Skip to main content

tv   NEWS 30min  Al Jazeera  February 23, 2024 3:00am-3:31am AST

3:00 am
on if i need to go, i'm on the drive and reinventing costs on a new series of africa, direct on how to sierra the the latest victims of these rows war on gaza. children are rushed to hospital after strikes on the central part of the strip. at least 40 people with you, the color there on june. the whole this is out to 0 live from the also coming up. the people of cause i need to cease fire. not when practicable, but now it's done woods from the secretary general of the doctors without borders, say thing us draft resolution on gauze or at the u. n. is misleading incentive goals? president says he's mandate within 5, april the 2nd,
3:01 am
but the questions remain over. who will leave the country? plus. welcome to the houston. this is tanya. both of them moved an american space from touches down on the lunar surface for the 1st time in 15. the . we begin in central gaza, where at least 40 people have been killed and more than 100 injured in. some of the latest is really strikes to hit the strip. in the past few hours, i'll duration and new setup refugee camps have been targeted. residential buildings have been hating the by and also i to, to the goals as health ministry says 90 percent of the victims are women and children. the injured have been taken to alex the hospital. it comes as israel has been accused of targeting the most vulnerable and
3:02 am
it's more on garza golden $12600.00 children and at least $8570.00 women has now been killed since the war began. honey, malcolm moved reports from rough or in southern gaza. this is what has left of a 3 story building in bethlehem leveled by his regular air strikes in the northern gauze. much of the north of this trip resembles a waste land with no buildings and no body untouched by his rows. war with an old sick lady with her daughter in law and grandchildren were sleeping in their home. the house was leveled and they are still buried under the revel. we managed to recover only bits and pieces of some of their bodies. there were at least 15 people inside. we could not recover a whole body, only bits and pieces. rescue workers. a neighbors faced the doubting task. tons of degrees has to be moved slowly and carefully by hand to retrieve the bodies
3:03 am
or what has left of them slide some, some of the lead and it is very difficult for us to search without any equipment. we are simply using up, they had apparently women and children were the only ones inside the we haven't found a single survive up in rob i and southern guns that were one point. 5000000 palestinians are sold, 3 is really play and targeted on, sorry, mos in the city centers. residents say it, how's the library with historical tax? the families forced to see good by our inc. consolidate mazda and then the stop. we heard the airplanes just after midnight. we looked out of the window and saw flames and people screaming. there were more than 25 to 30 people in the house when he collapsed. everybody scattered, grief and loss. go hand in hand in garza and what do you want his calling
3:04 am
a desk zone? most rough uh, southern gaza palestinians fleeing from gallagher gauze as no say they've been attacked. and the roots of israel's ministry previously said was a safe passage, was no way to go. many a sheltering at i'll see for hospital a facility that is barely functional. taylor callahan reports with a warning that the was may find some of the images in the report disturbing. the palestinian mother is almost inconsolable. she described to style to attempt to flee from northern guns that were on our way to the south. and the 2 men who were accompanying us were march. here we were bombed. suddenly we started running. my baby hasn't eaten anything. i don't know what to do now. the situation is so dire at all she for hospital she pleads with doctors to help feed her baby. my baby
3:05 am
needs some milk help. oh god, please have mercy on us in teams. fine and garza's north and the lack of food supplies is least, palestinians with no choice, but to leave. i really, i'm a jeweler. next these children are starving and we have no food or water. we are heading south, hoping to find some nourishment. we have absolutely nothing here as rails ami, designated the algebra state street, which connects the north to the south as a safe car doors. it's proving to be anything bought best. under the bought of of the do. the shell was fired while people were on the way to the south. many people were killed or injured. and at the very center i was packed and i was heading south . here's my bag stained with the blood of those who were injured. who did arrive at el cheapo hospitals taking refuge in medical care? as israel continues, it's really most offensive and gaza cleared the young and innocent continue to paint for she'd be
3:06 am
a surprise how you tell him how to 0 us. the conflict in gaza has overshadowed the meeting of g 20 foreign ministers in brazil. earlier this week, brazil's president accused israel of genocide sparking, and in israel and the united states. speaking of the g 20 meeting us secretary of state antony clinton has admitted that international efforts to ensure a reaches the palestinians in gauze has not been sufficient. there's been many obstacles that we're trying to work through every single day, including making sure that convoys can proceed in a way that ensures the safety of those who are um, conducting them. and that means the confliction, that means coordination and that has been insufficient. so we're working on to improve that, as well as to make sure that, as you pointed out, assistance gets not only to people throughout the southern part of garza, but actually gets to the many people who need it, who remain in the north. some 350000 people who are remain above the water,
3:07 am
gaza. so what i can tell you is this, we're working this quite literally every single day through our own invoice for assistance master david satterfield and his team for the work that and many others in the government are doing engaging with the different institutions of the united nations engaging with the israeli government with the egyptians with the jordanians . the bottom line is this though, we need more a to get in 3 more places to reach more people. well then friedman is a policy director of defense priorities, a foreign policy think tank. he says, american attempts to influence is ro on working. i think the united states and secretary blinking in particular are in a, in a mode where they're genuflecting trying to show respect for international law of the opinion of the international community for the lives of the palestinian
3:08 am
civilians being killed in big numbers in garza. but they're not willing to really stand up to israel, and that means my opinion threatening them with withdrawal of support, including financial support. if they don't do what we ask them to do. so it's not that a blinking and by the administration have to go as far as the south africa or some of the other more critical countries void. but i think you know, to go even a little bit in that direction and be serious about it. you have to threaten is there always some consequences if they don't go along with what you're asking. otherwise, it's just sort of empty rhetoric that's designed to look critical without actually making any difference. in my opinion, there is always been, i have to say a large amount of hypocrisy in the idea of a us led international order or liberal international order. i think since people have used that term, it's been full of exceptions, usually for actual dig,
3:09 am
tutorial governments that the united states is in bed with for one reason or another. but in this case, it's not a big tutorial government. it's a democracy by the slide. one that we're sort of in, in this with, for, for historical reasons. but nonetheless, i think it's, you know, important to note that israel was behaving and liberally. and the united states is going to be hard pressed to say, oh, you know, this is part of a fight against our autocracy. you know, we're on the side of liberalism and all the nice things that go with it. when we defend israel, i think that's kind of an impossible position. we're now putting ourselves in or the secretary general of the doctors without borders has criticized to us drop resolution on gaza. say that it's misleading. he spoke to the un security council, which is about to vote on the us, a sofa blocked or resolutions cooling for a ceasefire in garza and you draft resolution by the united states suspense of
3:10 am
records for cease fire. however, this is misleading a best discount. so should project any resolution that filled the compass, humanitarian efforts on the ground, at least as council to tacitly endorse the continued findings and must atrocities and causes the people of the people of cause, i need to cease fire, not when practicable, but now they need to sustain, cease for not a temporary period of calm. anything short of this is gross negligence. the protection of civilians and gaza cannot be contingent on resolutions from this council with instruments or large humanitarianism. to pull up political objectives, remy, canada is the emergency coordinate of adopters without voters, he returned from garza last friday and says a temporary cease. fire is not a solution to the desperate situation. in the strip. today we need this wall to stop and a dumper. we ceasefire is not going to out any organization to scale up their
3:11 am
activities and to be able to meet the massive needs of the people that we find everywhere. we know that the supply chain coming from a jeep to, we know that you know that the security that they can fix and then all authorization to be able to increase the kind of activities that we're providing and ease ready some a process that takes a lot of time, so to their shots these by your we don't believe is going to the people to be in a better situation. it is rarely ami has carried off mal rates in the occupied westbank. at least one person was killed in 4 in june in jeanine refugee camp, where he's rarely forces carried out a drug attack on a car. troops who have carried down to him most likely, right, since the will began on october. the 7th. now us president joe biden stopped mid least advise the bread and the good cause in israel to discuss the war on garza and hopes for a cease fire and captives release. he's met israel's defense minister. you've got
3:12 am
to salute has more from occupied east jerusalem. so when a meeting is rolls defense minister meeting with breton, with girth biden's, top of middle east advisor, and in that golan t off go on. the defense minister has released the statement saying that israel will now expand the negotiators for the captives. what they are allowed to do, but all the while israel and the military will be planning for more intensive ground operations in gaza. this is essentially one of the pressures we've been seeing on israel by the americans to get negotiators back to the table, to meet with the other side to see what sort of concessions can be offered up to see where there are still disagreements and sticking points. but these really have been under a lot of pressure from the bind administration for how they've been conducting themselves throughout this war. the americans would like to see more humanitarian aid going, and they would like to see
3:13 am
a deal to bring back the captive sooner rather than later. and it is actually these really specifically prime minister benjamin netanyahu, who declined to send in his really delegation for 2nd day of meetings in cairo just about a week ago. and this is something that did not bode well with these really public and the families of the captive. it's you have to be seen. what's exactly going to come of these talks if there are any sort of advancements in these captive negotiations. but these really delegation will now be present at them to argue their case, and perhaps what concessions they're willing to give up in order to secure a deal as the palestinian ambassador to the un who's told reporters the palestine is working to fast track it's application to be recognized as a un member state diplomatic editor james base has more. this was the 1st security council meeting since the us vito, another resolution cooling for an agency spa. that was though some unity at the end
3:14 am
of this meeting, a joint statement was agreed by all members of the security council, including the united states, to hear about you and stuff and the risk that taking in gaza a 160 u. n stuff. members that so record anywhere in the world have now lost their lives . also at the end of the meeting, the process of getting them back to the, to the united nations, re add month. so address reports, as he said that he condemned a recent side by these riley finesse it, which said that should be no unilateral declaration of a palestinian state. because of that, he said the polish thing is we're going to push ahead with their application to become a member of the un. as i was originally thinking was to put an end to the war fast in order to move into the other fights sense. they pushed the envelope now and challenged all of us instead of of, of being the provision of all of that is from the i. c j,
3:15 am
there are going further of denying us, but i to exercise our self determination, including our right to the statehood. palestine is currently the observer state of the us and to become a full member. they need to get the approval of the security council, and then that needs to be a vote in the general assembly is the security council bit that will prove the problem for palestine. because of course the us is a permanent men, but we'd veto power. james space out as the era of united nations. still the head on out to 0. the family of russian opposition figure alexi no problem shown his body, but they say, oh sorry it is one to buried in secret the for the latest news as it breaks. and i think it's very blue pace,
3:16 am
the used to be able to face up to 37 kilometers out to the same spot. know any more from the hall. so the story, this is how this experience is waiting for the 3 of your patients, paula to tax the legal supplements and then grab with detailed coverage. the 1st situation in the cause of the group is worsening. at least half of the population is already starving. the frank assessments, here's essentially delaying the democratic process. the current government knows not being picked up, but when the elections say they want to buy time using fix critical debate, ok, some of them are struggling. that's give them some cash. but let's look at the reality. 80 percent of these farming subsidies are going to the big voice, informed opinions we don't live in a postcolonial work we live in the neo colonial one and gaza is resisting that termination inside story. on al jazeera record numbers of chinese asylum seekers are traveling to the us. that's double many take
3:17 am
a dangerous route through loss of america. a gang of people points that have come in the 1st of a 2 part investigation. 101 east meets the chinese. my friends risking it all to the american dream on out to 0, the the welcome back to what you're now to 0. the reminder of our top story is this hour is really strikes of killed at least 40 people and wounded more than a 100 in central gaza. in the past few hours, i'll raise and new cetera, refugee camps with targeted residential buildings, we will. so he came down by the end of the wide sconces. health ministry says 90 percent of the victims on women and children. the interest of being taken to alex
3:18 am
the hospital. it comes as a israel has been accused of targeting the most vulnerable and it's for and also the secretary of state says us and international efforts to ensure the delivery of a to palestinians in gaza is not being sufficient. even speaking at a g 20 meeting in brazil, which was overshadowed by the conflict. now the us has landed a spacecraft on the mood for the 1st time in over half a century. the odysseus lunar land touched down in the south pole region. it wasn't without the technical issues though, and they were tense moments as the control room waited more than 10 minutes to receive the 1st transmission often touch down the mission as part of the us led to miss program named it eventually putting humans back on the moon. let's take a look at how we got to this point and what to expect in the days ahead. the lunar land built by private texas based intuitive machines was launched on
3:19 am
a space ex rockets 6 days ago. it is the 1st ever lending by the private sector on board. i'm not so science instruments that will be used to study space where the lunar surface interactions and landing technologies that data will be used to help guide future emissions. but this is landing on the moon is the 1st successful us lunar landing since 1972. that was also the last time humans set foot on the moon during the apollo 17 mission. the whole state. maryland is a retired now so strongly about. he joins us from chevy chase, maryland. good to have you with us. a few tense moments as we heard the just as the landing was under way. but as it was announced by mission control, odysseus has found its new home. at what point steve, do we deem this to be a successful landing and give us a little more context on the significance of it?
3:20 am
oh, sure. well, landing animal is, seems to be a horrible problem in the various year or $23.00 uh, 3 countries have successfully landed on the moon through government space organizations. a private outfits in 3 countries have failed in their attempts to land on the loan. and today we have at least a partial success, like the recent japanese partial success where that spacecraft worked for a little while. but i had landed and tripped over so we couldn't point properly at the earth around the sun. and eventually i ran out of power when the sunset over its low location on the moon. well, we have today, as far as the we've been told is a landing that was delayed and made difficult because a laser instrument on board,
3:21 am
the spacecraft fails and they had to use a backup instrument, i'm not sure who had intended was intended that way. so they delayed the landing while they use, and that's the laser on board to provide the information on the distance above the surface of the moon and the speed of which you were approaching it. and so they not as it last work, they're not quite sure exactly where they landed and, but they know they haven't, it isn't a crash because they've got, they've got some stuff working. so we don't get into the position, take some time to deem this a full, fully successful landing. i presume data will start to be transmitted in at some point they will ascertain whether or not the land is able to perform each task. but let's assume for the moment that it is, it has landed on the surface of the moon. the 1st time in more than 50 is the us as a team such a goal. why may i ask?
3:22 am
do you think it is taking all of the combined resources of nasa and it's science to take 52 years to repeat of the success of apollo 17 and this is a non mand draft, of course. sure, the moon was not a big sign in to scientific objective. originally. kennedy and the president's following him initiated and approved it. a lot of the apollo band program to catch up with the russians who had launched the 1st satellites in space and the 1st man and woman woman in orbit around new years. so we had the objective to get to the moon and that was to, to try and influence the emerging nation. so we're getting emerging from out of colonialism after world war 2. that they should believe in the american system
3:23 am
as a leading the world. and in great seats and technology rather than the soviet system . and having done that, the successive governments just lost interest in funding the moon program. that was much less expensive to fund other man programs that just went a little bit around the years like this space shuttle. and then later, the international space station and the address to the fundraising science experiments that just go to or bid around 2 years, or send the robot to orbit the moon or robot to land and roll on mars. and so on the matter of dollars they've gotten very given that it is a matter of dollars. steve, does that, does that go some way to explaining why private companies are now crucial to the future of space exploration, and indeed to the future of,
3:24 am
of getting men at ask for it. hold back on to the moon, which is, which is a goal. now with student nasa, yes, natural wouldn't agree with all of what you said but, but i do the, the nasa program for getting men to the loan the are, are the main art arguments program uses extremely expensive rockets to which we need at least another test flight of and it's very slow process as the inspectors who have gone into this and reviewed it. have said there isn't enough money to go very far with that program. and they are hoping to use basics to reduce the cost of much of it. but in order to get going on characterizing the surface of the moon, so we can more safely have people where, who will live and work there longer than just a few days of the apollo astronauts. we need to characterize the radiation
3:25 am
environment, especially the dust environment. that's kicked up on a rock of land. that was one of the main purposes of today's. the oddest of this is a lander and, and in order to do that cheaply, the science director of the nasa went to a private industry. and the dimension you had today cost a $118000000.00. that's like the cost of paper work on a really major nasa program. gosh. like the james web. well, the telescope, steve. many, thanks for your thoughts with have to leave of the steep mountain. joining us from chevy chase, maryland to retire now. so a strong, a very many thanks for your thoughts. you're welcome. now, more ivy f providers in the us state of alabama opposing treatment services.
3:26 am
following a landmark ruling at the state, supreme court judges rule that frozen embryos can be legally considered. children, doctors and patients now fear the info, tennessee treatment could lead to prosecutions about 2 percent of pregnancies in the us all the result of ivy f, where embryos are implanted off to fertilize ation outside the womb. the procedure has a failure rate of about 70 percent, a set of goals. president mackey sol says his mandate has as leader will end on april the 2nd. but he hasn't said whether a presidential election will happen before that. early of this month, he delayed the vote hours before the campaign was supposed to begin. the move triggered violent protests with opposition, parties accusing soul of trying to extend his time in power. sol denies those claims. the mother of rational position figure election development. he says he's, she's been shown her son's body around. he died in the russian prison last week.
3:27 am
his colleagues and family side of the kremlin ordered his mother. moscow denies those claims around this mother has recorded a video alleging that investigators are imposing conditions on where, how and when it should be buried is supposed to stay novelle. and this death certificate states. he died of natural courses. yes, it is the throne. i am recording this video because they started threatening me looking me in the eye. the investigator said that if i don't degree to secret funeral, they will do something with my son's body. the investigator for a pyre of opened, he told me, the time is not working for you. the corpses decompose, i don't want special conditions, i just want everything to be done. according to the law, i demand receiving my sons body immediately, and us present. joe biden met around this window. you know, well now, and he's built a dashboard in california by and who has blamed preteen for the desk. says he'll, he'll announce major new sanctions against russia on friday as well. that is it
3:28 am
from me, joe. now. so now the weather is next and then in science story looks at humanitarian aid in gauze the color, the weather remains very wintery across northern parts of china. we have got a fair bit of clap into northern and central areas for the time being wet to weather, just getting across the fall south of japan, moving the east with cold enough and took it 5 degrees celsius just about getting about freezing the in phasing it should be lost, the dry side of the disruptive snow. now in the process of phasing, but most don't have any significant full. it has to be said, well that's why that down towards the south and freezing rain as well. down to was the process. how come with a temperature around $21.00 celsius as a warm sunshine coming through here?
3:29 am
warm sunshine to across much alpha indo china. scott's regression as into the eastern areas of the philippines, southern passing, the heavies through the south, west sunshine and showers west. the possibility of saying some live the storms, the usual hate of the day stuff coming for here. as is the case to into job and also into some entre solely weather has to be making its way away from that east. the side of in the northeast and past in particular bung with this dosing. a few showers as we go on through friday. but right this guys come back in behind is this week i want you to set stay. so it's becoming a little more extensive across that eastern side of india. moving up towards the west, mingle. the unique perspective that plays students up told the palestinians to go to on heard voices, to humor. i try to highlight the absurdities inconsistent, even proceed in the landscape. connect with our community and tap into
3:30 am
conversations you will find elsewhere to take every day. this is going to unspeakable horror as to really alone about what's happening because of the death and media attention the stream on algebra. israel is blamed for blocking a deliveries to gauze, an accusation, the government denies. so what mechanisms are in place for israel to ensure food and to mandatory and assistance reaches the millions of people, the un says are at risk of starvation. this is inside the hello and welcome to the program. i'm how much enjoy them before israel's war. most of the 2300000 palestinians living and gaza were already dependent on human.

11 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on