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tv   News  Al Jazeera  December 9, 2023 11:00am-11:30am AST

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these laws actually encourage more violence, 7 hospital stories for a global audience. this is a mighty policy. this is the way what these are so tied of the phrase us from our concept of a new eyes to an alternative view of the world today. on how does era the the us box, the un security councils proposal for an immediate to monetary and cease fire in gaza. the, you're watching out the 0 my for my headquarters. and sometimes a number of days also coming of criticism from the palestinian ambassador to the un condemning dot photo. i'm saying it's consequences to be disastrous. sees why it sees via save lives. a very fair to that
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a day means lives lost. israel carries out another morning afraid to cross cities in the occupied wes thing from a separation wall to segregated roads. we explain why israel is accused of imposing apartheid on policy, the disastrous and the disgrace. that's how palestinians are describing the us veto of a draft resolution at the un security council, which is calling for an immediate and israel's war on garza. the vote was called after the un secretary general on sonya to terrace invoke the rarely used article 99 of the un charter christ and salumi reports of the un headquarters in new york. the secretary general made his case for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire and gaza, noting it's not just bombs threatening civilians, but also a lack of food,
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water, and medicine. the risk of collapse of humanitarian system is fundamental. the link through the complete lack of safety and security for all the stuff in gaza. and with the nature of the intensity of community federal potations, which i cc it, we lead me think of sex 2 people in desperate need to drop the united arab emirates, put forward a draft resolution co sponsored by 100 countries. it is brief, it is simple, it is crucial. in addition to calling for the ceasefire, it demanded the release of all hostages. 13 out of 15 council members voted in favor, but the united states vetoed it as long as the mos clings to its audiology of destruction . any cease fire? is it best temporary? and it's certainly not piece in any see far we've some us in control of gaza with an odd palestinian civilians the chance to build something better for themselves in
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the united kingdom. abstain citing similar concerns. russia and china was to the united states and that's a colleague is to show before the, our colleagues from the usa have literally, before our eyes issued a death sentence to thousands, if not tens of thousands more civilians in palestine and israel. while others, including us allies, lamented the implications for international law as well as civilians made it was more in foot proof. unfortunately, once again, this council has failed with a lack of unity. and by refusing to commit to negotiations, the crisis and gaza is getting worse. and the council is not completing its mandate under the charter, it can move us to sit on. the palestinian ambassador said the future of the palestinian people is at stake. if you are against the destruction and displacement over the palace to name people, you must stand against this war are. and if you support it,
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then you are enabling this destruction and displacement. regardless of your intentions. the palestinian and basset are about to take. they issued to the general assembly while the united states and the other players in the region said they would continue to use quiet diplomacy to get more aid into gaza. kristen salumi aus is era the united nation? well, the 1st us the veto on palestine at the un security council supporting israel was in 1972. it's blocked un resolutions on the issue $35.00 times in more than 50 years. and 2 out of those retailers have been during israel's ongoing war on gaza, including that vote on friday. the us has vetoed resolutions on israel $47.00 times in all, including over israel's invasion of southern lebanon as well as that occupation of syria's goal on heights. well, israel's relentless bombing of civilian infrastructure continues across gaza. the
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ongoing assault has prompted urgent calls from guys as government media office for international intervention and more aid, an images showing extensive damage to the medieval and the all muddy malls can cause more anger among palestinians. villa marks reports in russia, the aid trucks pass through but do not often pull the un is here but cannot always help. 6 and so with adults, a line sick men outside the field, stung by the my husband dismissing. i don't know anything about him in garza where the communications are down. we don't have money to spend or to eat and nobody is helping us. situation is dangerous. where should we go. 2 smiles here, all still possible. but with this 6 young children now settings in
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a single tent. so not us economy wants the well to intervene. tires nice on the bottom right is what? we don't want more. we're tired. we want a decent life. know how many family and friends have really low leaving the tails of a con eunice hospital, a tiny baby, and it's and it's charlie face and go with dust and despair. meanwhile, gauze as largest most historic, most rendered into rubble by the bombing. while spiraling smoke smoke as the sky line, the gunfire goes on. far above the cross keeps clean. there is little light left for those down below. the marks i'll just say to israel has declared an area smaller than london heathrow airport as a safe space for guys us displaced people to move to palestinians are being asked
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to evacuate to a part of the south western town of a y c. that so called safe stone is only 6 and a half square kilometers in size. it's smaller than britain's busiest airport. honey. my fluids is joining us not from going off in southern gaza. and the issue, honey, is of course, that the palestinians and people in gauze up simply don't trust israel when they tell them to go to safe zones. because as in the past that they've evacuated and then they've been bones a yes very. and indeed, people did not trust these really narrative when the talk about safe areas for palestinian to evacuate to. because here is where we are reporting. we just arrived to out of my last seats evacuations center. and if people did not die of aerial bombardment and error strike de could die of as tar vision. as the moment we step out of our vehicle,
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people ran to us thinking we are providing humanitarian. a people haven't eaten for the past 2 days. the lack, all the basic supplies and the basic needs that could help them survive. another issue was raised by the vast majority of the fact that we've here are it happened to be women and it showed a deal. we're asking for survival items and the moment it took us a few minutes just explained them that we're here to document their situation, but people are hungry. people are thursday, they're looking for survival items to help them. this area is, is smaller than as you describe heathrow, airport, i happen to land and he's very airport couple times, but indeed it is smart because we moved in the car here. and within 10 minutes we moved around the 6 square kilometers here. it's definitely smaller than any decent area for evacuation. the estimation number of people in this area is more than 50000 people. as you can see from the frame of the camera,
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there's so many tents they've been set up in this area of people who are late to arrive late to the side of this evacuation center. the ended up buying that is small. it's 3 and 3 square meters on the ground just to set up at 10 because the area is, is running out of space. and those who owned the land here ended up sliced into small portions in either renting or selling it to evac leaves. who argued the situation is very desperate, as you see, just very close to that, this evacuation i there is the un headquarters here. this is that dropbox center a, the un headquarters and rough i and in the fact that the you and facility inside have accommodate. so many in fact with a lax old that, that this very a supplies do is do that good. sustained people at this site. the deal that they did talk about, that's barely enough for the people who are inside the facility. what people here
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doing their complain about nobody is, is asking them about their needs, not even the one, not even international organization. they are basically live alone here the left behind without any proper intervention to save their life. just the fact that the vast majority of the, of the making of this side is it women and it should, it makes it very difficult that people could survive the coming days, especially we're looking at whether that is very cold. it is very wendy. it could get width and possible if lot, if it started to rain with these tens are very small or not proper for a humans livelihood. the situations are getting out of control as of this moment, right? take a literally, when people are looking for basic supplies to uh, to keep them alive and tiny, it just sounds like the situation is showing some good, shattered behind it sounds like the,
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the desperation and the desperate humanitarian situation is just going to get worse and worse as we hear of more air strikes, taking place across the gaza strip, i guess what, what, what that means there are more displaced people who will end up coming to this, this area, the intensity in scale and magnitude of the mass boom environment. the air strikes are taking place, been hon. you and it's been mainly the southern area including growth i that was designated as a safe for you. i would think about the central robot and the southern eastern side of as early hour this morning. more people where it goes more residential homes were destroyed, and ones with the more residential homes are destroyed. people are going to be display as an evacuated more than one time. in fact, some of the people here, this is their 4th and 5th time evacuating from one area to another. and it's a great, it's a creating a desperate situation for people,
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particularly when they lack, not only to visit supply. but there is one element that everybody is concerned about. what is the shattered sense of safety and security? it happened in the northern part. it happened in gaza. and it's likely to happen again here to the rubber where people can shoulder if it happen in honor. what designated school when they got bomb is it can easily happen in this open area, right, where people. c any necessities, anybody to protect them, any organization to help them survive this situation. thank you so much on him. i was reporting for us from this is where the forces have been carrying out raids in the occupied westbank. this is the latest operation where 2 people were arrested in drama, low cost to you and the city of hebron were also targeted. territory has seen increasingly violent daily rates and israel began its war on gaza. more than $270.00 pounds as
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the ends have been killed in the operation since october. the 7th. and there were also raids in nablus early on saturday. several is really army vehicles drove through the city. there been no reports of progress so far. as in bethlehem, the village of not ahead of us soldiers patrol the streets on foot. there are reports, some of them were smashing. the windows of car is parked in the streets. lots of bringing to die, but he and she's joining us from somebody and that's in the occupied westbank me that and uh, talk to us about the raids that have taken place in the occupied westbank as well as, as well as where you are and the significance of it as well. and the significance is that those rates are happening continuously on a daily basis on suddenly palestinian towns and cities even a rush thing, those will and detaining. let's put this into a method of phrasing and standing. those will have been released as. 8 of the latest deal, now there is a 15 year old, his name is use if i will help him from jericho. he's been detained for hours as
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these really forces rated jericho. he was there with a group of young men and he has been detained for 2 hours and a half. he's been beaten up and then later released we've been trying to reach him . his family says he's tired, he's been beaten up already. he's taking some russ, but will be speaking to him throughout the day is now we is the day we know that these really forces have not arrested any of those who have been released as part of the prisoners exchange deals that we've been seeing happening as a part of the deal that so the release of is really captive in gaza. what's posted is would tell you it could be a matter of any minute that is really would re arrest those palestinian prisoners. you know, we've been speaking about the previous deal that has been done years and years ago with veterans. these of these really sold are get all totally. and we've seen those who have been released as part of the exchange deal being re arrested including
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that. and it, but it would say who is now considered the one of the eldest palestinian prisoners not in times in terms of his age, but in terms of how much time he spends in is really jail and counting. so these rays are continuous or violent. we have unconfirmed reports that they found really near hubbard has received the news of the death of their son who has been killed during one of those has really raves to have road. we're still looking to confirm the news. as you can see, there barely is of the day with a and is really as sorry, as promised to me. is it the is not rated by is really forces. it's only it adds, it increases the attention. and let's not forget that. in addition to that, we have is really suck to those who are treating really be occupied with strength as their own, with calls to it. go and expand their raids. let's call them in many towns and places and we are hearing now that suck closer. calling upon the
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others to go to one of the villages he had called called you to kind of lay claim to it and prevent for passing is from accessing it. thank you so much for that, but i am reporting for us from as am i in, in the occupied westbank of the will for 2 months the us government has kept repeating the need for a 2 state solution between palestinians and is really, is once the war is over, but how viable is a future palestinian state given the reality of israel's ongoing occupation? let's take a look at one of the most visible manifestations of that occupation. the separation wall walls are designed to keep people out. in the case of israel, this one is not just to keep palestinians away, but also to separate them. in 2002, israel began building a concrete barrier in the occupied westbank. it's intended to be more than 700
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kilometers long and about 30 to 40 meters wide on average. israel says the wall protects its security, but palestinians say it's a symbol, a segregation and racism of so far. israel has managed to build nearly 65 percent of that wall, that's despite the u. n's, highest court calling. it's illegal. israel has use the world antics even more palestinian land. around 85 percent of its root runs inside the west bank rather than along the internationally recognized pre 1967 border answer known as the green line. it completely cuts off east jerusalem from the west bank and runs through a $150.00 pounds thing in communities separating them from their farm land, west original and they're marked in blue and east and yellow. then there's a so called same zone,
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and that's the area that's wedged right between the green line and the separation wall. about 50000 palestinians live there. and they need is really permits to inhabit their own homes. israel has built 71 illegal is really settled and spare. they make up more than 85 percent of the subtler population. they're allowed to move freely. the upshot is, israel's illegal separation won't make so it can take you with palestinian state nearly impossible. she has more from knew that reporting from the occupied westbank . this is the view that no scene has been looking out for the past 20 years. behind the wall or the trees she planted and can no longer reach people in the well to waco, agitated from a bad nightmare. but here we are awake and agitated every single day. these really separation barrier cuts through her family's land upon the village. you do so then
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i never could understand. i had the tickets working and sold them up, reaching the trees. it was a deep pain in my heart. they didn't care when i left the trees that i carried on my shoulders and planted one by one decades later is really forces are back for more in august they handed several families and upon the you confiscation orders to expand the war. they fear that is where we use the war on garza to grab more land without having to share the did the, this is our land and we have the proof. they say you're close to the legal is really settlement, but i was here before the wall. the courts and power are in their hands. my future is over. i fear now for my children and grandchildren. future israel started building the wall during the 2nd palestinian uprising known as the fall. the palestinian sea is well used security as an excuse to confiscate more lined. the
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walls length is more than double that of the 1967 borders sneaking into palestinian territory, running as deep as 18 kilometers inside the occupied westbank. as the un says, it's almost complete and will take up around 10 percent of palestinian lance. the international court of justice has read the war. is illegal. roads like this one are all what's left for palestinians. he often have to take longer routes to reach their destination for palestinians. the wall is an extension of israel system of control as part of a wider network of road supplements on check points built to give us radius the upper hand while making their lives unbearable by the de need that but he josie to the occupied west bank. well we are some palestinians,
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what the occupation means to them have been listed as little. i have heard wisdom dead. the posit. uh, i see that is on the phone. so you just download. yeah. yeah. i just sent a bit high uh sub a lot of some of the some by you see, but it's all up really sending you the letter been in a while. i'm totally and the stuff and the i you stuff just the dads, fish all the benefits or why the minister across the, in the middle of one of them had a mine because of the move in the had the issue at that with the, with the me or what the g of the zoning me i know my for the national geo honestly for the blackboard, relative to that, how large is who will, who will she because you to and i'm sure i'm begging in because all plans are kind of i was just looking i am in the of the negative 10, mean hampton's,
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allowed to exist, and it all off the little of the, to the can with those uh, i will to the how are the zip finally got the got there as well as early jails and its dual legal system as another symbol if it's illegal occupation that affects every aspect of palestinian life since the war began at least 3680 palestinians had been arrested. and that's according to the palestinian prisoner society. that's $58.00 arrests for each day of the 2 month conflicts. israel is holding 80 percent and so called administrative detention. that means they can be held indefinitely without charge or trial. the u. n says doctor, record number 6, palestinians have died and is really custody the highest number in such a short period for decades. palestinians held in is really jail say that they're denied adequate food on water. many report, beatings, abuse,
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and torture by prison guards. some say they've been threatened with rate. israel is also limited visits from family members on lawyers, and that is against international law. how about that? how he is caught up with the palestinian prisoner who's faced abuse while incarcerated, and has this reports from the occupied 1st bank. he might be home but still acts as if behind bar pacing up and down his hands in front as if handcuffed his head filled with um, answers questions and that has how do i feel? i am still in prison. i am psychologically tired and even pain. my body is number non stop headaches. i filled out a tricity down my spine. i couldn't get out of bed because of the pain. they used to hit me all of it, it, buddy. so besset was 15 year old when he was 1st arrested, sentenced to 2 and a half years on charges including resisting police. but as
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a teenager, he often rebelled against prison rules. it's led to several due time extensions, totaling 11 years behind bars. 7 in solitary confinement the last 18 months with no visits or outdoor time. the impact is so deep, bass and was appear to be released, begging to be returned to his. so that's him. frame long beard and the shuffled hair and a lot of pent up anger. i'm his mother, but he didn't want to come to me. he didn't recognize us. on the way home. she attacked us. hey, tests got out the car and run away. he was annoyed with me even though i'm the only one who saw him in jail in the p affected me, is not able to deal with the return to normally the massive needed urgent treatment . this is the house, but the webmaster was admitted 4 days after his release is the only psychiatric
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hospital in the okay, by the west bank. and we're here to speak to his doctor to understand the long lasting impact of solitary confinement. and the tension doctor say best, so this plays the symptoms of deep trauma need about the club national. and we think this behavior stems from what he needs. the strength and any physical contact was addressed that there was torture, immunization the grading treatment. so this kind of present of feels that any human touch is a negative just yet i will, i'll to the cost of the fact that the last been 2 sentences in prison, one as a child and later at 12 year, one for participating. in the 1st intifada, then your until today, and it's been 7 years now, my phone has been on silent. i like the quiet. i prefer to listen until i don't like public places too much. any noise is around me just to me. i don't show it, but i feel different inside your 10 weeks later, vassal is still confused. how did
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a duct on addressing me as his doctor last in time setting up acknowledging his parents by the respective family of a boy down there. i am an old friend. he was born 4 months ago. gotcha. who does people look tough to me? is fed me and took care of me to tell me to call them mom and dad. but it's not possible since i'm in olsen and i am right. where is that most of your parents who had been waiting for over a decade to have their son a still denied that moment. this is one story unique, but at the same time, not uncommon, deduct reality of living under military occupation. that is only getting more brutal by the day for the how many of the 0 in the occupied westbank, the palestinians who remained on their lands after israel established itself as a state and 1948 said that they've been treated like 2nd class citizens for more than 7 decades, despite there is really citizenship, truly like or has more to a,
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palestinian is riley citizens. they are the descendants of palestinians who did not lead the loans. when israel was created in 1948, at least 750000 palestinians were displaced during what became known as the not the old catastrophe. those who left became refugees and neighboring countries and around the world, they remain so until the stay a while around a 150000 palestinians remained on their own lands and we'll eventually became israel. they live on the military room for 18 years. these really military did not allow them to move around freely, and they were quiet to have a permit to leave the cities and villages. today, there are 2 millions 48000 palestinians is riley's. they account for 21 percent of the israeli population, which is around 9000000,
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around 60 percent of them live in northern israel. the remaining 40 percent, a divided between the center on the south. the listing is really say they often face discrimination at the hands of israelis that includes not being given a federal and quote, unlock of job opportunities and facing land confiscation. they say there was no equal opportunity in israel for palestinians. and salaries. benefits raises what conditions, which is led to a high rate of unemployment, israel's loans confiscation policy, and on equal to distribution have also heard the main source of income, which is forming, palestinian townsend israel, which is the rundown, and neglected are a good example of this on equal treatment. many palestinian is released they they
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so like 2nd class citizens on the times of trouble, like as well as one cause and now the government cuts down on the palestinian community from a resting protests to social media censorship. palestinian is riley's often denied the rights to express themselves freely and show solidarity with palestinians. and you'll keep wide west bank and gaza as the south african veteran anti apartheid activist. ronnie castro is this calling for a cease fire in gaza? is a founding member of the armed with the african national congress on former minister and the 1st post apartheid government. and he's spoken for decades against sign isn't and has garnered support for palestine saying that apartheid us to stop. my name is ronnie casseroles. i'm a saw that freaking i served in the liberation struggle my adult life. i became
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a minister in mr. monday. there's government growing up in japan was big in the 1940s from a jewish immigrant families. and i was very affected by the nazi holocaust. but i began looking around as i grew, so there for to and i couldn't be a seeing the way black people with treat to the shop till messic. it took place in march of 1960. and i felt the thing that i had to ask my mouth change, and i've got deeply involved in the struggle to the bright south africa we, you have one price group that pick 2 weights, repression of that.

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