tv [untitled] June 11, 2021 11:30pm-12:01am +03
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into a dream ah, landfill, harmonic witness documentary on now. oh, hello, marianne demising, london with a quick look at the main stories. now. a pledge by g 7 lead us to donate a 1000000000 doses of the current of ours vaccine to poor countries has been dismissed as inadequate by activists. they say it doesn't go far enough. british prime minister or johnson says the group of 7 plan will inoculate wells nearly a 1000000000 people by the end of next year. but campaign is the same moving slow, and it shows western leaders are not up to the job of tackling the was public
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health crisis in a century. and the reason is that there will be still large areas the developing world where the virus is spread like wildfire, and the risks of mutation and the risks of new billions coming and becoming the will to get ends of mind. the efforts that comes up every day to make sure that the full population inspection or in our other headlines this, our deforestation in brazil's amazon rain forest has risen for the 3rd consecutive month with president shire bull scenario yet to follow through on a pledge to boost funding for environmental enforcement more than 2 and a half 1000 square kilometers of land was destroyed in the 1st 5 months of this year. at more than 3 times the size of new york city and a 25 percent rise compared to a year earlier. much of the land is used for capital ranches, farms, and logging a 15 year old palestinian boy has died after being shot by israeli forces during a protest in the occupied west bank. the teenager was one of several palestinians
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wounded in beta south of nablus while demonstrating against the expansion of a jewish settlement. molly's transitional government has named a new cabinets with colonel sad jo kamara pointed as defense minister. his appointment comes days, often military need a kind of a senior quota was sworn in as president military power last month. and army officials have now been appointed to several key cabinet positions. committees and lockdown has been imposed on the chalet and capital. despite more than half its population being fully vaccinated, off to santiago reported some of the worst curve at $900.00 case numbers since the panoramic began. daily caseload such 25 percent in the region over the past 2 weeks and intensive care beds. and now a 98 percent capacity. wall, not the news hour and 25 minutes time. i will see you then portal is the program coming out next, i'll see you later. i
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hi, i'm sandra gottman. welcome to portal your gateway to some volunteer as best online content. this week we focused on israel and palestine. the flare up of violence we saw last month turned gaza into a war zone battered by 11 days of israeli or strikes. in this episode of portal, we're going to take a look at some of the bigger issues behind at all, including the messy politics at play. we'll get a sense of what it's like to work as a past. any journalist in the west bank dealing with a daily challenges of israeli occupation and we go cycling and gaza to hear about the challenges and joys of one young man trying to fulfill a sporting dreams. there are lots of reasons why the fighting we saw may between israelis and palestinians got so bad,
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but it's not the 1st time we've seen an escalation and violence like that and of where to avoid seeing it again. something will have to change. but change often comes down to politics. so what are the politics at play here? that's the question my team and i asked on start here an online show that breaks down the big news stories. the let's talk about israel and palestine. the bonds in the rocket to stop falling for the problems that lead to the recent violence haven't gone away. there have been announcements about reconstruction and vague commitments about improving lives. leaders on both sides will need to chart a better course. starting by making real improvements in the lives of people in israel, gaza, and the west bank, but there is no, not even a hint of
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a long term solution. and the political backdrop doesn't look good for finding one . you have a clinical crisis and critical crisis policy, and it's already, you know, political crisis and then there's the americans and their relationship with israel . if not one of the us having leverage over israel. it's simply one of the united states being israel, shirley, to the, when it comes to israel, palestine and the politics that play here are 3 things you need to know. the. the 1st thing you need to know is that palestinian leadership is divided on one side. there's hamas, they control the gaza strip. it's their military wing that was firing some of the rockets at israel. the us in israel consider hamas terrorists in gaza. her masters, lead by ya. yes. and war. then there's the palestinian authority, the p a was set up in 1994 and it's effectively like the past and in government. but today with, from often control of gather the p,
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a control is very limited except for parts of the west bank and even there, it's israel as the occupying power that has control over most things. since 2005, the pig has been controlled by a political party led by mahmoud abbas. he's the palestinian president, represents palestine on the international stage. this split between him off and the palestinian authority creates all sorts of problems and raises the question of who actually represents the palestinians. this is a really difficult question to answer. and the reason it's difficult to answer is because we have not had elections in more than 15 years to be a we're going to hold elections in may. but mahmoud abbas counsel them the last minute that it was because of israeli restrictions on campbells meaning and voting, unoccupied, east jerusalem. but some palestinians question if that the whole story i don't think that we should minimize what it means to have elections in jerusalem. that being said,
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i think that the elections were canceled because bass wasn't competent with the outcome as long as the palestinians politically divided between them off and graphically divided between the west bank and gaza strip city. no hope for any jewish negotiations. it's also been israeli policy to perpetuate this division. now that's political division has existed for a long time. but it now seems there's another center of political power that getting stronger the power of the people on the street and across the humanitarian. and this is about standing up for the this mart is going to be very, very important. the last few weeks, we have seen palestinian organize and coordinate all over the world, not just inside the house. we were all connected suite. people are opening their
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eyes and they're really saying that, you know enough to me as people are united behind one idea and when ideas that we want to be free. so that's an overview of the situation on the palestinian side. the 2nd thing you need to know is that on the israeli side, politics are also in a mess. in march, israel held is 4th election in 2 years without a clear result. there were weeks of deal making and now benjamin netanyahu is being pushed out after 12 years and power. his opponents formed a coalition with natalia bennett the far right politician. that to be the new prime minister. he's supported by yard le pete, a centrist, who is expected to take over as prime minister in 2 years. this is essentially an 8 party coalition. and the only thing the parties were able to agree upon is the removal of benjamin netanyahu from office. so how does all this play into the israeli palestinian issue? but of course it's hard to say definitively. the issue hasn't come up much in any
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of the recent election campaigns. and most israelis support keeping things with the palestinians pretty much as they are. but here's what we know about the new leaders, natalie, but it is in many ways more hard lines, more ideological the nation. yahoo, he is somebody who has explicitly called for the formal alex, asian, much the west. but yeah, the pity is totally adopt. you haven't really pushed for a change in israel. apologies toward the occupations if you want to look at the glass is, is promising that things are not going to deteriorate between israel and the palestinian. if you want to look at the half empty glass, it's a prescription for perpetrating the status for. okay, so on the palestinian side, we've got a major political split. and on the israeli side we've got chronic political uncertainty. even with the new coalition. it doesn't exactly look great when it
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comes to finding the kind of committed, maybe even visionary political action needed to bring lasting peace. and it's in that, that this, this war broke out. you can get a tune. you can stop the fight in. i don't think you can resolve the underlying issues, but you should in the piece, making efforts the follow. try to plant the seeds that will get you to a better place. now, the other big factor and all this is the usaa relationship with israel. because the 3rd thing you need to know is that the u. s. has always been israel's biggest supporter. ah, this is more of the friendship between israel and the united states, the americans, israel's oldest and best friend in the world. the united states is proud to stand with you as your strongest ally and your greatest friend. i will,
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where you stand with our great friend and partner, the state of israel for palestinians and often feels like this friendship comes at their expense. and under president trump, it reached a whole new level. he recognised jerusalem is the capital of israel and moved the u . s. embassy there from tele vive. this ignored palestinian claims to east jerusalem as their capital. he pulled more than $200000000.00 in aid of the palestinian authority. and the u. s. had opposed is really settlements, but trump reversed that policy. so going forward, the question is how the bite and administration might do things differently. and so far there has been a change of tone compared to the trump years. i'm here to underscore the commitment of the united states to rebuilding a relationship with the palestinian authority and with the palestinian people. when israel started bombing garza and made it took 8 days for bite into express support for the fire. us also blocked 3 attempts by the un security council to condemn the
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violets. and around the same time, news broke about us weapon sale to israel worth $735000000.00. factor. the matter is we are still sending $3800000000.00 to the israeli government and military funding every single year. and the overwhelming majority of congress is unwilling to put even the most basic conditions on that aid. but when it comes to us support for israel, we've recently seen a lot more open criticism. we must condition aid to israel and compliance with international human rights. and in the apartheid, many members of congress have instead fallen back on the blanket statement defending its rails airstrikes against civilians under the guise of self defense. the idea that it's even remotely controversial to call what israel has imposed on palestinians a form of apartheid is laughable. but does the u. s. leadership have any appetite to really deal with the underlying issue? it seems that by strategy, the biden policy is to put
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a lid on this conflict. i'm not even trying to make the effort strong. solve it. that i think is because they believe right now the time is not right for peace. the thing is, it seems that it's never been the right time for peace, but from palestine to the us to cities around the world. the voice of calling for some kind of change or getting louder for politicians. pressure is on the going to be going to change. it is just not the years we're going to change. i think the people are leading and the meters while the politicians do their thing, palestinians are confronted with the challenges of living under israeli occupation every day rung as a bonnet is one of them. she lives in the occupied westbank and is a producer for al jazeera. in this episode of the online series between us, she takes us through the barrier. she faces as a palestinian journalist,
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covering the story on the ground. the occupation here is the heart of the story. if the elephant in the room makes about the $3000000.00 palestinians living in the occupied west bank under the occupation and it's not only about them, it's about those not born. yeah, my name is ronnie benny and i'm a producer coming the west bank from ramallah between us. i feared it would be more of the same. the vast majority of kind of sinews with born and raised under a few patients. so it became pretty much part and parcel of their lives to be waiting in long lines at tech points to have the soldiers knocking on their doors. the fact that nothing is predictable and pretty much the only predictable thing living under occupation. now what i'm a little bit different, it's a bit of a bubble. it became a hop for the palestinian authority. it's vibrant that has of international
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organizations. but go a bit outside the reality hits again. he's got refugee camp. you've got checkpoints always of been covering the west bank for 20 years, being get palestinian before being a journalist has its own set of restrictions. you have physical challenges that have to do with barriers and movement restrictions while i can't go to occupy jerusalem without them for any permit of foreign journalists can. and then there are the unseen barriers. i end up scrutinizing my own work to make sure that people don't think i'm biased. at the end of the day, i'm a journalist, i'm not an activist nor a pattern. ready but there are pros for being a palestinian journalist, you understand the complications. the no one says in the context of the story. for example, you go to a funeral and you see a mother and she is happy home and just love the child. but as a fellow simian, you know, she's trying to show resilience. there's also a bonus for being
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a woman journalist because i can have access to places that other people might not necessarily have access to. for example, i can speak to bed when women what i like to do is tell a little stories and go into details like spend some time with those people. take an extension, for example, such an abstract her. but how is it going to affect karima? how's it going to affect my living 2 times down the hill? permit is another example. the term. so blog lesson, yet people could lose their life waiting for such a permit. some stories you really need them to any voice because you need to question the authorities. if palestinians and international organizations say that homes and militia are collective punishment, you have to have an early voice to respond to people's accusations, or concerns or fears. they didn't just destroy my house, they destroyed my dreams. they destroyed a family and a life. and while you know that their answer is going to be by the book is really
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authority, say some homes built close to the separation fence or security risk and have to be destroyed. you have to include that because that's the answer. but sometimes i feel like we really don't have to. we report on a population under occupation. so equating the occupier and the occupied would be inherently bias. there are lots of unsung heroes in this place. the people who live in the jordan valley with so little and yet decide they want to stay there. the people who have lost children or have loved ones tortured and choose to remain hopeful. what else motivates me? my kids, i want them to have a life better than mine. to be honest, i try to keep my kids as far away from the conflict as possible and not filled them in on the details of my job. but you can try's kids and they ask, why am i wrong p after covering the arson attack that killed the chef emily in duma
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. or why do i smell like skunk, quoted when covering a protest, and you have to come up with answers that are 2, but at the same time that doesn't teach them to hate. and it's tricky. i think that injustice anywhere shouldn't be looked at seriously. palestinians have been marginalized by the us administration by the outer bridge, and even by that on thursday, the most understanding would tell you that annexation isn't new. it's been happening for years. the discourse shifted from why the occupation should end to why annexation is bad for. and palestinians are being sidelined in a story that pertains directly to them. they're sick and tired of waiting. most people we meet with tell you that. they fear that they're losing their most important hope. and
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the, the violence that palestinians suffer at the hands of israeli forces has been clear to see, especially in recent weeks. and that violence extends to children in the last 20 years more than 3000 past. and in children have been killed by israeli forces, or online interactive team has put together a feature to remember. some of the people behind that statistic, like 16 year old belong us. our. he was shot dead in 2019 during a protest and gather. and 15 year old hominy bore him home, a yell, who was shot in march 2020 by his really forces conducting an early morning raid on a village. so let's speak to lena, also feel one of the out the or online journalists who helped to produce the know their name feature. she's also been leading much of our online coverage of recent events. lena, just tell us some more about the research that went into this. the research included looking different websites. so the,
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the policy in the ministry of information, it has a more comprehensive list of passengers that were killed since they are 2000. and then you have this children's rights organization called defense for children, palestine. their documentation of children killed is a bit more recent, but it definitely includes more details into the, the, the child him or herself. and you know, the details that they're killing, where they were, how they were killed, tragically, the names of more children need to be added to this list. can you give us a sense of what the impact on children has been this level of trauma as is kind of routed in there except the beginning of their lives. if you take just children who are born in gaza, for example, children under the age of 14 have already witnessed about 4 major. large scale is very different from sitting on the strip. what powerful work. thank you so much, lena, for speaking to me, the we're going to and the show on
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i find that you see how it looked on manager said there was a little bit less when both the economy you know what i'm from 5 years the i mean then the condition i was meant and then had the new but i'm looking for much, you know, from up north with the money. i mean can you talk to shuffle future? i
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that that she can mash. i'm one of the she'll be on the fish and wildlife $1.00 and $2.00. and then one of the water so it was sent to the job. so i the heavy muscle. ah, no i that's it from us. of course there's a lot more and out a 0 dot com and our social media pages. thanks for watching this week's dive into digital content. we'll be back next week. plenty more. ah,
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ah, ah ah, most people will never know what's beyond the store, the deafening silence of $100.00 and how it feels to touch danger every day. most people will never know what it's like to work with. every breath is precious with fear it's not an option. but when most people use hello there. we do have more rating the full cost per se, impossible,
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straight ever over the next day or $2.00, all associated with this area of low pressure cloud and rain wrapped up around this system. we are going to see some heavy bus to brian for eastern part. so victoria, then flood warnings in force for some, hey, a red warnings, and one or 2 spots here. so i certainly want to keep a close eye on keep an eye on the local forecast, se wet and windy weather to into the southeast of new south wales. pushing across into a good part of tasmania. that range has start to move away as we go on through sunday by sunday night to some weather weather coming out to southern pulse of western australia for the knowledgeable south australia sing. wanted to shout the brightest guys for the southeast of waltz. i'm pleased to say the garden right will make its way into new zealand, where it will tide, increasingly wet and wendy for the start of the new working week. so looking at some other way, whether it's a central parts of china or at the moment, southern air is also seeing some cloud and rain. this cloud and rain will make its way to southern parts of japan. as we go on through sense that you should see some
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heavy bus to frame. maybe some shells for a time to southern parts of horseshoe, with the most part of his last try find a try for the korean peninsula, but rain for northern china. ah. ah . this is al jazeera ah, mary, i'm new jersey. you're watching the news, our life from london coming up in the next 60 minutes. guiding the world out of the corona virus. pandemic. g 7. need as promise a 1000000000 vaccines the poor countries, but criticize for not doing more sooner. disappearing before our eyes,
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