tv DW News DW March 19, 2024 2:00pm-2:15pm CET
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the, the, this is dw news live from by then another stop warning about causes solving civilians. 100 percent of the population and gaza is at severe levels of acute fluid and secure. as this is, randy forces pound the power tree and plant a new offensive. both washington, i'm the u. n. say goals and we've already facing a hung up catastrophe. also coming up on the program, heat waves on just on land. they also in the ocean is that is had a devastating impact on marine life like karl, will found, find out why meets urologist a sounding the along the
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i want you keeps making in welcome to the program. the u. s. has will and that all of gaza is facing starvation, secretary of state anthony, blinking made the remarks as he prepared to head back to the middle east. he'll meet top officials and saudi arabia and egypt in the hope of brokering a ceasefire and ramping up a deliveries to gauze. a 100 percent of the population and gaza is that severe levels of acute food and security. that's the 1st time an entire population has been so classified. we also see again, according to this case, the united nations, a 100 percent. the totality of the population is in need of humanitarian assistance . a lincoln was referring that to
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a new un back suit security assessment that is wanting the hall of gauze ins and now experiencing tacitus trophic hunger and the famine could hit renewal soon. if a deliveries are not immediately increased, that's been growing on ease among his rails allies about the human cost of its war against hum us which began off to the radical islamist groups terror attack. on october, the 7th, a huge crowds of guys and gather to receive aid at this shelter, run by the united nations agency for palestinian refugees amid an increasing hunger crisis. and the gaza strip were aid has only been trickling in since the beginning of the war. the young people are dying. we are asking the era people to press for a ceasefire in gaza. we are exhausted in dying. the united nations has published the slightest report warning that gaza is on the brink of famine. the you in
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humanitarian coordinator and gaza says that he's working with israel to open up more land routes for 8 shipments. as soon as the goods come in, the 200 drops a day or whatever the case may be, is not enough to satisfy the. the numbers that we have to address, and so as soon as goods come in, they don't get stored anywhere very for very long unless we can put significant supply increases into those areas. those people who can shop catastrophic levels of a ammonia, attrition or food insecurity, will at face. we will see these problems. the use top diplomat, joseph bro, believes israel is using famine as a weapon of war in gaza. we on no long down on the being of, i mean, we are in this state of, i mean, affecting was enough people. we can not stand by and watchable justine and stuff. what that will be going to do
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because this is this, i mean there's not a natural disaster. it's not the flaw. there's not the hes. quake is entirely mine made my home a mess. they have to say it. my home. well in each shipment arrived in garza from cypress and some countries have sponsored air drops. agencies say that this is nowhere near enough and can not replace the aid delivered via land crossings. were dozens of humanitarian aid trucks, a weight permission to reach people in garza spoken, i deal with housing blue. sure. a journalist who was based in gaza and the 1st months of the war and his now in amman. and i asked him if palestinians believe that the pressure on israel now because that will lead to the opening of moorland crossings as well. people in garza,
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they are very desperate and disappointed from all the parties, palestinians, international arabs, and every day that and all reports, you would see that people are blaming everybody for the crisis that they are living . and they don't think that any pressure would make any change on the unity a sports that's important. i would say that the, the international pressure made to made some food to continue entering garza and there is a limitation of types and quantities. there is a level of prices, the prices with the owner, uh the price is about the crossings and inspecting and scanning the trucks. and these were 80 signs. and there was a experiment of allowing some fluid from a gate between as well and goes us rep and a and then the last and last week, but with the am drops it's still the crisis is there, but it, it helps. but the bullying goes believe that it's not enough. mm hm. that's being
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reports of losing, of people being killed well trying to reach a deliveries. can you describe how difficult have dangerous it is for goals and to try and get that hands on the 8th? that does make it into gaza? as long as there is no, no one on the in, in garza then as well is, um, is this it destroyed all the entities that them belong to? the blue one or the lake police and now there is, uh, there was no me can, is in uh to distribute the food mainly in the north for that to be people were very and in the brink of full starvation and famine, um they were gathering at a certain points in them and the cool way to round about and that will see roundabouts in the, the, the western side of the cd with waiting for the trucks to come in. and it's very risky and very dangerous. where the paint is where easy things are. so they,
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they jump on the tanks which was very limited number of flour and to get some of them are killed according to the reports by, by shooting some with the, with the room being. and i'm sitting up or by uh, you know, uh, the pushing and so people don't, didn't know that recently. and the reason 2 days that there was more organized uh, trucks loads like a right to some certain areas. but some reports that you know from y'all's like coming that the police police officers were in charge of organizing and secured for the trucks where we have targeted and killed. as i'm to what extent has the aid that has reached garza via at drops by sea? to what extent has that brought any relief to the people the as well it's a it's, it's a, it's a be bullying doesn't believe it's a gift. sure. we are talking about a very limited number off of air drops to 100
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a day in a place that in an open mouth is and there is a deep starvation there. um the people in need of, of food for a long time. and it's not easy for, for, for everybody it dropped in certain areas, not the whole. people can go and jump and people rush to the area who will be there fast to can get the others wouldn't. as long as there was no low in order in the area. so who's a stronger a can get? so what about that? the, you know, women, children sick people. they can't get anything. so he drops, wasn't distribution for, for the, for the crisis, specially in the north. uh, because because of the, the app, the quantities, the qualities and the way off people and getting it to unless housing melisha
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reporting from a mine husband. thanks so much for your insights. the records in global temperatures, greenhouse gas emissions and ocean heat were broken last year. that's according to a new report from the you and we'll meet your electrical organization. now this led to 90 percent of the world's oceans, experiencing heat light as last year. and one impacts of those heat waves is coral bleaching endeavor, states marine ecosystems, and leads to economic losses in coastal communities as well. volunteers in the indian coastal region of go and now trying different ways of giving heat, stress, corals, a new lease of life, a short distance of the ocean. but not for fun. these marine biologist. some volunteers have a mission to kathleen, move fragments of go is intact. carl re re pump the the full, the last 50 or 60 plus the quote of the word way to have gone and then are coming
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back many more and just rent. price and global temperatures are increasing ocean heat waves. one impact is coral bleaching, which tends carl white and puts them at risk of dying off completely home to around a quarter of old marine space these karl reefs a crucial for sea life. bunker ton conservationists that contest shallow and his team move the car off to more habits. full waters, a laborious and costly job. to finance this, they decided to get tourists and locals on board. we just said, let's start the adopted quarter program and it's a one year adoption period where we give them a certificate of adoption. we give them to photograph of the cotton fragment we give them the sizes were the problem is that we're going to give them a fresh for that at the end of one year with the increased sizes of m t kamisha is one of the projects supporters. a regular assessment and diverse,
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she often spends her time in the waters here in 5 successive dining. my says, i've seen the decline of, of, of the color of the card and for example, and that hurts. it's nice to be able to do something, even if it's just a little bit. katasha and his team have replanted more than 500 carls to date it's painstaking work, considering the size of the ocean and how many carls have been destroyed. of antique, it is realistic about the challenge that she believes the adoption project will do more than just raise money because i think it's really cool it's, there's really going very to create them. but because that when you make people feel like the one something and when the news that it hurts that much more, a hutch you can afford cross support around 1000000000 people, 3 food and income for tourism and fisheries essential for life in the sea. beyond the we can get more from dw,
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find that report to louise osborne. hi louise. we just sold a how rising temperatures impacting the oceans. what else does this new report tell us about what's happening? so it confirms some of the information that we help the for 2023 was the hottest year or record by far and the will ups by the records that were smashed as well. um, ocean temperatures. there are the highest levels of greenhouse gas emissions and the atmosphere than ever before. the sea levels are rising. so all of these things, um, it also talks might be extreme weather events that we are seeing that we are continuing to see now with extreme heat and south down at the moment. for example. which means a lot of children are being told to stay away from school and stay inside. um, so it talks about those kinds of issues and also about food security and how of food access to food is being impacted by climate change. so some really devastating
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statistics that mean is there anything positive in this reporting tool? so i mean, it does point out that climate financing, for example, has doubled in the past few years, which is really great. it's money to enable us to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. and to look at ways that we can adapt to the changes that we are seeing as a result of climate change. so that's a positive, although there needs to be a lot more money that. and it also talks about renewables. so we're talking about wind, solar and, and tiger energy, for example. now, new electricity additions, last year, powered by renewables, grew by almost 50 percent move and in 2022, according to the international energy agency. and the w. m. o says that that gives us the prospect, the 520282030 actually when a b lovely does have promised to triple renewable energy by that we are moving in
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a good direction to try to, to achieve that. so there are of some positives in there. um, although few of the tips that we need to hang on to though, i mean we've seen several reports, haven't we recently pointing to this rise in the global temperatures? i mean, we are expecting this trend to, to steadily continue in the next year. it's probable that we are going to be more records broken. there are natural phenomena that are contributing to this as well, like el nino, for example, which is driving up temperatures move and then just be a well be high temperatures that we're seeing as a result of funding fossil fuels and the climate change stuff that is causing the but fine to say that they need to look and see what happens once the el nino phase has gone so that we can really see where we stand. anyways, i was born dw, find the report. so thank so much for that. and that's
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all we have a time for a man. coups mckinnon. i'll be back at the top of the next hour with more international headphones. thanks so much for watching. delete the votes. people have to say the that's why we listen to based on the reports every weekend on d w they say everything is written right, but that doesn't mean you just stick them on.
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