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tv   News  Al Jazeera  April 2, 2022 11:00am-11:31am AST

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ah, ah, a 2 month true cindy. evan brings a glimmer of hope. after years of war that have left millions on the brink of famine. ah, hello, i'm adrian finnegan. this is al jazeera live from doha, also coming up, people in ukraine's 2nd biggest city, calc heaved, hide underground as washing forces bomb their city. a state of emergency declares, trying cup where there's been growing on rest of an unprecedented economic crisis. and amazon says it's looking at its options after workers vote to unionize in new york.
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ah, evans warring sides have agreed to a 2 month truce, which could be extended. the u at envoy for yemen says the saudi led coalition and who the rebels will stop all offensive operations inside the country and across its borders. saudi arabia at its allies, have been fighting us to support the government against the who these since early 2015 i'll just here as bob i'll, i top is in the amans capital some off and says there's a sense of hope that this is a step towards piece the your an invoice to yemen. miss hanser, groundbreaking, has mentioned that the, this would be just this, this starting point for wording sites. so to show to, for all, for them to build the trust there, and alder, to start, longed a big own negotiations for how to form the, the,
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the future of human human needs. now, be living in this kind of complex when the saudi lately polishan declared its war against the houses in order to reinstate the internationally recognized government . but so far, the fighting has went different, occurs the this, the, the, the, the more impact on the civilians we could talk about the nearly 30000 civilians. patients have died because their ability to travel abroad for because of the ban of the liquidations back on the summer to nice airport now, which also the people are hoping that the this, this would be serious by the, the, the parties of the conflict with the act seriously about how to fulfill their commitment to turn back stability security. and also the more many people have lost their livelihoods because of the non payment of monthly salaries. so it's joyful
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news. we are waiting to see the fulfillment of such a declaration on the grounds. call chambery as media adviser for east africa and yemen for the norwegian refugee council. he says it's hard to overstate the significance of this truce. the agreement also provides for the opening of the board of holidays and the airport. and so now 2 major important developments that we've been calling for because the closure of those for the airport have i want to talk was lives. we hope this will save more lives that are, that are still trapped in this conflict and 1000000000. and besides the resumption of import of, of fuel much need the fuel would have been has up in the day though crippling the countries the company is dependent on these for power. and that's,
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that has, has meant that hospice has no fuel that we're more be providing there because of that. no, no, no. 15000 people fueling. just if you will, that car we've seen that every day on the on now and the gross. yeah. and then so, and the import of, of commercial goods, food people are starving. people are dying of starvation and so the opening of the sports is going to be essential and trying to get them back on their feet. of course, we call on both parties to stick to their commitments. they really need to do on our commitments over the next 2 months. and hopefully this will, will bring forward an opportunity for longer than stability that we will have these yemen. use the ukraine, stephanie prime minister says there's been an agreement to open 7 show on
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a terry and corridors. it will allow civilians to lead multiple and buddy and my private transport on friday, the red cross so that it was unable to get people out by bus. city officials accused washing forces of blocking access to the city. but at smith report, most people who've left mary awful, they've had to make their own way out. pavel says he's used to the walking. he's a shepherd, but he loved that it says richard warden, we've got 35 kilometers to go. he says he and his wife yanna, a heading to their village, away from the fighting. they hope around a 140000 people have escaped mario pole in the 5 weeks since the start of what russia calls its special military operation. but not every one made it to safety. those that do find themselves in reception centers
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in russia or schools like this in don yet that that would usually so senior. well, why did we come here on a fuel because it became too hard. we were exhausted. i took julia, she hasn't been outside at all for a month because she was scared, very scared. and we went on foot, a group in a column until we reached the edge of the city and a shooting and bombing, but we made it. thank god, all the people, al jazeera spoke to say they're here either because the only route they could find out of mary apple brought them this way or because they relatives in russia for new stuff which to them. when of course i want to go home because i have a flat there. so i went to return to my beloved city where i was born or my daughter remains and all my friends and relatives, all my life was spent in mary apple. oh, you both went on holiday to mary awful. when she was 18 years old. there she tells us. she fell in love. i got married and has left the 50 years. it was
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a perfect city. she says. oh luna needy sir! and he is it. we must make peace with each other. we learn these words grads, machine, guns, women, children, why do they need to know those words? it is better to learn other words, those of pace love respect towards each other, but not machine guns. when your flight is on fire or the car, that's not real pain. the real pain is that we're being torn apart. from the reception centers, people will go either to relatives in russia or temporary accommodation that can be hundreds of kilometers away. no one knows when they'll be able to go back home to mario and the red cross as, as the russian government for permission to open an office here in raw stop on dawn to service easton, ukraine. we're about a 90 minute drive from the border. an indication perhaps that this won't be a short term conflict. bernard smith, al jazeera roster fonda lived out of our zeros robert bride,
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who's in lived in western ukraine to rob bill, a red cross attempt another evacuation mission from mario paul. today that is the stated intention of the c c. they are continuing this long process which has gone on. now for days it has been problematic to say the least, but they will attempt today, saturday. finally, to get the convoy movie into mary awful. they said that yesterday, friday conditions simply didn't allow for that to happen. they need to go. so to guarantees about safe passage, which they just haven't had at the moment. it is only a small i c r c continue. there's only 3 vehicles and 9 members of stuff, but it is hugely important because they are organizing a potential column of more than 50 buses which have been sent by the ukrainians, which represents safe passage. a refuge is an escape to safety if you like. but many, many people in merry,
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desperate to get out. we've also heard from ukraine officials that in the past day or so around 3000 people have been able to get out to matter. you poll by different means. and of course, we also know that of the 7 humanitarian colorado's that have been announced for to be operating today. saturday. one of those is for private vehicles from mary paul. so that is another way for people to technically, to get out of the city a robot for situation around the capital care of right now. we are continuing to hear reports from different towns and cities, especially north of cave, up towards the border with russia, of the russians continuing to disengage, to withdraw units from places like a pin. this tower, which is seen a lot of the fighting on the outskirts of the outskirts of ki, if also hostile mo, which is this scene of many battles and the sights of this airport facility of
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military base. again, that has been vacated by the russians, but president blood him is lensky, and he's nightly addressed to ukraine, has warned that ukrainians should braced themselves for more fighting in the east. that has been the stated intention of the russians that they intend to concentrate on the east of the country, the ukrainians. believe that that will be the case that will be more targeted. fighting at the sky, also accusing the russians as they withdraw of leaving booby traps and land mines. and of course, we know that as the forces have been withdrawn, they have been again using artillery to cover that withdrawal and also multiple missile attacks. how does the restaurant mcbride reporting live there from levine committee? thanks. did rob, more than 4000000 ukrainians, have fled to other countries with billions more internally displaced? i'll just hear a stephanie deka. is it a center for displaced people in western ukraine? she's with us now. live stuff. what are people telling you that
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while i think or where we are now, really does give you a story of the entirety of this war. people we've been speaking to he here from cut keith, for my a paul from key if from, from all over really that of that a fled to hear when the trans carpathian mountain ranges is nestled along the border with slovakia is one of the only places that hasn't been hit, it's incredibly remote, we'll try and that you see how people are trying to live here and everyone we've spoken to will tell you a they have no choice. they have nowhere to go. others will tell you that it's fine here because they're finally safe. just speaking to a lady who was from actually this lady who's from lou hunts. we interviewed her for a package earlier today and she was saying they sheltered for 3 weeks in a basement into hang pants. she says her home has been completely destroyed. they then you were just talking about the humanitarian corridor. she used that humanitarian corridor. it was incredibly difficult. they tried to evacuate 4 times
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and, and under shelling. so these are just, you know, as we've been documenting a long along this conflict sound to 6th week, the, the stories of horror continue, another person. we spoke to a lady a couple, burst into tears and said, i never experience. i never thought i would experience this in my lifetime. i'm this center is basically for those who cannot afford to go anywhere else. i can tell you that this city of was good is packed, every hotel is full, every apartment has been rented. this is of course, for the people who have money. we had to were staying around 2 hours out of this city because it's the only place we could find. it is absolutely packed. the population is doubled around a 2 to quarter of a 1000000 internally displaced are now in this region. why? because it is seen as the safest mountainous remote, very close to people are telling us here nato countries. so this is the feeling and
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they don't want to leave. what they want to do is to be able to go back home once this war is over. but certainly at the moment it doesn't seem like that as a has got any indication, despite the fact that negotiations are going on. i'm 0. stephanie decker reporting my very from oscar road in weston ukraine. mary, thanks jeff. the un peacekeeping mission. and molly says it's concerned about reports of civilian deaths and an operation carried out by molly and forces. molly's army says that it killed more than 200 fighters last week when it rated the village of mora in the multi region. thousands were arrested. large quantities of weapons were confiscated. the un says that it's working with molly and authorities to tackle growing insecurity in the region. coming up after the weather on al jazeera, pope frances issues apology to canada's indigenous people. plus the moment football fans have been waiting for the groups for the 2022 world cup revealed in council. ah,
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richard, he has begun the faithful world copies on its way to castle group. your travel package to day. hello, there may have been april fools on friday, but the winter weather that swept across europe was no joke. we had an arctic blast that knocked temperatures down in northern in central areas and brought snow flurries and some heavy snow to places like france. now these areas were just basking in the spring warmth last week and there is going to be more winter weather to come. this we can, we've got ice and snow warnings out. for lot of france, we're going to see the heavier snow as well, pull across switzerland, heavy snow for the alps, and that's going to skirt its way further east. as we go into sunday. now it's looking very unsettled in southern areas across the mediterranean. we've got wind warnings out for corsica and sicily as well as sardinia. here we could see gusts of up to a 120 kilometers per hour. and
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a lot of those winter in wet conditions are going to cling to coastal areas of the age react exceed no further east of this, the grease we are seeing some stronger winds, but plenty of sunshine for athens and for the iberian peninsula to the west. while it is a sunny picture in southern areas of spain and portugal with some better where that's come. now for the north of this britain, an island we are seeing some sunny spells, but we'll see the wet weather creep down from sunday. but there will be some want coming to london by the mid week. official airlines of the journey mainstream coverage of big stories can sometimes deliver more heat than lights in a water scenario, there's always a push to simplify. narratives. nuance is always called for, even in the case of an aggressive war, the listening page, delve into the news, narrative and dissect them. there is not our great deal of subtlety. we're talking about the barbarism that is unfolding as though we somehow unique. it's not unique
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covering the way the news is covered on al jazeera lou. ah, hello again. this is al jazeera. let's remind you of the may news the south a 2 month truce has been agreed in yemen. c, h, a war. the saudi led coalition and who the rebels at a stop, all offensive operations inside yemen and across its boards. ukraine's deputy prime minister says an agreements been reached with wash and officials to set up 7 humanitarian corridors on saturday. it's allow civilians to leave my apple and body ask by private transport at the u. s. peacekeeping mission. and molly says it's concerned about reported civilian deaths and an operation carried out by the
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countries forces. the army says it's killed more than $200.00 fights. this last week, in a raid on a village in the multi region fighting in, ha, keith has displaced more than a 3rd of the city's population. many of those left behind of been hiding a makeshift bomb shelters or corresponded acid bag has met some of them. they would you could lose you when it's pure relief with voice. they shelled so much last night. that's what lana shadow over. they shell so much but we're holding on. but on with the didn't you have more you, the summer they emerged from their shelter and the subterranean existence they have been forced to live because of this war. why is it happening to us? why did he come to us? so, but we didn't. it's too much for some when you're when you put your momma, you were just since march. i haven't been able to reach my mother and maria paul,
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the house was hit by for shelves. the police offer a bite to lifeline for these people. i think south africa, the worst each area of her give hi . few live here. even fewer venture here. this is building 2 to 5 on friendship of nations street. the irony is another nation. soldiers and a few kilometers away, obliterating this neighbourhood, your preferred crew poison. there's more people over there. can you evacuate them? they have disabled children, asks this resident. we can only evacuate people if we have some way to has them. all the metro stations are full. just says officer, yet not that i don't get overwhelmed. but still, there's more were taken to
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a basement. so over we'll go, watch and pitch black darkness. ah, there's got torches going in one room than another. and finally flo will go to look after his record, it's connected among those crammed into this room. we find, 06 year old kira at a minute. she's preparing for school and a school that may never open. she wants to be a break dancer and recites a poem about the love for a mother, just as my paycheck dollars. wow. so i'm pretty sure i shall, shall much marty, my not outside you re cooked for the family, the silly citizen and says his daughter hasn't been outside for 2 weeks. i live in some of the law was versatile. you can hear it because every 20 to 30 minutes,
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it's normal. it's normal. it wasn't for the shelling my daughter would be outside, break dancing. guys, or would you be careful? be careful in a little, but i know you weren't for the police accompanying us. this is personal the all used to live in this neighbourhood, yan still has a home here. the only way to get in is through the window. to recreate them. oh, he doesn't live here anymore. but passes by from time to time to check up on it. yes, so you're not so sure of opening. so today the flat is intact and hall tomorrow my not the he great. thank you. russia incoming.
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the shells fold near by the onto her to start fine. be crazy. she's trying to get us on 2 days from now and you're from state to state . oh, oh, i said big al jazeera, her keith is ready for his shot and killed 3 palestinians in the occupied westbank . it happened in the town of ida, which is the janine israel says the men were armed and opened fire on the military . 11 people have been killed in separate attraction. israel in recent days showing is under a state of emergency a day off to hundreds of protest as tried to storm the president's residence. the order from president got to buy a raja packs up, give security forces sweeping powers to arrest and detain suspects. people in protesting against the worsting economic crisis in the country. the m $23.00 rebel
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group in the democratic republic of congo has declared a unilateral cease fire after 5 days of clashes with the army. heavy fighting broke out on monday to the group attacked 2 army positions near the eastern borders with uganda and rwanda. i'll just smoke web reports. these people fled here in fear of their lives. dance off the fighting broke out between the n 23 rebel group and government forces in the east of democratic republic of congo. they walked over the border to this refugee camp in neighboring uganda, where sticks and plastic sheets make their new homes. not the 1st time. give them up. ok. families have to run away from fighting. they were displaced when m. 23 for the con, the least government 10 years ago. well, if it was going on with mo, in the 1st conflict, some of my brothers went to a refugee camp, which is very far away. and i've not seen them since i'm told the camp is far
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inside uganda. so i've never seen them again. and its recent fighting, we continue suffering, not knowing what to do. people here is staying close to the border so they can go home in the daytime to collect food. un says it's not safe for them here. down the road, others have come to this transit camp hoping to get food, water, and shelter. all the new arrivals have to take a covey test. something my son heard of the villages of east in congo. congos army blames nearby were wendy for supporting in 23 and displacing people from their homes. rwanda denies it both. uganda and wonder have been accused of repeatedly meddling an eastern congo ever since they 1st invaded 26 years ago. eastern corners, been unstable letter sent to the community. please do you get this process in d. c. and also to the what instruction to come down to. i'm not to be to give them
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to give peace and safety. like most people here, maria katty is scared to even talk about who's fighting, who people lived on the m 23 occupation before it's fighters? killed civilians and executed prisoners, refugees, fear retribution if it happens again. and all they want is to be safe. they got a gun when they started bombing our village at midnight. we were very scared and decided to run, registering here can lead to a new life in a remote refugee camp. everyone says they just want to get home only even when it's safe. malcolm web houses, era processes apologize to canada's indigenous people for what he described as deplorable abuses that schools run by the catholic church. adam rainy reports down from the vatican where the head of the roman catholic church asked for forgiveness
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an apology. that was years in the making. pope francis spoke on friday, the vatican delegates from various indigenous nations who had travelled from canada . but it will even go to the queen. maybe there are kiss i had told you. so the deplorable behavior of those members of the catholic church, i asked given us from god. and i would like to tell you from the bottom of my heart, that i am very pained and i joined my brother bishop from canada in apologizing to you. of course, pope francis said he felt shame for the abuse indigenous children suffered in canada's residential schools. he said he hoped to visit canada in july between 1831 in 1996, around 850000 indigenous children were taken from their homes and communities. stripped of their languages and customs. many were raped and abused in church, runs school, a truth and reconciliation commission in 2015,
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called it cultural genocide. for years, indigenous canadians have been calling on the church to apologize. the movement gained momentum last year when the remains of $215.00 children were found at the sight of a former residential school in western canada to morrow. and it will be the 1st day of reconciliation. not only with ourselves with our families and communities, but with our neighbors. and indeed, with all of canada, there's work requires full participation from all parties. the reason there is that we're all there is in there together and will not happen overnight. oh, the delegates we spoke to said there's still a long way to go to true reconciliation at the moment after francis issued his apology, some companies and come out to saint peter's square and celebrate the moment the
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work will continue. they say some who traveled to rome or former students of the schools themselves. the pain and suffering is very real for them. many delegates are calling for more action from the church. they were indigenous artifacts kept in the vatican museum, returned and documents from the schools that might reveal other secrets buried in the past. adarine i'll jazeera vatican city. retail giant amazon was about to get his 1st union in the you asked, the company says the vote is disappointing. and that it's reviewing its options and zeros. gabriel, alice, under reports now from new york to the law. we're human and american. his ha, he's story victory. workers at a massive amazon warehouse in new york voting to unionize the winning margin more than 500 boats out of nearly 5000 cast. meaning that the $8000.00 strong workforce
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will become the 1st amazon employees to unionize. in the retail giant, 28 year history. the way of what it's hop go, because we want every other industry, every other business to know that dang, sustains. we go on, we go, you know, it's not gonna quit our jobs anymore. workers who are demanding better pay and working conditions at the warehouse, where jubilant. many say the ramifications of the unionization push will be felt far beyond the walls of one amazon warehouse. this is a victory and it's a tide. and it's not stopping. and it's going to sweep us all and means everything i it means worker power. the potential for working fast revolution is if you can, unionize, is on you can unionize. anyway, it's a remarkable story for the amazon labor organizers, a small independent union that began only last year and set up shop at a bus stop or the warehouse winning against one of the most powerful companies in
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the world. some believe the pandemic and its impact at amazon has sparked a see change in workers attitudes across the board. people realize how expandable they were to these companies, how little these companies cared about them, and workers aren't going back. there's a new sense that they want something more, they risk their lives for this country that recall the central workers and workers are going to keep pushing and pushing. and i think this is the beginning of a new era of organizing in a post pandemic period. amazon spent over $4000000.00 to try to defeat the union boat. the company argued among other things at their $15.00 minimum wage is competitive. union leaders here said they've already heard from amazon warehouse workers in over a dozen different locations expressing their desire to unionize as well. while the result at another amazon facility in alabama remains in the balance tension now turns to another new york amazon warehouse due to hold
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a unionization vote next month with this victory still very fresh in their minds. gabriel's hondo al jazeera new york will smith has resigned from hollywood motion picture academy after slapping korea comedian chris rock at the oscars. it happened, ulta wrong made a joke about the act as wife smith went on to win the best actor award. he's apologized, but the academy says that it will move forward with disciplinary proceedings. ah, it's good to have you with a solo, adrian finnegan, here in doha, the headlines and al jazeera, the rival sides. indians war have agreed to a 2 month truce from saturday. the you and envoy for yemen says the saudi coalition of who the rebels will hold fighting inside yemen and across its borders. both sides have agreed to allow fuel shipments into her date of port and to let commercial flights oper.

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