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tv   News  Al Jazeera  March 23, 2022 8:00am-8:31am AST

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actually help in russia's invasion of ukraine in depth analysis of the days global headlines inside story on al jazeera, unprompted, and uninterrupted discussions. from a london broadcast santa. on al jazeera, ah, ah, a city turned to ashes russian forces intensify, that bombardment of mighty you pole. 100000 people are trapped by the fighting. ah, think of this is al jazeera alive from door you kind 2nd largest city also sees heavy fighting and 96 year old holocaust survivor is among
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those killed by russian shells in the distance and see smoke on the horizon as no one. hardly anybody left her because her the u. s. warns russia against launching a cyber attack, saying any hack of a nato ally would get a collective response. and a shock announcement in the sports world. the number one ranked women's tennis plan ash barty is retiring at the age of 25. he cranes, its 2nd biggest city hot cave has been under heavy fire local authority say 15000 people are hiding from shelling in underground metro stations. residential areas have been turned to rubble, and most people have fled. i said, beg reports from heart give silence. there was once
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a community here, but just us, everything. silence is broken by the sound of a tillery. this house was just hit. last, soldiers will curricula those who remain have become accustomed to it. this is milda, deborah, bob wallace. 10 minutes ago they were firing like crazy. and so they were really pounding the area up the road. well, this is a residential area or you're, it happens a lot of your every half hour. they reload thomas, this is not for him. when they bring in and across the street, we meet 69 year old lead of or been a cover. but don't show like watching the yoga front of her. she said she doesn't want to leave her house because her husband can't walk. and they don't want to be a burden on others. her neighbourhood is under constant attack, or kinda along again another. it's scary. they hid here and there. half the street is destroyed. ukraine save us. where with you. we're told it's unsafe. we
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must leave the area because of the ongoing artillery job. can hear that going and the incoming and can also hit him landing in the distance and to see smoke on the horizon. does not hardly anybody left her because her but in the shadow of war, it seems only the elderly, the left here. this school providing a vital to monitor in lifeline. wellness the seller are book looters, system. our house is safe, but a 100 meters away from us. people got killed. their bodies were in pieces. they were people. i knew there's no marriage. not far from here. an apartment block was hit holocaust survivor forest roman jenko lived here. now the taking away what's left of his body after shelling hit is flat,
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was throws nick all through. there was a terrible shelling. it was not a bam. more of a whistle with 3 terrible whistles. you think you bring them? roman jenko survived 3 nazi concentration camps in world war 2. vladimir putin says he is fighting nazis, but it's not, not is that killed roman jenko. it was russian artillery. i said big. i'll da 0. how to give or ukraine's president says 100000 people living in the besieged, city of mighty you, people are suffering in human conditions with no food. water medicine. one of them is soleski says much needed, aid is being blocked, and russian forces captured some rescue workers and bus drivers trying to reach the city. some are not see dean will meet as of today there are about 100000 people in mary apple in, in humane conditions under a full blockade with no food, no water, and no medicine. under constant shelling and constant, the bard meant for more than a week. now we have been trying to organize stable humanitarian corridors for mary
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apple residence. and almost all our attempts, unfortunately, are disrupted by the russian occupiers, by showing or deliberate terror. women order the strategic port, city of mighty you, paul, used to be home to 400000 people. see just cut the city off from the sea and allowed russia to establish a land corridor to crimea, which it sees in 2014 zaleski says, almost nothing is left of the city with st. battles raging and constant bombardment that relentless assault is being mirrored. the elsewhere zane bas robbie reports now from the western city of la viv. mario pal is being bombed into the past ukrainian se economic infrastructure factories warehouses are non military targets . survivors now suffering war will inevitably suffer in the future. their livelihoods destroyed, ah,
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on the ground rushes chechen soldiers hardened fighters continue to push on residential areas and suburbs, waiting to meet them may be ukrainian volunteers like these math actors, singers, artists, all defending their home suited to the board so far old people of volunteers, ottam who basically never had a gun in the hands, never served in the army. they never thought that they would have a gun in their hands used to, but all of them are with all of their intentions, determined to resist. and this desire just brought all of them lisa will know. michelle, what was the fear is natural. he says to control it. you must embrace it. oh, a small unit with little training days away from going into the fray. ladder to block rushes advance on the capital. mario pl keith turner. give satellite pictures
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show the russian armies use of artillery where it's ground forces have been stalled by lethal ukrainian hit and run attacks in the kitchen vigil in khaki region. another enemy jet was shot down these. our forces have already shut down so many russian jets and helicopters, that we can only state, instead of containing brains, their pilots heads. i empty, you look, i said as well. and this is not by accident. their hearts and souls are all so empty. the bombardment of nikolai, of seemingly reaching new lows of brutality, a strike on a hospital for people suffering mental illness. the fluid, how can i put it? i feel so much resentment, and i wanted to cry because we had a connection between you. frayne and russia. i'm russian. cruelty is so brutal. there's nothing i can say that bad people. it's not a human way to treat people, it's and times i'm just speechless because i'm not even a month into the war. the un world health organization says half
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a 1000000 of the refugees from ukraine who fled into poland. have problems with their mental health. the pace and the scale of this crisis is unprecedented, as is the strain on the people living it with a number of refugees. now about half of them, about half a 1000000 requires who bore for mental health disorders due to the conflict on about $30000.00 and we've mental diseases ah, fears fighting continues in residential areas of mary, apple setting homes on fire off the coast of the southern port city ukrainian soldiers reportedly used a guided anti tank missile to sink a russian boat bravo and unharmed, but not untouched by the fighting performers in drove each have new rolls, cooking meals for soldiers on the front lines. the moisture yet the key we live.
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there is a saying that when the guns found amuses, are silenced, but we are not silent. we are in the rear. we are engaged in volunteer work because ukraine is in a difficult situation now. sure, sure. not sure. since the invasion began, they sent thousands of meat balls and dumplings as well as meat stew, soup, fish, and pancakes. from here to keep as long as their people remain in harm's way for this theatre troop, the show must go on zane basra, the ultra 0, the v's ukrainian forces, say they retaken a sub of just outside give the defense ministry says seizing mccarthy will block russian troops surrounding the capitol in the northwest, but it admitted that russian forces have partially taken 3 other areas near by. the city center has been relatively quiet. a 35 hour curfew has just been lifted. all too often critical infrastructure is coming under attack. the health minister says
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10 hospitals had been destroyed and the world health organization has a further 43 been damaged aid group, say more than 300 health facilities are in combat zones, or areas under russian control. more than 60 schools across ukraine now lie in ruins, and the 460 educational facilities have been damaged. save the children, says an estimated 6000000 children are still trapped in ukraine with many sheltering and buildings coming under increased attacks. these pictures show a children's hospital in the city of several done yet, skin the eastern leucon squeeze in the came on the russian bombardment. in the past 24 hours, rescue teams were able to evacuate 7 children and 15 adults. officials say more than 2 dozen buildings in the region have been damaged in the past day, including a school ukraine's biggest poor city. odessa remains on high alert for
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a russian attack. families have been increasingly boarding trains to evacuate the city as russian warships remain off the coast has largely been spared from fighting so far, though, a residential area was hit by shilling over the weekend. people of installed sandbag barricades throughout the city to prepare for an assault. a unicef has started setting up a senses in ukraine's neighboring countries to help families fleeing the fighting. our correspondence rub, mcbride is in the wave in west in ukraine. he spoke with a james elder from the un children's agency. this safe space is so the scale is meant to match the need. now the moment that's still very difficult because we have the fastest growing humanitarian crisis in terms of refugee numbers that we've seen since world war 2 for these safe spaces, their places with the families get a moment of response. they get some water, they get some sanitation is increasingly that we cash assistance this 1st day.
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there's ideas with families who are separated from their children, so they're breathing space. they're a safe space. they'll be here in ukraine already there. in romania, poland, hungary, they're essentially places for kids and families on this treacherous journey. you mentioned there is one of the fastest growing crises that facing to give us give us an idea of the numbers here of, of children and the potential for how this is going to develop in mind boggling numbers on sometimes lows to use them because i don't think people can always, you know, intellectual eyes, them at the moment we are seeing a ukrainian child become a refugee almost every 2nd. every 2nd since this war started almost a month ago, a ukrainian charles become a refugee $55.00 a minute. now that we have not seen that since world war 2, and you will have seen what that looks like, that's another child separated from his dad. it's another family split apart. it's probably a child who's in a bunker for a few days. it's a child who was going to school a month ago and has now had their life turned upside down. we have just come out of
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an air raid alert. that's why you managed to make it here. now we have them constantly during the day. you've just come from a bunker here in the viva. tell us about that. yeah, it's a maternity hospital here. it's an enormous hospital again, one of these ones run by incredible doctors, pediatricians obstetricians the era. sorry, goes often. everyone does dance is including scores of very pregnant women. so i'm talking about, you know, anna, who is 36 weeks pregnant with twins who, 5 times 6 times a day, 3 or 4 times a night is going to a bunker in fantasy. it's a basement right. it's a dusty floor and they're ready to give birth down there. it's that moment where a family should be excited for this life changing moment with family and friends. know they've lost their grandparents. they're in bunkers in key. if they've separated from their husbands, they're under troll. not most of them are going into labor early because of the extreme amount of stress. and they're sitting in a dusty bunker waiting for these life changing moment, bringing the children into
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a country at war. a fill ahead on, i just seen a western lead slam a court ruling that will keep the kremlin critic alexis may behind boss and 9 more years and we look at how mexicans working abroad, helping the country out of the economic recession caused by the them ah, welcome to your world. further update. we're going to begin this wine in the middle east. hello everyone. good to see you. it's all about the heats through the golf. so we'll go in for a closer look. there is a forecast temperatures on wednesday. we've got minima in for a high 33. i'm going to put this few days for now. on friday we get this northerly wind out of iraq. so that's dropping down the temperature and minima to $27.00. but the high still hanging onto the thirty's. as we looked toward pakistan, karachi,
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33 degrees will come back to this in the sect, but we've also got heat through southern iran. sure. as a high 26. okay. promise you, we talk more about karachi here is a 3 day forecast. i think by the weekend you'll hit 40 degrees, it's fall above average, and all has to do with a switch in wind direction. those winds have been fierce that times through the boss for a still dealing with them on wednesday for is stan ball with a higher 8 degrees, well below average shower pitcher there. and we've also got wet and cool conditions for the live that storms are flying up. the cross central parts of africa right out to the gulf of guinea. and as we go toward the bottom end of africa, right now, we're seeing that rain fill in rate across south africa. slight chance it will see it and keep town is wall with the height of 25 degrees on wednesday. and now you're in the know, see soon the army of mud, very 16 enemy,
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the infinity is submerging the homes and livelihoods if 60000 people years later, little inhabitants, still fighting for justice from the fracking company, they blame and the hot flood continues to flow. great, a witness documentary on al jazeera. ah ah, you're watching edge did armada of off top stories. this, our ukraine's government is urging russia to lead emergency aid into murder. you
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pull and allow safe passage out for more than a 100000 people trying to leave. see cities been on the continuous bombardment? be the people without food, water, oil, electricity fighting, intensified northwest of kia, would ukrainian forces, saying they've we taken the suburb of mccarter. city cent, has been relatively quiet. 35 hour curfew lifted. ukraine's 2nd largest city hall, cavan surrounding areas have seen some of the heaviest. shelly, these pictures show the result of russian attacks in la 's over 30 se apartments were destroyed. the united states has warned all they coordinated nato response. if one of its members is hit by a cyber attack from russia, the warning comes as president joe biden prepared to attend meetings with nato, the e u and g 7 leaders in europe. alan fisher report us says it's seeing the
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foundation of russian cyber attacks on the us. it's monitoring scanning efforts. essentially, hackers probing for weak sports. national security advisor jim sullivan says any such attack on a nito member will bring a coordinated response. we could see circumstances in which a collective response by the alliance to a cyber attack would be called by an outline. that is absolutely something where we and other countries could bring capabilities to bear to help a country both defend itself and respond to a particular cyber attack. now, that's not necessarily the same thing as a military response. that response could take many different forms when president biden and put met in geneva last year. the us president said key areas of infrastructure should be off limits to cyber attack. that was in response to the 2020 solar winds, attack. federal severs were hit, 30000 private companies and public organizations impacted. washington says the russian foreign intelligence service was behind that hack and addressing business
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leaders on monday. your bike want them to get ready. the magnitude of russia cyber capacity is fairly consequential. and it's coming federal government is doing this part to get ready. but let me be absolutely clear about something. it's not just if you're interested or stake with or potential use of cybersecurity, it is the national interest. the russian government denies its planning cyber attack thing. it would not resort to what it calls, banditry officials here, believe it's a way for russia to strike back at the u. s. for providing weapons to ukraine without escalating the actual fighting. alan fisher, i'll just either at the white house other news now and the u. s. n e. you have condemned a court ruling in russia that's extended the prison sentence of opposition leader alexis of omni vladimir putin. main political opponent has been moved to a maximum security prison to serve
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a new 9 year sentence. a court in moscow found him guilty of fraud and contempt of court. washington says it is an attempt to silence the criminal critic and distract from the invasion of ukraine. we strongly condemn the russian federation orchestration of a sham trial. to convict election of only and further spurious charges and sentencing him to 9 more years in a high security prison. we note with grave concern that the court's sham ruling is the latest in a series of attempts to silence and of all me and other opposition, figures and independent voices who have been critical of russian authorities. the taliban has failed to live up to its promise to reopen secondary schools to girls. 7 months after seizing power in afghanistan, some girls were seen returning to school in cobble on wednesday morning for the spokesperson for the ministry of education. as now confirmed, all schools for girls from great 7 to 12 will remain closed until further notice.
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taliban has been widely condemned for depriving women and girls of an education. foreign children held in syrian camps for relatives, a suspected ice will fight as risk being stuck there for decades. say the children says less, the pace of reparations is accelerated. it could take 30 years for young people to return home around 800000 iraqi children and more than 7000 from 60 other countries, a stuck in the kurdish wrong and haul. and raj camps in north, east and syria. a mexicans working abroad, sent home a recall $51000000000.00 in earnings last year at nearly 30 percent. more than 2020 the inflow of caches helping bolster mexico's economy, which is in recession and struggling to recover from the impact of the corona virus . pandemic. manuel rapids reports from the state of walker. how?
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hello, i'm with you on the go. annella sanchez and her husband are having a video call with their son to check, so i can shoot your lives in the united states. the money he and his brothers send back home to mexico in the form of remittances is what keeps annella and her husband afloat. i was like a me think about the san my sons are in the united states and they send me money in my they something needed in the town, like building a school, a church or a community kitchen. they support that to everyone who is away supports those who are here in santa rosa castillo, walker quietly nestled between the mountains of the mexican state of waka, just about every one has one or several relatives that have migrated to the united states. al jazeera met with the towns leaders and with a show of hands asked how many of them have at one time or another. migrated north maple clinton is different. okay, rebecca gillum, my jojo,
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very few people stay here. the majority, their children, husbands and wives lived in the united states because of work. the truth is there are no sources of employment in this community. those who are here only plant crops and the rains come because there's no water fear a geisha, and it's a bit sad in this community. and this is why everyone leaves finding other places to make money and satisfy their needs. the mayor here tells us that migrating to the united states at a young age is practically a tradition in the town. and the remittances migrants sent home represents a financial lifeline for the families they leave behind. small towns like sent that little sack was la walker had become dependent on money sent for migrants living in the us. but despite modest improvements in the lives of residents, poverty and a lack of economic opportunity continue to push more young people to migrate. in order to send more money back to mexico, last year remittance is to mexico reached a record high money sent home for migrants now represent close to 4 percent of
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nations, gdp globally only india and china rank higher than mexico. when it comes to remittances . even mexico's president has acknowledged the impact this money has had on families across the country. if took a part of them. this is what our fellow mexican heroes bring to the table. it's meant a 27 percent increase in relation to 2020. in baseball terms. this is what brought us out of the whole leverage another well, well record remittances may sound like a lot. it's not money that generates jobs and new opportunities, meaning that an immense number of young people continue to migrate. well anyway, annella's sanchez says being apart from 3 of her 5 children hasn't been easy, but she says it's also the way of life in her community. thought well, on monday sitting there, it's our own community that since that money to help the town. and the truth is that it's the people that build streets the drainage, the drinking water love. if the president helps a little too. but the community helps more. experts say remittances to mexico are
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expected to increase again in 2022, continuing to represent a driving engine of the nation's economy. manuel rap, hello al jazeera santa rosa castillo walker or the annual maritime defense expo held here in cotton, highlights. the latest naval technology ship builders from different countries are all buying for business. and that's us. china, italy and turkey all looked to be the ones building and equipping the navy's of the future. alex got topple us reports from door bangladesh, missile corvette and a pakistani frigate. both made in china. the country naval training ship bill to the unadilla shipyards and turkey. these ships and other naval equipment are on display at hummer. ported cutter was part of dim decks, the annual maritime defense expo hilton, doha. defense companies from around the world of gather to show the latest wears as
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potential buyers look for bargains that will give their navies an edge in any potential conflict. the new class of ship builder has emerged making stealthy, powerful warships at a price. many countries can afford. one of the newcomers, china is no expanding defense base was supplied cheap, capable warships to its clients. you have geanargo exploding submarines to bangladesh, you know, in the southeast asia they were exploding submarines to are even pakistan. they're also having a footprint in africa where there's certain countries which have tardies product like nigeria. so i dont not any tons of volume of these lessons. what's also in terms of the tonnage of the vessels that china's now, oh, diversified. it's, you know, oh, different classes of ship as well as it's construction. italy too, has been building advanced frigates for egypt and has been helping cutters. navy expand significantly. turkey's navy is developing rapidly under its domestic ship
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building mil jen program building. it so worships, but also perfecting how to integrate foreign weapons sensor and radar systems. the go together to make modern naval systems. so she has been building ships for a long time, but says with the 1000000 program we had the experience and the capability of designing our own ships, including the turkish subsystems, which gabby degree took is now building. worships for cutter pakistan, the u e. it sites also firmly fixed on lucrative asian markets like indonesia, hostile flexibility of a chief factors for success here. and these 3 countries are now building an ever increasing number of stealthy, powerful warships for tomorrow's navy's alex, the topless out a 0 go home of the world's top ranked women's tennis plan ash party has announced she's retiring from the sports at the age of 25 the 3 time grand slam champion
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deliver the shock news through an instagram post party says it's time for her to chase other dreams. it comes less than 2 months after she won the australian open success for me is, is knowing that i've given absolutely every, everything i can, i'm unfulfilled, i'm happy and i know how much work it takes 2 to bring the best out of yourself. and i've said it to my team, um multiple times, it's just, i don't have that in me anymore. i don't have the, the physical drive, the emotional i want and kind of everything it takes to, to challenge itself at the very top level anymore. and i think i just know that i am absolutely. i am spent. i just, i physically, i have nothing more to give and that for me is, is success. i've given absolutely everything i can turn to this beautiful sport of
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tennis. a cray. gabriel is an australian tennis journalist. he says barty has achieved what she set out to do in such a short amount of time. she is doing on her terms. nobody else is turned. she's not injured or anything like that. she's decided, as you just heard from her emotionally and physically, she's done, she can't do it anymore. and she wants something else in life now and good luck to her. busy she's achieved everything she wanted to achieve. the french open in 2019 wimbledon in 2021. the strength opened a couple of months ago. she won wimbledon. she started to this, the story started to come into her mind after that she was so spent then, and then the icing on the cake was winning the australian open. it's been a remarkable career. i'll give you a couple of staff she end of the year number 13 times and she's got the 4th longest
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streak of consecutive weeks at number one, and she 7th overall for the most weeks at number one. and you can't knock that and she has to be spoken. busy in the same category as people like stephanie graph, monica selfish, margaret, sorry, but she never after the priest, even though they had much longer decided to play for greater a longer period. what ashes done in such a short time is truly remarkable. ah . all right, let's get around up now to top stories. ukraine's government is urging russia to let emergency aid in tomorrow. you will allow safe passage out for more than 100000 people trying to leave. the besieged city has been under continuous bombardment, leaving people without food, water, or electricity. president volunteers the landscape.

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