Skip to main content

tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  June 5, 2024 9:00pm-10:01pm AST

9:00 pm
or the, [000:00:00;00] the hello i'm, we're a little rock. this is the news. our lives from joe are coming up in the next 16 minutes palestinians war and their loved ones after is really strikes killed at least 97 people in central gaza alone. and the attacks do not stop people, weapon displaced multiple times, are again,
9:01 pm
forced to flee for their lives. the violence escalates in western seam, dawn and the last city helps by government forces in new york city are 4 states plus late russians. the lens with all the planets and we need the next step of the highway to climate sales, humanities set to low pass the key pairs climate targets, and the un issues this star warning about the consequences. and for a teenager mirror and revised has not the world number 2 out of the french open. the 17 year old russian beating a rena several blankets reach her for 70 final the and we began in gauze our where is really forces have been focusing their attacks
9:02 pm
on chance for display sp, people in the center of the strip. 3 camps were targeted just a few kilometers apart from the air and by artillery fire. they are braves move. got my guys the and let me say that the and at least 97 palestinians were killed in the attacks. many of them women and children that brings a total number killed across the strip since tuesday to $102.00 doctors without borders has described yourselves as an insane escalation of violence. weaving families have gathered outside the lock, so hospital and there has been a, its central guys as last remaining health facilities. and some of the homeless lots of redone you expelled us from our homes, claiming you wanted to eliminate from us and its leader. but you haven't done either of those things and that's and you all who do you want to take revenge on children and sleeping children and women?
9:03 pm
what's if you're a cheese, what are your goals? well, more than 300 people were injured in the strikes on central gaza. doctors forced to treat patients on the floor while other have others rather have died waiting for life saving operations. hospital has ward is 3 times over capacity and says we can take care of any more patients and families that are fleeing. those strikes are also coming under is really fire. these people have been displaced multiple times, often making long journeys on 4th on perilous roads. they say they are simply exhausted, running from one part of gaza to the other in a desperate hope for safety. let's say i have 2 central guys that i speak to all just there is a heading of motor, who's joining us from outside the alexa hospital in there and better. how? how do you tell us more about these, the latest strikes in the area where you are, and this will,
9:04 pm
the situation is remaining quite difficult in the central area. we're looking at a version via talks by the hour just as the time of repairing this report. the new a air rate, air toxic waste on upgrades, refuge account, more residential buildings have been targeted and destroyed and not for on people who are inside. those are residential being trying to leave these home since yesterday. the surgeon desktop started on the invasion office then from the eastern part of the area. nice. 5 people are why the hospitality in 2 separate ambulance vehicles here including one shot is what we've seen here at the courtyard of the hospital. that brings the total number of people who been killed to fruit in the past. the 24 hours to a $102.00 people. right now we were told by paramedics in the ambulance vehicle,
9:05 pm
there's still more people at the targeted side. these are the residential homes of palestinians in the grades roughly. you can at that, the southern eastern part of the central part of the goes to next to the city. they are still in their homes and those people went back through the 3 weeks ago to their homes out there just really monetary withdrew from the area, leaving trails of devastation and distractions. what do we're trying to do is to find a way to do some clean. i remove bubbles and stay in whatever remaining of their residential homes, only to be targeted to be and be forced into more further internal displacement. the situations are getting quite difficult by the hour. we're expecting a surgeon, they are a talk as the people are still leaving these areas and coming to you did in the vicinity of deluxe. the hospital at the western part,
9:06 pm
near the coast of rhodes to describe the scene in both. both of these gives me these rough v e commerce. as a wide, typical, risky they're leaving with a deepening sense of shattered safety and security. there is no safety place lifting gaza, but more tragically, there is no escape out of this genocide. now as these, the stripes that continue, we understand the hospital is having difficulty of providing a chair. what's the situation like inside a very dire situations. i've been trying for the past couple hours to step inside the emergency department, then other parts of the hospital just to see what's going on inside. and we did not put a foot inside because it's super excited. right now, a people are literally on the floor of the hospital,
9:07 pm
and this is the influx of injuries being arriving to the hospital since the early hours of the evening of yesterday and the surgeon, the ground invasion, started in a bridge. and what has the can be just one standing here and reporting at the number of, of andrew lines, the number of the trucks and an carts pulled by animals bring to the injuries is beyond imagination years. this is the 1st time i see. and right here is a large number of injuries coming up one time or do a list, then all look at a 24 hours a little over 24 hours right now. but the number is so massive, including got scenes of, of children and women as well as elderly. it just safely, you can say this hospital right now is unable to accommodate this large number of injuries definitely needs supports to continue a stand and gets authoration. it lacks necessary medical supplies including on
9:08 pm
stage yeah, antiseptic. one doctors told us their, their ronnie surgery is your kid conducting surgery without these not necessary elements. uh and uh, they run the conduct this on the floor of the hospital. okay. and the vast majority of injures here, you wait for a doctor or a nurse to pay attention to them, given the insufficient medical, the staff available. and that's why increases the risk of injuries losing their life as the lead easily inside the hospital. very grim, the situation, the motor reporting from their brother. thank you so much. and the war has taken an unbearable toll on garza's children last month's images of a headless baby and went off after it is really airstrikes shocked the world. ahmed, who was just 18 months old, was killed. one is rarely forces targeted to displacement. camp 45 people were killed, announcer 0, spoke to on his grieving,
9:09 pm
father and brothers coming the cat that has their story. the family united in grief who dreamed of being a doctor all kind of dreamed of being a pilot, just 18 months old osmond hadn't yet had a chance to dream of becoming anything down to john's wife and 3 children were killed and it is really a strike on or displacement, come in, rafa show how to continue to use or say order can i saw the bodies of my wife, my daughter, her to my son are con and my baby osmond i was told he was headless. i just picked inside the body bag and saw his body without a head. i couldn't stand to see any more. i lifted up again and walked away from the all. 7 the cafeteria food in the last estimate was among the 45 people killed in the attack. many others at the comp done to leave in the tents.
9:10 pm
they had been staying in his ready, designated safe area. they were killed just 2 days off to the international court of justice, ordered israel to stop. it's in person, into rough uh, despite estimates, final death. this is how his family tries to remember him. they kept his toys and clothes, source of comfort and pain. most of all that all up that you know, and every time i look at my brother's belongings, i'm overwhelmed with grief. i hope to be killed, so i can join him in heaven. i missed my sister and for others i miss them all. set them on the table, understand who i missed. my mother, my sister who died in my 2 brothers icon and i'm at a wish they'd never been killed. i missed them too much from its head was never found into his family. were forced to bury him without it. his grave is next to his
9:11 pm
mother and siblings in the ruins of casa, can no magic altars era. an earlier i spoke to us, so in my way so spokesperson at units of some middle east and north africa office. and he says, the best way to stop child trauma is to stop him from being exposed to it. in the 1st place, a war has a profound impact on their psychological, uh, wellness. and what's your, you know, as before the war started before, the latest escalation started before the 7th of october and there were around 500000 children. and the guys typically needed some kind of mental health support. now we know that all of the children in guns i need that support. i need a specialized support in, in many, many, many cases. so uh, this is really hard to do with the problem now is the services that are on the
9:12 pm
ground are almost on existence. we're talking about the only psychological a psychiatric hospital inc as a, has been the service early on in this escalation. um, that means that the basic needs of, of mental health can't the can't be uh, mit um, also for children as long as they are continuing to, uh, to witness what they are with to take as long as they continue to experience what they're experiencing. it's really hard to deal with with the trauma, the 1st, the 1st a principle of, of trauma is 3. move the person from the environment of the trauma. that's, that's impossible and god, so there's no safe place and goes on. there's no uh yeah, there's no place that feels safe. there was unicef sicily my way speaking it to me earlier. now it's less than 2 weeks since $45.00 palestinians were burned alive in their tents and shelters. when is rarely strikes, hits
9:13 pm
a displacement can't be off. and their final hours, many of the victims had faced a difficult choice. stay at alpha under the threats of his really strikes or leave for the rooms of hon. eunice, i was just there, a service on auto had unique access. she to travel between the 2 cities. and she found what she saw is that how does know how some money that's right now behind me is a long thing happened in las lloyd and other slaves. whats fox and the last area i don't need are those what people are still is 5. these spends because they were told that they all and a face area last night. and this literally by 5 to 6 rockets as people appropriate result in, in the credit of 40 to 50 people. if you find link is all over dropbox, kind of give you this and kind of trip about us, where should people go?
9:14 pm
no, not empty. okay. is not empty, you cannot allow it to still go real fast. that needs to be back to where you can get them to do. so we'll look at the videos as would be, if i know it's really crowded and the people are sitting here. the other problem is we're into evacuating. we're going to be invaded and unit is destroyed. so people are living in mos hennings, intense or in the rubble and the rest of the people that are not able to find any place to go to. i remember taking did you hear 31 of those 2 months ago, and that place was, well, since we're talking about hundreds of thousands of friends and i moved to
9:15 pm
get this new. mm hm. please manage. yes. hi and model come back, i'm said, is that the perceive your mattress newest, the floor, the window. it's just fun with the furnace you and get it in the mail just leaving the bus. you don't have to sort of but if i, you give us an idea of how you see more and more and there is different people i'm living in here and we'll see there are people living here. then spending their time their
9:16 pm
entire time waiting to return back to their city. as the talks continued to reach a ceasefire and israel's war on gaza, hamas is sticking to its demands of a permanency fire that of a mazda zip. political winner is male. i need a says, a mouse and is allied factions will do positively with any agreement on the basis of a comprehensive secession of aggress aggression, complete withdrawal of israeli troops and prisoner exchange in the us. meanwhile, the police have arrested several students at stanford university in california. after the barricaded themselves inside the office of the university president, the students of civil demands made several demands rather including vote to by the university trustees on whether to digress from companies that provide weapons to the is really military. now in the last 2 months,
9:17 pm
voters demanding an end to israel's will have swept across the campuses in the united states and ultra nationalist, a is release of and marching through occupied east jerusalem as part of their so called flag day celebrations. while the event sparks israel's illegal occupation of the area after the 1967 war participants will her chanting death to errands while marching through a palestinian area of the city and benjamin netanyahu, his cabinet has bad l. just 0 from reporting in israel. so let's go to him, ron khan, who is in the dining capital, a minor good to have you back with this and run, talk to us about, you know, you witnessed a previous flag marches in person. how does this one compare as well? this one is much more openly racist than previous flag lodges have been i may have actually, i have to say been also very racist as well. but it's,
9:18 pm
it's the challenge and the actions people are taking it began in the morning with ministers from, sorry, politicians from it. the more i think it is a policy, the national security minister leads a far right policy. going into the i likes the most compound, they raised flags that and they attempted to to try and pray. those are 2 things that i'm not allowed to happen according to an agreement between the jordanian looks to actually manage the compound. and these readings before it seems, it was deliberately designed to inflame attention and it did almost as soon as the participants in the cycle blackboard to arrive in occupied east jerusalem guarding through damascus gates. there was at 5 and young men were attacking old palestinian men old palestinian women. they were racing into schultz and simply trashing the. the police actually have to say to the public schools, please just shut the shops. we cannot help you. uh,
9:19 pm
this police action is very typical of what we've seen in previous years. i'm very typical of the issue of fail, know that to defend those being attacked, they simply that to try to control the crowds of that and know it's worth it. this point saying that is really the, isn't that a single is really a rest of this year. but 3 palestinians have been arrested simply for trying to defend themselves. we've also heard of that and i saw this by, you know, as last year. uh oh to that actually is pulling out a gun and threatening i don't palestinians. so this is a much more openly racist march than in previous years. and there are 2 key slogans that they keep. jones, that one is death to arabs and the other one is jerusalem is ours. is it writing sensible? do you hear when you speak to those people who have done this before? a particularly if previous it is um is that these people don't belong to any more of these palestinians. we were rid of them. this entire land is also ours bishop.
9:20 pm
but we've also been hearing about the amex, i should have the occupied westberg. that seems to be something the probably the participants in that circle flag that much looking for. so yes, this is a much more openly racist black box and we've seen in previous years and we're on connor reporting. thank you so much. and ron and reminder again, benjamin netanyahu, his cabinet has band alger 0 and we are reporting from outside israel. the there's been renewed. fighting between the sudanese army and the parent military rapids support forces in the city of our fasts or the state capital of saddam's. northern dar for state both sides using heavy weapons and artillery vine was little girls in l. foster's
9:21 pm
in mid may to the alarm of the international community because it's a humanitarian aid hub. the results and the sort of these army have been vying for control of the country in a civil war. the skilled, at least $14000.00 people in one year in north dar for states of foster is the last stronghold of the internationally recognized government. the r, as of has, excuse me, has taken control of nearly all other main cities. their local armed groups have broken months of neutrality, declaring allegiance with the cedar news army the states will fall completely in their hands. i foster has a also been a major or supplier route for aid and the conflict there means relief is no longer being distributed, worsening a dire humanitarian situation, and it would be
9:22 pm
a very high will to reach inside the nation. and because of the funding, but not only because of the fact you go to, so there is a supply issue. so at the moment, there is almost no trucks, even commercial trucks arriving at so it means that so even food is investment list available. what those are, some that's available. so it means that even if people are, we start thinking about they know of different through 4 different conditions. so even a we used to be delivering the it will be more and more complicated already. mother cushion was so very much inside the city and of this area. so what we can imagine though, is this sufficient, continue like this independent. there will be with me a very kind of mortality that is for, for the want did the very and you know, so we received the already more than $1300.00. 1 didn't know only of us the, to doing centrally of the moment. and well, then $200.00 of them,
9:23 pm
the bus to wait. there are lots of the people who used to be a very good and unfortunately there is just just one surgeon company in the fashion . so yes to we are going to new with all the cases received in the tool and the hospital itself is not safe at all because that would be normally attached by the shilling full times in the, in the 10 days. so it's the continue out to reduce but it's very difficult to work in says search situation. and that was that clarity, claire. she's out of doctors without borders, emergency response and she dont speaking to me earlier of russia's foreign ministers, surgery alive. ralph has arrived in 14 of faso on the latest stop of his 4 country tour of west africa. and moscow has been attempting to strengthen his ties across the african continent. on wednesday lab, ralph analysis additional military supplies and instructors to help build up 14
9:24 pm
a fast those defense capabilities. nicholas hack has more now firm center goals, capital the car. there is a real sense from the african countries perspective that russia offers an alternative to western countries or to other super powers that are acting in the region for guinea, for instance, of the leadership and getting a swing to renegotiate. it's a, it's access to manuals, it has one of the biggest reserves of bulk site in the world. uh, no international companies exploring that. and russia sees an opportunity to here to, to come in and to perhaps a build more economic partnership. it is not just in the country that large growth is visiting. let's talk about these year. and this a hell where we're seeing american soldiers asked to step out of the country where they had their biggest drone operation and russian soldiers stepping in. now the russians are also going up, the uranium
9:25 pm
a areas you rich and uranium set, the french we're exporting up until now. so it, it is go, it's circular, but he is visiting countries that are richard and minerals and countries that need more security. and that's something that the russians can offer, encounter part, it wants better and bigger economic relationships. the russian, a, africa trade is worth $14000000000.00, not worth the european union. that trades over $300000000000.00 worth of goods and services with the african continent. and perhaps so a good lover of here is trying to re establish a more equitable balance of relationship on the economic front walls, increasing security ties. and i'll do a body on it as a researcher at check on to the university of jones has now from the cart, sent a goal, very warm. welcome to 0,
9:26 pm
sir. what do you make of russia's africa strategy of what i think the less than 20 minutes according to not be tied and decided, but each of the highlights and important started to do much for most to against a backdrop, uh, including global solution due to your opinion templates, and really since we're, some countries continue to tell you, all right, russia has found an opportunity to select on times without countries, middle pasting security problems. and how recently started for me to take all those that have also led to break down information. so we have 7 uh, width and tons, we think for the price in the us, especially when it's time to have dimensions between the relationship between these you have an in the us and i think these, the interesting enough, we tell you what to do. the historical tides, but it's published a dude into some of your subject era. and these relationship was initially palmed
9:27 pm
through extensive support to the entire color dollars. but it was so much as groups, and they continued to foster a sense of respect and sympathy to russia across the continent of the russian engagement. the plan just called was due to internal turmoil. it's, it seems to be kind of, we kind of really in the mid to thousands and we just cut on interests focusing on military providing an economic aspect. and i'm just wondering, in terms of the security issues that are pleading a many to countries in the, in the so how and them turning now to the russians to help with counter terrorism. for example. um, what is, what is russian offering that france and the us so we're not able to offer. okay, well i think uh, defense and security cooperation from the thoughts on
9:28 pm
a crucial component of russia in the process engage money enough for the past. and as you know, all these republican countries are experiencing a political timeline, but also security just phone was the results of the money and prices thing 2012, the us department of all over and know all the country, all of these kind of neighboring countries are kind of fun, the fire must go even moving into this country and such as commodities we cannot produce with these. yeah, and today, going to just cannot create and taking advantage of the western political myspace in grow in time. you will can sentiment and the long standing failure of the international community, but also local players to talk to the root causes of a regional instability. and, and today rush every man and a top supplier to the content according to military equipment, but also using a private military companies, particularly at the black net group. we played
9:29 pm
a very part of the world when it's come to a training a demo. you know, these kind of what's not the can both so heavily in military's security, abrasions and intensive a russia russian influence. as you know, uh, countries like the united states and france, a very worried about the growing influence of the wagner group in the africa. and as you know, a u. s. has already pulled out hundreds of its troops from child recently. it's in the process of pulling out of new jersey and new share, a country where it invested heavily in terms of security. um, why do you think there has been such a quick break down in relations between the us and the countries you know like tried in new share? and i think it's because the western policy is in this i how
9:30 pm
haven't the expected results and uh, the country without experiencing political tome while, unfortunately dyslexia, but i've been put forward with lots are able to allow this country to be tons of normality, especially in security markets, and i think that's one of one of the reason why, for, you know, since 2014 be seen a anti western sentiment growing. we also a critique over 60000000 lives movie and rather than just countries over the last 3 or 4 days. and i think collaboration with, with some countries, it was also criticized that i think this is a shit is also the results of a search for a new one kind of to but also uh do the newer relationship with other popular
9:31 pm
including russia. but the china on these briggs is a new search for a new alternatives i'm do or deanna. thank you so much, sir, for joining us, us and so head here on al jazeera, extreme flooding in south africa, flattens neighborhoods, giving more than 20 people and leaving hundreds homeless plus the, the commercial space, re street's up as growing. finally launches astronauts into space after years of delays and is ford, gracious football team. 6, those for ration from the fall ahead of the european championship fire is here with that story. the color we are looking at some very heavy right across the southern part. so if any
9:32 pm
of them also, it, of course, has now sec, tenants about wherever it should be one or 2 spots, because it's just ahead of schedule, that black line shows where it actually is. and the blue line is where it should be . but of course, the western part, so she can see it pretty much wherever it should be, and temperatures about where they should be to across this particular area. because there is a cool, small cloud around more cloud to up towards the north west into a good part of central and northern partners, dante level. but about the t i celsius that i taught to above average it 42 degrees, but at least it's not as hot as it has been in a recent time, similar conditions. as we go on into friday. we are looking below the dry weather. meanwhile, across much of the middle east, what's the weather about western disturbance now with the process of pulling away from afghanistan, northern positive buckets done, but dry weather coming back and behind one or 2 shelves just around the higher ground for iran allows you to on the wall across much of that east, the side of the mediterranean few showers into ducky a 40 full sales. he's still on the costs,
9:33 pm
clinic assembly keeping those kind of values into the weekend. and so the policies to for that northeast and corner of africa planning a shout was me while across the west, africa, all the way into the gulf of guinea. the unique perspective, a deep fake image of donald trump, with flat folders to try to win over black voters. these aren't real, but the harm is incredibly real. it on had voices. it's our responsibility to make sure that future generations are not lied to connect with our community and tap into conversations you weren't find elsewhere. young americans in particular, have been extremely critical of the united states as role in the way the stream on al jazeera,
9:34 pm
the, [000:00:00;00] the, [000:00:00;00] the still watching out is there a reminder about top stories this hour is really forces have killed at least
9:35 pm
$102.00 palestinians across gauze since tuesday, most of them are women and children and families are fleeing. though straits are also coming under is really fire. these people have been displaced multiple times, often making long journeys on foot on perilous roads. and fighting between the cities, army and paramilitary with rapids support forces has escalated in the capital of some dogs. north of dar for states. for city of alpharetta. fisher is a hub for humanitarian aid in a country facing the tube. food shortages, the united nations secretary general antonia with this has warned of the dire impact climate change could have on what he called humanities chances of a livable future. and a stark address with this warrant that the average global temperature were very, will very likely exceed 1.5 degrees above pre industrial levels, at least once in the next 5 years. and that would, lo, passed
9:36 pm
a cheap terrace climate target and cit, the world on a disturbing path. and there is a $5050.00 chance the evidence temperature for the entire next 5 year periods will be $1.00 degrees higher than the industrial tides. we are playing russian roulette with our planets and we need the next, it's read off the highway, 2 climates fail. and so just how does global climate action measure up against what's actually require to reach net 0 by 2050. our environment editor and the clark explains the fact that you might remember this power is 2015, a rad. moving to label consensus as a power as agreement was for us, it was a historic deal with widespread support. a primary objective to phase out fossil
9:37 pm
fuel emissions, to keep temperatures from rising. ideally no more than one and a half degrees celsius above pre industrial levels. well then, a 9 years on the world has failed to deliver as temperature of soul in his call to arms, the un secretary general said that failure is super charging, whether extremes costing billions and displacing millions, even as climate parallel strikes. a parts of the globe, not one of the g 20 countries is causing emissions quickly enough. the energy transition is happening is just to slay. meanwhile, the fossil fuel industry is still being subsidized on a massive scale last year. a record 7 trillion dollars is that is more than government's believe we spend annually on education. and fossil fuel companies invested just 2 and a half percent of capital spent on clean energy in 2023. the rest on keeping the coal business of oil,
9:38 pm
coal and gas running many will point to how some government said, not only porting private policies, but also actively reversing them. it's pretty evident that it has to change and fast. as the secretary general said, it's time for leaders to decide who's side there on tomorrow is too late up and running as live now from sarasota, florida is drawing the for d. k. he is the director for international climate policy. i see need sure can surface the good to have you with a certain john on how bad are things well, they're not looking good as a secretary general mentioned, global greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise. we have seen a tapering off of the emissions. rise is probably the one good thing that we have going right now. and we've seen some of the barriers agreement was signed back in 2015 that many governments and need a large governments which is the most important thing or are really starting to take climate action. and what this has resulted in is as
9:39 pm
a slowing down and the increase in global greenhouse gas emissions. although at the moment we're kind of at a peak, which means we haven't really started to go down in the way that we need to come down. and i understand that you think that climate fine as well now play a very crucial role going forward. i think clement finance is huge. we don't see any countries out there saying we don't want to do anything about climate change. we with the rhetoric we usually here is we don't have the finance to do what we want to do. what that means is we need to get more public funding, which has been kind of a negotiation process through the un framework convention of climate change. but then also, how do we start to align private financing? how do we start to make sure that companies are starting to how the global economy works and started to build that into their business practices, to make sure that we're actually really getting the leverage of the larger private finance, which, which is our economy actually works. now of what has been quite interesting to see
9:40 pm
is that a very ambitious goal set by governments or the likes of the you of the green deal that are being back tracked, walk back the minutes that they have to be paid for. um, so how much of that is an impediment? you know, the investments that we have to make the financial investment that we estimate to implement changes needed to mitigate the climate crisis? yeah, i think it really, again, speaks to the private finance needs that we need here. um we're looking at governments. we have constrained budgets, whether it's for the overseas development aid for health, whether it's for military actions, public budgets or are being pushed everywhere in being requested for funding for each different things. so it makes it hard for governments to go back to their legislatures and ask somebody, so in a way what we're seeing, public finance for climate change go up, but it's not going up drastically. and we can expect it to do so exponentially.
9:41 pm
what we do need to do is make sure that private finance is coming into how do we use those public dollars? how do we use what the you might want to invest on some of his green deal and make sure that you money if it's public money, maybe the risks, investments. so the private bank will actually come in and make the investments that are made um, to, you know, quadruple what the investment will actually be. what are some of the examples where the private sector could step up? i can give you one from the nature conservancy we we do something called in nature box. what would it means as we've used to funding from the us government, that actually it ends up working as a guarantee. it creates a guarantee which reduces the political risk in an investment. what that guarantees and ends up doing is saying we can work with the government of save a se shells, or believes we can start to lower the debt profile and, and start to repetitive, restructure that profile. so the government actually has more money that they're
9:42 pm
able to eat if they're not paying it back and the payments on throughout the glove, they can use the money for environmental work. and so you're, you're looking at something where you're using a couple of $1000000.00 grants from a government, and you're able to translate it into something that the private sector can really expand and make much more influential. fascinating. now, um, there's also been a call for a band on fossil fuel ads that says the oil and gas companies are they've got fathers of climate chaos. i mean, how much impact does a band on ads really have? uh, i mean, what do you make of that to that proposal? and i, i think every stuff we take to reduce emissions, it's going to be necessary and whether that's a ban on fossil fuels coming out for some of the ads. whether it's starting to see the stickers that show some of our food products or deforestation. free all of these steps are really important. and in not just because of what they would do for a government, but for what they do for the average consumer. many of us look at those things and
9:43 pm
then we buy these things at the grocery store every day, and we don't think about it. but when there starts to be a sticker, there starts to be a movement towards the reduction of these emissions in different ways. we start to take these kind of questions and turn away and, and it's, each of us starts to act locally. we start to but luckily we start to, you know, push for things locally. and we start to request um the, the different companies that were purchasing or our products from to to do things different. john never did good director for international a climate policy at the nature conservancy. yeah. interesting conversation. thank you. i think now one of the impacts of the climate crisis is severe weather and flooding which has now hit south africa's east coast. at least 21 people have died and hundreds are homeless for me to miller reports. because this is over to god is a tomatoes, a driver kept as
9:44 pm
a tomato building up in south africa's kazoo natal province. by the time many could seek shelter. it is too late. areas like this have been devastated. the high winds in torrential rains, flattened homes and flooded roads. at least a 120 people have lost their homes. 11 others have been killed. thirties have declared a state of a lot. i see now blue level, but we don't have any food because it's all with all our belongings, with our ideas, all under the rubble and we're still searching. we literally have nothing we played with those who can help to come forward and risk us. the language, the rooms have been destroyed. that means my tenants don't have a place to stay in the month now i have to try and get them a place to stay and have my house repaired. and i do not have that much money to do that. i survive because of my tenants, and there are only 2 of them in some areas work is being done to restore water and electricity supply of the power lines were damaged 2 years ago, doubling and it's
9:45 pm
a rounding areas with the size of the was flooding and so last week is history killing more than $400.00 people. at least 10 people have died now in the neighboring east. some k problems with has been extensive flooding. and more than 2000 people have been forced to leave nelson mandela bay with the service to save the heavy rains and cold are likely to bring hail snow and more strong winds issued a warning into other provinces. because more bad weather is expected to meet the miller, i'll choose 0. so lucky as prime minister, robert fitz, so has made his 1st public comments following an assassination attempt on him last month while he were shot 4 times at close range, leaving him in a serious condition and in need of surgery for it. so says you could possibly return to work this month and called his attacker, an activist of opposition. parties that are still maya summer bundle of a on may 15th and handle of an activist of this lo back. i'll position and try to
9:46 pm
murder me from my political views. the great medical team of the roosevelt hospital prevented the washington. it's time to take the 1st step, which is forgiveness. i saw no hatred towards the stranger who shot me. i will not take any active legal action against him or seeking damages or compensation. i forgive him and let him so out. well, he did and why he did it in his own at to commemorate shows are being held in france to mark the alias. the anniversary of the day, the troops from the u. k. the us and canada attacked german forces on the coast of northern france. in june 1944 more than 4000 soldiers were killed on the day, and another 5000 were injured. latasha butler has sent this update from normandy court. the main focus of the us present j biden's visit to is to take part in the
9:47 pm
de commemorations here in normandy. he'll be meeting us veterans enrolled at that was a 150 k age between $96.00 and a $107.00. some of them took part in those the day landings, 80 years ago, no doubt will be sharing some of the stories and memories with us to present a bite. and we'll also eva, see a service as a hobby, to the american symmetry that i'd take pulse along side of the world. leaders in an international commemoration that will be hosted by the french president emmanuel macro. ukraine will also be here in the shape of the ukrainian president into florida. may zalinski has been invited by the lee say, specifically to take part in the celebrations because of war and ukraine in the heart of europe. it will be on many people's minds. the russian presence, let them be approved and has not been invited, nor has a russian delegation. that is a change from the policy. lisa says that is because, as russians in your crime, nature, in the week on such as a fight and on my call,
9:48 pm
well, a whole entire so be a state. and as i, as i'll have a lot to discuss the schools, particularly you crate, but also the situation in the middle east. latasha popular, i'll just sarah normandy frauds and so have here on al jazeera is for to will hear from manchester cities. chairman, how does the corporate bear so take legal action against the english premier lee. the
9:49 pm
business latest is brought to you by pegasus. i live by on one of your lives makes more than please the business like, just is free to you believe, i guess is like my on one of your just makes modern plates the, [000:00:00;00] the
9:50 pm
disarm now for sports, hillsborough. well, thank you so much. 17 year old nearer and reba has pulled off a shock when overwhelmed. number 2 rena sub blanket to reach the last 4 of the french open. 7. she's requested the train mentioned looking at a good way to assemble lancaster bravo with illness. for alex's court, a final deal strongly an open champion had multiple medical time hours and several like was still to take the rush, a teenager to a deciding stats and drive a clench victory on her 2nd match point. she's become the youngest grand slam semi finalists since martina has made it to the us open sammy's as a 16 year old in 1997. i don't even have a plan. so when i see it, i see an open space on the record. i tried to play there if i see that maybe she
9:51 pm
was around there. i tried to play behind her back or something like this. i mean, my god, she had a plan today, but again, i didn't remember anything. so yeah, just to andrea, but we'll play italy's jasmine powell lini and the last 4 of the she produced the biggest win of her career to teach former wimbledon champion. elaine over between that and it says that this is already how leaning best of a performance at a grand slam tournaments. the 20 year old is enjoying a breakout season that seeing her move inside the world's tall. 15 for the 1st on the was it really so much i think ahead a little bit too emotional in the 2nd said, but then i, i said to myself, okay, is good. she's a great champion so it can happen. you know? yeah, just fine. trying to, to keep it there, you know, to try to keep everybody. yeah, it's for 2 times
9:52 pm
a day after pulling added the french open. novak job, which will undergo nice surgery on wednesday and is a nature day for wimbledon. the serbian was defending champion in paris, but will now lose his world number one, ranking to younique's center, jock, which has not won a tournament this season having once free of the 4 grand slams last year. he faces a race to get fit for wimbledon, which starts in less than a month in paris. olympics, which begins on july 26th to new york on a brief sides of india's cricket team. as they made a rapid start at the t 20 world cab ireland spiders were no match for india's basement crowd of more than 20000 fans at now. south county stadium saw them bold out for just $96.00 india chase down the total for the loss of just 2. it gets india next. take on fierce arrivals. pockets on the same venue on sunday, manchester city are taking legal action against the premier league over the
9:53 pm
organizations commercial rules. the club are challenging the legality of the legs. the sponsorship deal regulations, and are understood to be seeking financial damages for losses. after some sponsorship deals were halted for league have their own case against the club after they were charged on a $115.00 counts of breaking financial fair play rules. of course it's frustrating . i think the reference is always frustrating. uh, having it being talked about the way it's being talked about. i can feel of course, for our fan base for everyone associated with the club to have, you know, these are these charges constantly referenced. i think we as a club have to respect that. there's a process that, that we have to go through and we're going through it. it's taking longer than what anyone hope for. i think i really got to where it is today by being the most competitive lease. so i hope there's a bit more sensibility in, in regulating be attending in england or the rest of the your, i think you won't see the same level as we've seen in the past 3 years. because of
9:54 pm
the level of you with regulations to one of jeremy's key players is calling on his country to have the same killer instinct sizes club team, round madrid. germany is getting ready to has the european championship, which takes off in just over a week. antonio, rigorous as a change in attitude is needed. if germany, it's and it's 4 run at major tournaments. germany have gone out in the group stage at the last 2 world tops and last and around was 16. the previous heroes is the. and so that was, and it's like 2 different pairs of shoes. hey, with germany, we have a very good system that fits all game. but what we can take from madrid is that killer instinct, a less match against ukraine, was a nail male jewel. and we paid really well, but the thing that was missing was the goals. and that's what we can learn from madrid and croatia will be helping a blessing from the pope will do this. their chances of success in germany. lamadue, which led the team to a world cab semi final at top to our 2022. but the country has never made it past
9:55 pm
the last 8 at the arrows. they're grouped alongside spain, italy, and albania. all right, and let us all your sports fan come back to layla. thank so much for how thank you . now, the usaa aerospace, the company of boeing has launched to ask from us on a mission to the international space station market a 1st for the company. it's only the 2nd private firm to do so after space 6 and comes after multiple failed launch attempts and mass of cost overruns. calling baker has more on what this means for the commercial race to space. a new spacecraft, a new rocket, and the seasoned crew, are headed to the international space station. boeing has waited a long time to send humans into orbit and it joins a very small club in 2010. then us president brock obama promised
9:56 pm
a bold and risky new idea to transform the nation's 50 year old publicly funded space program into one that relies on private companies for space travel. in order to reach the space station. we will work with a growing array of private companies competing to make getting to space easier and more affordable. 14 years later, the companies in the us space race includes some new startups and many old titans. boeing is a space veteran. the company was involved in the apollo program half a century ago and was just one of 2 to be awarded the task of transportation under obama's new land is or so it built the star liner. but the craft is only flowing to the space station once, and it's never carried people starlight star line or flies on a united launch alliance rocket. that's a partnership between defense giant lockheed martin and boeing along the way. other
9:57 pm
players have made big promises to. bigelow space was supposed to build habitats for space stations. it collapsed in 2020 so virgin orbit hope to deliver satellites by plane. it folded in 2023. the amazon founder, jeff bezos, has company blue origin, started selling short trips to space for the wealthy in 2021. and its hoping to see its own mega rockett lift off later this year. but the one that promised the most as over delivered space x led by eli mosque was the start up in 2010. today it delivers most of the people in cargo into space controls the most satellites, and is testing the largest ever spaceship or all of these depend on substantial government support. the space economy is more a speculative economy than it is a real economy. everything that comes from the space economy, as we understand it is mostly well 1st based. so most of the time space companies aren't actually making profit off of space based activities. we're
9:58 pm
going into space. it's mostly military contracted to just restore line or boeing tally some much needed success. mid business troubles back on earth. and nasa can claim a new partner as it aims for the moon. calling baker out here. you got a good and are you off today to thanks so much for your company. i'm way laraca. more news coming your way right after the the illusion of anti senses with opposition to design is a cynical and it is harmful, a dangerous completion between the persecution of a people and the criticism of the state is echoing across the world news rooms and to send me keys in the hatred of jews because the country is honest and is not about us. it's about teacher. and we need to talk about the scientists of
9:59 pm
a listing co special on his jersey hours before his killing a canadian c key. there said the agents of the indian governments were prompted to assassinate fault lives, explores how the coal for an independent states a spilled beyond india's borders. investigates. the nations alleged campaign of eliminating critics on foreign soil. the indians assess the nation on a jersey the award winning program from international so make, as we've just seen so many people traveling with children, thinking a long and difficult to explore an abundance of world class programming. every time we do an interview, web net with soldiers, voices from different quotes,
10:00 pm
stories from other ranks. each one of us is a with this today here. now programs that open your eyes to an alternative view from wells today on algae was in the or the child looks for her loved ones and the chaos of the hospital. in central concepts, there's really forces have now killed more than 100 people. and the attacks don't
10:01 pm
stop even for the terrified families trying to escape to punch in

25 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on