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tv   [untitled]    June 3, 2021 1:30am-2:00am +03

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heard of wild elephants has been causing havoc in southwest and china, of wandering out of a nature reserve and into neighboring towns. they've already tracked 500 kilometers from their base in united province, damaging buildings and trampling crops along the way. experts tracking the animals onshore why they want to move, saying such a journey hasn't been seen before, and needs further study. ah, reminder the top stories yolanda 0, israel's opposition either. yeah, lucky does informed president reuben river when he succeeded in getting the support he needs to form a coalition government and unseen benjamin netanyahu the unlikely alliance. couples together parties from across the political spectrum. and in historic move, it was the 1st time she support from a palestinian israeli party. the united arab list looks to
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me that we promised that we would be the last ones to agree and sign the document. and this is what we did. we understand that all the other parties have joined the process. we have seen that all of the other parties have signed the document. united nations and red cross officials are in gaza to review the destruction. almost 2 weeks after a ceasefire ended the 11 day conflict between israel and thomas. teams are assessing the extent of the humanitarian crosses across the gaza strip, including damaged homes, schools, hospitals, and critical infrastructure. thousands of palestinians remain displaced after residential buildings were destroyed in the ready bombardment. the red cross is appealing for more than $16000000.00. to help people garza, the israeli defense ministers visiting the united states to request more military aid. any guns is expected to ask for a $1000000000.00 to restock israel's on don't defense system. the fighting with him
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as for thousands of rockets launched and intercepted over palestinian and israeli skies. a congo ship carrying tons of chemicals is thinking off shoreline because coast sparking fears of a major environmental disaster. part of the vessel has become stuck on the sea bed . it had been on fire almost 2 weeks after an explosion. stopped at sailing from india to singapore. hundreds of tons of oil from fuel tanks could leak into the sea . devastating marine life. and a massive blaze is broken out just an oil refinery in the south of iranian capital . terror wrong. it sent a thick prima smoke of parts of the city going to local media. the fall started at the liquefied gas line tone. we on refinery. so father, new reports of injuries. there's a top stories. do you stay with us or not? is there a phone lines is up next and i'll be more news for you straight after that. thanks for watching my summer. nelson, sorry,
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should we be about raising prices in harley down to the time we bring you the stories and developments that are rapidly changing the world. we live in time in that setting that i thought had made as the task of fixing a war torn economy, counting the cost on al jazeera this is likely to be the most frightening experience of your life. the more we plan and prepare, the more we practice in general, these plans, the more automatic response will be mis shootings had become a grim part in american life. there were more than $62020.00 alone. all of which had 4 or more victims who were shot or killed behind the reality that when it comes to gun violence, no place to sick mom's movie theaters,
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places of worship. even schools in the shootings continue to happen. this is where i carry christ every day with me. little baby earth. and that's how i cure him with me all the time. is as crazy. it sounds really does give me peace. doesn't address that. i have him with me all the time. even though he's in their little piece of him in there, it makes me feel good that i still carry my son's me. in this episode of fault lines, we explored the long lasting trauma nash shootings on generation of survivors and victims, families. and the new normal that day in the country continue to reconcile. oh, the santa fe, small city, south of houston,
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texas. on may 18th, 2018. there was a mass shooting of the high school here. the worst thing you have to worry about santa fe is a literally get run over bar cow. i said that and here i am rushing to the school because my son got shot, had several people down. anyway. me, megan me. i started running in a see like cars running. i don't really remember much far the server was me. spell it out of the building in a c, mom's cry in the scene, people for united with their kids. and i was just waiting for
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me really network fracking new development, the latest mass shooting in the us, your high school in me. it was one of more than $300.00 mess. shooting said here in the suspect carried out, the attack was gone and have done both taken from his father. after planning exploding inside the mine, the 17 year old gunman, a student at the school killed 10 people. among them was a football team make chris rosie stones. she was such a been a middle kid and he was not sure to cry. he was a mama's boy, 100 percent, mama's boy women, rosie and chris is older, sisters, angelica and mercedes,
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8 months after the shooting. when i took him to prom because junior problem, the saturday before, most kids don't want their mom and dad there. she wanted me there. that's just to chris was and i taught my kids, the family was everything for christmas sister, we living happy memories has helped them copeland the months afterward, our uncle paul as the 3 amigos. he was only one who committed to a goofy but the trauma of losing chris changed their lives and ways. they're still coming to terms would have your good days where you don't cry as much . you don't want to just stay at home all day. when you have your really bad days where you really just want to talk to them either
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friday, who's going to hear his voice. i know chris would have wanted. mean that's put my life on the whole and i hadn't really every day i think about him. got phone call, i think about it constantly like one phone call, change my forever like that 2nd. and i think about every moment what chris's being killed. terrible should ever have to think of their kid or their brother or sister like that. it's been particularly hard for rosie. she told us she hasn't been able to sleep for more than 3 hours at a time since her son was killed. there's not a place in my home into his think of him in that's what makes it hard to go home. so what i do is i spend a couple of hours every single day at my house. i haven't tried to stay the night
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there yet. 8 months on you haven't spent the night back in that house. like here. i really can't. it's just a lot of memory, so it's hard for her to do it. like little things from taking up the trash like chris took out the trash. chris felt the dogs like it's just hard, rosy instead, binds piece in an unlikely place where the shooting happened. here. see that door? that's the art room where my son was and that's the door that was locked. i literally go in there and i sit in chris's spine, and i'll sit there for me about 3045 minutes. nobody talks to me or nothing. i don't say nothing. i just sit there. and when i leave, i feel
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a little better because that's when chris took his last breath. you know, i was there when he took his 1st one and i wanted to be where he took the last one . me, rosie is haunted by help. christmas jack could have been avoided like many others in santa fe, which sits in the heart of texas country. her focus has been on improving school safety measures. not don't control. i don't blame the gun. it wasn't the gun that walked in there, bite and killed my son. parents need to be held responsible. gun owners need to be held responsible. after christ rosie and her daughter's got licenses to carry concealed handguns. she believes they can protect her and her family. i do feel like it's a safe tool. i don't like that now our students feel that way. i don't like that. our kids feel like they have to have some kind of weapon in order to make it in
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this world. but that's the reality that we live in. ah, that reality means that his parents and their kids to school there now thinking of ways to keep them safe there. and there's a growing industry to help them locked down. drill right now. this was your classroom, this is the only door in and out. where would your teacher have you go and go there now go, go. just go. this class for kids as young as 8 years old. called school safe. it's run by 88 tactical, a private company in omaha, nebraska. it's meant to supplement the lockdown trills, which are now conducted in 9 out of 10 public schools across the country. what are these representing to us? yes, we have. what is your teacher tell you to do? you stay quiet until the bad guy leaves or we run out of room. what if the gun
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shooter comes in your classroom? if somebody came in that door right now and pointed a gun in this direction, do we know that desk is going to help out? no. so what would we, what would we do? someone's point of going in this direction over the course of 2 and a half hours. the kids for different self defense strategies based on the run hide fight model. we're going to run away from the bad guy. are you guys ready? okay, i'm going to go with the instructor as a retired police sergeant and believes that kids be more preparation than they're currently getting in most schools to evade and even fight off an attacker. we'll go from there and we're not trying to turn him into what commanders or anything like
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that, just to give him some information and give him some strategies. so if something were to happen in their little part of the world, they would have an idea of what to do. i'm just going to come in with my hands open like this, like a catcher. and i'm just gonna come in and grab this here. and hang on tight, right? somebody coming in here. what does it say about effort to educate our children that they are in their minds preparing to potentially be killed in their own school? as unlikely as it is? doesn't feel that we are kids. we don't know how it's going to affect an entire generation. we have no way. john cox is a reporter for the washington post, who's investigated the impact of gun violence on children, including the psychological, told of lockdown trials at schools. someone has to get the gun. i'm shooting people right now. missed shootings in schools remain rare. there we go. in the likelihood of a child dying and one is low. but after each man shooting right, the demand for schools and kids to be prepared goes up. so we know that locked
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downs can be incredibly frightening, but should we not have the kid do the drill and then the day comes and they have no idea what to do. that's probably not a trade that parents or teachers would make the better the reality until we are the country makes a really significant changes to prevent the students from recruiting the 1st place to your bill. i know we talked about running. i've been fighting, we haven't talked about giving aid. right. this is just a brief little thing about weighting control. and it'll work on kids. your age. for tie one, not room, but the pencils in there. watching your presentation. i got some scary stuff to talk to kids about a woman shot money and bleeding out in the mall. what do you think about that to just talk about the idea of doing that? i believe our kids know about this kind of stuff. all right,
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and i don't believe in a lot of respects that we give our kids credit enough for being able to handle what it is that needs to be talked about. and because of that, that's why we were very blunt or just very straightforward them. it's going to hurt is there is no other way about it. see that? anything in the presentation with a scary or was it? i was shaking. wow, really because i was scared if it happened in real life. you know that you've done the training. so i feel more confident about it. i for generation familiar with lockdown trails and connected my social media the thought of the shooting school, but it seemed far away. it happened here in february 2018. it marjorie still minnock was high school parkland, florida. the come in used a legally bought semi automatic rifle to kill 17 people. it was valentine's day.
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and for students it wasn't unexpected. i had already planned what i would do if the shooting would happen because i was surprised, but it happened that all of he used to go when the shooting happened that the for a lot of the airport they said to always look dead if there's something else to do you go under somebody that has passed. so i had always told myself, i can't go out the window and that's what i would do. so i did it. late. eastman had just finished the presentation on hate groups when the government began firing into the classroom. she took cover under her presentation partner nicholas, who had been shot and killed. as soon as he saw, i just followed his every body movement and went underneath him and laid there. at that moment i just be talking to god and telling him, i don't want to feel, i just want to be fast. i remember laying there and looking at the floor waiting
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for foot dead. so i knew and to hold my breath cuz i didn't want the shooter to see me breathing and alive. i went to like i was dead. and i'd say about 20 seconds. he moved on to the next class. i sat up there, i just sat in shock, me, the child that i give birth to almost died, that that is drama. can gunshot over the phone? she said, i love you. i told her i said a lawyer get off the phone and pay attention and couldn't breathe. i assume she was want to be killed. how could you escape in a small classroom with a guy with a, a 50. how could you? how did you find out the way i was safe? actually i was texting her. that's all i know. my baby was alive because i thought of bubble. she texted me to see i'm okay, and that's how i know the visual for the one year anniversary of the parkland
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massacre. it's a familiar scene. one repeated across the country in the aftermath mass you join together. it's become so predictable. there's the shooting and the politicians announce that there are the visuals always and there's memorials and there's intense coverage and then it's paid. if you're a member of the media, you just move on to move on to move on and move on because they just don't stop. after the news moves on, survivors and their families are left to pick up the pieces. imagine in your heart that you would want to say on this 1st and every remembrance be strong live stream from one another. what was it like
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watching a 6 year old tried to process the trauma that she experienced. it was difficult. she slept in my room for 2 weeks and you know, she had nightmares and it was very traumatic for her. you know, i was providing for me as well, but i have to put on that brief mommy fees and be there for the for me survivors. guilt is still something that i struggle with, knowing that i'm here, but he's not knowing that parents aren't upset with me and are happy that i am alive makes me feel better. but i feel like sometimes i'm alive at his expense because he of course, saved my life in the park when shooting reinvigorated, the national conversation on gun violence and kick started a movement led by young people including the late the midnight last night working
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on her testimony so please, you know, give her love when you fear, encourage her. she's worked really hard on the february of 2019. she spoke with the 1st congressional hearings. goodbye. listen, 8 years. many like me. we're fortunate enough to walk away with our lives, but we will never be free from the terror. some will carry visible scars, but all of us were scarred emotionally for the rest of our lives. i was in my 4th latest activision has given her sense of purpose in a way to cope. it was just a teen with his whole life ahead of him. but her mom worried that she still has a long recovery ahead of her heavy burden of balance. we know this as a fact, adiana did the i tell her, said all expectancy when the camera and the lights and the action is going, you're going to be in a dark place by yourself. when the phone call stop, come in to come speak of this event. you have to process what happened to you and
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seek help. often you'll see that right? the people are ok in the beginning when they have a chance to talk about then where people go through transitions in life is when often the trauma really sets in and it changes the trajectory of people's lives for dec ah, now another american community turns in words to each other for support in the way of the nation leaders. ah, the event is only the beginning my heart hurt for those people because it's not a quick fix. it's never going to be a quick fix. your level in depth of trauma is totally going to vary based on a number of factors, but they're in for a long road. after columbine, i stopped watching the news and heather martin was
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a senior at columbine high school. when the shooting happened in 1999, at the time it shocked the country and was the worst school attack and us history. now, it doesn't even make the list of the top 10 deadliest mass shootings today. how that works as a high school english teacher in has been through multiple locked down trills, but news and other math shootings can still trigger anxiety attacks. the trauma and what i went through that day will always be a part of me. it's taking me quite a few years to kind of come to terms with that for 9 years. i was really not in denial that the event happened, but in denial that the offense impacted me to the extent that it did, i felt last isolated alone. i really started my journey at 10 years, 10 years after the i after the mesh shooting and a movie theater, and or colorado in 2012. heather co founded the rebels project,
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support group for mass shooting survivors in victims families. it started with people from a handful of incidence. now it has members from more than 100 community is impacted by mass shootings. if you guys could introduce yourselves and what community or associated with i survived the movie theater shooting. we started it because one of the things that we were missing were people who understood and people who we could talk to more deeply and not just about were you there was a scary, did you know the gunman? so we can automatically dive deeper. i will be freaking out. like i'm going to go through this again. i think it was probably because i was reliving it constantly with flash, flash back. no, like i'm going to go this kid and like i realize it's not hygiene that, that i'm with know, but you know, your brain has recalibrated itself to make you think. and so what your brain does is say, oh, well, when my friend got killed, it was funny. so maybe
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a 30 day becomes a trigger because that's what was going on my time. something happened and it makes so much sense. it's why i couldn't smell pumpkins by law age and starbucks after my shooting without like breaking down or i couldn't eat greek yogurt for years. that's it. that's what trauma i have to. i've met one other person that has a similar one and maybe you guys do too. when i get triggered for a day or 2 afterward, i actually see bodies out of the corner. my me because that's what i saw when i was running out of school. not like a full bone like hallucination or anything. it's just like i like. right. so yeah, survivors, everyday occurrences can take them back to the day they wish they could forget me and even just to, to take
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a 2nd breath came in canada victory because he got through one more center and he didn't freak out. he said to me it as question, when you guys talk about the kind of triggering how long do you think your brain might be rewired? that way? forever. you have to undo it and it takes a lot of work. it's really hard. like yeah, i started the are 3 times very much and i wrote down every trigger that i ever had . and i had to cones, 2 pages. i've heard through every single trigger working with final 2 balloons. these triggers are exacerbated by
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news of other mess, shootings which these days can be hard to escape me, but the survivors say the staying connected with one another makes all the difference. we tend to think trauma as a tuesday and something you're never going to get over. but if you take it small steps at a time, you can get over it. and in the earlier years it's like a one step forward, 2 steps back type of scenario. now my steps back are shorter in a way, i almost feel really awful for the people that it's happening to now because they don't get the coverage, the other shootings get. and that's really minimising for someone's experience. when your shooting is out of the new cycle within a week, what does that feel like? as a survivor, that feels like i should be over this society is moving on. but the people who are impacted art and then the struggle sometimes or even work
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i'll take one that's the last time i got from chris asking me to buy him a piece. and i didn't do it to like 10 o'clock at night. i ended up buying them the picture and he was sitting at the table eaten when i went to bed. i'm showing it took the box me mom, quit working. i can do customer service mozilla's people. it's a lot of smiling in families walking in with her kids or have any find something more clerical behind the scenes. not the facing one like i used to be in this is my new normal and it's a sad, normal,
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empty normal. you never think your child ever get away from you. you know, it's different when you have an illness and you prepare for it. but not when you think about your son and the day before and your body was pete. so you think like the way it's a bond that nobody wants to share but there's so many of us that have this connection all over the country and we should be connecting phone, the music we listen to, or it the car that we like or the regular teenage thing, but we're connecting because of gun valid in i
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the important thing if you are walking around in beirut was not to be in the line of fire from the holiday fall off. we heard gunshots, i was the 1st one to flee. the whole battle lasted 3 days and 3 nights, and there were no prisoners at the, in control over the in and you control the region around. and that's why this is an icon of conflict at the heart of the lebanese civil war bay route holiday in war. hotels on al jazeera in the next episode of science in a golden age, i'll be exploring the contributions made by scholars during the medieval period in the field of mathematics. the term algebra can be traced back to the arabic word
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algebra. we're going to the limit to mobile technology 40 percent. often with beta found they gave us the final building block finally discovered at medieval times in science and a golden age. with jim alkalinity on al jazeera. ah aah! israel's opposition parties reach a deal to form the next coalition government signaling the end of benjamin netanyahu term as prime minister. ah jordan, this now do they are alive from coming up? should i get braces for.

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