few months ago he tried to actually break the famous to the area which no one thought was really possible it was a publicity stunt for a sports with money factor he didn't quite manage it that day and it didn't count as a will record because of the pacemakers that he used but given what he's achieved today you have to wonder whether that two hour barrier could be smashed by in the future the last seven men's marathon world records have now been broken here in berlin is the home of the marathon fantastic a phenomenal win for elliott can show they now like he wasn't the only one breaking records today the women's race was a lot tighter who's come out on top there. well defending champion gladius churro no of kenya has won the race and she did it in of course record it was a very tight race here in ash did bob what was the favorite from ethiopia she went out in front but then sharon amidst managed to capture overtake and then power to the line so a great day for kenya with the two top kenyans retaining their titles and it has been a fantastic day obviously we've had the wheelchair races as well the bike races you can get all the results on deja vue dot com mark meadows thank you for your time i'm going to talk to you later. as saying trade takes place they are all on sunday with formula one world champion lewis hamilton on pole but only just standing there it was a mere three hundred of a second quicker than his rivals but that proved to be enough. lewis hamilton struggled at times on saturday losing his line on a number of occasions his missed sadie's course to its overall was not best pleased . but burton hamilton is not world champion for nothing he pulled a lap out of nowhere to top the time sheets and he stayed there max for a stop and ended up being second quickest in his red bull. hamilton knows pole could be gold dust on the tight singapore street circuit especially with title rivals the fast in fettle third on the grid. wow wow that was awful of my vision for. that but imagine. i don't really know where it came from but it all came together. not to want to say thank you to so the same back in a factory you know i was working so hard really gritty so roger put out a lecture bits. singapore and the throngs of fans are ready for an epic race on delights. and our minds are at the top story that we're following for you life in mind gates has made landfall in southern china bosher in hong kong and dawned on dong province with gale force winds and torrential rains authorities have issued their highest hilarious and a huff a million people have been evacuated from cities across the region. that's it for me for now you are watching d.w. news coming to you from berlin and more again at the top of the hour and don't forget you can get all the latest news and information from brenda talk on our website on tenterhooks to come. to. earth. home two days of species. own words so you can. give those are big changes and most start with small steps global ideas tell stories of creative people and innovative projects around the world. like to use the term limits to stop green energy solutions and resource to ensure. the community interactive content teaching the next generation of fundamental to touch him. to some place channels available to inspire people to change connection and more determined to build something here for the next generation the ideas for the empire. series of global three thousand on d.w. and online. only. dortmund fans were delighted as the black and yellow summer signings stole the show and kicked off much they treat with a three one win against frankfurt. abdu diablo open the scoring for dortmund in the thirty six the minute it's the frenchman's first goal for the black and yellows since signing this summer from minds now in the sixty eighth minute sebastien of their equalized for frank first powering home and danny the cost across in stuff. but just four minutes later dortmund three took the lead thanks to him obvious both two minutes from time buckle and concept rounded out the home victory with a debut goals. not restart welcome to the blues league on d.w.i. pablo foley dorman's victory set us up nicely for an exciting weekend of football and there's been no shortage of goals so let's see what's coming up on today's show . we start with labor couzens quest for points we'll see if they could end their miserable start to the season by shopping by. and a tight affair is expected between vulture and tatar berlin two sides have been flexing their muscles this season. now leverkusen were full of promise before the season kicked off but their start the campaign has been dreadful two back to back defeats and this weekend they faced an uphill battle against biron in munich could they surprise their solid hosts and finally pick up some points let's find out. they've accused coach heiko haley went on the defensive against by and. even left out germany for what the union began. with the first good chance fell to labor cozen giago handled the ball a penalty was awarded by him protested but the decision looked to be correct. kevin fall and stepped up a man you'll know you're saved for the spot kick had to be retaken because the referee had not whistled. this time ventile made a better job of it one nil to lay the q.'s now after five minutes. bans reply though came just five minutes later france will cook in a column tonsil least so showed the greater desire to equalize but his game would later turn sour recall champions by and began to press hard labor couzens defense crumbled and are in rubber and make them pay the dutchman taking full advantage of unison towers mistake by and had turned the game around but lost aliso to a knee injury. the game petered out after the break but it came alive again on eighty minutes. red herring b. just eight minutes after coming on holding this ugly challenge on ruffy near by and were incensed. the hose that no chance of ten men and by and sealed it late on through him as rodriguez later cusanus third loss in three. no one to this of course but it is how it is for so it's we have no points from three games but we mustn't lose our cool. high and celebrate that perfect start but halak side are in dire need of some inspiration. two games and two wins that's have all spirit and berlin have kicked off their season the world surprisingly strong start to the campaign has their fans feeling rather optimistic after struggling through the past couple of seasons now their opponents had to have also looked pretty nifty and evenly balanced much was predicted but could one of the to inform sides edge head. those ferg and hats or were both hoping to continue their flying starts to the new campaign the hosts were in control ellie on with your own receive your trying his luck from distance on several occasions the frenchman's efforts were less of a threat to the go and more to the camera man decided that bumped to the head meant he had to cook off early fortunately there was no lasting damage. so much of the game the two sides cancel each other out just after the hour mark just fire odell rowson capitalize on a wayward pass to put hats. in front of if the opening bell was the dutch when his first in the bundesliga absurd it stayed until the eighty seventh minute went on a maia clattered intermix on and right on the edge of the box. the referee eventually gave the penalty. dispatched by the stuttering you know smiley. one one the school but the drama was just beginning in the first minutes of stoppage time on dry due to slips and ingenious free kick under the wall to put half him back in front of the buy it was due to his second goal from a free kick into games i'm but with time running out john brooks headed on to admin and he level things up again by bruno love india's team snatching a draw from the jaws of defeat thanks to their new found never say die attitude of his talent but this his image of the team has gained confidence they know from the last few weeks and some situations at the end of last season that they can come back from behind that gives you belief and who comes into the disc for the home a point was the least the sides deserved after a match high on drama. now it's time to take a look at some of the other big toys this weekend in a moment we'll see when this leipsic and turnover fared. first we look at the clash against chalco the royal blues have lost both of their opening ties leaving coach to many go to tesco feeling under pressure so let's take a look at how they got on against a glass site that hasn't tasted the feat yet this season. the answer is quite poorly the players were barely on the pitch in glass but we're already in the lead. with the opener in the third minute i. shall who were poor on the attack but when they did get a chance on goal from a corner they came bitterly close yun zama just keeping sally senay back. midway through the second half block but came close some cells goodness hoffman tonight by the woodwork. but the foals ultimately poured more salt in the royal blues wounds when they got the second in the seventy seven minutes i was given spross in the box was knocked on by early some player to set up the take him above shall because braille envelope pulled one back in the dying seconds to one of the final school either way too many go to discos side lose their third on the bounce and find themselves in a minor crisis. over in life see the start of the game on the front foot do you good him a shot deflected for use of pull since ahead in the open in the night minutes by it was the danish internationals first of the season. four minutes later the guests were back in the game nicklaus fuku with a superb volley to level the school the but i'm leipsic stepped up again him a forsberg and team a vendor began to shine in the sweet setup the strike it to reestablish the host slender lead on forty minutes would the but after the break they teamed up again to move into with his brace and leipsic with three one a above hand over work ready to go down without a fight though because auburn always pulled one back for the gas in the sixty fifth minute but that was the end of their resurgence however still without a win this season while leipzig win their first game of the campaign at the third time of asking was. well let's round up all the action so far of course on saturday and as we saw byron beat leverkusen there's a draw between vosburgh and had to berlin got but beach elka and it was good news for new comers fortuna doth. back heel secured the win with a late strike he converted from the spot in the asian seventh minute to give to promote inside their first victory of the season it's a bitter defeat for hoffenheim who had equalised just a minute before just indorse winner but of course i forgot to mention there that of course leipzig get beaten over three two now in minds to host managed to beat but it turned out to be no easy task the winner came in the nine hundred thirty minutes with alexandra nazi. firing home that marked the end of a chaotic and eleven minutes in which outs bird took the lead before minds turned the game for keeper fabio good for one to enjoy watching the replays back he was a full for both minds goals. now there's dortmund victory against frankfurt on friday night of course on sunday braman host nuremberg and stuttgart travel to freiburg an hour that's take a look at the table of course what a shocker munich up there at the top but there is a little bit of movement dortmund move up on vols bergen had to move down a little bit than the other end of the table we have somebody new down the bottom laver who is and what an absolutely shocking start to the season they're having stuttgart move ever so slightly up shelter looked and there just one spot above those relegation places really good results for them now it's time for the ball in this league is play of the day as voted by our followers on twitter and the winner with fifty nine percent of the vote is barnes are you robin the dutchman meant jonathan todd's clearance and hammered home this caustic fairly early in the opening half to put munich. never to use and lucas for a decade was left absolutely stunned are you and robin is your play of the day. surely one of the best goals of disease and i would say. well on sunday we'll be joined in the studio to discuss this weekend's bomb the sneak action by bill in this league a journalist kip holden will be asking will shock and labor manage to win a game sometime soon i'm sure their fans really want a good roeser of for them so do send us your questions for him to be addresses on your screen now it's time to say goodbye will be back of course on sunday so to tide you over until then hear so many great moments from the week so far so for me and the rest of the bundesliga team here in berlin. place of home. german come sunday dinner nine hundred sixty. flames. and even fuel its member. that was the beginning of how the torture itself. the survivors christopher johnston continues to this day next d.w. . good shape rare diseases are rarely diagnosed correctly at first many patients run a medical gone from the first symptoms to the final diagnosis. if you have the feeling that something isn't right then you should continue to fight for cover diagnosis demisting we visit the center for rare diseases occur when charlie teo hospital in good shape in sixteen d. told him. or. ever dreamt of going on a polar expedition then don't miss this story for john j. should johnson takes you along on a thrilling and bone chilling journey each week as you can discover a new story and locate. each other his story on instagram. in a moving van beethoven. his work in the goddess fortuna. the maestro and fiddle. beethoven faced twenty teams. tyranny and physical abuse at a german run enclave intially. vine county where i can't cry anymore we left our tears behind and chilling cheated a lot of. the victims demand compensation. and all just good so we need financial support just a little help please this is important. governments have done nothing to help. one releases and be sure when he's in chile they'll want to deal with this already after dortch inside. the school is located on the outskirts of chile's capital santiago. then feed him spent the first twenty years of his life in the colonia dignidad the colony of dignity. eventually it how are you nice to see you michael. this exhibition is devoted to one of the darkest chapters in the modern history of chile and germany. you know what it's been. what the family panels of the sixteenth. the physical you know this is intended to teach the new generation about colonia dignidad it's a kind of warning about sects government policies extremism brainwashing things that just shouldn't happen here in british. but all this was the first year these students were born long after the end of chile's dictatorship in the one nine hundred ninety they. lived at colonia dignidad for how long twenty years it. makes you feel for you won't believe it but there were no family as such. i didn't know who my father and mother were. i had no concept of a normal family life. from the age of seven i had to work hard seven days a week no days off not even sundays sixteen hours a day. today people often asked me whether i wanted to excrete. i say no because i didn't even know that there was another world out there. we didn't have radio or t.v. we had no idea that we were living in a world that was anything but typical because you would be on a fairly distinct. the colonial dignidad was founded in one nine hundred sixty one by paul shaffer a german immigrant. chere father had recently fled west germany after being charged with sexually abusing children for many of the colonial residents life was like a prison camp. the colonial was surrounded by barbed wire. in one nine hundred seventy three general augusto pinochet came to power in chile in a coup determined. pinochet secret police used the colonia to interrogate torture and murder suspected political opponents many of these crimes took place in this. two hundred appears on the exhibits video screen more than two hundred prisoners were tortured at colonia dignidad. one of them was louis enrique people a is a left wing activist at the time. in september nineteenth seventy four i was arrested in santiago. i was taken to an interrogation center and then flown to the colonial. i was subjected to electric shocks on my feet genitals ears and where else on the back of my neck were the victims try to come to terms with the past year it is more than a part of the process involves telling people what happened to you and revealing that side of your private life we have to tell young people what happened here so that it never happens again it is with us just as the sun was making a focal. in a few days of infamy plans to visit the site of the former colonia dignidad he plans to set up a memorial for the victims. how schaefer fled the colonia in one thousand nine hundred ninety seven after tulane authorized he's filed charges of child abuse against him he was convicted in absentia on those charges. she felt was arrested in two thousand and five and died in a prison hospital in twenty ten. when police raided the colonia they found a complex of bunkers surveillance equipment torture chambers and weapons. then and in the initial into her brothers spent more than thirty years at colonia dignidad. they were treated like slaves they were forced to take psychotropic drugs and was subjected to physical abuse. discovered we were tortured with cattle drive two children brought in germany france would use it so it would you would not often ball what they'd used to prod on your stomach or. hysterical. does fall under the torture was absolutely hellish it was served the value that i wanted to die with got to the point where i said i can take this anymore. this myth of brad is now live in germany they've written an account of their ordeal. they describe how they were separated from their families as children and they identify the perpetrators who tortured them they point out that many of the victims are now retirees who live on welfare. beyond the limit we work like dogs seven days a week three hundred sixty five days a year. that includes christmas and new year's. and we ended up with nothing but we weren't paid for our work. there was no compensation at all listen and just a study we want to make a public record. public while. this is the government district in the end. it's the first time that vanna and hina have visited the capital. and they and other colonial victims have decided to lobby the government for compensation. the government has so far been reluctant to come to terms with these crimes. today they'll be talking to social democrats in peace. there are reports that all the political parties now plan to take this matter seriously. that's a positive sign for decades the german government refused to discuss the issue of financial compensation even though the government shares some responsibility for the crimes committed at colonia dignidad. officials at the german embassy in chile knew about the torture and slavery and kept quiet about it for decades. in twenty sixty federal presidency welcome gulp rejected the idea of compensation for st george's if you can see the german government will under no circumstances consider such glorious my homes i'm sure we're here to accept you that. that did not go down well with the victims. today they will also meet christian democrats in peace the c.d.u. has long been opposed to compensation claims abuse we've all had bad backs my husband's had several operations he first entered his back at the age of fourteen while he was picking up big rocks so. it's not like you know you vanna and harness the honestly to the politicians about what happened to them. don't come with it not at night paul shaffer would come sneaking through the rooms with a flashlight looking for people who are still awake. sometimes i'd toss you outside in your pajamas. even in winter when doc. you've lost also take you to the garage. where you were in an old barn strap you drown in with you for no reason to use it. for pool it almost didn't go on but they treated us like dirt. just the work was not brought up good and i got so used to the beating was that it was like they were happening to someone else they'd be the tire of me to the point where i couldn't feel anything a lot more but the good it's made you feel good. morning company you did use a rubber trenchant a little and beach you insulin bled polluted or does he would just pour doubts they could do what ever they wanted to you. could i couldn't cry any more. i haven't cried in years if they could beat me bloody and they still could walk right out of a. mess can also be what i feel the same you get us also i can cry on my honey we left our tears each other we were cheated we cried so much and no one outer stuff you on. their own paradise couldn't help and the german states wouldn't help you but maybe that will change in issue thought about us i'm shocked by what i just heard for what happened to these people is beyond belief i'm guitar involved in this. and you saw here in trade where compensation package looks like these people did not live and work in germany. but we've got to see this through so that the victims can get the help they need them it. was the phone home because i believe that things have changed only when they see concrete proof i don't believe in their promises anymore. what does this make it think about all this. world the talks were encouraging. i was actually pretty nervous when i got. there was a lot of pressure a lot. also offered a lot of fuel to we're not used to meeting with politicians. but i feel good about these meetings and i've developed a sense of trust to these people which is. that there's not much time to propose legislation parliamentary elections will be held in a few months the compensation bill could get lost in the shuffle. if. we returned to chile. after didn't feel tempted if colonia dignidad he owned a law degree and now represents some of the victims like. at the age of twelve savile was treated in the colony hospital and was sexually abused their bipolar schafer. is one of at least two hundred abuse victims. this is where schaefer was able to live out his paedophile fantasies for more than thirty years without fear of arrest. today colonia dignidad has been transformed into the village above yet or over there in village. part of the site caters to tourists the restaurant his spare and german crissy the colonias notorious past seems to have been forgotten. maybe what they are they are pretty guarded turds of the house for schaefer abused me out terrorists are enjoying themselves the places where people were raped and murdered . it's horrible the tourists bring their kids interim period. i want all three of my court cases and compensation the ok you know but the colony officials who should pay still haven't and it's long overdue know when i was implementing fences they would think that's a good thing at your funeral or not the only one people that about us you know. there's been a lot of legal wrangling for been free tempted this is one way for him to come to terms with his past to fight for justice against the system that abused him. the next day of infamy travels to the town of to move to meet two other colonia victims. this is you are inside. he and his wife left the enclave and eventually moved to this farm in southern chile. you ask him was held prisoner and abused at colonia dignidad. it wasn't easy to start a new life you or him found a job as a missile and the couple rented a small house. i believe in rather than the. longer you know you adams wife doris couldn't stand living at the villa any longer at least here they can lead normal lives. the tightness spent years slaving away a colonia dignidad they weren't paid for their work and certainly didn't make contributions to a pension fund. and if you know my ploy to get out and steve get off toss up with my company goes out of business i'm finished. i have to deal with that possibility every day. i supposed to find a new job and after start all over again on phone and we'd lose the house and everything we own so hot it seems like the time we live from month to month my wages cover our expenses for a month and that's it going to be awful if we couldn't afford to send our children to school i worry about that a lot i need an operation but we can't afford it and you had a stroke. that was rough a matter uninformed does not cause you didn't know tobe or third i had a cerebral. stroke a stroke stopped design you couldn't speak and we can't pay our medical bills and home to me. that sadness and the children needed years of counseling to help them cope. don't know no no no i go out without a mother and it wasn't easy. to have a she died young if she did in two thousand and twelve the time the system was collapsing did you know or don't. know unfortunately the people tell me she was very nice. it's difficult for you ask him and do this to talk about this but they're determined to stick it out. they say that germany shares some of the blame for what happened to them. these interventions with him and also we're not trying to rip anyone off we're not going to get rich off this but we need financial support just to make ends meet we want to pay for our children's education so that they can make something of themselves just a little help please this is important in the new book. we return to billet this is the last session of parliament before the election it's just before midnight a breakthrough seems to be in the words of bill has been submitted that would provide for a review of the colonial case and compensation for the victims. vanishment care and victim wagner observe the debate. who have come because in the german authorities have ignored this situation they must have been blind children were kidnapped and abused the parents were like two people were murdered. and now the fact. is those in favor of these please raise your hurts if you went home. and the money was sent to votes or abstentions the third month the motion is approved i was doing this for the house as i think you know. just because my tufnell the gives us hope. i don't want to get too excited but it looks like things are finally moving in the right direction. because there are a lot of politicians who support us and would listen to us if. that's something we never had before and. he was honey often. so he helps me i didn't expect this to. completely overwhelmed. this is a ray of hope. and lead. this is justice may finally be done after fifty seven years. thirty k. . waters but how will the government actually implement the compensation package legislation. and that's why. we're. back in chile. then for example meets with human rights activists there on their way to the village of vieira the former colonia dignidad. they're going to put up a plaque that to honor the victims. back at the some this is the very first memorial to those people. today is the national commemoration day and that's why we're here. and we got official permission to put up the plaque there were so many crimes took place. back here for i think i'll. do this side that decides that she wants to go along. to mine here sign this is interesting i want to show my support for the victims i wouldn't normally do something like this i suffered neck injuries at the colonia and it still hurts so i'm a little nervous about all this been missing every society becomes a hellish. it's a forty kilometer drive to. many of polish if a sociopath still live and work then. the closer dolly's gets to the village the more vivid memories become. just before you can see the trees and the fences you couldn't escape it i tried eight times to escape in five minutes they'd send someone out to bring you back so it was hopeless to say here's where we go in and out of those lines i'll see what. a number of human rights activists are already here. in this area used to be outfitted with security cameras and sealed off by barbed wire. this is the former potato center where people were tortured to death with whips clubs and electric shocks. there's no indication that brutal crimes were ever committed here . it's an insult to the victims. outside vintry detaches the plaque to the wall through the memorial was approved by a national income the director of the bavarian village and the daughter of a colleague of polish if. so why was nothing done until now to remember the victims of these crimes. this is going to yes that's a good question and i did ask our own former members of the colonial why all this was kept secret even from us and now why do we the younger residents have to make sure that the story is finally told. before why has nothing done been to remember the people who are tortured and murdered here why didn't people tell the truth. and why didn't they provide a proper memorial for all of those who were murdered and secretly buried here with a detour to send order for the. borders in. the commemorative plaque was approved only of the human rights activists put pressure on the bavarian village. it took a long time to get results. to come here we came here five years ago for only got as far as the front line in africa three years ago we made it this far before they sent us away again appreciate now the building is protected as a historical sites and that's why realtors put up the plaque plaque in the girl does it for troop. experts estimate that more than one hundred torture victims probably killed by pinochet's police are buried on the grounds of the colony. only one grave has been found so family and relatives now gather at the site to remember the victims. doris knew nothing about these graves even though she lived at colonia dignidad. i'm very close to tears this is a very emotional scene it's painful to remember what happened here. there's also a woman whose son was a student when he disappeared without a trace you know when you look at the name. for the well this is all i have is a picture of you there are so many questions where are you what happened to you you know i spent years looking for you but i've never been able to find you they were sure you know that in their well. then this decides to speak to the group. so daughter's. school or not my name is doris i used to live here. schizos it hurts me to think about what happened here and i'm ashamed thing i'm going to win some. pretty hard news to get up or go status but i want to express my support for you because i know what it's like to feel that you're alone. you are suffering now like i did when i was a child. i support you. and i hope that the colonia dignidad officials who still live here will overcome their shame and give us some answers ok out of sync. quintin but when something that is submitted when such an increase over the sought. by zero zero seven victim apologizes to other victims that's something that many perpetrators have still not been able to do but at least the political situation has changed so that those who suffered can now achieve a sense of change. this. you'll go up for the. even if both. food. you'll go up or. even what you go to any food. in the good ship rare diseases are rarely diagnosed correctly at first many patients run a medical gauntlet from the first symptoms to the final diagnosis of another the flu not the sand if you have the feeling that something isn't right then you should continue to fight first proper diagnosis to music. we visit the center for rare diseases occur when xabi to hospital. good should thirteen if. you're going to an official estimates more than one point two million venezuelans live in colombia legally and illegally. was returned to venezuela. to visit friends is that i don't think i'd ever go back there to live you know what i live there again i don't know so i'm not sure. bearing witness global news that matters the make for minds. they make the commitment. they find solutions. they inspire. africa on the road. the stories of both people in a different shaping their nation place and their continent of africa on the move the stories about motivational change makers taking their destinies into their own hands. double using multimedia series food for god. dot com africa. the love the first time doing it turns into to me not a part of the incredible it's a whole new more. modern concert christmas tree on the beach a new era of sexuality. real love sickness is big thing a foot and sexual frustration too much i still have to get used to these robot noises exploring a new frontier in sex and love three point zero. zero love stuff on september twenty fifth on. the return. to. business due to the news coming to you live from berlin after wreaking havoc in the philippines typhoon longer as it makes landfall in china battering hong kong with gale force winds down to wrench old rain more than half a million people have been evacuated across several chinese facing as they brace for impact also coming up. a russian on to government activist has reportedly been flown to great length for medical treatment for suspected poisoning traversing author is one of four of pussy right protesters who stormed the pitch during this year's world cup final in moscow. and new morrow's on a world record in berlin as kenya's anyone could still get finishes the race in just two hours one minute and spurgeon nine seconds. of. it's good to have you with us type in mind is now hitting southern china hong kong and taiwan dong province with gale force winds and torrential rain the super storm has already caused major destruction in the philippines authorities there say dozens are feared dead in flooding landslides and collapsed buildings. nature lashes the coast of hong kong with full force and these people got to witness it first hand. as hong kong issued a maximum alert for typhoon mangubat the territory's government warned people to prepare for the worst. storm surges were expected to raise water levels by up to four meters. hundreds of residents have been evacuated to shelters while others hope to ride it out. almost all flights in and out of the city's airport have been canceled so for anyone who hopes to leave hong kong before the storm there was little option but to keep out of harm's way and stay put. i didn't expect to get caught up in a typhoon when i booked a trip to hong kong. i've had to scrap all my sightseeing plans i can't go out the subways closed buses have stopped running and there's no ferry service at all. the west the gambling hump of macau closed the doors to its casinos for the first time in history ahead of the storm. authorities here faced criticism for failing to pad residents for a deadly typhoon last year now they face another huge challenge just said to be the strongest typhoon to hit the region this year. meanwhile at least eleven people have died in the u.s. as afaik rainfall from tropical storm florence calls as severe flooding in north and south carolina authorities say that the devastation is far from over there warning residents not to attempt returning to their homes my a stranger visitors a trailer park where people are struggling to cope with the effects of the storm. this is not supposed to be here this is broken so is that new bern north carolina bore the brunt of florence's fury hundreds of people had to be rescued from flooded homes and cars across the river on the edge of town one park of trailer homes can't even begin to dig itself out. a small trailer unlike a solid house is nearly defenseless against the torrent of wind rain and floods that the hurricane unleashed in this neighborhood it was pure destruction for many people here this is all they have and the waters may have receded some now but this is how high they got so this sent his family to safety a state away but chose to stay behind in his trailer saying he had worked too hard to simply abandon them go go go go go. people think that you should wait for a week for i need to rebuild because if i going. and at the end of the. francis tycoon just arrived back he and his wife took shelter for two days at the country club where frances works and this is how they found their home. we're going to see if someone will help us maybe this he or the federal government will help us because we don't have any other option for to go for now. francis and tammy don't have insurance they can't afford it they're not expecting any help from the government tammy suffers from chronic health problems meaning her husband will do whatever he can to clean up alone even then it might not be enough . i'm not sure i don't feel like this will ever be back to normal because i just don't feel like after all this damage it would be safe. just don't know what's going to happen to be truthful and i don't know where we're going to go. i'm just at a loss i'm standin in the days and i know it doesn't help. i'm lost . forecast say even more water could flood here in the next days no matter what happens people here say they'll come together to help each other out . now to some of the other stories making news around the world. syrian state media say israel has launched a missile attack on the main airports in damascus the claims were backed up by the syrian observatory for human rights and said the attack targets arms warehouses causing heavy damage no casualties or recourses. an israeli man has died after being stabbed by a palestinian shopping mall in the west bank the israeli army say the assailant was shot following the attack near a busy junction south of jerusalem which has been a major flashpoint in recent years. nine environmental activists have been injured and thirty four detained as police attempt to clear a forest in western germany the land is owned by energy company order which wants to clear large swathes of trees to a new coal mining in the area activists began occupying the area in twenty twelve. a russian government activist associated with the protest group pussy riot has reportedly been flown to berlin for medical treatment. was taken ill three days ago and admitted to a moscow hospital pussy riot members say that they believe he was poisoned. this video appears to show a prominent anti kremlin activist. arriving in the german capital that was posted on twitter by nadia tolokonnikova a fellow member of pussy riot the group believes first the love was poisoned and an attempt to intimidate or even kill him pussy riot member veteran economical she says he is in berlin to receive medical treatment versus a love was one of four protesters who invaded the pitch during july's football world cup final in moscow millions of people were watching live the four protesters later appeared in court and they served fifteen day jail sentences. d.w. interviewed verzilov and other pussy riot members back in august for the love explained the group's approach. to soon on tuesday can political collective we don't have a fixed number of members of the different people come together from various factions you would. the young activists talked of a harsh climate for opposition groups who are frequently condemned by state media i mean by that then as they attack us because they have to because pussy riot don't do what they want that's just the way it is the state media always attack opposition groups. verzilov was hospitalized in moscow three days ago a prissy riot activist was quoted as saying he had lost his eyesight and ability to talk it is not clear what caused his illness but something goes have pointed to the kremlin several high profile poisoning cases have been blamed on the russian government in the past fifteen years though it has always denied any involvement so far the kremlin has not commented on the loves case. well we're joined now by our correspondent. in moscow and here in studio by nina political correspondent host you both now major i am going to start off with you has there been any reactions at all in russia to reports that has in fact been brought to berlin you know their actions from the russian go far. well to treat this. now nina i'm going to ask you about the german aspect of it i suppose and have the german authorities actually react as to these reports doesn't look authentic doesn't just the video so far are most reliable source is billed newspaper a tabloid the biggest tabloid in germany and they actually say that the chancery and the foreign office are involved in the case are involved and they have been informed but we don't have any official information yet what we do know is that builds a built reporter was there at the airport he took photos of the woman who posted the video on twitter the video appears to be authentic and then also spokes person for the airport in southern belin confirmed that there have been an ambulance fly tones i say evening ok so we're still waiting for official confirmation but the airport has said that there was a fact an ambulance does being brought in now dragged is that surprising do you think that the kremlin and loud him to leave the country a good question but honestly i don't have a really good answer to that yes i can only speculate but if you look at spencer's childhood carrier so he has a kidney and a russian citizenship for the reasons you know the russians have to let him go if he wants to leave russia not a long going to leave russia will raise suspicion for example that it was the good sportsmanship sort of reasons this is not a reason why it's a lot to do rush. and nina do we even know hospital might be in again builds newspaper reported that he has been taken to the hospital which is really old hospital and world famous as treated international patients in the past we also do know that the cinema for peace foundation that is based here in berlin they paid for the flight they organized the plane they took him back here they have helped pussy riot before they are in close contact and they said pussy riot reached out to them last week for help and then when they got in contact of the only call they acted and brought him to berlin so that is pretty sure that he is here so far we're still waiting to hear from them again but they are saying that he is a bit better he is not yet able to speak ok and may drag just a couple of weeks ago you in fact met. in moscow can you tell us a bit more about him and his role in the group. well he's a very likeable person as someone that is also very smart guy to me but he's one of the organizer who runs advanced user publisher of the investor to use website called meet us all and not really a big fan of the current government you know russia well and i met him was kitchen and he took pictures there was a song because his cat was playing with our t.v. camera and this is it as a separate funny boy someone will you know who. would be great to hang out with and . so a very likable person he directs are it in moscow thank you and you know thank you very much for coming into. the brain marathon is taking place today and it is one of the world's top marathons and the men's world record has been smashed smashed by kenyan any had kept can still be won last year and this time beat the world record by more than a menace clocking in a time of two hours one minute and thirty nine seconds the therapist and mild conditions in berlin are ideal conditions for runners it's ok's closest rivals finished around five minutes behind him. but earlier we spoke to our debut sports correspondent mark meadows who was standing by close to the finish line at the front of my case it would be very very special the red one here today let me tell you it show it hasn't just broken the world record is completely destroyed it did it in two hours one minute thirty nine seconds now the previous world record which was set here in two thousand and fourteen was two hours two minutes fifty seven seconds so we smashed it by well over a minutes i mean people a few years ago with thinking was that even humanly possible it is quite incredible what he has achieved and he's only thirty three so he's not a spring chicken but obviously is training. in kenya in high altitude helps him but still this is something massive in the world of athletics you might remember a few a few months ago he tried to actually break the famous to our barrier which no one thought was really possible it was a publicity stunt for a sportsman manufacturer he didn't quite manage it that day and it didn't count as a will record because of the pacemakers that he used but given what he's achieved today you have to wonder whether that two hour barrier could be smashed bike in the future the last seven men's marathon world records have now been broken here in berlin berlin is the home of the marathon. here watching d.v.d.'s stay with us. please. enter the conflict zone confronting the powerful i test the convictions and the values of the powerful club something that was said i would draw all those people with other people's life in their hand out of that conference or. how good the arguments of my guests. i'll just excuses. play complex all come from the powerful d.w. . much of it. surely to lose from africa and the world or link to exceptional stories and discussion from the use of these each and what we're going to have you do comes much for joining us on facebook. or go. to the. place. i'm talking today about xenophobia integration and how people identify with germany see that she is secretary of state for integration in north rhine-westphalia. is there a way to end a great into german civil society the hundreds of germans who recently joined violent anti migrant protests in cabinets. to plot that's a very good question there was much discussion in germany for example after the attempted coup in turkey. when people of turkish descent gathered in cologne calling for the death penalty. for that sparked days and weeks of debate about how integration failed there but the empty immigrant protests in chemist's are. never discussed in the context of integration. it's not just kim it's. just remember two years ago and right wing piggy the activists held a gallows marked for and the american insignia got a real. stand off that too is a problem arising from a lack of social integration and needs to be discussed in the context of integration just as much as other events when you just give it up. to if you were born in germany to turkish immigrants did the incidence in saxony where protesters chanted neo nazi slogans remind you of your childhood when neo nazis and zoning and elsewhere set fire to foreigners homes hordes of them and on top. wedding and life i was thirteen at the time of the arson attack. and i observed my parents fear and voices in the turkish community questioning whether it might be time to go home where it was safer since evidently they were no longer welcome here as. it wasn't just insulting and before that there were attacks in moon rostock in her spare. time and i might not have been as conscious back then of what was happening as i am now. on. the other day i was talking to my mother and she's one of the strongest women i know she's my idol this for me. can and this was the second time in my life that i saw her scared. the. first time was after zoning in after the events in camden. she happened to be nearby with my father at a health resort and told me they were too scared to go into town that weekend. stopped. and these things are troubling and need to be taken very seriously and i don't have all the money in stocks and bonds put this into any protests were triggered by the deaths of two germans. in one case the main suspects are asylum seekers who are due for deportation just like. the tunisian behind the attack on a berlin christmas market. how much has the failure to enforce deportations impacted integration efforts you've been in a moment ago. then monday. only to the extent that two issues are blended into one in germany we abide by the rule of law and other recent examples have shown that it's not always legally possible to deport an individual even if it's already been mandated. let's. look at sainct are of course those individuals should not have been here and that's why people have now turned their anger against refugees and let the hits the water off. this is just an attempted instrumentalists asian deal and here to using the death of an individual to vent their own resentment so it's mixing apples and oranges. yeah. it's true we need to be more rigorous when it comes to enforcing deportations especially when the individuals concerned pose a threat. but we also have people seizing on these incidents to advance their own agenda. and we need to make it very clear that that's unacceptable and to i think it's up to us is. but each new case attracts new members to right wing nationalist and extremist groups what are you shocked by the large turnout in saxony should we be concerned about growing xenophobia in germany . and i understand about you might know it's true but let me counter with a question then if it hadn't been a refugee due for deportation wouldn't this case still have been misused to push a personal agenda and file for the i. can also miss paul. we've had other similar cases elsewhere in germany where people didn't react the same way war mention east. and. so again yes we need to be more rigorous in deporting people especially when they pose an imminent threat but i'm against abusing these cases to broadcast xenophobic ideology of private individuals and. look professional from. these interest to your parents were turkish guest workers you studied in are a member of the conservative city use executive board. you are a poster child for successful integration. and yet you were hesitant to apply for a german passport why do you think. doesn't it wants an article on the grounds it was mostly for emotional reasons mentioned talk wish i had i resisted giving up my turkish passport for a long time. and. i don't want to feel divorced from the identity of my parents whom i look up to. then went on and have. already lived in this country for thirty years as a turkish national without feeling i wasn't in a great it being. all but then it came to casting a vote and as my interest in politics grew i finally decided to apply for a german passport one week after the state elections in two thousand and ten when i was left on the outside looking in. the door to start talking but again it was more for emotional reasons plenty of people who don't have a german id still feel like they belong to this country well on the other hand you also have people who have held a german passport for years or even decades and still don't feel like they belong. to. a muslim groups above but there are still many people of turkish origin in germany who feel left out when switching schools trying to enter higher education or applying for a job in mind they say they're foreign last name is problematic. today we have third or fourth generation turks in germany. are they more integrated than previous generations who. want. to hear about these they must live for the longer the debate continues the more evident it becomes that we've made great strides in integration policy. that younger generations feel much more likely belong in fatah are. quite a few ask my father where he was from he wouldn't take it as an insult. i think i'll stay in the middle saying he's from turkey in my thinking about if you ask my generation the second generation. fifty of them give you the florida step the question. an answer it accordingly but we find it annoying. when they're thinking about me and if you ask my nieces generation the third generation. then you get a snotty reply like where do you think i'm from i'm from germany just like you always thought. shows that people don't want to concern themselves with such banal questions anymore because they unquestionably feel part of society. and that's. what it was so many identify with germany why do two thirds of the turkish community in germany back the turkish president he's dismantling the same rights in turkey that turkish people take for granted in germany. is this an example for how integration has failed. i'd say it's a perfect example of how we've pursued a failed integration policy for decades but if you say two thirds of the turkish community in germany voted for president heir to one i need to correct you two thirds of those eligible to vote elected him but. there are about three million people of turkish origin in germany five hundred thousand of whom voted and it was two thirds of that figure who will not and it's important to note that the third generation isn't necessarily reflected in that calculation. why do you think they voted for one. hour the one i think in many ways everyone has filled a vacuum and reasserted turkey's stance is a strong nation with economic prowess which is certainly demonstrated in recent years. he also filled a vacuum by making people feel like he was there for them he was taking care of them. that's. what i call a vacuum because no turkish president before him had done that kind of placing them taught no german politician had done that before either chancellor angela merkel was the first person to say i'm your chancellor. to. console them and might not make sense to everyone because it seems so self-evident but sometimes the most obvious things need to be emphasized to. the council what the chancellor says is one thing but what needs to be done to prove it looks like that's really. course we also need to promote structural integration you've just mentioned several examples. there for instance there are still many migrant children who don't advance into higher education the hoped for but if you compare to do with how things were ten or fifteen years ago you can say that now many more migrant children attend high school than before. i mean you know compared to the majority of society there are still lagging we also still have problems with the job market where people are being discriminated against because of their foreign names or even their religion and they have to apply many more times than others with similar qualifications these are things we need to work on. in divide between the to what degree are muslim traditions hampering integration like parents keeping their daughters from joining sports classes and making them wear headscarves. this is. gonna be it's not a hindrance to integration i'd say it's a hindrance to civic inclusion yolland tyler. since it is a problem when parents invoke religious freedom and i wouldn't put it any other way restrict their children's rights. like he does on the. ond i think we need to be demanding here as an open society. and can't just accept parents arguments that is their freedom of religion or their freedom as a parent without questioning it. when they only influx. well we've reached the end of our interview and i have three unfinished sentences i'd like to ask you to complete the i mean to anyone who says i'm a city used token migrant i say. you don't understand a thing you still don't get that we live in a country of immigration. so i expect migrants who want to live in germany to this is not only demonstrate loyalty but also affirm their commitment to germany. they can. go to me germany is the country. i would like to remain in because i enjoy living here very very much. thank you for your time thank you. in good shape rare diseases are rarely diagnosed correctly at first many patients run in medical garb from the first symptoms to the final diagnosis of the flu that it's in if you have the feeling that something isn't right and you should continue to fight first off a diagnosis is a mistake we visit the center for rare diseases at berlin's r.b.t. hospital in good shape next to. the contentious figure at home. he wrote in germany. from the fall of the burman. to german reunification. m.b.m. of the cold. war of choice was one of the great heroes of the twentieth century. because gorbachev the last leader of the soviet union was an agent of change. quickly made his downfall. i have decided to resign my duties as president of the soviet union. but you want historical buttle i'm sure one because of course. he continues to fight for world peace with the reminder i know that we have to comprehend where this has taken us today there is a new arms race. the hour of time gourevitch off and the opportunity for peace waster starts october third on d w. after. hello and welcome to and good shape coming up. the importance of hygiene bacteria are lurking everywhere. directness there are let there be no light. and a.o.l.'s facing a rear neurodegenerative disease head on. and usually host dr carsten. some doctors i really ought to think especially those who are on t.v. do you know the show dr house this guy solves medical mysteries there are fifty thousand different diagnosis and medicine eight thousand of them are about rare diseases so rare that a regular g.p. has never had off them but who sort of thing is stuck to high khuda here at the sheraton in berlin welcome to in good shape. imagine you have a disease that no one knows when it could be that it's a rare disease and you would be surprised where diseases are not so seldom. do you remember the ice bucket challenge in the crazy year of two thousand and fourteen where stars doctors and joes knows had ice bucket with ice cold water it doesn't over their heads to raise awareness for a less the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis a very rare disease and many people are saying this instance certainly perplexities stunt but do you really think it was that silly. in twenty fourteen bruno schmidt came across the ice bucket challenge a fund raising campaign for research into a.o.l.'s. he'd never heard of the disease and decided to find out about it then came a shock that it isn't all going site it was all there in black and white about us markets opened and muscle twitching. and the fine motor skills of the first to go. the inability to open doors and bottles i was exactly what i was experiencing now that was like scales falling from my eyes. and all the muscle twitching had grown more frequent. kept telling him to see a doctor. and then things were impossible to ignore he had many tests after four months a diagnosis illness is a progressive neurological disorder the mind remains fit but nerves and muscles gradually degenerate until breathing becomes impossible. well i feel completely abandoned at the diagnosis and they say there's no treatment for two weeks it was terrible but then i said there's no point moaning i'm changing the rules this disease is going to have to work hard to destroy me. he began to tackle the disease head on with daily balance board training by a resonance therapy hypnosis and dietary changes. and i refused to let the doctors convince me that the disease will follow a set path that it will kill me. they told us that five or six times in the space of an hour and i said i'm not so sure about that. but there's no denying that the symptoms are progressing things like brushing his teeth or showering are becoming increasingly difficult on waking he feels stiff and weak the former athlete is witnessing his body gradually giving way to the disease . cycling as one of his great passions but this too is becoming increasingly challenging. a special hydronic system and electric gears make things easier. to sit on my bike and cycle off i forget about my disease i just focus on riding my bike it's great fun i love it. even though his gradually declining strength is making life harder bruno tries to live a normal life. but i do have to be careful not to waste too much time on pointless activities. his diagnosis has helped clarify what's really important to him. enjoying life more every second of it and i try and see everything in a positive light. this is the biggest challenge of his life but he hasn't given up hope. and i want to outlive my parents i promised them that i wouldn't go before them and i want to meet my grandchildren that's really important. he's determined to live as long and as well as possible. as it's not just in tact of course it's hard to deal with it every day but as long as my father is coping that's what counts. the family knows that life will change and become more difficult each time bruno's symptoms worse and they have to readjust it's a challenge for the whole family. and he was. head of the department for rare diseases at the ground hi thanks for having me today we just saw a report of a patient who was made aware of his condition that's his name a less after he saw the ice bucket challenge which was quite a spectacular procedure is it very important that we have more such fun crazing campaigns yes obviously and it was a very good example that for the regs this topic just public recognition is absolutely helpful so indeed we need more but what is the definition of realism in principle it's it's it's a border whereas expertize. in the system is not enough to all patients with this rare disease will find help in the system maybe some of the normal experts will know the disease but we have as are diseases in the range of twenty patients known worldwide to those so-called orphan diseases so often disease is a disease when we don't even know if the name for the disease but the red disease is a disease where we have a name and all those rare diseases have something in common next to it they're quite rare yeah indeed so call. and problems into common topics are for us the diagnosis is always very late in this patients because no one knows the disease no one thinks about the disease and. years in the system the way to find diagnosis the second problem is. not enough experts so if you imagine a different grade disease system you don't have the experts for. silent but every patient with the disease at least in the high developed healthcare systems has a right to live an expert and and at least to find some way to that's a cert common problem is that when there might be a chance to develop a new. treatment and new a new drug that it's very difficult to convince the. industry to invest in this is just rejected by the army and it is not it's ok but it has been already addressed that all of these three problems a common and for that you need two centers what do you do better than i do i know better but we have so we after. the problem over a long time we have two main tools to say we have time and the second thing what we are doing what you can do. that we are going to interdisciplinary case conferences where all the experts come together to really think about the patient in a holistic way that each one thinks only about the liver or the brain so that they come together you see a lot of patients with red diseases some patients there stick in your mind one patient is for music most intense patient was a. girl which has been referred to age of six months with severe obesity but just absolutely common and common interests it in this age and. in addition to this extreme obesity as it was and. endocrine hormone deficiency and it's a time even this symptoms to be have not been described in terms of often disease and and it's time we talked a lot about that was an interdisciplinary team and we really found the diagnosis and it was a defect which. by by which we could explain the whole the whole disease and now the disease as a name and the lucky part of this story is that after a long time we now also successful to develop a new treatment based on this recognition of the disease and. normal weight because you could really substitute what is missing and if we doctors can find a diagnosis we sometimes think that the patient is making it up and then such a center for a disease this might be the best solution. it's a situation that diana zeba is all too familiar with she's been plagued by severe pain in her legs since childhood back then no one took a seriously. myself. and told my family planning that my heart i was usually told the symptoms were the kind of growing pains are suffered by young children and then there were the gastro intestinal issues they used to give me some sort of medication to help a bit with that but the leg pains weren't taken seriously at all what it was that's people said i was imagining things that. and that went on for years. two years ago she sought help at a center for disease in our. meteorologist my code on examined her and pinpoint the cause of her problems after just two consultations. and that's me. it was a weight off my shoulders of my heart and i finally knew what was wrong with me i said false. i always had the feeling that i had something rare but it was never investigated or confirmed. by us because the doctors didn't believe me they thought i was faking it making it up and. diana suffers from a rare genetic disorder fabry disease. that's highest harsh on it starts with neuropathic pain and burning tingling or stabbing sensations in your hands and feet then there is heat and cold intolerance skin sensitivity in general a reduced ability to perspire caused by damage to nerves in the skin it can lead to heart arrhythmia and other heart issues it's all due to a specific enzyme deficiency which causes certain substances in the body to build up to harmful levels give decent. diana was prescribed medication which he's been taking for five months she still has some pain but she's been improving for. month to month where it's any good. i would never have thought that my gastrointestinal or heart problems would improve all my rash for women that's always the worst having a rash is a big deal and that's gone like she's also stopped taking many other medications like antibiotics but most importantly she now knows for sure what's wrong them and us not to feel that that's but if you have the feeling that something isn't right then you should continue to fight for a proper diagnosis and not accept a mistake let's. just feel. the diagnosis has made all the difference finally diana saber feels optimistic about the future again. and here's the scary statistic from germany about the rare diseases it takes an average patient with already six point five years from the outbreak of symptoms until he sees a specialist and in the meantime he tried ten doctors two or three wrong diagnosis were made and he has put himself through two or three wrongful surgical interventions so this is quite an odyssey how does this affect the patients so they don't know what business is it has no idea what they can expect no idea if if they ever find someone who can treat it so this uncertainty is really a problem and the second point which is also. really really tough for the patients that feel alone into the system so that it's no one can really discuss a disease and if you are ill you expect experts in the health care system and if you only find someone who says i don't know three fried no no this is really a problem that's right yes indeed so sometimes the patients hear from their doctors that all the problems are just psychological so how can you distinguish between so how can so many problems. and really somatic problems if you really have to for a long time this uncertainty about your diagnosis just brings you. a completely different psychological level and at the end you cannot really discriminate is it a problem or psychological disease or is it just not just or is there is a reaction to is a cinematic disease and you need. lots of interdisciplinary team to tackle that and and we are working together with this clinics from psychosomatic department so that we. offer the patients that we that we would think about all aspects in this context many causes of disease is a genetic they can occur in adults or kids and yeah this is this is possible so we have these eight thousand mentioned rare diseases approximately seventy eighty percent are genetic and most of the money faster in childhood but also money first later in life so that you have to add to it on the various subject of symptoms but later on when you get really good diagnostic tools we also need for the adult patients is also. genetic sequencing so that was a new genetic to us you see that even if you cannot treat it genetic disease it is still hard to give the patient the diagnosis estimates of prognosis of the patient so when it's a known disease it might might be that we can expect after four or five for as the years of the disease course that possibly in diabetes for money fast so we would not beat until the symptoms of diabetes so then you can screen for this money for station and this will help the patient. not to run into the severe symptoms and then one important point is that as soon as we have to go through this we don't have to do much more further investigations and finally we have several diseases where we can really treat and we can develop treatment based on the more likely a defect we can find present genetic diagnosis thanks so much for having me here today thank you rebecca and one of the most interesting things for me here was that this is an interdisciplinary team which takes care of the patients and we do have an international team which takes care for all the questions our viewers of the w like david. and augustine could renew christian you for the input for today's show thanks so much and keep sending the questions. on an upcoming show we'll be talking about urban stress busy streets noise and. how do a city life affect our health and mental wellbeing send your questions to in good shape at d w dot com right urban stress in the subject line we're looking forward to hearing from you. and not so rare disease is power release is also known as pressure for bladder ridge is the fear of public restrooms in most of the cases people who feel the germs in the restrooms rest assured the restrooms not that dangerous and germs everywhere. let's take a look at how they come into contact with bacteria and spread them around but where to bacteria hang out to not every day surrounding. own which species. but how many germs actually stick to our house. we checked it out. this is louisa our test subject we'll follow her around for a morning. what kinds of bacteria are to be found on louise's hones to begin with the petri dish is used to collect the samples. professor rania mortars from the institute for medical microbiology and hygiene at philips university of marburg will be analyzing the samples for us. so what did he find right after louisa got up . we found lots of germs that are typically found on the hand like strains of micro caucus and stuff. we would expect a clean washed hand to yield about fifty colonies on a dish like this and this kind of thing but louisa had three hundred so quite a few times more than a few thousands this market or maybe she didn't wash their hands properly or that's for the towel she used to dry them wasn't cleaned up to talk with. what other bacteria will join those germs to find out louisa won't wash their hands for a while. the first candidates are lurking in the kitchen in sponges for instance. how long is this woman in use it's good for a five weeks it's certainly never been washed. the direct contact test shows that the sponge contains gut own skin flora but also fecal bacteria most of them come from food in serious cases they can cause lung infections or even sepsis. now they're probably sticking to louise's fingers and that's not good because places with lots of people are often ideal for bacterial exchange. here louis said picks up a few more bacteria. experts actually consider the metal bars in the stop button fairly harmless but. you're going to see large numbers of germs on the seat of your skin flora but also germs that shouldn't be there. like us anita backed by in other words someone sat here with a bacterium that could be a pathogen the crow transmitted in large numbers of it could cause an infection for two oscars and benson was making perceive the order. many people expect to find large numbers of but here but in fact the germ load on an escalator rail is quite low. carts though are a different story there often lots of classic human bacteria on the grid mostly harmless skin germs but also pathogens the cause diarrhea there's some clue luckily there were no pathogens on it often but you do commonly find them on shopping carts if they pose a hygiene problem because they're rarely if ever cleaned him. louisa's workplace is also a hotbed of bacteria the sample from the door handles show four hundred colonies. what's worse the telephone and computer keyboard both have too many cut and fecal bacteria on the germs can spread on down punts. and is this even worse no not if the toilet is cleaned regularly. you too little toilets can inspire fear but in this case there was nothing dramatic we found a large number of bacteria but no pathogens to worry about its contents or mom's or . has come into contact with many different bacteria this morning how many of it here to her. on the course of the day louise is being contaminated with some bacteria that aren't necessarily pleasant alongside gut flora and enter a caucus that was a stuff a caucus or ears which is a pos forming germ and abandoned as the need to back on a germ the causes lung infections in hospitals in immune compromised patients especially when it's antibiotic resistant come. up love you either can wash their hands it's a good idea to wash for twenty seconds after going to the toilet before eating and to try your hands thoroughly to keep the bacteria from multiplying. i personally can't understand why some are afraid to be the dog because he can use darkness as he likes to. say. this is what rebecca to man will see for the next forty two hours absolutely nothing. darkness therapy involves spending time in a room without any light. and by me a lot of solace is i know i felt this really strong draw this pull a feeling that i would like to spend several days in the dark and i wasn't afraid or skeptical after all we all come from the womb to elsmore to live. her dark retreat is being supervised by natural health practitioner saskia your rebecca moves in with her an hour before it starts. this room will be her she did domain in case of an emergency saskia will always be close by. if you feel really moved by something or fear bubbles up and you notice that you need help then just call out i'll be there. the light switches are taped down just to make sure and the blinds are closed time to get serious. some believe that living for days in complete darkness is dangerous. heights of depriving someone of external stimuli like lights for example which is so very important for us a sense of well being is something that can be very harmful for people who aren't particularly stable psychologically or even physically. come. i've never heard or read anything that suggests this could trigger psychosis or anything negative. and there are lots of books about it people fear could happen but experience shows differently i don't know of a single case where this has actually happened. saskia has undergone three sessions of darkness therapy herself. the last one was twenty six days long that was when she decided to share this experience with others but support is important she talks to her clients for an hour each day. forty two hours later and rebecca is emerging from the darkness listless and old how does she feel she moves carefully as she did when it was dark. and. i feel really really grounded and definitely very rested relaxed soft but also very in sync with myself. alfheim there by mia. rebecca plans to come again to continue her therapy in the dark. as a t.v. doctor i do love the spotlight and it will go on again next week and until then let's all try to stay in good shape. to a. good . kooks to. see what's coming up. i'm still going to sleep so much movement in the listening to this. sentence hold the fear. it's fun to take a look at what all that means for the type of clothes. the bomb does legal fees to explain the total. max this week's highlights. into flying with northern ball behind the scenes. intensive drinking blackline in southern france. playing video games and. the roman catholic church the most fun to get. up and fighting for the place to take you seriously in the world oh boy here's what's coming up women's told. me it's more towards smart stay in the gym rank recently in dangerous time the time w. me for my. main nineteen sixteen and i'm trying to go around the most. young people in the field against the currents generation. it was an absolute move downstream from the stupidity in teaching kids to. be demanding nothing less than a whole system of. my middle stream of. limbs with the beyond the plate to grow from our generation watch the vietnam war every day. those were the members going to remove the first. and i had a feeling of being home to something for. the seeds civil rights the peace movement. plan is pure. sixty years. this week. this is due to the news coming to you live from berlin after wreaking havoc and the philippines typhoon mongolians it makes landfall in china about three hong kong with gale force winds down to rental rain more than half a million people have been evacuated across several chinese things as they brace for impact also coming up. a russian antigovernment activist has reportedly been flown to berlin for medical treatment after a suspected poisoning referencing all that is one of four of pussy right protesters who stormed the pitch during this year's world cup final in moscow. and new marrowbone a world record in berlin as kenya as any other kid choking finishes the race in just two hours one that is i'm scared to nine seconds. i'm out on let's go to have you with us talk in mind gates is now hissing southern china hong kong and guangdong province with gale force winds and torrential rain the super storm has already caused major destruction in the philippines authorities there say dozens are feared dead and floating landslides collapsed buildings. nature lashes the coast of hong kong with full force and these people got to witness it firsthand. as hong kong issued a maximum alert for typhoon mind goot the territory's government warned people to prepare for the worst. storm surges were expected to raise water levels by up to four meters. hundreds of residents have been evacuated to shelters while others hope to ride it out. almost all flights in and out of the city's airport have been counseled so for anyone who hopes to leave hong kong before the storm there was little option but to keep out of harm's way and stay put. this right i didn't expect to get caught up in a typhoon when i booked a trip to hong kong. i've had to scrap all my sightseeing plans i can't go out the subways closed buses have stopped running and there's no ferry service at all. further west the gambling hub of macau closed the doors to its casinos for the first time in history ahead of the storm. authorities here faced criticism for failing to prepare residents for a deadly typhoon last year now they face another huge challenge is said to be the strongest typhoon to hit the region this year. meanwhile at least eleven people have died in the u.s. as rainfall from tropical storm florence causes severe flooding in north and south carolina authorities say that the devastation is far from over there warning residents not to attempt returning to their homes to. visit as a trailer park where people are struggling to cope with the effects of the storm. this is not supposed to be here this is broken so is that. new bern north carolina bore the brunt of florence's fury hundreds of people had to be rescued from flooded homes and cars across the river on the edge of town one park of trailer homes can't even begin to dig itself out. a small trailer unlike a solid house is nearly defenseless against the torrent of wind rain and floods that the hurricane unleashed in this neighborhood it was pure destruction for many people here this is all they have and the waters may have receded some now but this is how high they got so much of this sent his family to safety a state away but chose to stay behind in his trailer saying he had worked too hard to simply abandon him go go go go go which i had those are people saying that we should wait for a week for i need to rebuild but i because if i going to get to the hotel and at the end of the give you know. francis tycoon just arrived back he and his wife took shelter for two days at the country club where francis works and this is how they found their home. we're going to see if someone will help us maybe or the further government that will help us because we don't have any other option for to go for now. prancer so tammy don't have insurance they can't afford it they're not expecting any help from the government tami suffers from chronic health problems meaning her husband will do whatever he can to clean up alone even then it might not be enough . i'm not sure i don't feel like this will ever be back to normal because i just don't feel like after all this damage it would be safe. just don't know what's going to happen to be truthful and i don't know where we're going to go. i'm just a louse i'm standin in a daze and i know it doesn't help. i'm lost. forecast even more water could flood here in the next day no matter what happens people here say they'll come together to help each other out. now to some of the other stories making news around the world. syrian state media say israel has launched a missile attack on the main airports in damascus the claims were backed up by the syrian observatory for human rights and said the attack targets arms warehouses causing heavy damage no casualties or recourses. an israeli man has died after being stabbed by a palestinian a shopping mall in the west bank the israeli army say the assailant was shot following the attack near a busy junction south of jerusalem which has been a major flashpoint in recent years. nine environmental activists have been injured and thirty four were detained as police attempt to clear a forest in western germany the land is owned by energy company owner which wants to clear large swathes of trees to a new coal mining in the area activists began occupying the area in twenty twelve. a russian anti-government activist associated with the protest group pussy riot has reportedly been flown to berlin for medical treatment. was taken ill three days ago and admitted to a moscow hospital pussy riot members say that they believe he was poisoned. this video appears to show prominent anti kremlin activists people to versus the love arriving in the german capital that was posted on twitter by nadia tolokonnikova a fellow member of pussy riot the group believes the love was poisoned and an attempt to intimidate or even kill him pussy riot member veteran economical she says he is in berlin to receive medics of people were watching live the four protesters later appeared in court and they served fifteen day jail sentences. d.w. interviewed verzilov and other proceed right members back in august for the love explained the group's approach. if. it isn't on tuesday can political collective we don't have a fixed number of members the different people come together from various factions you would to the young activists talked of a harsh climate for opposition groups who are frequently condemned by state media and the nasty attack us because they have to because pussy riot don't do what they want that's just the way it is the state media always attack opposition groups but it. was hospitalized in moscow three days ago a perceived rights activist was quoted as saying he had lost his eyesight and ability to talk it is not clear what caused his illness but some fingers have pointed to the kremlin several high profile poisoning cases have been blamed on the russian government in the past fifteen years though it has always denied any involvement so far the kremlin has not commented on the loves case. well we're joined now by our correspondent. in moscow and here in studio by nina political correspondent host you both now major i'm going to start off with you has there been any reactions at all in russia to reports that has in fact been brought to berlin you know their little reactions from the russian far. as your support. for medical treatment. now nina i'm going to ask you about the german aspect of it i suppose and have the german authorities actually react as to these reports doesn't look authentic doesn't just the video is so far out most reliable source is billed newspaper a tabloid the biggest tabloid in germany and they actually say that the chancery and the foreign office are involved in the case are involved and they have been informed but we don't have any official information yet what we do know is that build built the reporter was there at the airport he took photos of the woman who posted the video on twitter the video appears to be authentic and then also a spokesperson for the airport in southern belin confirmed that there have been an ambulance fly tones i say evening ok so we're still waiting for official confirmation but the airport has said that there was a fact an ambulance does being brought in now near dragon is that surprising do you think that the kremlin and loud him to leave the country a good question but honestly i don't have a really good answer to that yes i can only speculate but if you look at spencer's childhood in terms of the salute of canadian or russian citizenship for the reasons you know the russians have to let him go for if he wants to leave russia not a long time to leave russia would raise suspicion for example that it was the good sportsmanship sort of reasons this is not a reason why it's a lot to do rush. and nina do even know hospital might be in again builds newspaper reports that he has been taken to the hospital which is really old hospital and world famous as treated international patients in the past we also do know that the cinema for peace foundation that is based here in berlin they paid for the flight they organized the plane they took him back here they have helped pussy riot before they are in close contact and they said pussy riot reached out to them last week for help and then when they got in contact the only calls they acted and brought him to berlin so that is pretty sure that he is here so far we're still waiting to hear from them again but they are saying that he is a bit better he is not yet able to speak ok and drag just a couple of weeks ago you in fact met. in moscow can you tell us a bit more about him and his role in the group. well he's a very likeable person as someone that is also very smart guy to me but he's one of the organizer who runs events he's a publisher of the investor to use website called me yes although i'm not really a big fan of the current government you know russia well after and i made it was. he took pictures with the song because his cat was playing with our t.v. camera this is it as a separate funny boy someone will you know who. would be great to hang out with and . so a very likable person he directorate in moscow thank you and you know has a thank you very much for coming in studio to. the brain marathon is taking place today and it is one of the world's top marathons and the men's world record has been smashed slashed by kenyan elliott kept her till the one last year and this time beat the world record by more than a menace clocking in a time of two hours one minute and thirty nine seconds the therapist and mild conditions in berlin are ideal conditions for runners it's ok's so says rivals finished around five minutes behind him. but earlier we spoke to our idea of use for its correspondent mark meadows who was standing by coast to the finish line at the front of my case it was very very special the red one here today let me tell you that chile has just broken the world record is completely destroyed it's getting to our one million thirty nine second now the previous world record which was set here in two thousand and fourteen was two hours two minutes fifty seven seconds so we smashed it by well over a minute i mean people a few years ago were thinking was that even humanly possible it is quite incredible what he has achieved and he's only is thirty three so he's not a spring chicken but obviously is training. in kenya in high altitude helps him but still this is something massive in the world of athletics you might remember a few a few months ago he tried to actually break the famous to our barrier which no one thought was really possible it was a publicity stunt for a sportsman manufacturer he didn't quite manage it that day and it didn't count as a world record because of the pacemakers that he used but given what he's achieved today you have to wonder whether that two hour barrier could be smashed by could chill gain in the future the last seven men's marathon world records have now been broken here in berlin is the home of the marathon. you're watching d.v.d.'s stay with us. on a route and they will not succeed in dividing us about not succeed in taking the people off the streets because we're tired of the stick trying to show you. taking the stand global news that matters d. w. made for mines. her first day of school in the jungle. first the clueless and. then doris crane the moment arrives. joined during a training on her journey back to freedom. in our interactive documentary. tour on the right to tame returns home on t w dot com tang's. dortmund fans were delighted as the black and yellow summer signings stole the show and kicked off much they treat with a three one win against frankfurt. abdu diablo open the scoring for dortmund in the thirty six minutes it's the frenchman's first goal for the black and yellows since signing this summer from the mines now in the sixty eighth minute sebastien of their equalized for frank first hammering home i've done neither cost across in stuff. but just four minutes later dortmund retake the lead thanks to my wheels balls and two minutes from time buckle i pass it rendered at the home victory with a debut gulch. no free stuff welcome to the bonus league on d.w.i. public. dorman's victories set us up nicely for an exciting weekend for people and there's been no shortage of goals so let's see what's coming up on today's show. we start with labor couzens quest for points we'll see if they could end miserable start to the season by shopping bag. and a tighter fare is expected between vulture and tatar berlin two sides that have been flexing their muscles this season. now leverkusen were full of promise before the season kicked off but their start the campaign has been dreadful two back to back defeats and this weekend they faced an uphill battle against biron in munich could they surprise their solid hosts and finally pick up some points let's find out. i'm they've accused coach heiko haley went on the defensive against by him and even left out germany for what a union bryant. but the first good chance fell to laver cozen giago handled the ball a penalty was awarded by him protested but the decision looked to be correct. couldn't follow and stepped up a man you'll know you're saved for the spot kick had to be retaken because the referee but not whistled. this time ventile made a better job of it while not too late because now after five minutes. i replied though came just five minutes later france world cup winner column to answer the social the greater desire to equalize but his game would later turn sour. recall championed by and began suppressed leverkusen defense crumbled and robin made them pay the dutchman taking full advantage of yonathan towers mistake by and had turned the game around but lost the least so to a knee injury. the game petered out after the break but it came alive again on eighty minutes red for carrying bell about the just eight minutes after coming on pulling this ugly challenge on ruffy near by and were incensed. the hose that no chance of ten men and by and sealed it late on through him as rodriguez later cusanus third loss in three. no one to this of course but it is how it is so it's we have no points from three games but we mustn't lose our cool. guy and celebrate that perfect start but halak side are in dire need of some inspiration. two games and two wins that's have all spirit and berlin have kicked off their season the world surprisingly strong start to the campaign has their fans feeling rather optimistic after struggling for the past couple of seasons now their opponents had to have also looked pretty nifty and evenly balanced much was predicted but could one of the to inform sides edge head. those ferg and hats were both hoping to continue their flying starts to the new campaign the hosts were in control alley on with your own russi or trying his luck from distance on several occasions the frenchman's efforts were less of a threat to the go and more to the camera man beside it that bump to the head meant he had to cook off early fortunately there was no lasting damage. for much of the game the two sides cancelled each other out just after the hour mark just fire odell rowson capitalize on a wayward pass to put hats. in france by the opening goal was the dutch win his first in the bundesliga. so it stayed until the eighty seventh minute when on a my it clattered into max arnold right on the edge of the box. the referee eventually gave the penalty. dispatched by the stuttering eunice mali. one one the school but the drama was just beginning in the first minutes of stoppage time on dry due to slip an ingenious free kick under the walter but half setback in front of my it was due to a second goal from a free kick into games. my but with time running out john brooks headed on to admin many and he leveled things up again by bruno love india's team snatching a draw from the jaws of defeat thanks to their new founds never say die attitude. is coming back to see the image of the team has gained confidence they know from the last few weeks and some situations at the end of last season that they can come back from behind that gives. now it's time to take a look at some of the other big toys this weekend in a moment we'll see when this leipsic and turn over search but first we look at clash against chalco the royal blues have lost both of their opening ties even coach to many go to tesco feeling under pressure so let's take a look at how they got on against a glass site that hasn't tasted the feat yet this season. the answer is quite poorly the players are barely on the pitching block but we're ready in the leaves are as skins are with the opener and the third minute the before shelter were poor on the attack but when they did get a chance on goal from a corner they came bitterly close. just keeping sally said name the be midway through the second half block but came close some cells to night by the woodwork the but the foles ultimately poured more salt in the royal blues wounds when they got the second in the seventy seven minutes i was convinced cross in the box was not some but only some play to set up the take hammer on the big shot because britain mbulelo pulled one back in the dying seconds to one of the final score if the many go to discuss side lose their third on the bounce and find themselves in a minor crisis. over life see the start of the game on the front foot good him a shot deflected for use of pull since ahead in the opener in the nine minutes by the it was the danish internationals first of the season. four minutes later the guests were back in the game nicklaus fuku with a superb volley to level the school abut the biopsy stepped up again in may of forsberg and team of vanna began to shine in the sweet setup the start gets reestablished the host slender lead on forty minutes was the boss of the break they teamed up again a team of an hour with his brace and life seek with three one a if the ban over weren't ready to go down without a fight though because auburn always pulled one back from the gas in the six. the fifth minute but that was the end of their resurgence however still without a win this season while leipsic win their first game of the campaign at the third time of asking i. well let's round up all the action so far of course on saturday and as we saw byron beat there's a draw between volves and had to berlin got the beach. and it was good news for new comers fortuna dusseldorf. secured the win with a late strike he converted from the spot in the eight and seventh minute to give the promoted side their first victory of the season it's a bitter defeat for hoffenheim who had equalised just a minute before just indorse winner the now of course i forgot to mention there that of course leipzig get beaten over three tonight in minds to host managed to beat but it turned out to be no easy task the winner came in the nine hundred thirty minutes with alexandra maxine firing home that marked the end of a chaotic and eleven minutes in which took the lead before minds turned the game for keeper fabio for one to enjoy watching the replays back he was a full for both minds goals now there's dortmund victory against frankfurt on friday night of course on sunday braman host nuremberg and stuttgart travel to freiburg. and now that's take a look at the table of course what a shocker munich up there at the top but there is a little bit of movement dormant move up on valves bergan had to move down a little bit that the other end of the table we have somebody new down the bottom laver coups and what an absolutely shocking start to the season they're having to carve move ever so slightly up shelter looked and they're just one spot above those relegation places really good results for them now it's time for the bun this league is play of the day as voted by our followers on twitter and the winner with fifty nine percent of the vote is barnes are you robin the dutchman meant jonathan todd's clearance and hammered home this past equality early in the opening half put munich i had never couzens lucas for a decade was left absolutely stunned are you and robin is your play of the day. surely one of the best goals of disease and i would say. well on sunday we'll be joined in the studio to discuss this weekend's bomb the sneak action by on this league of journalists kip holden will be asking will shock and labor manage to win a game sometime soon i'm sure their fans really want to go to rose or for them so do send us your questions for him to the address is on your screen now it's time to say goodbye will be back of course so the tide you over on tilt back and here's some great moments from the weekend so far so for me and the rest of the bundesliga team here in berlin. max this week's highlight. flying. drinking. interactive video games. as it once was. a good guy. but then countless tragedies on. my. there's a slope on everyone on the top of them and no way for god forgive their son or determined not to give up hope the joys of iraq we are still good. remember america in forty five minutes on t w. such the first time doing it's hard to tell me. a hard core you have incredible it's a whole new more. online inserter space industry alarm it's a new era of sexuality. will lovesickness be a thing of and sexual frustration to us i still have to get used to these robot new ways of exploring new frontier in sex and love three point zero. the toughest on september twenty fifth on. i want to welcome to our high life edition with the best pics of the week here's a look at what we've put together for you today. dizzy heights the magical cliffs of media your are in greece. digital art video games on show at london's victoria and albert museum. in wings of desire saving one of the world's rarest bird species. we got the show on the cliffs of meteorite they're located in central greece and play host to one of the largest complexes of eastern orthodox monasteries now you might know these clips from a james bond movie he climbed them in an action scene in the film for your eyes only all the meteoric clips attract climbers from all over the world because all of the routes and on peaks with amazing views of the landscape you're actually joined a group of climbers for an exciting adventure captured on film things to a cooperation between this broadcaster and the so-called multi drone project. the main rock formation in central greece is a magical place of stunning. paradise for rock climbing. game from the nearby village of bluffs climbing hands like so many of them. let me use my life david because every morning. i see the oaks and they say. i hope must go they're climbing over the place it's my life. these cliffs were formed over twenty million years ago from deposits of rock sand and month left by the streams which flowed through him at the time. to. natural caves in the region still back traces of former hermitage is this is where since the nineteenth century pius individuals chose to live in total isolation the caves could only be reached via two wooden lattice in the twelfth century monks began building large i'm on the streets in the area today meteorite its best known for places of worship. peaks up to three hundred meters high initially they could be accessed only with rope land as a windlasses of the twenty four monasteries once built most lined room today just six and still inhabited what made pious people flock here writers of the rock and short protection against intruders and brought you closer to god and the rock formations are spoiled by having effect on people. for a long time not see it served as the president of the mighty or rock climbing club he still enjoys scaling rocks today and often meets other climbers here. running. up or pairing to climb the iconic spindle monolith. to germans kicked off the meteoric climbing craze during the one nine hundred seventy s. they set the first time in roots and drove safety hawks into the rocks. christos. is the first one to reach the peak ensuring that fun gala spot ceo's can safely follow. he has failed the spindle in twenty years. one knows that every climb assigns the summit register. patsy always says he scaled his very first role as a ten year old. free solo because we don't. think of what the old we saw that month. look at us with the crazy young boys. i mean with what the mind. itself that can see is taking one of the region's most scenic climbing routes the pain that. still is better known than this is making sure. it's safe. it's freedom it's no use to know your limits and go above them it's. out of the books it's. like trying to relax when you are not been likes push the song i can sink my life without crying because the coming year is placed almost so that kassam crystal especially young is trying to explore more and more if they school just landscape he looked at. video games have come a long way since pac-man or space invaders to become a large part of today's popular culture while here in germany it's estimated that forty per cent of the population play video games and that number seems to be growing like them or not there is no disputing the video games play an important role in many people's lives so much so that the victorian albert museum in london is devoting a special exhibition to the subject and shows the diversity of modern videogames and how they impact modern culture to this day. video games have become more than just a way to pass the time in fact they're currently being presented as an art form at a museum in london the victoria and albert who's dedicating an entire exhibition to video games focusing on their development since the early two thousand years there is a turning point around that access to broadband to social media to new design tools new commentary online new whites talk about video games how it's really changed the nature of the medium and moved it from a particular direction for it so much broader wall but can explore different ideas . that applies to games with a million dollar budget. as well as small independent productions the show with the b.n.a. pays special attention to how games look for an exhibition about all the design and so not said today video games make perfect sense to be explored here right now digital design is one of the most important elements of contemporary design and that's why we're at the forefront of exploring that one example of outstanding design is that twenty thirteen gaming epic that lanced of us. were used all freight train cars and trucks players assume the roles of father and daughter trying to survive in a world ravaged by an epidemic. thanks to an exciting story line matched by deceptively realistic graphics the game is sold millions of copies. of. the exhibit reveals the months long painstaking work that goes into developing stories and game design. design is also key to the success of journey a surprise hit from twenty twelve. players roam a virtual desert that's why the games developer. went to a real sandy environment to design and. we went to that is no dunes on that store through l.a. and decided to spend time running in the sand and you could see me playing with a scarf in the air and you know just sliding and walking and feeling with this and felt like because we really wanted to build this summer said world where this and as a unique feature. journey was the first video game ever to be nominated for a grammy it soundtrack was a contender in two thousand and thirteen. coming. i think one of the biggest things that you can do is you can really reach for something new and different go into the blue ocean and try to find other things unique feeling or unique style or unique way of interacting that really captures hearts. the exhibition also make space for games that dive into topical social issues like the game how do you do it with its playful take on gender issues. in. the graveyard tackles issues of aging players take on the role of an elderly woman a big contrast to brutal first person shooters. harvey and michael so i mean developed the game a lot of video games deal with deaths but they deal with them in very artificial ways and confronting a gamer with the idea of death was sort of in a way we were playing with their expectations of what games death is and then also making them think about well the human condition at the same time just what we wanted to show this is this confrontation of life and death in the city and the harmony between those. the virtual and the real worlds are growing closer for example game fashion scene sponsored by design. in reality and vice versa. players go beyond just playing it they create they they take the characters from these walls floyd and create cults play and they create communities and you know i think both of these there isn't some topics are superphosphate for the future of video. to share with the victoria and albert museum and back at the beginning at least in appearance it's an arcade retro style hands on that you can touch and try to cultivate really experimenting and having fun is what video games are all about and in this case in a museum. we turn our attention now to some wildlife and the northern bald ibis may not be the most beautiful bird in the world i mean look at it it is not it's a phase only a mother could love but it is one of the rarest now the species was almost entirely extinct with an initiative between the european union and the world wildlife fund was launched to save it now a unique resettlement project is underway and we take a look now at how things are going so far. it's an impressive sign when thirty one northern border ibis is flying from building in germany to their winter quarters in italy. faster mothers and steak and cotton estrada are showing the parents the way down. to two women a part of a team dedicated to saving more than bold ideas from extinction. after working with the birds for months they know that beauty is more than skin deep even for but it's . time for a lot of the same unfun with a lot of people say they look ugly for us and the life but when they see the birds live they realize that's not true and they're really lovely birds never. act each one has its own character each one is special for this or that and that's what gives them the beauty that these birds radiate. the semester's are scared as much and this is asker he always wants to be close to you to be beheaded for that you can recognize him right away from his behavior alone. so even if they all look pretty much the same we can tell the difference although wasn't that she does her work with them every day that the secret has led to this on. the northern border i bear says one of the grammar is birds on the planet it's been an endangered species for for centuries but now some birds are being reintroduced into the wild. they are made an ultralight aircraft too fast to mums in yellow t. shirts to aid recognition a megaphone and team boss johannes fits the behavior biologist and initiator of the recent hope project explains what else is required. if google deviant or higher than birds we still have a kept in captivity so when you want to release them into the wild you have to show them the migration route or create a new migration tradition. and that takes a lot of effort. i know schmoe speak and call him out esther start working with a bird shortly after they hatch the foster mother to teach them to react to certain calls oh he's. fine the kind that is. the northern border is his get very close to their foster mother's. the young birds are supposed to follow the women everywhere because they have and it's medicine and we kept and when they're between three and eight days old they learn how as soon as they learn how to take food from a sudden we start calling them like this at every feeding they hear it so they'll connect the food with the car that's what i've been the one where in the ultralight aircraft we use it so that they'll follow us around them it sounds and a half. you can call and i asked i have spent half a year training their parents to fly with them the project is supported by the worldwide fund for nature of the fault doesn't always follow the plan it takes practice. funny i'm a fan of plans but then we start off in small steps and we take really short flights and slowly increase them and then when we've been in the air for a while we circle around and keep calling them and entice them to faraway meadows and eventually when they notice that we're taking them on outings that we're flying to new meadows with them that spurs their interest then they get it and follow us everywhere that's why i'm a tin foil. now they have an almost one thousand kilometer journey ahead of them be you finances the reason for hope project for your highness fights the plane journey is something special. this is baby just moving with the birds in three dimensional space crossing the alpine divide that's an elevation of up to two thousand six hundred meters and is fascinating almost surreal to not see all. after exactly two weeks they lined up the new goon of all the talent and nature reserve in south in tuscany. and as i say out here just happy to have arrived at their winter quarters and succeeded in showing the ibises the way south. but the joy is tempered with sorrow because soon the foster mothers must bid farewell to their charges nothing to without it is a bit sad but then that's the aim that they're free and independent and that doesn't work they're relying on us and human opponents are paying them. to foster mothers will stay with their feathered friends until november bought by next year at the latest the burns should be able to fly so. not only the colors of wine are rosy white or red but did you know that black is also an option black wine stems from the mild back grape and was given this name because of the extreme darkness while here in europe it's mostly produced in southwest france and that is where we are headed for our next report so let's find out if black wine is really black and see how its rich color affects the taste. the core region in southern france is one of europe's oldest wine regions its claim to fame is the mother back great. prize for the best mother of twenty eighteen went to the chateau de meco as vineyard owned by bed time to go home. monday from core is also called the black wind it isn't hard to see why there's a saying if you can look through it it isn't a mound there. are some. it's a grape very very difficult to grow bird here in. meat. very. very. bad target holes father bought the chateau de mega whereas in the one nine hundred eighty three. he turned it into a four star hotel with thirty rooms and a michelin starred restaurant. the castle ambiance is part of the appeal. of the bishops' of. until a certain twenty's interests who you don't have a lot of. initiative from the certain sensory. could always growing my back even len. but during the nineteenth century a fits plague the region and destroyed most of. them out back break from cold war was only rescued from extinction by the vintners hard work in the one nine hundred forty s. . lydia and claude studied agriculture and dedicate their efforts to replanting mountebank they bought land which was once used to grow wine but was then abandoned because it was too hard to reach a fossil in france fable. and talk about preserving cultural heritage france restores churches castles even old factories and now we're restoring our agricultural heritage clean one. we tried to do for a customer what the. big from the media early age and then they can taste really what people drinking power during. before they started their own vineyards the couple worked for other wine growers for years with great success as experts in soil analysis they advised hundreds of venice the world over for their own slopes they chose that very traditional. where works in so long time for the moment yes said we make we make we help people to print when you're outdoors who's a word and govern the thing and so she said why we can't. so there's a whole region of the decision. the chateau de meco as produces on a very different scale it is more than six thousand five hundred tech tons of land . also take center stage at the hotel restaurant in twenty seventeen the chefs julia plus so was awarded a michelin star preparing regional dishes that get perfectly with the wine. i like to serve freshwater fish with a mound back. from one of the wankers especially well with. the support from. actually originated in the coal region but it's not only associated with french wine about seventy percent of the world's most of that grapes are grown in mendoza argentina. the difference between a argentina and. quite important. this is. the differences like between peak us who are. great there are different. wind from the south of france. one of the best is time on it europe has to offer. and finally we stay in france and head to the northwestern part of the country to brittany for a kolesnik dish now these are crack made with buckwheat but while cuts are normally served with sweet drink jam or even chocolate spread got a lead or rather salty we want to take a closer look now at various versions of a traditional. brittany is famous for its rugged n.p. to full coastline this region in northwestern france is home above all to fishermen and farmers. locally grown wheat is plentiful here good news for the region's many critics say and there's certainly no shortage of those here in the small town of compaq which dates back to the middle ages. the company defeat is one of the oldest here it's run by audrey green day and her colleague. for her cripps she mixes different types of flour in addition to ordinary wheat meal she also uses flour made from buckwheat. known here as blaine wa or black wheat it's a key ingredient in the proton gallons. lezzie mobil says and i've added salt to my various types of flour i mean also and i mix it all up with my hands. so i add one ache. and finally water. so what's. the mixture is needed to form a light batter. then it's ready for cooking. let's thank you so this is the day. the griddle is coated with egg yolk before cooking rather than fat. that's how we wait. only if we use a lot of butter in brittany butter with salt. and a goes in the center genially and then kill your cheese over the top five in there now add ham and fold it. then you brush it with salted butter. and it's done. all kinds of toppings can be used for the. favorites include goat's cheese or rock for sausage bacon or slices of pork loin. the gallops are traditionally served with cider. was first introduced to france from asia in the middle ages it quickly became popular among farmers. the plants thrive even in brittany's acidic soil and rainy conditions. today in that block wheat takes just three months to grow that's very fast and that's what made it so popular. it was duchess of brittany who really brought it in . and she divided the region into an upper and a lower brittany. so in upper brittany their work i let and in lower brittany the more refined clip. are not just popular with the locals but also with tourists diners at the cricket he disagrees you get to select the ingredients of their choice. and as the meal is very inexpensive it's common to have multiple courses. for dessert many opt for a sweet kind. it's usually served with a homemade caramel sauce. but the company to floozy offers a huge selection of sweet cups including with chocolate or fruit preserves. for the more exclusive club was common yes. and that wraps up another week of euro max you can always keep up with the show on our website or by following us on social media for me in the rest of us here at euro max thanks for tuning in well seeing and seeing. iraq. as it once was it was a good that i have just spent a day. but then countless tragedies unfold. my uncle was a slope that everyone has told them no way for lost or leave their sergeant to give up. the joys of iraq we are still. remembered baghdad fifteen minutes r.t.w. . climate change is just. waist length. isn't it time for good news to go at africa people and projects that are changing no ones are meant for the better it's up to us to make a difference let's split each other. what it could be environment magazine. d w. n n gemini with demi at any time i've come to meet lace easy names. yet i don't like a bit of pressure. to sing along to see this to come from soup. to for. interactive exercises. everything is online and interactive benjamin fifty fifty w. . a contentious figure at home. here in germany. from the fall of the unlimited. to german reunification. and the end of the cold war. gorbachev was one of the great heroes of the twentieth century mikhail gorbachev the last leader of the soviet union was an agent of change quickly met his downfall i have decided to resign my duties as president of the soviet union. he continues to fight for world peace with the reminder i know that you have to comprehend where peace has taken us today there is a new arms race. the hour of time gorbachev and the opportunity for peace wasted starts october third on t w. this is indeed news live from berlin after wreaking havoc in the philippines typhoon man good makes landfall in china battering hong kong with gale force winds and torrential rain more than half a million people have been evacuated across several chinese cities as they brace for impact also coming up. a russian as he government activist has reportedly been flown to berlin for medical treatment after a suspected poisoning her vera to lob was one of the four pussy riot protesters who stormed the football pitch during this year's world cup final in moscow. and the marathon world record is smashed in berlin as kenya's a kid choking finishes the race in just two hours while. a minute and thirty nine seconds. spicer it's good to have you with us typhoon mangled is now hitting southern china battering hong kong and guangdong province with gale force winds and torrential rain the super storm has already caused a major destruction in the philippines authorities there say dozens are feared dead in flooding landslides and collapsed buildings. nature lashes the coast of home calling with full force and these people got to witness it firsthand . as hong kong issued a maximum alert for typhoon mind goot the territories government warned people to prepare for the last. storm surges were expected to raise water levels by up to four meters. hundreds of residents have been evacuated to shelters while others hope to ride it out. almost all flights in and out of the city's airport have been counseled so for anyone who hopes to the phone come before the storm there was little option but to keep out of harm's way and stay put. this right so i didn't expect to get caught up in a typhoon when i booked a trip to hong kong. i've had to scrap all my sightseeing plans i can't go out the subways closed buses have stopped running and there's no ferry service at all. the west the gambling hub of macau closed the doors to its casinos for the first time in history ahead of the storm. authorities here faced criticism for failing to pad residents for a deadly typhoon last year now they face another huge challenge just said to be the strongest typhoon to hit the region this year. meanwhile more bad weather has left eleven people dead in the u.s. massive amounts of rain from tropical depression florence continue to cause severe flooding in north and south carolina authorities say the devastation is far from over there warning residents not to attempt returning to their homes. visited a trailer park where people are struggling to cope with the effects of the storm. this is not supposed to be here this is broken so is that new bern north carolina bore the brunt florence's fury hundreds of people had to be rescued from flooded homes and cars. across the river on the edge of town one park of trailer homes can't even begin to dig itself out. a small trailer unlike a solid house is nearly defenseless against the torrent of wind rain and floods that the hurricane unleashed in this neighborhood it was pure destruction for many people here this is all they have in the waters may have receded some now but this is how high they got. so this sent his family to safety a state away but chose to stay behind in his trailer saying he had worked too hard to simply abandon a go go go go go. which i had those are people saying that we should wait for i want we tory i need to rebuild but because if i going but i need times to get the hope and at the end of the you know. frances tycoon just arrived back he and his wife took shelter for two days at the country club where frances works and this is how they found their home. almost. we're going to see if someone will help us maybe this he or the further government that will help us because we don't have any other option for it to go for now we'll stay here. you know within the. prancer so tammy don't have insurance they can't afford it they're not expecting any help from the government tammy suffers from chronic health problems meaning her husband will do whatever he can to clean up alone even then it might not be enough. i'm not sure i don't feel like this will ever be back to normal because i just don't feel like after all this damage it would be safe. just don't know what's going to happen to be truthful and i don't know where we're going to go. i'm just at a loss i'm standin in the days and i know it doesn't help. i'm lost. no matter what happens. to help out. russian government activist associated with a protest group of pussy riot has been flown to berlin for medical treatment. three days ago and admitted to a moscow hospital. he was poisoned this video appears to show prominent kremlin activist. arriving in the german capital it was posted on twitter by. a fellow member of pussy riot the group believes was poisoned in an attempt to intimidate or even kill him. says he is in berlin to receive medical treatment. was one of those who invaded the pitch during july cup final and. millions of people were watching live the protestors later appeared in court and they served fifteen day jail sentences. interviewed and other pussy riot members back in august. explained the group's approach. taken political. we don't have a fixed number of members different people come together from various actions. the young activists talked of a harsh climate for opposition groups who are frequently condemned by state media. i mean. just because they have to because pussy riot don't do what they want just the way it is the state media always attack opposition groups. was hospitalized in moscow three days ago a prissy riot to vist was quoted as saying he had lost his eyesight and ability to talk it is not clear what caused his illness but some fingers have pointed to the kremlin the russian government was recently implicated in the poisoning case of takes double agents. though it has always denied any involvement so far the kremlin has not commented on josie lopes case. and we're joined now by our correspondent in moscow and here in the studio by nina who is the political correspondent to both of you. if i can begin with you have there been any reactions in russia to reports that has been brought to berlin. you know will. there be only. yeah a couple of news when you reach a ryall steve there been no fishel reactions from the russian government so far the state controlled media like rian obviously they report that he has left russia for medical treatment and go and that was basically it ok and needed do we have any official confirmation from the german german side that that he is in fact here know the devon foreign office as in fact declined to comment on the case they quote many strict privacy laws but then built news pay for the biggest tabloids here in germany m. says that both that angela merkel's chancery and the foreign office had been informed prior to that to that flight from moscow to berlin so we'll probably hear more about that in the hours to come but we definitely think that he's here because the video appears to be authentic and an airport spokesperson has also confirmed that there was an ambulance on the night sounds like very solid evidence no no major i just turning back to you is it surprising in any way that the kremlin allowed him to leave the country well there's a great question a guy only can speculate because i don't know summation of their question just to see what has spent a couple of years during his childhood in canada so yes that russian and in a in citizenship canadians prime minister told thought and said that the situation was a concern because it could be one reason for the russian officials to lower your to receive leave moscow out on him to leave moscow would recreate suspicion. that it it isnt. ok as is often the case there's a murkiness with these stories and you know just turning turning back you do know what hospital he's doing it all the in newspapers as saying that it's pretty pretty clear that he has to be at seventy which is balanced oldest and one of europe's biggest university clinics it has a long experience in treating international patients so this seems to be pretty clear and also we have seen pictures on bills again newspaper on the web sites where it appears to be him on a stretcher being carried into a hospital or to talk to a research university hospital i mean i just turning back to you briefly a couple of weeks ago you met your vets evolve in moscow can you can you tell us a bit more about him well as a funny guy he likes to make jokes season absolutely critical of the russian government essentially that he's one of the organizers who draws events and he is the publisher of the investigate newspaper called media's all known while cartman i met it was kitchen of these characters he was playing with our cameraman flip it was funny so it's a couple pieces of both of them so he's a likable person someone where you and i would like you know in the bottom ok i mean a drug storage in moscow in a house here in a studio in berlin thank you both very much now to some of the other stories making news around the world syrian state media say israel has launched a missile attack on the main airport in damascus the claims were backed up by the syrian observatory for human rights said the attack targeted arms warehouses and caused heavy damage no casualties were reported. german defense minister under line has held talks in baghdad over german military support for iraq german soldiers stationed in jordan and iraqi kurdistan have been helping in the fight against the islamic state underlines says assistance should now extend to other areas such as stabilization and reconstruction. an israeli man has died after being stabbed by a palestinian man at a shopping mall in the west bank israeli army says the assailant was shot following the attack near a busy junction south of jerusalem it has been a major flash point in recent years. the runners are continuing to cross cross the finish line in the berlin marathon one of the world's top races but the men's world record has already been smashed by a kenyan any good kid chug a kid should get one last year but this time he beat the world record by well over a minute clocking in a time of two hours one minute and thirty nine seconds to show his closest rivals finished around five minutes behind it earlier we spoke to our sports correspondent mark meadows who is close to the finish line at the brandenburg gate. very very special for everyone here today i mean. hasn't just broken the world record he has completely destroyed it he did it in two hours one minutes thirty nine seconds now the previous world record which was set here in two thousand and fourteen was two hours two minutes fifty seven seconds so he smashed it by well over a minutes i mean people a few years ago with thinking was that even humanly possible it is quite incredible what he has achieved and he's only thirty three so he's not a spring chicken but overseas chaining in kenya in high altitude helps him but still this is something massive in the world of athletics you might remember a few a few months ago he tried to actually break the famous to the area which no one thought was really possible it was a publicity stunt for a sportsman manufacturer he didn't quite manage it that day and it didn't count as a will record because of the pacemakers that he used but given what he's achieved today you have to wonder whether that two hour barrier could be smashed by in the future the last seven men's marathon world records have now been broken here in berlin is the home of the marathon now in the women's race there was no world record set but. it was won by gladdest hirono the kenyan clinched the win in a competitive field posting a personal best over forty thousand fun runners are taking part as well you're watching news from berlin more coming at the top of the hour and don't forget you can get all the latest news and information around the clock on our web site that's t.w. dot com thanks for joining you debbie.

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