tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera July 17, 2024 9:00pm-10:01pm AST
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[000:00:00;00] the, [000:00:00;00] the hello i, my name's i, this is denise. i live from doha. coming up in the next 16 minutes. is there any minutes we kills at least $27.00 palestinians across garza, residential buildings. a most targeted denouncing washington's role. and the one guards, as the republican national convention tends its focus to foreign policy. remembering the victims of malaysian allies,
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mh 17 and the memorial as hell to month 10 years and supply was sold down over you . craig the power of digital activism. how i'm seeing government protests is in kenya and mobilizing the efforts through sexual media and our piece of statements with useful to use their own just 9 days to go now until the olympic games and the mayor of power swims in the river, seems to prove it safe for the we begin in gaza where israel is once again targeting palestinian homes, places of shelter and medical facilities. the attacks right across cause i have killed at least 27 palestinians since dawn on wednesday is rarely jets attacked most gonna house and own is there it's refuge account. at least 11 people were killed in several attacks in the area. i mean line cause a city in the north of the street and palestinians were targeted as they round to
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seek shelter inside a school. 3 children were among those killed in all remote neighborhood on tuesday as strongly on the un run, the school killed 23 displays palestinians who were sheltering in the vicinity. i mean, my mood has moved from darrow bhalla in central casa, in the past 24 hours, have been quite difficult for palestinians across the gauze trip. the is rated military, committed for atrocities against entire families, whether inside their residential homes or evacuation centers through the backboards and centers are managed and operated by ottawa international organization, but they're not protected inside these facilities. people were murdered, were killed, were maimed inside these uh facilities. the took them as the shoulders for the past 9 months and more recently from areas like of dropbox. and pon you and as, as is really military expanded, it's military maneuvers. we're looking at least 81 people have been killed. so far
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more concentrated in the central area is this really monitor is stepped up. it's area less talks across and the refuge account and the western part of the city, including these trends, part of the central area of the some of the and a bridge. refugee can $27.00 of those $81.00 killed within the past 24 hours only in the past at 10 hours, just causing further civilian casualties and to your level of destruction. that is a quite a bit of a right now. any area across the goal is to serve anywhere you go. there are those rubble told rhodes rhodes, as well as the many devastations trails of devastation to public facilities and old means of life. we lived in the military continues to block the land, the crossings ended preventing 3 of basic necessities and supplies, including if you will, that is representing a lifeline for hospitals as well as for other necessities and services,
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including water wells and waste treatment management plans, including definitely nation, the water system anymore more. how does your the central area garza's trip? well, a little early i spoke with dr. v. a built in the name he's b. golf and medical team need if and don't does. without buddha's. he told me about the most numbers of casualties. the emergency room has been dealing with since. is there any attacks on saturday? we would just thing and blot at the end. does that the 1st case i saw was a 3 year old go with her side. i peeled off how about the 2nd case i saw was a woman covered in dust, as she looked at me, she was breathing. it meant that she's globally okay. but i took down the dressing on her belly and had a piece of abdomen. a piece of the bottle was out and then suddenly a rush of healthcare work cuz fully dressed. uh, 1st aid responders in the uniform
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o injured. it was so shocking to see health care workers interested in this way. and then i looked across at my nurse and they were helping manage the ad way of the boy that looked about 13 or 14. and she looked at me and. and in a mass casualty, if you have to manage the highway, you have to call that person that it was a boy. none of us had the heart to call him dead. and then the next one came in and the next one came in and there were no beds and you'll, you need anything on the floor and you can, serial knee is wet with lot. and you have to quickly decide who's more urgent and who's not just mine looks like he has a brain injury. he has to be left for dead. this woman has a need almost blown off. take a straight to operate and catches very quickly at o. h or pricing fits is enough for medical complex were full full, the surgeons that were available,
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what operating i still have 2 critical cases in the rest of the patient room still surrounded by hundreds of patients in the yellow and green. so we had to try and send these patients somewhere. one we kept with us waiting to go to the or t, the other we sent to one of the local fields. hospitals, even though he was on stay, but it shouldn't be moved. i know that both those patients died. this is in the context of looking up can i just say looking up in middle of managing all these patients and i so my, any success colleagues that, and i was, i said, why are you in here? what's happened? and he said, i've just found out my house got destroyed and my families didn't hear somewhere. well, the widespread destruction in the north of gauze that i'm the spread of famine, is forcing people to make the dangerous journey south injured palestinians in desperate need of medical treatment are among those fling garza city. john is
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abraham al, clevi spoke to some of those that have left as many as even use have a strong desire to stay in their homes despite the ongoing attacks and starvation in the north of gaza. however, the severe lack of access to basic necessities, lightford water and the treatment has left many feeling. they have no choice, but the leave of a stand up for the most of the 3. huh. i was injured when this was sheltering in was targeted by d. 3 and i have rod implants in my league this shortage of medical treatment in northern gaza. so my leg got infected. it's been 18 days since i was in jail. i'm moving south to seek treatment. lloyd that allows us to have good. yeah, we have food. we have had enough of the sliced, we're heading stuff, whatever, because there is no food log. no, what? no life yet until we are going to the south to be with the people. the journey is full of suffering is families face dangers like violence and harsh travel
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conditions as the, as they have trouble walking forward, distance is gary and heavy packages by these hardship to hobbles, meeting up with their families and getting put into a treatment of for months of a border war keeps them going, evacuating families in yorba physical and emotional pain as they leave behind their homes and communities. all this mass movements highlights the immense suffering and the despair need for solutions to address these challenges. their strength and determination and such tough times underscore the cvt or their p like. and the urgent need for the, for the relief of many of how this thing is keeping the keys of places that they have been forced to flee, has become an involuntary tradition in both because the strip and the okay pod westbank, the key symbolized hope of returning to that homes were all day reports from the
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janine refugee camp is garza, hello sentience, please. death and destruction. exhausted by the trauma of war and overtaken by greece. this is the most brutal chapter of the palestinians. not but or catastrophe . that began with zine, this malicious, expelled the majority of palestinians from their homes. in 1948, today's tragedy has revived, and that's the best most poignant symbol. the key goes, is that the money all the way when people were exposed in 1948, they kept their home keys were just like them. we hold on to our keys in the hope that we will return to israel has so far obliterated, upwards of 70 percent of homes in gaza and the ongoing war, most of these families will have no home to return to the city. i need the key to present hold for me that god willing we will return home to rebuild. the key would
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remain as a better my money, whether it's in gaza in exile or here in the occupied westbank. stories of homes stolen a lives crushed and of keys bearing witness, or a common thread in the palestinians experience of dispossession. the scars of repeated destructive is rarely, military campaigns are inescapable. in the janine refuge account of the salons home was damaged by is rarely a sold in 2002 and twice after that. a 2nd home he bought nearby is also gone. only the rubble remains and he's hesitant to rebuild again. it's like gods a here we knows even safe and now homes. my brother's home nearby was struck while he and his family went inside generations of refugees here experienced repeated
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displacement and loss in their lifetime. the was 10 when he became a refugee in 1948. he holds on to the key to his original home, which i mean, what, what do you know? the key evokes in during bitter memories, but it is also a way to challenge the occupation. it's material evidence of my land and home in the alleys of janine's, comp known here a small gaza, the promise of return and rebuilding lives on kept to live by patients for assistance, not all the data janine refuge account, palestine. meanwhile, there is growing and it is rarely prime minister benjamin netanyahu. off the allegedly said, the captives held in garza suffering but not dying and as straight as have gathered in tel aviv following those comments demanding b is riley government finalize has ceased 5 deal, which would see the release of the captives destiny, all reports and they made the comments on tuesday, during a cabinet meeting on the on the security council has been holding its quarterly
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debate on the situation in the middle east, including israel school on golf at the u. n. chief of stuff says extreme hunger and infectious diseases are on the rise. gabrielle is older, is that the united nations and has more and what he on to say, the most meeting is still going on. it's gonna go on for several more hours because there are more than 3 dozen countries that are on the speakers list that want to talk here and we're not even halfway through it. but i think what you're seeing here is, especially from the chief of staff for the secretary general who's speaking on the secretary general's behalf. because a secretary general just happens to be a way today. i think he saw 3 main themes. number one is that he said that the u. n . has to have more sustained access to get humanitarian a to those who need it the most. there's some aid coming in, but not nearly enough. he said the united nations remains committed to delivering
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life saving 8 in gaza, but we faced severe challenges and deadly risks on a daily basis. he also calls on israel to halt it's illegal settlement expansion that has been ramping up in recent months and also sure uh, showing the light on the situation in the west bank saying that since uh, october 7th uh, through july, 8th, uh, the u. n. has calculated or, or, or, or, or accounted for 553 palestinians that have been killed in the us. be paid westbank by is really security forces, or a, or a or other is really settlers. he said that needs to stop immediately. the donald trump choice for vice president nominees said to introduce himself at the republican national convention. later today on day 3 of the meeting,
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the focus is also expected to attend to foreign policy, including biden's handling of the gallons a will outside the venue. people have been protesting to show that solidarity with palestinians shepherd, tennessee reports from the will k, where the convention is being held to gauze, it has been central to the approach. as south side, the republican national actors see the us back was a result of a corrupt political system. deeply linked to other issues like economic inequality and civil rights and israel genocide, against the pals and people. because this is the primary issue in the world today. our generations, vietnam war, one of them over their heads, the us posted in community network. it goes involved and helping organize the mileage on the r and c a year ago because of fears of a 2nd, trump presidency. it was important because we knew that the trump was going to be
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the nominee. that you know, we had seen for a pretty brutal years from him when he was president. but after 9 months of jo, biden's unconditional support for israel, this mobilization of thousands outside the r n. c is no longer his group's big political protest of the campaign season. that will be a be democratic national convention next month against them, and they goals, genocide, jo. now the mass mobilization is going to be chicago in august. now it's going to be tens of thousands that are there with the r n. c, on the way the democrats are trying to make the case that they remain the lesser of 2 evils for the power of citizens. joe biden expanded on that v. me in an interview release this week, and the guys done more from the housing community, but we watched the interview with some published in americans and milwaukee and us for that reaction with such a great friend who needs enemies. right? like, or is that how do you say it?
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i, obviously it has to be like that, you know, if he has been so straightforward opinions, why are you know, 40 close to 40 minutes, 40000, but it's 2 years now. most of you to hear this type of a lack of nuances and nicest way i can say it bordering on delusion it. it breaks my heart and infuriates me at the same time for those who want to stop us approved the israel's assault on gaza. this election isn't a choice between a great to lesser of 2 evils, but simply between the evils and having made goals of the focus of demonstrations here with the r n c. protests is prompt to regroup at the democratic national convention in chicago next month to try and stop for carolina. she everytime see elders are well patsy. calhane joins us from the convention, milwaukee in wisconsin, because we get to see say, foreign policy on the agenda on day 3 at the republican convention. what are we likely to hear the oh board. first of all
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we, we're going to talk about the vice president. how many ged vans because he's going to be the keynote speaker today. i wanted to give you a little bit more background on him. he came to prominence when he wrote a memoir called hillbilly allergy. it was about growing up, surrounded by addiction and poverty. and so that it was made into a movie and so he, he was a pretty high profile person there for a minute. he was a huge anti trunk critic, very vocal during that election, but didn't when there was an open ohio senate seat, he's one of the president's adult endorsement and he eventually got it. after saying he was wrong about trump, tyler was a former marine. he was a yell educated lawyer now in the ohio senate, and he is really one of the most vocal performance supporters of the mega movement . he led the effort to get rid of a g crane, and he is a very,
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very pro israel. he says he's he had studies for a total of. busy ocean ban, with no exceptions. he since now gone in line with the former president said it should be a states right boss issues. he's a skeptic of climate change and he is also an election deny. or he has said that if he was where mike pence was when the then president asked him to basically throw out the election the elect doors. he said that if it was him, he would have done it. and, and patsy. tell us a bit more about the j d. the bounces the background because he's got a rags to riches story, doesn't they? uh, what does that expect you to bring to the ticket as well? today they're really going to be talking about in foreign policy. the theme of today is make america strong again ad. so i expect in his keynote speech, you will bring up some of these issues and get a real sense. i'm looking at who the speakers list of what they're really going to be talking about today. one of the things is,
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is real and they are going to have parents. so some of the captors give a speech here behind me. we know that donald trump, when it comes to the world, gaza has been, is very sort of muted. and what he says about it, he has said that he still needs to hurry up and it will finish. and so they are in his words lindsay, the p. r. war. we are also going to hear from a student who says that they feel that they are being targeted on campus because of anti semitism to that aim. that does go with what's the platform. the platform here is for the republican national convention, says any foreign students who are here in a visa, who criticize or protest the war on gaza, they will simply be deployed. and another big thing tonight is going to be on immigration, is basically saying we're going to bring the border into everyone's living rooms. and in again, that platform president donald trump is a former president. trump is promising to do for millions of people,
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including children. he says that she is going to send troops that are overseas to the southern border, which she can't actually do under the constitution on something called the policy commons. how does that us troops are not allowed to operate on us soil and again on ukraine. we're probably going to hear about that because i, judy vance, again, huge component of cutting off all age ukraine. the former president said he would ask and prayed to make massive concessions, giving back, giving some of their land to russia. uh, yeah. i asked you understand i, they didn't really bring that up in the background briefing for us. but i heard one of the videos that's going to play out. and they know that this is a political winter for that. and because during the disastrous retreat of us troops in afghanistan present job, items poll started the plummet, and they really have never come back up since then. so it's going to be a very america 1st american centered speech at what we're in here from all the speech teacher speakers tonight. it's underway at about 4 and a half hours. okay,
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thank you for that particular hanging. but 1st up, the republican convention in milwaukee, wisconsin. now let's turn to us president joe biden, who's campaigning in the background stage of nevada, where he will be trying to quote the hispanic vote, as he said, to speak at the annual conference of hispanics, civil rights and advocacy organization. immigration is expected to be one of the main topics. joining his line from wash d. c is clarence blue saying he's a professor and director of international fast majors at howard university. thank you so much for your time. i'm several recent polls injected the hispanic and latino very to shifting to ed's donald trump as the election moves close to. is there anything the president can do or say at this point to change things? and i think there is, i think for both african americans and for look, you know, folders,
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it's hard to acknowledge anything that they really got out the 1st top administration problem with horrible on integration. of course very much i'll bring me the wife nationalists terms. i think there's been some frustration with the, with president biden, and it has been so cold for him to fail when he's fun. but i think one see, because to really to basically a side by side and look at what time do you while he was president, we're buying this done while he's president, then it becomes pretty obvious that a trump has not acted in the interim is a little community or other communities that i have been marginalized by the republican party, right? as they say, the rest of the like we have seen some trump on the migrant issue and minorities in general. and yet we see a growing number of latino is who seems to be more trusting of trump when it comes
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to addressing migration of the board. and why do you think that is but he said again, there's been a little movement on the issue. uh, and for the buying the administration uh, wallet it failed to come up with uh, immigration policies. uh, it hasn't been successful. and i think that the republican party has really kind of made this the central issue of the lease, from their vantage point of the campaign to the administration has been by campaign i. it's been did credit any fees, i think an offer in account or i really actually wasn't it still last week where he began to get some sense of what binding would do in the 2nd administration, there's been a lot of discussion about project 2025, and kind of the also it's very and, and i know really policies that are in that document. but what's been missing,
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anything on the, the credit party side that would be kind of, would counter to that going to the democrats really are able to articulate and clear agenda for a bind 2nd term and popularized that. they're going to find out that it's going to be difficult uh for communities, black community, latino communities to complete the stay on board. i'm talking of a black veritas, part of former president from claims that his conviction and even his immigration policies have made him more appealing to the african american community. is that really the case? does the polling reflect that to? so the polling has shown and we've done polling at how university as well that there is anywhere between 20 to 25 percent of people of black people who are paul, who said that they would be willing to vote for bytes. but we saw this in 2016,
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we saw it in 2020. and what actually happens is when people actually did come boat, we said an outcome. so for all of the, uh, bragging by the campaign, a 2016 in 2020 received only 6 percent in 2016 and only group 8 percent in 2020. and all of the ads before january 6 and some of the tons conviction. so there's a lot more, i'm actually now with the thing to try when it really kind of boils down to people actually voting. and if you look at how people actually voted in 2018 in 2020, in 2022 african american voters been voted. overwhelmingly, i'm pretty consistently with the democrats a briefly clara clarence, if you could just stay with us. uh, we are going to go live to
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a couple of harris. she is speaking in michigan. let's have a quick listen to what she has to say. we now confront the one of the questions we now confront is about the way we should engage with one another. in this campaign. on sunday evening, our president joe biden issued a call for unity. and there must be unity around the idea that while our nation's history has been scarred by political violence, violence is never acceptable. there can be no equipment about the same. the hallmark of american democracy, the hallmark of any democracy is a strong competition of ideas, policies and a vision for the future. and just as we must reject political violence,
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we must also embrace a robust discussion about what is at stake in this election. the shortest way to reaffirm the strength of our democracy is buying gauging in a vigorous and civil exchange of ideas and one of the ideas. and one of the principles that is at stake end of this election is the issue of reproductive freedom. and that is why i am here today to discuss that topic and i look forward to our conversation. thank you all very much. pamela harris, the, the vice president speaking there in michigan. let's written to our guest clarence a new saying professor and direct spends national affairs and majors at howard university. let's talk a little bit about cumberland, harrison. what she means to,
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to the black vote is and, and, and why a increasing prominence could play an important role in, in bringing, bringing the black vote to the democrats race. so 1st let me say that the vice probably who is absolutely correct that there is no credit score, political violence. they were on the political spectrum. and that, that needs to be on acknowledge, across the spectrum, i would not be uninstalled who not pointing out that there's the one candidate in the race who has been an advocate. oh, certainly, aggression and violence by his language at his rallies for a number of years. that said, getting back to kamala harris. she's been important because she had brought to the
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table. a new generation of democrats, i'll find, as we know is, is it is a eighty's. and she and nancy pelosi and a number of other democrats represent a generation that now has to turn over the mantle, too much younger for to younger individuals. and so kamala harris, you know, brings that to the table. she also brings a background of being a woman, being black, being of asian background. that is really reflective of the democratic demographics that are retaining in the country. and you compare that to the again, the republican party brings to white males to represent their candidates for the president. so it's very stark kind of contracts and clarence. we've heard today that couple of harris has agreed to take pause in the debates with clara uh,
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with the vp peck for donald trump. himself, there is that, i think can expect expectation that his rags to riches story will also appeal to minority versus what, what do you think of the, the to being pitted against each other? so i think uh uh, vice president harris would be wise to quote td bank if you look at his statement is going back to 2015 in 2016. and where do you have to say about donald trump? how donald trump was divisive on a range of issues that advance was concerned about. not only for white working class individuals that he comes out of. but he also talked about not dividing a working class people by race or by ethnicity. so it would be wise to find him on what more important insights that he had when he,
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during that time of course, he is transformed and it's not clear what he would say in regards to those views now. but it shouldn't be very robust debate because again, both katie vance and kamala harris represent a very different generations. then donald trump and job, i really good to get your perspective clarence the same professor and director of international says and major is at howard university. thank you. thank you so much . the ceremony has been held to commemorate 10 years since malaysia airlines flight m 8. 17 was shot down over east and ukraine. kidding. any 300 people. the need to sign into his health. the victims of the crash at a memorial near amsterdam, the claim was on its way from the dutch capital to kuala lumpur when it was find
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upon adopt sled investigation in 2018 concluded that a russian missile hit via croft. michael. both secure as a former spokesman for the o. s. c, the organization of security and cooperation in europe. he was one of the fast on the scene when the plane went down and he told us about his id investigations in my press briefings that the skies above ukraine at that time were becoming more dangerous. why? because russian back rebels were in possession of shoulder fired missiles and we, we said that and then when we arrived at the scene, we quickly noticed these very unusual kind of pock marks in the fuselage of the our craft. fast forward a few days or weeks later, it turns out that there isn't these exact signature of the russian book amiss. so it went up to 3333000 feet with aircraft was exploded, sent all of this shopped onto the aircraft, and that was a big, big piece of navigate the items of criminality. of course,
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what the relative has definitely are looking for as an apology. from russia also the one that made the decision to deploy the book. and so it's suggested that went all the way up to mr. brewton and things like compensation. i can tell you people here, their relatives are really suffering even financially having to travel here, having to pay for many other things, in some cases, multiple burials because they get remains in separate kind of from deliveries if we can use that word. so, you know, the pain is really, really written on their face and whatever you speak to them, it's some side. i write scripts and can you say more than 50 people have been killed in the recent anti government protests, many demonstrate to save and most afraid and will continue with demonstrations until the mountains and that they have been connecting through social media platforms to debate. crowd source and mobilized approaches. katherine sway reports
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from nairobi. and the company that took studies we are done with you copying to is one of the most popular 2 characters in kenya. how can i make shop? he is a huge social media presence. he's saucy. we are both see and lout is creative says he talks about issues that resonate with many canyons at the cost of leaving corruption and bad governance. he does this with a touch of humor, know, coming to his main goal is to, to bring, you know, to make your life the as to being a human, being a bit of joy, especially in the, in the times we're going through the mental, ill know people are blessed to us to know with everything that's great when people angry don king is a using social media to push for change. the discuss serious topics to music.
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comedy skips and guns president william who to has used it to some of the demands. but they say this is not enough. the frustration on line and on the streets. he's evidence william omar says he has been unable to access government funding to pursue his university education. he's an often education piece. what as to because he did fuck before anything else. so personally, i think i'm look happy to the president of the president. so that's very, very painful to me. the president doesn't hold up so you'd probably many wanted the president to address them on social media, the not democracy that he did. he's one of a few de does on the continent to do so. so you have a planned to get out to this be tomorrow and but and tony bulky, who hosts a show online saves. they still don't trust him because of many broken promises. we had an educated class of jo, bless you, it's
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a very dangerous place to be. we need jobs, and that is what the government has to respond to. otherwise, before people coming out, calls for the present to step down are getting increasing these out. many of these young people are not afraid, they say this is their right to protest, and that very angry as well about of how the country is being one who they say they're going to be here until the president. the end of government does best on accountability and just to put those who have died in the protest, catherine, so all the 0 nairobi, so heads on the al jazeera, maybe it looks to tackle a major crisis that sees thousands of people risking their lives for best buy loads and members of the house of commons by government will govern in service
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to the country. the case being charles opened his parliament and lays out the new british governments plans for the year. and in forcing them to set to begin a new era without foss following style watts, james addison pizza will have the my wife and i just said between the admin and financial on 2010 today to need a new fund. digital has between about 1 o'clock, 5 mean you don't have a contract and now we have this was one, then you are the last, the 20th of the beneficiaries who have bought a book that about 400000 jobs. our 1st african we believe not only financially a bar and these don't have the guns with alternate training them. unimed, providing mentors for them to be on the 2nd largest, to have
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a play of labor in the private space of stuck with the states. often lines here on russian side space is to a fall or use, it creates technology oriented opportunities, worthwhile were driving over to you ever to, to sure, look at the lighting job creation on a wheel. so as showing to see economic empowerment because the the new foundation and powering african entrepreneur is the, the, you're watching out. is there a mind of stories this hour? is there any jets attack to multi gonna house and golf is home is there is refuge account via tax,
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right across the strip of killed at least 2070 palestinian since dawn on wednesday you and chief of staff is told the security council that extreme hung up on infectious diseases on the rise in gaza. l coordinate rob trace as overhaul from many and palestinians on the verge of salvation ceremonies been held and i'm sit down to on others killed when malaysia airlines flights. i made 17 downs over at craig and 8300 people died in the crash 10 years ago. the flies was on his way from amsterdam to calling them for darcia investigation concluded that russia salt down the now representatives from 28 countries are missing in libya to address the dangerous crossings of the mediterranean made by migraines. many european union nations are attending, alongside african nations, not at china has these officials are in tripoli to discuss
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a pressing issue. african and european union leaders want to enhance cooperation to combat people smuggling and irregular migration. post libya has been at the forefront of the migration crisis. we said, let's sit and tool, instead of you spending money fighting immigration and searching for them, why don't we build strategic projects? and you provide the funds as partners to stop the influx. the libya has long been a transit hope for migrants trying to reach your pin shores. but compared to last year, there's been a 60 percent decrease of arrivals in europe from libya this year. so migrant say that's because it's becoming increasingly dangerous for them to be in libya, many are choosing to go back home. i'm looking i maybe i and i now they have a very, very dangerous to how people go to see wants, of course to see. so they'll have to stop pause. so i know everybody is going back
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right now to dial country. so far this year, more than $17400.00 migrants risk the dangerous journey across the mediterranean. and arising near the leaf from libya. but nearly 900 died or went missing, etc. but you ins migration agency says there are more than 725000 migrants in libya, but libyan official save the number is much higher. according to the un, the vast majority, 85 percent cited economic reasons for leaving their countries by their or should you be i came to libya by con my situation to need. yeah. was very poor. i had no work. i have no problem with the libyans. i came here to make money and provide for my children, and then i will go back home. many are also seen war like a neighboring sudan fighting there has displaced more than 11000000 people. local officials estimate, 1000 sued in these refugees are now entering libya every day. libya says it's not the source, but
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a transit country for migrant officials here and says they simply don't have the resources or capability to meet the humanitarian needs of the growing number of migrants and the rest of jeez libya, once a coordinated international effort to help tackle migration, they helped meetings like this for him. kind of cheese that out right now. i'll just 0. triple it. the heavy rains in the east and i've got a stone. i've killed at least forcing people. it's a non ha ha ha! was lashed by hale and heavy rain on monday. and as mohammed jump june reports, many people say they've badly received any help in eastern afghanistan after the rain storms and amid the devastation residents. and then go heart province, tried to salvage what they can oh, recalling the neighbors and loved ones who did not survive, praying for them as well, spoke to the vehicle, take it as usual, but all of them to shut down one room. the rain and storm go down, pens, the 100 noise and the little girl came and said,
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the roof collapsed. i ran and screamed, i'm off for him. nobody was here with flooding here, having killed dozens. maybe maria has no idea what her family will do next. the sub by that an alarm that i was thinking, i don't have any house, and i have an old father in law. what we do for me, and i have small children and a disabled mother in law. what should i do? local officials say hundreds of houses have been destroyed as a result of the latest round of flooding and the power has been taught in many areas. the scale of the devastation also cleared to see in the rooms in core doors at this hospital. so those in the hall regional hospital, we've received $29.00 bodies and around $230.00 wounded people from sucrose district floods. and this is a preliminary number. exceptionally heavy rains in afghanistan have since may alone, killed over $400.00 people,
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being among the poorest countries in the world means afghanistan is also particularly exposed to the effects of climate change, which, after decades of war has left these residents of nangle har province. even more vulnerable than they already were. how much enjoy associated china and the philippines have agreed to set up an emergency hotline to prevent future escalation in the south china sea. so 1st time, the 2 countries assessing up a direct line at the presidential level to handle such disputes that has the keys, john is coast guard of hostile maneuvers in the contest. invoices, aging says from being ships have in the past, encroached on chinese territory. police in thailand, believe 6 people found dead in the luxury hotel room in bangkok were present victims written to me is nationals to have dual american citizenship when hey, how's the story? the 6 bodies were found inside one room here at the grand hot air one
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a 5 star luxury hotel, right in the heart of bang costs busy tourist and shopping district. when they were found on tuesday, by a hotel, stopped me by police believe that they had been inside the room for around 24 hours . attention quickly turned to a course on the tip, given that the police said there was no sign of a struggle inside the hotel room and no sign of any wounds on the bodies. there was also a lot of attention placed on meals that were discovered inside the hotel rooms that had been lift, largely untouched. however, tasting on tops that were used by the deceased have tested positive for traces of sinusoids, and the police believe that one of the deceased was responsible for the poisoning and other words, they believe this was a murder suicide. carried out because of a business disputes. wayne, hey, al jazeera bank on still as on the out is aaron's full,
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makes modern pleads. the business like just is free to you. i guess is that a light smile on one of your makes modern plates? the the ok, it's time as far as he has pizza. i mean, thank you very much. in 9 days the school he will who will gather in parents for the seals, and then pick games. but they all concerns the cities senra the won't be clean enough for athletes to compete in the mail and hit dell. go swim in the worst way to prove it. even clean. it's actually about the reports from paris making
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a splash and fulfilling a promise. paris may need to go taking the plunge and the rivers send to prove its clean and ready for the olympic games. i want to be here and make some because injury and let me know it's really messed up. and the reason i thought it was, it was, if i originally people in the long side, the man was the heads of the power skins organizing committee 3 time and then pick the middle. when a canoe is tony, a strong gay support, a great symbol to make sure that 10 days before the games it's ready to die, please. they can be sure to say new state to be the style of the powers games. the opening ceremony will be held on the river and athletes will swim in. it's during offense including the track alone and swimming barrison shoot on. seasonal rain,
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push out pollution levels. organizers say swimming. defense can be delayed a few days. cleaning up the senate has taken more than a decade and cost $1500000000.00. there are now new water treatment facilities and the whole sewage system has had to be improved. this environmental campaign a says the benefits of a clean since the wellbeing b lympics for health and yes for the system to so it's interesting to, to, to, to do all those west and to be able find any to swing because no way with the climate change the city is going longer and longer. the french president is also, i promised to swim in the same box with the manual might cross much to the political crisis of to this month's paul elementary election. it seems, i'm likely he'll be taking a deep any time soon. natasha butler, ultra 0 paris, a long jump to mohammed. i mean, also allow me will compete in paris for the i sees refugee to you if lead syria for
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germany nearly a decade ago. then all this is happy to feature. if the olympics you wish that it could represent these home country, david states reports, mohammed, i'm in of salami arrived in berlin in 2015. the promising young athlete had escaped war and syria crossed the mediterranean in a rubber boat. and then we'll the rest of the way to germany. one of his 1st goals on arrival was to find a gym so he could practice long jump again. my leaving of reasons why we had support for me is really be my life, especially here in germany. i'm all alone. life in germany is not easy. it's really not easy. when i'm in training, especially what i can for well, all this joy, it's such a great feeling. 29. you out. salami has been granted asylum in germany, and he's one of 36 athletes, and the i've sees refugee team for power is 2024, benefiting from a scholarship program which helps fund that training. the 1st thing steve about
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them is special. germany in the refugee team have given me a lots of support to get that. that's not an issue. when we say for which country or for him i compete. of course i would like to compete for syria stuff else allow me was 15 when he discovered long jump and when serious national schools championships. it's been a grueling jenny since but last year in budapest he competed at the world athletics championships. this came from because i've been fighting with myself really hard to improve my performance for the event picks and want to at least make it to the final to show that we have that because we have competitive athletes and not just refugees. where the syrian colors in paris by achieving his dream of competing it's in the lympics else allow me, will represent more than a 100000000 full should be displaced. people around the world, david stokes, which is 0. a ram who had kept them new commodities assigned
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a one year contract extension with the european champions. the 38 year old will now continue at the burnaby row until june 2025. margaret arrived at royal in 2012 and his health club when 26 trophies anytime in the spanish capital along the way. he is also won a balance due and fee. so play of the year award england the preparing to play the 1st cricket test match since the time and so false by the james anderson. he bowed out so after the 1st test against the west indies last week. and now for the 2nd phase, there will be an opportunity for someone else to take his place in the building lineup. captain ben stokes says anderson is still called the overall states up. and the younger voters are absorbing as much of anderson's knowledge as they can be standing there. and you can just see the lights are just like just drawn towards and the one that's pick his brains about, well he thinks how we hold certain deliveries and, and yeah, i think it's been a very, very smooth transition. but there's no doubt mozilla motion with jimmy cuz it's
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only been a week. meanwhile, the waste thing. these are looking for an improve showing off of a performance in the 1st test at the ones that were humbled in less than 3 days. captain craig brathwaite has cooled for a base, a bathroom performance, even though i think it's pretty simple to do. we go to bob metal. also, we gotta find a bit of issue. we have some discussions or wrong or different things. we can do better as a team. you know, there are still a bit of positives in all of this by the boss in our the said before 5060 runs to many, but it was a positive to get angry, gets by the by. we just got to put runs on the board as a simple, a tiger woods prepays for the open to mid criticism, the bodies full man surplus. one of these for the prose has come out in support of the 15 time major champion. more than $1000.00 spectators is followed would steering his final practice round that royal train in scotland on wednesday. for me,
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you're a variety cup captain come montgomery, suggested tiger should retire. but this is p j championship windows and the shelf like, oops, woods plays on for many years to come. he's still ok great to me. you know, he's still on that right on sunday and i have uh, yeah, i just heard some of his comments that were said uh by conn. and you know, whether it's his honest opinion or not. i mean, i became a golf needs and need some desperately. uh, you know, selfishly, i want him to play as long as possible. it just helps all the guys out here. just with me, my eyeball, something like tiger was, brings golf so he's still got a lot of fighting. i'm really mcelroy he's looking to win the open championship for a 2nd time. an old, an irishman just missed out on victory at the us open last month, which would have ended obtain you major drought. the board number 2 does not sound
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too concerned about it though. i know that i'm in a good spot and like i you know, if i think about 2015 through 2020, that 5 year stretch i i seldom had a a realistic chance to win a major championship. so i'd much rather have these post calls. that means that i'm, that i'm getting closer, but yeah, absolutely. i'd love to be able to, you know, play the golfing and get one over the line. but as soon as i do that, people are going to say, well, when you're gonna, when you're 60 i, that's all the school things. so the time being all that move a little bit later on. thanks for you to are now the u. k. is king charles is most the source of the parliamentary year with the speech laying out the new government's priorities. case dom is labor policy, want a massive majority in general election 2 weeks ago trying to help her force from london and just pageantry history and symbolism. some of it dating back to the
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middle ages, as parliament and the monarchy intersect in the king, speech stability will be the cornerstone of my government's economic policy. every decision will be consistent with its fiscal rules controls, with a deliberate, the new label, governments, legislative agenda. in a customer, a monitored constitutionally applied to remain politically neutral. beyond the spectacle, his woods had substance. a speech setting, a prime minister, keeps tom as planned to a tv cannot make gross taken together. these policies will enhance britain's position as a leading industrial nation and enabled a country to take advantage of new opportunities that can promote gross and wealth creation is the from 35 pieces of proposed legislation, image and agenda, stretching from house building to nationalizing the railways. clean energy to job creation. they were bills regulating artificial intelligence, tackling illegal migration and devolving pilot to the regions and on the world
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stage, plans to forward to close, to ties with your up to continue support for ukraine and the commitment to long term peace in the middle east. multi bit thrown from the pages of the manifesto that one labor the election less than 2 weeks ago. they all priorities britain's new prime minister hopes will restore politics to public service and kick stopped what he calls a decade of renewal. let's think of the the pots, the economy entry state the following. what will be largely symbolic, both in the house of commons on looking to speak the word because they see parliament can get thumbs of why this goes. but scaling prime minister keystone is facing pertain in this country. now they've been killed the whole l 201. okay, that's it for me, for this news out, you can find much more now websites out there and they'll come from the is he in
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the next few days to stay with us? the the lines of ethnic i'm groups is posing the biggest challenge to me in my us going to since the 2021 with exclusive access to remote camps and find, find battles. people in our accounts, the progress of an idealistic young generation of rebels as a pivotal moment in the last 60 years of the countries, the trouble of history on the phones me in my, on the, on the ropes on al jazeera, unique perspective. i love that. i really not that because definitely i love and nothing is something you that we on heard voices, but we are committed guessing best i can know all about you so much connect with our community and talking to conversations you will find elsewhere. lot of these
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system even come in as an international inside corruption, excellence award. nominator here are now the these really military kills at least 27 palestinians across calls on residential buildings. and the most could talk a sent the somebody to miller. this is all to 0, live from dough. and so, coming up denouncing washington's role in the one goes on as a republican national convention terms. it's focused to foreign policy. remembering the victims of malaysia a lines and make 17,
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