Skip to main content

tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  December 5, 2023 3:00pm-3:30pm CET

3:00 pm
the, the, the, the we knew is long from or less is really forces pushed further into southern casa, israel's military orders, a mass of vacuum ration of the city, of con eunice. but one is constance and their families feel hospitals think they have no safe place to go. also coming, israel accuses the united nations of turning a blind eye to the rape and mutilation of women by tomorrow on october 7th. witnesses were accounts most of the details of sexual grief and confusion,
3:01 pm
and nigeria is 85 people are killed by a military drones striking, gone wrong. the president orders and event investigation into the attack on a village in the northern state of cartoon. the army is yet to comments. plus china is the world worth polluter for this investment in renewable energy could help the rest of the world transition from fossil fuel. the uncomfortably, thanks for being with us. israel has stepped up its bombardment of southern gaza as its forces expand. they are ground offensive. these really military says it is targeting homos, which is classified as a terrorist group by multiple countries, israel and sold hundreds of thousands of civilians to evacuate the area around con eunice and head towards the mediterranean coast or further south towards the border . with egypt,
3:02 pm
the world health organization says the situation and gaza is getting worse by the hour, running out of places to keep their families safe, palestinians more than their loved ones after striking the vicinity of a school in con eunice, this is his blood. may he rest in peace? have you? thousands of bodies arrive at the hospital. many carried there by regular people. unload i la my cousin called me and said my sister was killed. he said the body was on the floor in the school yard. we had to carry the body out of selves and we saw for millions of people blood and submit to the many thousands and con eunice have already been displaced after evacuating their homes in the north some more than once. now israel's military has released footage. it says shows
3:03 pm
troops pushing deeper south and people in con eunice have been built in new evacuation order. israel's using a numbered block system to issue it's a vacuum ation orders. those are ready in the strip south for being asked to relocate even further south. and we are preparing ourselves to leave the hun, eunice area and go towards rafa who we've been here for about 50 days. now in the end, we're just looking for safety and the many fear that even the so called c sounds they are asked to evacuate to will not be spared the bombardment . china low from the norwegian refugee council in jerusalem told me what the offense of means for civilians and southern gaza. a civilian doctor has been told
3:04 pm
multiple times that they need to move 1st from northern god. then god, the city to why the god that south of all the god that and now from southern gaza, even further south or west. there's since he is not space for these people to move their art facility is able to accommodate them. shelters are already bursting out the themes and the places that people are being told to go because they're allegedly safe or, or not. they. we are cells have had staff that have been injured this week in the air strikes on rock and have family members. and there's killed as a result of these airstrikes demonstrating that really there is no safe place for people to flee. meanwhile, the ongoing fighting and hostilities have made it incredibly difficult for humanitarian agencies to be able to have any sort of affective response. right now, most agencies are limited to operating within the rock. but in the southernmost part of garza, we ourselves have half a suspend operations because it simply is not safe for our staff. and they are able
3:05 pm
to reach that be that we have stored in warehouses that we were hoping to distribute these days. you say there is no safe place left for civilians. let me rephrase the question then, what is the safest place for civilians right now and gaza? you know, i, i really, it's impossible to answer that because, well, there might be some places that are getting struck with less awe. struck with less environment. there really are no safe places. our staff has that up in the office, in southern gaza, in rasa. i was on the phone with them a couple of nights ago here in may be shows, coming in nearby. this is in an area close to where people have been told to sleep, in addition to places that they're be being told to flee, to don't have any facility is able to accommodate them. so if they, even if they are spared from bombardment, they are not fair to exposure to the elements risk of spread of diseases because
3:06 pm
people are in close quarters. are risk of diseases from on, on the clean water and on safe food. and just general lack of hygiene. so there really is no safe place. the only way to guarantee the safety of palestinians in gaza right now is a piece fire, a permanence of themes, these fire so that people can return to their homes and start rebuilding, which will take of course, not a month but years. yeah. you say that your organization has had to suspend its operation in gaza. the gardens are still in need of live savings, humanitarian supplies, maybe more so than ever. how much and what kind of aid is actually getting through? then there's still r e trucks. coming through. some of those trucks have fluid water, medical supplies, but we go sales have been unable to safely access the that we have inside of garza to be able to distribute it. i think there's a very,
3:07 pm
very limited amount of 8 that is going in right now. uh, the south southern protocol that is effectively cut off from the middle part of garza, which is effectively cut off from northern garza. and so the middle in northern areas, i do not believe that any aid trucks are able to reach them, certainly not in the north. and the, the operations that are, are ongoing are very limited and even seen just yesterday, the world health organization announced that these really are, we have ordered them to remove the supplies from 2 warehouses. newhan eunice, because they were going to be, were military operations would take place. this just simply is not feasible to have any type of humanitarian response. the effective while there's ongoing hostilities shayna low from the norwegian refugee council, all the best to your colleagues. thank you. so much you to israel has accused the united nations of turning a blind eye to the alleged rape and mutilation of women. by a month,
3:08 pm
around $800.00 people gathered at the un headquarters in new york to hear testimony including through some details of sexual violence during the last her attacks on october 7th. and is really government spokesman in jerusalem about the perpetrators would be brought to justice. yesterday israel's un mission hosted an event exposing the horrors of how much is sex crimes. and we hope that you have all heard the report, the testimonies about how, how must not only rate and gang raped is ray, the women and goals on october 7th, but proceeded to mutilate and to file that bodies we will bring the must october 7th rapists to justice and we demand accountability from the international bodies that remain complicit with them through the silence from where we can cross the dw of corresponding rebecca rivers in jerusalem. rebecca, what more can you tell us about the testimonies that were shared of the un as
3:09 pm
well and nicole testimony on and collecting evidence on crimes of such a nature is obviously incredibly difficult given the sensitivity surrounding the alleged crimes. but also of course, during times of conflict in times of war times of attack is we. so it was certainly the situation on october 7 now on october 7, things that made it also it added to the difficulty of collecting evidence of these crimes was of course that it was an ongoing operations that many hours. and of course, the main i'm, a 1st responders was to find survivors to evacuate the area and to try to keep people alive. so therefore they would not collecting evidence of crimes of a sexual nature in the beginning. and it, many weeks ago, there was some criticism on the all star sees here, in fact, for not perhaps coming through at the time will perhaps coming through and looking for evidence. and the other thing that makes it incredibly difficult to approve
3:10 pm
these allegations is that in the jewish religion matures culture and tradition, it is a culture to vary bodies within 24 hours of them being deceased. so many of the bodies now in fact, all of the bodies were buried in making it obviously very difficult to then confirm whether or not these allegations of raping sexual misconduct where we can be verified. so it's an incredibly difficult situation. there's been a lot of criticism here with us already. there's also things, criticism from some of the testimony with some critics saying that it doesn't hold up when you look at the evidence of where people were when you actually look at the evidence of where people were killed, doesn't stand up with some of the testimony of eye witnesses, police have confirmed that there are no living victims that have come out to say that they were victims of sexual assault or sexual crimes. so, you know, the commission that has now been set out to collate the evidence and to tackle this
3:11 pm
testimony to look at the video and the evidence that was on, you know, my study time and, and all the se, se, tv footage that was collected at the time i will have the very big job ahead of them to try to prove that this was, in fact used as a weapon of war, sexual violence across the board. me. the water is really authorities and women's associations women's rights association hoping to achieve by calling out the u. n. well, there's been a lot of criticism of the you and for not coming out in condemning these allegations or condemning you know, what, what people hear campaign is sized clear evidence of sexual crimes. and the un saying that there just hasn't been enough verified evidence until a few days ago, the un women's view and women organization did come out condemning sexual crimes across the board. a particularly, you know, on october 7, i should say. so they have come out, but you know,
3:12 pm
obviously critic saying that was a fall font to light. so that was very simple like that they took this to you and of course now we said also cross roots campaigns here in israel. there's a campaign called me to unless you're a jew and they've, they've put out a big billboard campaign against the you and you can see those billboards across tel aviv calling out to you and saying that international bodies, particularly the united nations, haven't done enough to support women in israel and you can tell from the, the heading there, they're saying me to and us to reduce. so saying that, you know, particularly in this case they've, they've looked towards crimes against women in, in the gaza strip, but not looking towards crimes that were committed or alleged has been committed here in israel on october 7th, as correspond to rebecca rivers from jerusalem. thanks. i, which is a look at some of the other stories making news around the world today. the british interior minister has signed a new asylum treaty with rwanda. a u. k. supreme court previously ruled against the
3:13 pm
government's plan to send asylum seekers to rwanda. to cut immigration press cures in indonesia and recover the remains of 10 more climbers killed and a volcano or option. taking the official number of dead to 22 emergency teams say 75 climbers were on laura p will pay no. when interrupted 2 days ago. for children and one adults have been injured in an explosion in northern pakistan. rescue officials say an improvised explosive device went off on a busy road in peshawar. no group has admitted carrying out the attack. officials and nigeria say at least 85 people were killed when a military drone strike hit civilians by mistake president bullet, you knew who has ordered an investigation into the incident and the northern state of cardona, he called the strike, very unfortunate, disturbing and painful nigeria. so army has so far made no comment.
3:14 pm
shock, then grief. as family struggled to process what happened? they loved ones killed by. what else are these a calling a mistake? residence in the village of to didn't bury was celebrating the muslim festival of my loot. when the palms began to fall, a german strike launched by the nigerian military. the officials say the strikes were part of an ongoing campaign against militants in the north of the country. do you manage it out? i mean, was on a routine nation, james categories. but unfortunately, some members of the to be a community where i think we are affected those residents say they have now buried more than 80 people dozens more upset to be injured. now jerry and
3:15 pm
president bullet to new bu has ordered a sorrow and full fledged investigation into the incident and cold for com. but rights group say investigations into nigeria is military are usually secretive, and mistakes are rarely punished. leaving the victims, families as the ones who are paying the price dw, corresponding towards address joins me now from a boucher in $90.00 area west. this is not the 1st time i'm drones, have killed civilians in nigeria. is it? yeah, you are correct. this is the 1st time, in fact uh, this is a default. so my saying is the 5th time we're having this kind of incidences in nigeria that many believe that avoidable because it has to be less. we're using a drone dara incidences where by you can want to unload distribution on where
3:16 pm
you when a topic we have with a drop bombs. but that has not been happening in nigeria. and it's happening again and again. and again. we know it seems like we're losing you there for us. can you still hear us? i apologize. we'll have to move on. that was was address reporting from nigeria, the carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels are sent to hit a record high this year. that's according to a new report release today. the global carbon budget report estimates a global c o. 2 emissions from fossil fuels to reach 36800000000 metric tons this year. it's more than one percent higher than in 2022. china is currently the world's biggest emitter, though, historically it's contributed less than the united states to climate change. and it's also investing heavily in renewable energy. great blankets of small here
3:17 pm
in china is capital beijing, north to wherever currents. well, equity has improved. it's still a big problem. a major cause is bonding cold, but we're still unfortunately heavy decade to fossil fuel. we actually burn yeah. logged in now. huh. off the global coal gas on ship every year in china is the world's biggest pollutant responsible for almost a 3rd of all carbon dioxide emission. and it's continuing to run pump. it's use of fossil fuels. in 2022. the nation permitted 6 times more cold projects than the rest of the world combined, according to one report. one reason is climate change. the country is being heavily impacted by global warming and to release his heat waves leading to more demand for air conditioning. another reason is industry. china is
3:18 pm
a global leader in both steel and cement production sectors with high energy needs . the replacing coal is not easy, particularly when he doesn't have a viable alternative. if a high quality heat is not impossible, but it's very difficult to achieve that in a very large electricity system, purely with renewables. the china is leading in clean energy to china's investment and renewable energy. in 2022, the wolf dropped the nations at more than $270000000000.00 compared with other big investors like the european union, with $55900000000.00. i mean lighting states with $49500000000.00. china produced as 80 percent of oil, solar panels. and there's also a huge manufacturer of wind turbines, electric vehicles, and bus trees. driving its own move towards clean energy and making it cheaper for
3:19 pm
other countries to also move forward. and those factors are primarily boost data over the last decade or so on by china is strongly industrial policies and it includes um, you know, china's ability to walk on be with the supply chains off those key technologies in a very short period of time. it also has a lot to do face just the sheer size of our domestic market. china is set to hitch its highest c o 2 emission levels by 2025 at the latest off to which its emissions will start to drop, helped by huge investments and renewable energy. but unless it abandons its colla diction, seems like these are likely to disappear any time soon. when 2022 alone in china invested more than $270000000000.00 in clean energy a short while ago. i talked with journalist bobby and catch my in beijing and asked
3:20 pm
him if that was enough. a lot of nuclear power plants. yeah, that's a big contradiction. and if you ask the government here, why are, you know, building so many new coal power plants? i mean, that is against the, the adults that a seating thing also gave. i mean basically it's against the green trends formation that the government will always say, yes, those paul paul plants, we will not run them as high capacity. i'm the i'm on a back up plan in case that's not enough. what's apple? oh, hydropower. oh, is this a long lasting draught in somebody, etc? and i mean this something to it, but you basically you have new infrastructure and you called paul pets and it's very unlikely that they will be retired in the, in 10 or 15 years. so that's really a wrong signal. i think the call of the problem is that, um china, economic model is a highly energy intensive. i'm. it relies on real estate and relies on huge infrastructure projects on industrial benefit picturing, etc. so that requires
3:21 pm
a lot of energy and as tulsa, i think the government, the things that can combine both, it can keep its economic model at the same time and pause it with renewable energy . and from my opinion, i think this will be almost impossible to achieve me. all of that said, global carbon emissions from fossil fuels are set to hit a record high. and we just got a new report today. and china had a lot to do with it, didn't. oh, yes. so according to the jew report, china is mostly responsible to china and india, which is to be fair and for the increase in and the cost of the sofa. and why is that one reason? it's also um, a one time reason. china basically one year ago listed all the 0 corporate restrictions and had a pen demik re bond with trust of robert the late. so now we saw a lot of, you know, construction, and a lot of, you know, um, production of, of, of use cement, etc. because after 3 years of pet damage, it was a, now there was
3:22 pm
a rebound. so uh, but still it, it's definitely um, allow me that a china is responsible for at the increase of fossil fuels and we should. yeah, keep an eye on this because bobby and customer. thank you so much. progress on government has been stepping up efforts to the port ask guns without proper documentation, hundreds of thousands of ask guns who are impacts on face expulsion. now the crackdown comes after around between is long. about and cobble over allegations. the taliban controlled government harbors and type taxed on militants, but critics say to move on fairly targets. adkins have lived in pakistan for generations. stranded in afghanistan in a mixture of camp just beyond the pakistani border. these ask in families could only take the bare essentials with them. there was no room for toys. they are just scraping by. there is very little water, few toilets, no electricity or heating. but there are 10000 people here in winter is coming.
3:23 pm
they have some medicine and food, but very little help. these people have been in pakistan for decades, and no longer consider afghanistan their home, the day, what not, was 15 when we left afghanistan. we lived in pakistan for 30 years, 5 years and but i had different jobs. i got married, this is going to be my children were born there. got it, got my parents died the but, but now we're here kind about that one month at the tone and we had to sell all our household items for very little because we didn't have enough money to pay for the trip here. everyone gets registered here, including those who once fled the tile about hundreds of tents have gone up more. are still to come. those running the camp say it's reaching its limits. very want to know more about why was she did. we need more help from the international
3:24 pm
community, and yet it should show they are able to help those really in need. know the refugees need more support and i get, i will give you my pleasure to a said always and more are on their way every day. thousands cross the tour come border to afghanistan. pakistan says it plans to expel old 1700000 afghans who live in the country without residents permits. the government blames them for the increasing number of attacks. but critics say this is all about politics and february elections are scheduled in pakistan. although the deadline has now been extended until the end of december, the government is ramping up pressure on all afghans to leave. i'm doing my non lives outside as lama, but he's telling what's left of his property for much less than what it's worth. he says, authorities recently mostly destroyed his house. your book, i'm going to give us. we have only 2 small rooms instead of everything we still own is there. we can't go anywhere else. when the people here are afraid to rent to us,
3:25 pm
because the government found it, who could i make them a condit, that so soon key in his family will leave pakistan. but to sort goals. family also has little hope of being able to stay. they had been earning their living by selling vegetables a, a, b, or somebody will look at it and it feels like i'm being driven out of my own country. you're focused on, his pakistan has always been at home. i'm up number in my entire life. i've never been to afghanistan, i don't know the country all the language that he's desperately trying to obtain pakistani citizenship with little chance of success. like many other african refugees who have been waiting in vain for decades. for watching the double, you know, is here's a reminder of our top story today is really military is pushing ahead with its ground and aerial offensive against how mox militants and southern gaza. hundreds
3:26 pm
of thousands of palestinians have been told to evacuate from the area around con units you and says, many don't know where they can go for safety. that's our time. i'll be back for more headlines at the top of the next hour. and i hope see that the,
3:27 pm
[000:00:00;00] the a pulse, the beginning of a story that takes us along for the ride.
3:28 pm
it's about the perspectives culture information. this is the, the news w mines. 2 years after the taliban re took power and it's gone. it's done. international troops have withdrawn from thousands of people's fee of the is the best revenge the german government had committed to protect them with the resettlement programs . and port has come of these promises close up in 45 minutes on d w. the
3:29 pm
discovery would change your mind. just click away, find out best document trees on you to see the world. the subscribe know to dw talking entry is called the prison. very short simple. we go for the one they've signed and receive the new and good will. 5 years ago the me to movement reached bollywood how much has changed since then escaping poverty. a young woman in brazil is helping people on low income set up a financial plan. the and of to the african

20 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on