tv Jerusalems Palestinian Cabbies Al Jazeera January 21, 2019 4:00am-5:01am +03
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just as blocked streets demanding the resignation of president bashir here daily demonstrations began in december in response to the rising cost of bread activists say dozens have been killed the president says the protests are being organized by quote traitors who have a vote has the latest from ca to more protests broke out today in khartoum and also in the city of man protesters have been planning to converge on the parliament and once again demand the government to step down and the president omar bashir but soon they were dispersed by security personnel using heavy tear gas or so in other parts of the man in the forty third street where i was there heavy to gas how it has been used and a cameraman working for dizzier has been as a freelancer has been apprehended and that's a part of a systematic you're cracking down on journalists particularly if they used t.v. cameras d.v. cameras are not allowed in these protests since the beginning and today or so
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president omar bashir once again reiterated his accusation to certain elements who he said are infiltrated among protesters and he accused them of being the ones who killed the protests that he said the bullet that has been used to kill dr bao because of the high heat on thursday doesn't belong to any of the government a part of his and certainly it has been it belongs to those infiltrators he said some infiltrators who are prevented recently said they belong to the darfur rebel leader abdul wahid and that they have been sent particularly to do this type of things and to put blame on the government the television news cameraman has been killed in libya mohammed been highly for well as a freelancer for al-jazeera and other leading news organizations the thirty five year old was hit by stray shell fire on saturday whilst on assignment following a libyan militia hundreds of people have been killed in fighting between rival groups since the fall of moammar gadhafi seven years ago. still to come on
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al-jazeera. the. angry u.s. federal workers demand that protection is what together for a compromise to reopen government class at the fuel that keeps gaza's hospitals operating is drying up threatening the lives of those who depend on it to survive. a day of snow for some parts of ukraine but very few of the people from his cotton dime store at the european play in the alps yes are covered in snow is not much more to come at least for twelve hours there will be actions for the south and central train that circulation is of rain but it's not off in the balkans you can see small snow for central turkey and rain to cover the already flooded area along most of the sides to be honest to the west where it was raining where it's going to
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the weekend is by the portuguese so it's all fine again and the sun's a but then the next storm system comes in it comes down through the u.k. obviously it's much colder rather is snow where it's forward flank has a big change of direction and that will eventually hit the outs to tuesday night or wednesday was to circulation africa bit more active bringing rain through its early to the domination and of course now beyond that up towards the south and garion plates are actually back of the water that means the dow geria to new zealand probably rocker will be involved in the picture of a monday rather cold analogy is rain coming on shore it's dying naturally about hugo fifteen degrees to enjoy and that's in the sunshine come tuesday and although disappointing mostly rain is skipped across northern to news here on tuesday it's actually warm further east.
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russian filmmaker under a necklace off continues his journey across his homeland to discover what life was like under putin during his travels he meets christians and muslims patriots and separatists i told the locals in the southeast. when i arrived and on to something completely different some longed to leave putin's russia but for others the russian passport means hope and the chance of happened in search of putin's russia on al-jazeera. are going to one of the top stories here on ars era fifty two fighters have been killed in a u.s. air strike on somalia the strike was launched after al-shabaab attacked
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a somali army base on saturday. police in athens used tear gas to stop angry protesters from entering greece's parliament building thousands of people have been demonstrating against the proposed name change to the former yugoslav republic of macedonia. and sudanese security forces have fired tear gas to break up protests in the capital khartoum and the city of. the protests that have been taking to the streets for two months now to demand the resignation of president bashir. a partial government shutdown in the u.s. has ended its thirtieth day and in a few more thousands of american workers will miss the second paycheck president trump attacked democrats for rejecting his proposal to end the shutdown and provide funding for his border wall but democrats house speaker said his plan is not a compromise and it was not are not offered in good faith practical heinous the latest from washington. a sign of the times of food banks sets up in the streets of
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the nation's capital aimed at feeding federal workers that are not getting paid many live paycheck to paycheck so for some this is the only way to feed their families. they aren't getting paid because u.s. president donald trump says that democrats want to put them back to work he needs money for his often promised border wall democrats have said no they'll debate border security but only after the government is reopened i can't see us keeping federal employees if hundred thousand people of work while we go back and forth on the go shave since these negotiations get to three of four weeks also appearing on the president's favorite conservative network fox the vice president seemed to admit the federal workers are leverage and i mean you don't really think you just want to leverage and what and that you figure if you don't keep the government closed that then they're going to go nowhere well again i i go i was there i was
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sitting right next to the president when speaker pelosi said. if you if we reopen the government and took thirty days to negotiate a cut that she would not give the president and i want to i want to ask you what your security or wall house speaker nancy pelosi actually said no to a wall democrats say they will fund border security the president walked out of that meeting but as the polls turn against him and his wall he's making democrats an offer he will reinstall the protections that he took away from around a million migrants in exchange for his wall so far democrats say no it is the impacts of the shutdown continue to spread across the country from long security lines at airports to federal loans not being given americans are wondering how this ends with no answer in sight. al-jazeera washington. israel says it has shot down a rocket from syria its missile interception system took down the rocket aimed at the northern part of the occupied golan heights incident came shortly after syrian
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state television said government forces had prevented an israeli air strike in the south with a lot of that magic. with actually increase the tension between that is that it is and they are on your hands they are in his will take things in their own hands from now on because they believe that they cannot rely on on one and the other party that says that americans are leaving us almost you are going to see more of that actually is likely strikes inside syria in the coming weeks and months. five hospitals in the gaza strip are facing closure due to fuel shortages hospitals rely on diesel generators because of blackouts in gaza's only power station israel has been refusing to allow the delivery of five million dollars in cash to buy fuel charles traffic reports. that he has suffered kidney problems all his life the ten year old needs dialysis treatment four times
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a week with fuel to power hospital generators is fast running out his father says he has applied many times to have refined treated in israel but they have always refused shortly and even. for four am really concerned because my son relies on this three times because that is unique to these machines and keep my son alive because we stop him with and that scares me the. gaza's ministry of health says at least five hospitals where hundreds of patients need vital lifesaving treatment the various illnesses including cancer all face closure and this fuel is supplied soon . fuel shortages throughout israel's world and ten you can see blockade but the ministry of health is saying the situation of hospitals like this one with respect to the amount of fuel they have for their generators has reached a critical point and there are numerous reasons why the palestinian authority led
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by president mahmoud abbas based in the occupied west bank has restricted gaza's electricity supply for years to put pressure on hamas. reconciliation efforts between hamas and fatah which dominates the palestinian authority have failed to heal the rift which is lost more than a decade the israeli government is also being blamed it blocks the third installments of fifteen million dollars from concert of the rockets were fired from the besieged palestinian territory earlier this month. the country cash is needed to pay thousands of hamas employees and to buy fuel for gaza's only power station but many israelis objected to the government allowing any money into gaza for hamas with an election jew in april it seems prime minister binyamin netanyahu at first bowed to the pressure but now says the transfer of the casa money will be allowed hamas denies accusations of exaggerating the fuel crisis so its employees get paid
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. gaza's ministry of health says money from international donors to buy generate a few has all but dried up. we have for the last two weeks been in a very complicated situation it is very serious this has become a critical humanitarian issue for thousands of patients in hospitals across gaza amount to and thousands of palestinian patients like his son know the difficulties of getting life saving medical treatment under the siege who go on trial strafford al-jazeera gaza. zimbabwe's president amazon and google has cut short an overseas trip to do with the ongoing unrest in his country at least twelve people have been killed and hundreds have been arrested during demonstrations against rising fuel prices they collectivists a seventy eight people have been treated for gunshot wounds with hundreds more suffering other injuries a spokesman for the president says the police crackdown is
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a foretaste of how the government will respond to unrest the african union has postponed a high level visit to the democratic republic of congo to discuss the controversial presidential election that's after the congolese constitutional court dismissed the case brought by opposition leader martin for you for a recount of the election votes starting widespread fraud president elect and weeks she said kate is due to be inaugurated in the next ten days the african union previously raised doubts about the vote and called for the announcement of the final result to be delayed. eight un peacekeepers have been killed while repairing an attack in northern mali armed assailants launched an assault near the village of argo hawk the head of the peacekeeping mission said the attack demanded a ripostes swift and concerted response the identity of the fighters is not known. demonstrations in the colombian capital bogota have marched to condemned thursday's car bomb attack which killed twenty one people present even duke
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a lead the rally towards over toys clothes i believe are the bombing at the police academy was the worst attack in the country in fifteen years government leaders blame colombia's last remaining rebel group the l.n. for carrying out the attack that is under impunity has more from the top. thousands of people both here in the capital and in cities across colombia march demanding an end to the violence after a car bomb attack on thursday killed twenty young cadets the government believes that the u.n. the last standing rebel group in the country is responsible so people came out dressed in white are holding the white flags saying that life is sacred and that they are tired of what they describe this terror attacks in their country while people are united here in this message against the violence there were some tensions along the route as colombians remain at the same time deeply polarized and
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how to move forward especially on how to achieve complete peace in the country the president even ducat decided to shut the door to any possibility of continuing peace negotiations with to your land now that allegedly they were behind this attack by some people here are saying that that's the wrong decision that going back to a state of war will bring more death and more attacks there's no doubt that the thursday's car bomb attack has jolted many nerves here in the country colombians were just starting to bring down their guards when it came to violence after decades of internal conflict but at least for today they came out and said that all together they want an end to the violence. northern irish police have released
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c.c.t.v. footage of the moment a car bomb detonated in london derry also known as terry on saturday the device was placed inside a hijacked delivery vehicle outside a courthouse there were no injuries dissident republican groups the reliable way have been blamed for the attack two men in their twenty's have been arrested the police who are evacuating the area at the time after receiving a warning have described the bombing as incredibly reckless. people in taiwan who aren't feeling so well have for generations avoided going to a doctor and visited a traditional chinese medicine shop instead of thousands of shops have shut down in the past twenty is a store owners fear when they die so will their industry catch up as korean explains why. leave chilling dispenses traditional chinese medicine from this herbal store in taiwan natural medicine shops like this one have been used for generations as an alternative to visiting
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a doctor but the industry that depends on curing illnesses is designed taiwan's government hasn't issued a new operating license for twenty years. although he's a just. this profession in taiwan is on the decline it's become a so-called sunset industry older people have slowly left and younger ones don't have a license it's all very uncertain the license shortage started in the one nine hundred ninety s. as the government trying to regulate traditional medicine shops government leaders feared combining western and eastern medicine could lead to unforeseen medical emergencies it was hoped train professionals would take jobs in traditional shops but that didn't happen well pay a limited benefits failed to attract young doctors and now more and more shops are closing down. good shrink who knows her dispensary will only remain open while her ailing father in law is alive when he goes so will his operating license be done.
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within the chinese medicine shops are forced to close because the second generation cannot legally carry the operating license our livelihood will be in jeopardy but more importantly it will be the end of a taiwanese tradition and cultural icon that it will be a thing of the past it will be difficult for them to emerge again an estimated two hundred taiwanese natural medicine stores shut down every year the total has been cut in half to about eight thousand in the last twenty years taiwan's approach is a stark contrast to china and hong kong where there has been a push to promote and export traditional medicine mounting concern anger has led to protests in the capital taipei now the government says it's trying to find a solution with industry leaders but shop owners fear it may be too late and employees such as lead channeling worry that it's not only her livelihood at stake but also a tradition that's part of taiwan's culture katia locus of the young al-jazeera.
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the wintry conditions in china's shining dong province have created an icy spectacular the promising temperatures have stopped the flow of a waterfall creating huge icicles visitors have been gathering to unlock the eighty meter high natural wonder on mt thai which is the country's most sacred mountain a phenomenon happens when atmospheric temperatures suddenly plunge well below zero stopping fast moving water turning it into an array of icicles and just a quick run you can always catch up with or stories recovering or checking out a website. dot com. what you notice here are mind of the top stories the u.s. military says it carried out an airstrike in somalia that killed fifty two fighters
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it was launched hours after the group attacked a somali army base their own group has also claimed responsibility for tuesday's attack on a luxury hotel and shopping complex in neighboring kenya. has more. it's very hard to say the scale of the u.s. or in somalia because it is largely secretive or porous no one really knows how many u.s. troops are present on the ground all we know is that the number has been steadily increasing ever since donald trump came to office the awful taking advantage of a loosening or restrictions on who and when to engage they have a huge military base eighty kilometers away southwest of mogadishu in a place known as police dog and that's where the. most of the groom and al strikes police in athens have used tear gas to stop angry protesters from entering greece's parliament building thousands of people have been demonstrating against the
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proposed name change deal with macedonia scope here wants to change the country's name to the republic of north macedonia and many great object because macedonia is the ancient name of one of their regions. sudanese security forces have fired tear gas to break up protests in the capital khartoum and the city of. the protesters have been taking to the streets for two months now to demand the resignation of president omar bashir. the partial government shutdown in the us has ended its thirtieth day hundreds of thousands of government employees are struggling to make ends meet without pay president trump as a tax democrats for rejecting his proposal to end the shutdown and provide funding for his border war. a spokesperson for zimbabwe's president emerson i got work is warning that the police crackdown on protesters is just a taste of things to come at least twelve people have been killed during demonstrations against rising fuel prices police have made hundreds of arrests
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there's a top stories do stay with us. is up next i'll have more news for you after that thanks for watching. despite international diplomatic and military efforts the wars in syria and yemen grind off. at a recent meeting in doha the so-called doha for him many of those involved in efforts to find a peaceful resolution gathered to reflect on the lack of progress one of them the head of the venerable munich security conference spread his message that the
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european powers in particular had failed miserably western policy towards syria it seems now it's focused more on combating certain groups and perhaps limiting the iranian presence in syria rather than the overall political future investing in the overall of the professed in diplomacy in the overall political future of syria which is left more to the russians do you agree with that analysis well i think quite frankly i'll be very honest with you i think our syria policy. has been is exhausted we started saving we the europeans we started seven years ago with a loud call for the demise of bashar assad. without really having a plan of how we would want to get rid of him. and of course we didn't get rid of him because we never had the means at the strategy and the policy to to influence
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decisions on the ground. so now what is what we're now seeing is the outcome of efforts by russia by turkey. i guess by iran and to certain extent by the united states with europe having been on the sidelines throughout this process that is extremely regrettable this is why i'm saying and i repeat europe must try to defend and represent the interests of five hundred million europeans the refugees didn't go to moscow they didn't go to pennsylvania avenue they came to europe. these events of the last three years have changed european and german politics in a major way almost dramatic changes the migration pressure the refugee problem so this is really our issue and we should have been played a role in
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a much stronger diplomatic role i think the the e.u. should have started a peace process five years ago or six years ago instead of looking the other way so this was not a beautiful you know example of great european diplomacy i'm very self-critical on that score. also at the doha forum where the leading officials at the united nations in charge of humanitarian affairs mark lowcock the undersecretary for humanitarian affairs and henrietta for c.e.o. of unicef the children's emergency fund we sat down with both of them to discuss the situation at hand in yemen and syria we began with yemen welcome to al-jazeera you're just back from yemen what was the glimpse of the country that you got well what i saw was a country on the brink of a terrible terrible tragedy talk to lots of people who've had to flee their homes
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from the fighting parents of starving children really a place that is right on the edge and we've got the good news from sweden the parties have agreed initial. steps to deescalate the conflict and to try and move things forward but that now needs to be translated into a real change on the ground because the people i listen to the parents of starving children people who fled from their homes sometimes multiple times they're not seeing yet any tangible benefit how do you avoid complacency not so much obviously unclearly for people on the ground the people who've suffered for years now but the people that were in remember in sweden how do you maintain the pressure on them to come up with something so i guess the message from the people of yemen is we're tired we're exhausted this has got to stop that's exactly the message those are the
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words the people of yemen i met said to me they are desperate they will stay six starving the single message to the world that they sent and i told the security council this war has to stop so the message to all those who went to geneva to remember as you say is where it's a great day actions now need. follow to implement your commitments especially very importantly around today to where there has been an agreement that crucial port city through which so much of the food eaten in yemen comes in and the males and the roads through which it gets to people they all need to protect to be protected and a cease fire that was that was promised for data that really needs to come into operation straight away would it be fair to say however to your people on the ground even for aid workers if you want the numbers of yemen the numbers that break. the all shocking when you're talking about how many people are literally on the verge
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of death when you talk about cholera when you talk about but sense of catastrophe that's just around the corner that's exactly right i mean we've just published the results of the biggest day of a survey of food security in yemen and what it shows is that. the highest level of food insecurity the catastrophe level for the first time there are people in that level in yemen two hundred fifty thousand of them there's only one other place in the world where there's anybody that level of food insecurity and that south sudan but there are ten times as many people in yemen at that catastrophe level so reaching them is absolutely a first priority the stories my colleagues tell me of what they're seeing on the ground what i've seen for myself seeing starving children in hospitals all the evidence is clear this is a really big problem and we need to scale up our assistance now the peace agreement . the first steps have been taken should help us with that but we need some other
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things as well we need all the parties on the ground to make it easier for the aid workers to get to the most vulnerable people we need to pump more money into the economy we do need to ask for more money for our appeal the u.n. appeal last year we also for two billion dollars this. we needed three billion dollars and we've got most of that next year there we need four billion dollars because what's happened during the course of twenty eighteen is that millions more people become vulnerable when you come to run those operations where the situation is getting worse not better are you kind of from a humanitarian aid point to be kind of robbing peter to pay paul because around the world now we've got seventy million people externally and internally displaced who are running away from conflict and you've got a bigger problem coming which is this that for the first time in the history of your department at the united nations can i suggest to you that you're having to tip from doing just keeping people fed and watered to doing
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a lot more than that we're not robbing peter to pay paul this year we've raised a record amount of money even bigger than last year is money that we raised for humanitarian response about fifteen billion dollars i think were raised by the end of twenty eighteen for the un coordinated programs and the gap between the money we are asking for in the morning we're raising is in fact getting smaller and it's a positive story that countries around the world recognised investing in reducing the suffering of people in humanitarian crises is a very cheap way to save a life and also build stability but we do have to work more closely to the second part of your question with those organizations including other parts the united nations which are involved in finding that the peace building opportunities the political solutions the development and so on because while humanitarian aid is very effective at saving lives it doesn't on its own contribute to the solutions
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and if we want to reduce the number of people whose lives are so terribly ruined by these crises we have to do better solutions ok so basically what you're saying is here you're putting three to three things together you're doing what you do better you're doing it fast you're doing it with a sense of being innovative but those three things even if you try. those in a very efficient way by definition almost they're going to reach critical mass at some point you can only go so far you can really slice the salami to make it go further than it's going to go anyway at that point what do you do next well at that point in a solution to the underlying problems we need more examples of successful peace discussions of the sort we had in rainbow in sweden for yemen we need that to happen in other places we then need to stabilize the situation there seventy million people displaced by these crises we need to see millions of them going home
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i realize that this probably doesn't come within your mandate but you have to the u.n. has to be able to say you're talking about yemen a lot to the warring sides and also the proxy warring sides going to situation that we've seen in yemen for four years now and say actually and explain to them peace in inverted commas is in your strategic interest so you can still get what you want or what your people on the ground told you they need because we're kind of correlating two things here and you need to get messages to break it down and get across to the warring sides exactly right no one has won from this war in yemen it's absolutely clear who the losers are and they are the starving millions of children and women and innocent civilians who are pictures increasingly we see in our news papers and on our t.v. screens those. people have a good understanding of who they think is responsible it's in everybody's interest for those people to have more hope for the future for them to have
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a. glimpse of possible progress for grievances to be addressed for anger to be reduced and lives to be recovered that is a strategic interest for all the parties who think they've got a stake in yemen as well as a humanitarian imperative one slightly worrying us but that came out of the conversations. apart from the photo opportunities and the handshakes and your colleague mr griffiths who's done a tremendously energetic job to get them where he got the money played an absolute blinder with the prisoner release which was his calling card on day one of those discussions is anyone at the united nations not talking to those people who are representing the fighters but talking to the people who talk to the people who talk to the proxies because there were serious worries raised for example over one particular aspect you can get peace on the ground but if there are still fighter jets coming across the border from the neighbor to yemen saudi arabia game over
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and it just goes back to what it was before well the united nations talks to everybody and anybody who has a stake in this and i think there is a recognition that there needs to be deescalation on all sides and that is part of . what has been agreed to take forward from rimbaud lots of the parties actually were. around the table and in they in the vicinity of the talks in rimbaud so we are hopeful that everybody recognizes that now is the moment to move forward and to consolidate the first steps that were taken in sweden. the wars in yemen and syria have lasted so long that an entire generation of children are missing basic education and nourishment this is where the unicef against a very difficult odds steps in and reapply for is the c.e.o.
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of unicef and according to statistics hard for syrian children that's more than four million children have no nothing other than war you're talking about two million who are out of school what is it that unicef is doing for for them. well you are absolutely right there has been a very strong toll on. civilians in syria and the children bear the brunt of it so with those numbers that many children that are out of school two million of them if you think of what happens in a child's life if they miss a year at school they might miss adding or subtraction they might list. learning to read it's a very long period of time for children so unicef works in nutrition in health in education in water sanitation and protection all of the areas of a child's life there are as you know many internally displaced people within syria
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and there are more than two million children that are internally displaced and more than two million children that are outside that are refugees if you add that to the number that are out of school and if you add in those who are exposed to explosive remnants of war it's a very difficult and challenging time for children they need education they need safe places to play safe places to live they need nutrition and they need clean water but it's a very very difficult time in syria it's not just the issue of relief and protection today i mean the psychological scars that will haunt these children in the future when if this war and i mean it's difficult to comprehend i remember visiting an orphanage on the border turkish syrian border and we were speaking to some of the children there and from you know those who can sleep through those who were you know in their teens and were still wearing their beds and and really good
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things that we're just going to live with them for the rest of their life so. is there are scope in your work to look out what happens once the guns go silent. yes and you are right that children are deeply affected by violence of any sort so whether the violence is because of war or because of conflict in their community or because of violence at home or violence online there are deep scars on a child internally that we cannot see so some of the children that we saw that were in schools some were terrified because they'd seen too much they'd seen killing and maiming they'd lost people in their family could be a father a mother a brother or a sister it's very it will never leave them so they're scared they're afraid to make friends others are exhibiting the opposite type of
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behavior they're more violent with their classmates they've seen it on the streets they think it's now how they should react to one another i mean looking further to the future is there some sort of plum puddings approach in terms of emergency response or word spawns that is almost second nature to you guys but looking forward to what would you do for the next year right so what we do now is we help with bringing textbooks into schools we help with getting children into school at three integrating them into a school community so there is a new curriculum that we've just launched which allows children there but out of school for six months or six years to come back into school and to be reintegrated into school we also have simple information at schools like how to detect a mine there's lots of explosive fragments still on the ground they're pretty and
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children will want to play with them but if you can stay safe and you can tell your classmates how to stay safe that makes a difference so these kinds of programs how. we also have been helping training community leaders and teachers school system is how that will work and how you can reintegrate their lots and lots of internally displaced children and young people in syria and as they begin to move and head back into communities they also need reintegration into their whole communities because their homes have changed their friends aren't there the community just not look the same we walk through an area which is duma unused guta it's been heavily bombed and so there's much rubble it's difficult to go back to your homes they've often that's been looted from all furniture the schools have been looted the schools are overcrowded because the children that are coming back were expected to go to schools but only half are open
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so they have to take in more water becomes a daily activity so you have to go find clean water there isn't clean running water anymore you have to go find food so children are not just going to school but they're trying to cope with an every day life and their families are struggling. there's another major war in the region and that's born yemen. courts this is the twenty million people are living in hunger children will be dying as a result of calderon disease that should not be killing people in this day and age and with the technology and resources that exists. or you were able to reach those who are most in need in yemen is there any hindrance to your work where there was closure of course there was places on the siege and so forth but how is unicef's operations with regards to your mom so access in yemen is always a problem and there's another problem which it also shares with syria which is the
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humanitarian workers are often targeted or they're seen as being just anyone well if we're not safe we're not to a military so if if that we're not protected when we go in to do let's say a vaccination program. something that will help cholera you know a clean water program it makes it very difficult to reach the hardest to reach that are up in the mountains that are difficult isolated population has not targeting been by the military or the militia by the saudi led coalition or by all sides but as you know cholera has been a real problem so is malnutrition the when i went into the main hospital in sana it was clear that there were just dozens and dozens of people that were coming in in every hour looking for a mound of ways to feed their children i mean they're just they're de hydrated they
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are starving they are coming in there are very few pharmaceuticals and drugs to help and if you happen to be born at this time period you are lucky if you can find a hospital that is able to take you in and help with the birth of a child in many places they're losing electricity electricity is what allows you to pump water so that in surgery units that you're able to wash your hands and it's just the basics but those of us who live in in a war like situations take all of this for granted and it just cannot be yemen is a. is a the largest humanitarian crisis that we have when it comes to children particularly in yemen the have really faced the brunt of the war there we saw a school bus being bombed by the saudi led military alliance a few months back and we've seen children as you mentioned die in the hundreds because of nutrition and other diseases why is it do you think that the saudi
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arabia the united arab emirates two countries mainly leading this coalition why do you think they haven't done enough to protect children in this conflict in every conflict around the world. and none of us are doing enough there are more grave violations against children and their rights at this time than there ever have been at any time conflicts there are so many now there are more than we've ever had they are of the longer lasting and they're more severe that takes an enormous toll on children so none of us are protecting children well enough.
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i don't. know we're not. going to know this is as good just the. most fun going to. happen. to our. job hides in the disney movie to. leave. behind a vision of a business good got. a job. john. kerry killed. dr gupta to invest and live in their living force and maybe yamato somebody who's been a dentist knew exactly job because a lot of asking god. to
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i'm just as it was to him that it. was to became killing a big mistake with the modern point being used today. and his only when he had been here is this you can't get away killing. because i was a kid and i want to be a daisy because i got better i say. you got to be good to lead us. back these more peace. in the school. i never talk about this here benefit to. you was this day what i
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mean mindy being. caught me. as a medic even got me. most side of my days. where there is water there is life but finding it there australia's arid deserts is a skill few still possess they took us to a small wet spot in the sea in the desert and this was this is a very important place they've been telling us about for the last five days training. and under orders against all odds an aging population is passing on its knowledge the rainmakers of the outback on
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a. right out of a hamas script examining the headline let me again with the fractious issue of palestine and israel in the us news and setting the discussions what makes them different as far as you're concerned sharing personal stories with a global audience nobody feels safe explore an abundance of world class programming designed to inform motivate and inspire. the world is watching on al-jazeera. and on their entire nandan the top stories on. the u.s. military says it carried out an astro i can somalia that killed fifty two fighters it was launched hours after the group attacked a somali army base and even baba has this report and a warning you may find some of the images distressing. the bodies of suspected al
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shabaab fighters lie on the road as somali troops pour over the scene the fighters were reportedly killed in american airstrikes after fleeing from a somali military base earlier stormed the base three hundred seventy kilometers southwest of the capital mogadishu military officials say six soldiers were killed during the attack and two others died after a booby trapped vehicle was blown up as the army battled to recapture the base eventually u.s. military helicopters were deployed according to a statement from u.s. africa command the air attack killed in its words fifty two militants the somali army says the figure was even higher. we managed to kill at least seventy five ship bad militants after they attacked us and many more were injured we are telling people about that victory today. al-shabaab says it killed forty two somali soldiers during the battle the group retains a strong presence in parts of southern and central somalia. it's also regularly
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targeted neighboring kenya which sent troops to somalia as part of an african union force it says it was behind tuesday's attack in nairobi when four gunmen and a suicide bomber killed twenty one people at a hotel and office complex on friday five suspects appeared in a court in my road be in connection with that attack the day barker al jazeera. police in athens have used tear gas to prevent angry protesters from entering greece's parliament building thousands of people turned out for a demonstration against the proposed name change deal with the former yugoslav republic of macedonia. ok wants to change the country's name to the republic of north macedonia but many greeks and ject because macedonia is the ancient name of one of their regions the greek prime minister alexis tsipras has survived two confidence missions in parliament over the contentious. sudanese security forces have fired tear gas to break up protests in the capital khartoum and the city of
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durham on trucks carrying security personnel were deployed to man after protesters blocked streets demanding the resignation of president omar bashir the near daily demonstrations began in december in response to the rising cost of bread a television news camera man has been killed in libya mohammed bin honey for worked as a freelancer for and other leading news organizations the thirty five year old was hit by a stray shell fire on saturday whilst on assignment following a libyan militia northern irish police have released c.c.t.v. footage of the moment a car bomb detonated in london derry on saturday the device was placed inside a hijacked vehicle delivery vehicle outside a courthouse there were no injuries dissident republican group the new ira have been blamed for the attack two men in their twenty's have been arrested the police who are evacuating the area in derry at the time after receiving a warning have described the bombing as incredibly reckless
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a fuel has been held in london for six unknown jewish victims of the holocaust the remains of the five adults and one child who died at the auschwitz death camp were donated to britain's imperial war museum in one thousand nine hundred seven the coffins were lowered into the ground in a jewish cemetery in north london six million jews were murdered in nazi death camps during world war two the ceremony was attended by the israeli ambassador and the deputy german ambassador to the u.k. as well as the chief rabbi of the commonwealth know. we don't know if. we don't know which three. we don't know what you do for a living. we don't have you. or your car. but every one that we do. you. well that.
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i'm andrea cross of a filmmaker and journalist and i've spent the past year traveling my country trying to understand. the soviet union was almost as large as the russian empire which spanned three continents in the nineteenth century. today's russia has lost many of the territories the towers conquered and the soviets regain but some are still part of russian business and no swedish finnish town of labor the soviet union invaded in one thousand thirty nine and finally and next to this part of famine in nineteen forty four. russia remains the largest country on earth even the only the ten most populous. it's still extremely diverse with about one hundred languages spoken by some hundred fifty catholicity. the former soviet republics are
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now independent states. yet russia still holds sway economically and culturally in some parts of the former empire bordering on the russian federation. this is the famous gorky park muscovites are out celebrating the twenty fifth anniversary of the russian federation when the soviet union collapsed and russia's new life began. the mood is cheerful no sense of crisis in the air and these are average people representative
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of the great majority of the multi ethnic russian nation. and. even. the thoughts and in that way at. the. end i find them a bit and down the teaching staff i am thinking that that. last. was done and. we're proud that we make others fear us in a song that might not sound serious but many russians actually do mean it with dangerous where. and this bullish sentiment is deeply rooted in
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a ninety only take in fact shared by russia's christian establishment. father to several a captain is another one spokesman for the russian orthodox church which lent spiritual justification to the power of the russian state. their group is worse commuter and bruised with the shoot was moved to spread lead to shoot. a group visible whose reason rules were the group who is moved from store. you're assuming it was group or new group we were is a woman where you move a person to see you there was to produce solution new proust was the words were
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a reason commissions crew are going to sure in the summer breeze sure the slaughter drills were news to a cruiser and it was suitable for new berlioz or. old school moral to use when new but soon well to be a new little near too soon as possible for which the computer world was observed we will reserve more all but all sort of most ability to sue would be the a polluter to inward so true solution. it was the birth of those words assisted was look we should little suited for most of those to those we resume or distance with the new or other new digitally or were you with welcome a short leash or was a looser it was uncertain we would little schools it was useless consider the surface it was those kids who have to show who are the rules of the early game it was the worst to most of course which still blowtorch both musically to super
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disillusioned who is who is really good in a blue certain. part of several it says peace is not something to be defended at all costs the russian orthodox church supports the state and its political and even its military objectors in response to the perceived external pressures on russia there's precious seem to have two main origins the west with its support for the ukraine and what russia perceives as a threat from radical islam. just past six o'clock. eight as a time when a. mosque and muslims a gathering of the best of france. just.
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delivering. a sleeve big mosque and sponsors small souls has come here to pray. right here right to show three. assemble one in one on one move on to get the neighborhood up and move over. i was there she did a blowsy it was the only year globally in our service with gusts of i live in europe which. was there all day was the most complete human part was. part of the time of the month here and is not. constant.
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