tv NEWSHOUR Al Jazeera April 6, 2022 12:00am-1:01am AST
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expected to win here, but how much ground in the far right candidate were in the pen? i know those game, one of the friends who makes an on out. is there a ah, this is al jazeera ah, hello, i'm mary. i'm to my the welcome to the news, our life from london. coming up in the next 60 minutes. there's 1st address to the un security council since russia's invasion, president, ramirez lensky, says, russian leaders must face accountability for war crimes, as he warned, more atrocities are likely to emerge in ukraine. or a younger, an area emerging from one month of russian occupation residents are saying many
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bodies remain buried in the rubble. also tell you about a landmark carrying at the international criminal court. the alleged form leader of an armed group in sudan. it denies. he committed war crimes and communication vases . observation, scientists say satellites are blurring their view of the cosmos and in sport is advantage. manchester city and the champions, the ab test lexical madrid in their core to file 1st. legs thanks to a goal from kevin to brain. ah, hello, welcome to the news. our top story ukraine's president has told the united nations security council a body should expel russia or dissolve itself altogether. modem is a lensky, was demanding accountability for elijah war crimes in his country. he says the
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world is yet to learn the entire truth and the massacre and boucher is only one example of what russian troops have been doing since the war started $41.00 days ago. and there is kristin salumi has worn out from the united nations in new york. ukraine's president addressed the security council on the heels of his visit to boucher vladimir zalinski called for the united nations to hold russia accountable for war crimes. saying it's credibility is at stake. typically, when does a great deal, ladies and gentlemen, are you ready to shut down the un? do you believe that the times of international law have passed away? if your answer is no, the actions are needed now on immediate actions are needed. the un charter must get its force back again immediately. the un system must be reformed immediately, so that the right of the veto will not become the right of death. jubilant he told of horrors at the hands of russian troops, including women being raped and killed in front of families. people in cars being
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run over by tanks. and he showed grisly images of dead bodies in civilian clothes, laying in the streets. but russia insisted, the images were staged with nubian burgers does go mucus. we are not shooting against civilian targets in order to save as many civilians as possible. very precisely why we're not advancing as fast as many expected were not acting like americans and their allies in iraq and syria raising entire cities to the ground. they have no pity for them, but we felt great pity because these people are close to us. let us the united states confir russia's removal from the human rights council, which has begun a commission of inquiry and ukraine. given the growing mountain of evidence, russia should not have a position of authority in a body whose purpose, whose very purpose is to promote respect for human rights. not only is the height of hypocrisy, it is dangerous. the un secretary general warned that the rising cost of food and
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fuel as a result of the crisis, $74.00, developing nations, particularly vulnerable. they're already seeing some countries move from vulnerability into crises and signs of serious social unrest. the flames of conflict are fooled by inequality deprivation. and then the findings with all the warning sign, signals flashing grab. we have a duty to act. you want officials pointed to growing evidence of potential war crimes, primarily by russia, and called for an independent investigation. russia pointed to the united states and its refusal to take part in investigation of its own soldiers in afghanistan, and showed no signs of cooperating. christian salumi al jazeera, the united nations, new satellite images have been a show, have been released sure, i knew quite a town of boot ship. crucially, they were taken 2 weeks before russian forces left the area images provided by max,
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our technologies seemed to show civilians were killed when the town was under the control of russian troops. several bodies were discovered on the same street in boots. on march 19th, russian forces withdrew at the end of march images contradict russia claim that people were killed after that the forces withdrew. the crown and assigned evidence suggesting war crimes had been committed by their troops, is a crude forgery, aimed at denigrating, the russian army. i shall borrow is in moscow with more on this for the russians, the allegations ah force fabricated and manipulated. this explains why her for silly and a benzo, the russian ambassador to the un was heading back of the ukrainian presidents village, immerse zalinski, saying that on the 30th of march, russian troops decided to put out from the care of region. and churney go following progressive. the talks with the gradients, in a stumble, underwater to give,
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stood strong indication that the are committed to the escalation a day late on the, on the 30, the 1st of march, the mayor of the region came out in a video saying that this is the area is now under their control with no mention of atrocities committed a against civilians. this is according to the russians. now they say that it took 3 days for the ukrainians to come out and say something terribly wrong happened in butcher. now from a russian perspective, this is something done by the nationalist, whether described as nationalists and nazis in the ukranian army. and this is, these are units operating within the army of the vast sol. role is to discredit, are russia with, with the disinformation campaign will after the horror, a scene in the town of butcher in past days, it was feared that worse would be found in the nearby town of by danco searing images have been emerging from areas in towns on the outskirts of care of including
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an aeroplane and boot shaft farther to the north, west images out by the anchor. on tuesday show, buildings destroyed, explaining, prosecutor general said it had the most victims of any of the towns nicki of province that had been re captured from the russians, that she did not provide any specific numbers on mess or people in bardy anchor had expressed anger and despair at the destruction of that town. that's all dumb genuine when you choose, cuz i know some, i don't know exactly what happened to that house with the people under the deborah . i think a catastrophe happened over. what should you love? this was a children soon. the russians went through everything they were able to. they took the child's phone mesa, so like with the digital m and the quote them, which i think the bodies that we find, we drive them out to billet circa a nearby city to the morgue, to figure out the cause of death. insulin. i can't state the definite number, but we don't know how many people there were in these apartment buildings. father,
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our correspondent rousseau center has more. we are in the town of ward younger in north western achieve says the russian forces just left this city, that scale of destruction is just now being revealed as we came in towards younger . we have seen many buildings heavily shelled and the core loved it. that did one bedroom and was so heavy that one of the residents that they have spoken to. she said her brother had a heart attack and died from the, from the fear. so as we were coming into the city, we have seen that humanitarian, it is just a being received and authorities are conducting the rescue operations here. the heavily shall the city. but there is a tough task ahead of them because door toward it is saying that the people are steal beneath the robles. will your secretary say antony, blinking as the u. s. is supporting ukraine authorities now,
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investigations of the trustees in bleach and so the surrounding towns. earlier i spoke to oksana macau choke. she is the executive director of amnesty international ukraine. and she's also been gathering evidence of alleged atrocities. i asked her about what she has seen so far and wanting that some of the images will show you now might be disturbing. we have pictures ah videos and just monitor all of survivors of, of what happened there. we still collecting evidence and what i want to read to ray that we need we need more time all of us to get proper evidence because so far we definitely see what happens there. we see that
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we see that sorry, i know it. okay. it's very difficult, i'm sorry, i'm sorry, it's late and i also also like it's the, it's the stuff that you've seen, right? i mean, you're looking all this 1st hand. you're looking, it's not what we see on tv, but you look at the fust. no, i'm sure it's going to have to, it's going to have an effect on you light. of course, the last 4 years i've been leaving to be painful. now i'm here again, but now of course, you know, this all happened so quickly. i know we speak about ukraine, you know, it's technically it was since 2014, but vision on this scale would be a trustees it and now being uncovered, this all happen very suddenly you said that you spent time living in pain and now i mean you look at images from that place now, it must just feel like a place transformed. lay some for 3 firms.
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and you know, the 5 of the 4 women, much because you've been in good shape that kind of like, you know, there was a lot of this is a place where a lot of families been living with you know, what, why did it, why didn't i place to leave and you can not mention that it changed in my my my that year is the body of people who, who been selling, you know, who, who, who, who wasn't able to leave. it wasn't the most vulnerable of books they left there. there are some reasons, can you tell me more about the process of gathering and preserving evidence that is so important now, including 1st time testimony when the country is still mind and conflict,
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the biggest problem park is mine and the elements that are at least everywhere that's why it takes so long for volunteers to collect a body to collect evidence that somebody has to go through the nation right. never worked for such horrible situation and a huge number of bodies that has to be examined. but we don't have between don't have an expert can do it in equipment. man morrow. we don't have enough resources to do and made or invest bridget, we don't have enough pre just to keep it. but that, that there all brushes and they have to be dead. those bodies have to
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be done. it's quite important for future work. we have to collect this evidence because especially the evidence that medic medical needs medical based, big wrong for their whole share. more often to national judicial use are coming out for you on this. these are from london. they look at children separated from their parents in the lockdown city of shanghai, china 0 co. that policy continues to draw criticism. the humanitarian crisis in war tone, yemen, wet food is too expensive to buy and in sport, tiger wood says he is ready for a major, retired at the master's santa will have more ah,
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town to live has been at the forefront of russian military fi recently. ukrainian forces pushed the russians out on march 12th, but the town continues to be bombed. as i bake has more stepping into the unknown as he does every day. this time, it's a rocket in the living room. 42 year old you are after rock works as part of what gives rapid response. the mining team boy and the said why it seems it was, but sometimes we have 50 calls a day, sometimes 70, sometimes a 100. we have 4 brigades that cover the whole area and they're always new requests coming in with folks from the home. there's something in the garden
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little, it's an unexploded cluster, munitions of all he hold, picks it up with his bare hands and just walks away for santa rosa, brother, lum. oh, can you please check if it's still there? says the resident. jonathan, it's a while almost at all. if it was at all. so it no, there's nothing here. it's exploded already. look the to the parts of the shrapnel . this is just the wings. there's nothing else left. this is where it exploded. can you see the impact area without society come on? every day they have a list they work through, but the list is never ending because the russians keep pounding this town. there's a fear russian forces will make a push for it soon. and as they work, ah, a jet streaks, low overhead. there was
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a plain. it played over him. off my wallet as go his go, his go. this is a constant threat they face. will she be of her buses here? listen him especially where, but it was no modem with them. of course i'm scared. this is war ordinance is dangerous, but of up ordinance cannot be safe. rule is created to strike infantry and light. armand vehicles. it cannot be so a limit, especially for civilians actual, every part of this town seems to have some sort of damage on these men's task is relentless. the russians continued to fire into populated areas and they're faced with seems like this on a daily basis. i said, beg, i'll do 0 to we if will you and human rights? she's human rights watch are among those who say there is evidence. russia is used,
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trusted munitions and populated areas of ukraine. cross emissions or explosive weapons the release or eject many smaller some munitions over a wide area. international committee of the red cross says they have caused large numbers of civilian casualties. the conventional casting munitions band, signet remembers from using and manufacturing cluster munitions. 123 countries signed the convention, including the u. k. in france. countries that did not sign on include the u. s. china, israel, ukraine, and russia. non signatory nations, a legally able to use class to munitions, but only against purely military targets. with dr. might martin is a war studies visiting fellow at kings college london. he joined us now from tom bridge whiles, and they're just looking at some of the tactics that are being used in the country . but if i could stop by asking for your view of russia's invasion of ukraine, mike some, one month on just over a month, actually, what is your assessment of military operations in the performance of russia's armed
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forces? hi, marian. the 3 most important things in wolf, at a critical stress, she, this resourced, did morale, logistics on all those 3 counts, the russians has come up short, which need to try to take care of that was a total failure. the gradient handed behind back to them on a plate. now they're trying to re constant, she reorganized whatever you want to say and come in at the east, and that's probably not gonna work either. what about the use of cluster munitions? and we also hear about minds being planted as russians withdraw from territory. they have not been able to control. we'd like to see more of this. absolutely. i mean to that i would also at the use of white phosphorus smoke in civilian areas. and yeah, as you said in your package earlier that are military uses for, you know,
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cluster munitions that are designed to take out runways, but to use them in civilian areas, landlines, white, phosphorus, those do cause issue war crimes because you can't discriminate between military target since they didn't targets will i need to see a lot more of this? yes. initially, when russians started consolidating control of that, the eastern dumbass region. and then that was an element of shock and surprise when they went so far west and there was a feeling that they would probably try to ukraine capital. keith is that, is that off the table now? that is completely off the table the ukrainians have taken back the ukraine batteries border north of steve. and if you look at some of the footage on the, so the 120 kilometers are so between cheese and that border. it wasn't a retreat, it was a route. but there are hundreds of russian vehicles destroyed. hundreds,
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if not thousands of russian soldiers have been killed and taken prisoner like it's a total disaster to the russians. so how are they going to extricate from this? could it create more of an incentive for peace negotiations to take place? possibly not the radians, i think the things we've seen in the last couple of days prison as civilians executed with a hand tied behind that box. ukraine has nothing to negotiate for now, but then they have to rush out of the territory survives for the russians. yes, right from the start when they realize that it wasn't going to plan which is about 24 to 48 hours in they have been consistently reaching out c ukrainians to try and write size if you like their objectives. because really the primary audience of
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painting, this is domestic audience. he has to come off of this complex with some sort of victory on at the moment he's barely hanging on to the areas that he had pre contracts with a couple of other corridors. and there's a real danger that he might lose those as well. is looking very, very bad. the russians. in the meantime, these images and reports we have seen of atrocities committed in towns around the capital key of draw and condemnation from around the world. but is it likely to market turning point in west, in reaction or military support for ukraine? yeah, i'll be weston intervention and you kind of be around 3 things. isolation sanctions and then military support. they need to step up on things. i mean, it's ridiculous that germany is still, i'm the other european countries is still sending money to russia for oil and gas and then that money is big, recycled. it's committed,
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war crimes. i think the west need to get together and step up to an even higher level of pressure on russia. we need to not just support the ukrainians need to work with the ukrainians to kick the russians could be going talk to like martin. thank you very much. for joining us, thank you, mary and european union on tuesday, proposed a 5th set of sanctions on russia in response to claims of war crimes and ukraine. european commission president wander lions at the mesh. the measures could include a ban on the impulse of russian coal, as well as a ban on russian ships and road operators, binding russian companies from competing for contracts. nato is considering further arms for ukraine sector general again, stilton bug said advanced weapon systems, anti weapons, ammunition, and medical supplies would all be discussed. while the u. s. is also expected to announce further sanctions on wednesday. they could include a bad on all new investments in russia and more restrictions on financial
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institutions and state owned enterprises and russia. well, nate has like to general has said that the alliance would back in investigation into accusations of alleged war crimes that boston has won this now from brussels. well, some very strong. our words are used by an sultan berg and native chief here in brussels. after images of for that, civilians emerge from a butcher. he called it a war crime. and he also said it was one of the worst in european recent history. there will be a meeting here by foreign ministers of for nato in brussels in the next coming days, but also partner country. so from the asia pacific, australia, japan, but also georgia and ukraine will be represented here. personally today to discuss further steps, natal wants to take a to 8 militarily. ukraine, further in new offensive as dalton burke has called it, that russia is according to him planning in the east and south of ukraine. he says
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russia wants to conquer to hall of don bass, but it might take a few weeks to a re, a man, and also re a refuel or all the troops. so he says this time period, this window, nato should also use the nato countries to also send more help and more military support to ukraine. but he stressed again that it won't be any interference, any military involvement directly into ukraine, and also no military planes from any natal countries will and to ukraine, the sas ne, to has a responsibility to make sure that the conflict doesn't go beyond ukraine, which would actually need to even more death, he said. but 1st of all, he also said that there must be an investigation into what he has called this war crimes in butcher. this is unbearable brutality that europe has not witnessed in many buckets.
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targeting on murdering civilians. is a war crime. all the facts must be established and all those responsible produce atrocities must be brought to justice. while the image is coming from which have also led to more sanctions imposed by the european union. ursula, on the lion, the president of the european commission has announced that around 5000000000 euros a sanctions will be imposed further on russia. after the very strict sanctions already announced after the invasion took place. she was talking about a banning coal from russia for around $4000000000.00 euros, but also transactions with 4 banks that will lead to 23 percent off. the russian market cheer to be banned. so that will definitely, according to her,
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weaken the russian financial sector. and also she wants to ban russian vessels from e u ports and they're also working on oil imports a band on that. so that's a very significant sanctions also expected here this week to be formalized in brussels. but the most important request by ukraine to ban, for example, the gas imports by europe, from russia. that's not going to be on the table. it's very much a high pressure from ukraine, especially on germany, because germany is importing a lot of gas from russia. but the german foreign minister has already said that if that would immediately lead to an end of the war, she would not hesitate to do that. but she says that's not gonna happen. and we really need to discuss this further. there might be a time table though, about stopping these imports of from russia, but nothing is gonna emerge in the next coming days or about that stair had on this
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news from london. political upheaval, ensure lanka governing coalition loses its majority when dozens of m keys walk out . late return to cambridge university library, charles darwin stolen notebooks are recovered. police investigation is ongoing and ins or russia dropped their appeal over a wildcard santa will have that story and more. ah ah, there though, whether assist them drop in some snow in scotland. hey everyone. here's the details . it's a rain snow combo. so it breaks down this way about $3.00 to $7.00 centimeters on the ground. you go up to about 300 meters. i think we'll see 10 centimeters stick and we've got whether windy conditions, western france into the low countries. there was quite
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a volatile system through the strait of gibraltar that's moved toward the east. so we've shaken the showers across siberia. temperatures are coming up. so seville at 19 degrees. but let's pick up the story where we have that act of whether so corsica sardinian central parts of italy, whether alerts in play for thunderstorms and when, but look toward the east of this across the balkans, full on sunshine and many spots in the 20s. still some pesky, wet weather for turkey's ne black sea coast that's dropped down the temperature and tribes onto 11 degrees. different story though, for the northeast of africa, look at this cairo 39. i think we'll get you back up to 40 degrees on thursday. wind shift around that drops down to 29 on saturday, which is more line with where you should be. different stories, south africa, cold air flooding in cape town, 17 degrees with them, showers, but give it a bit. we'll get you up to 27 on saturday. wall to wall sunshine. that's a soon ah,
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the, from the al jazeera london broadcast center t people, unprompted uninterrupted member, beginning of the pandemic. gosh, i had some b like, why from africa being wiped out? part one of the journalist, nestle, malik, and writer, and political analysts. man john lanier. bala, people will say things like, we're not going to give actually because the africans will not know what to do with them. there is no continence where people have more experience with getting medicine into people's hands. studio be unscripted on al jazeera, coveted beyond well taken without hesitation, brought and died for power defines how well we live here. we make the rule, not them. they find an enemy, and then they try and scare the people with people and power. investigate, exposed it, and questions they use them to be used of our around the globe on al jazeera
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lou. ah, welcome back and may development this hour. now, ukraine's president has told the un security council, the body should expel russia or dissolve itself altogether. though dom is lensky said, the world is yet to learn the full truth of russia's electrical crimes in his country . russia's ambassador denied accusations of war crimes and you cry. facility and avenger was speaking earlier, a beating claims that bodies on the streets of boucher were not there when russian forces left the town north of cave. but then you satellite images taken out of butcher 2 weeks before russians left. the area seemed to show civilians were killed
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while it was under that control. several bodies can be seen on march 19th, russian forces withdrew at the end of march. steven rappe as the for me or some pastor lodge for war crimes. issues under u. s. president brack obama joins us via zoom from miami now and now comes the the painstaking work of gathering evidence of alleged war crimes by russian forces. how important is the phase that we're in now for that the justice and accountability process? how important is it to access those relevant areas outside of keith, but as soon as possible? well, it's extremely important to develop the evidence to really get in there with, with experts to, to take photographs, do interviews, to develop the full history of, of what occurred there. obviously,
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there's other information that needs to be gathered. hopefully, there are people that potentially are captured, that may be willing to, to tell the story of what occurred and an ability to put together cases to charge those that are responsible. of course, these acts, you know, the rations are denying it. i mean, it's preposterous given, given the satellite imagery and everything else, but we've seen it before. the rations denying. absolutely. everything that's, that's ever occurred. i mean, you know, it was very much syria or attempted assassination of devali or, or of other individuals abroad. and they just deny it and, and i hope that useful idiots will, will agree with it. but i think the evidence is, is very strong and the individuals that are responsible could be charged. and, and particularly if the russian attitude is it didn't happen and they're unwilling
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to, to actually prosecutor investigate. then you can use the command responsibility at the i, c. c and take him right up the chain of command and failure to prevent or punish. can lead to the right to the top in terms of who can be charged for these crimes. and i'm sad to say, i have only seen that the beginning of it in terms of what's happened in at least these 2 times. when you only seen the, the beginning of it, i was speaking to the director of amazon national and ukraine earlier. and she's been analyzing footage that they've been getting of indiscriminate attacks on civilians. but one of the things she said was that ukraine was not prepared for a conflict on this scale, and they don't have the in fridges for corpses. they don't have enough investigators for forensic examinations of those bodies to, to determine what has taken place. what crimes might have been committed that can then be used as evidence is enough. they get enough support from the international
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community and tons and tons of those resources. well, i think they desperately need that support, that it's challenging to deploy individuals and to maintain security for them and, and to have assistance often with languages but, but i know that the icpc is requested. the states to assist in various states indicated that they will be going investigative units to assist the international criminal court. and of course, there are also efforts to support the ukrainian prosecutors, but, but it is so enormous what, what kind of challenges that they have and to a lot of, to a large extent, you know, some of the evidence is going to be missed that one of the great value is however, that we have is that is the images taken by citizens in those areas as we've had in
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syria. it's been the civil society organizations and others working with groups like c, j, a and others that have brought out the, the documents and the photographs. and the caesar photos that ever been in a enabled prosecutions. and 3rd countries here, of course, that we're looking for prosecutions by ukranian authorities, which i think they're going to, they're not going to be taken. the country is not going to be enslaved by russia, and that's going to be possible to prosecute. but of course, we need to reach to the top, and a state can't prosecute the they had a state of a foreign. you say, see if you, you right, you point out all of this is going to take a fair bit of time. and of course, it's positive that over 40 countries referred to situation in ukraine, the international criminal court. but this is an investigation that can take a very long time and you, how important is it for that to be that sustain political resolve and financial
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investment in that investigation from these countries to the justice to be delivered? well, certainly a sustained effort is essential. we don't want this to be 2 or 3 months and then something else is being dealt with in the, in the world. the country conflict is frozen or there's some kind of fire and there's still a crimes being committed in occupied zones. this has to be sustained, and that means the assistance is needed for the i c. c in terms of its own budget. but the i, c. c has only 71. investigators and 16 analysts are like 15 different countries and, and the way they have to put cases together. sometimes it takes 2 days to even do a proper interviews. some key witnesses. so there needs to be hundreds of, of individuals provided by western law enforcement agencies to come in there and work with it and then, and then support for civil society organizations that are also employed in order to
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really have the evidence that's needed. thank you very much. stephen are out for me as i'm by cert, lodge for war crimes, issues under president obama. thank you for joining us from miami. good to speak with you today. we'll america talk generally saying, well, there's a more dangerous place because of the invasion of ukraine. general mark milly, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, told members of congress that the military action has raised the prospect of a bigger war between what he described as to great nations. and us to hans, i tree lloyd austin has promised to move more switchblade drones to ukraine as quickly as possible. allan fisher ports on this now from capitol hill. we will have that debate about what that top line number should be, and it was a meeting to discuss the u. s. military supposed $773000000000.00 budget for the coming year. the largest in the world by far, it was a meeting where developments in ukraine overshadowed those discussions from the leading republican on the committee. an attack on the russian president to look for
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ordering the invasion, but potent, catastrophic invasion of ukraine has proven to the rest of the world. he's nothing more than an unhinge crackpot. the problem is this crack pot has his finger on the world's largest nuclear arsenal. and illegal stock pile of chemical and biological weapons, which he hasn't hesitated to use against his perceived enemies. the u. s. is top general mark 1000000 sis, the actions by russia and the growth in the chinese military has, in his view, made the world a more dangerous place. we are entering a world that is becoming more unstable. and the potential for significant international conflict between great bowers is increasing, not decreasing. the u. s. has pledged $14000000000.00 to the ukrainians and military eat. important support says the us defense secretary with help from congress. we been able to rush security assistance to ukraine to help you craning ukrainian people defend their lives and their country and their freedom. the u. s.
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still sees china as the biggest global threat, and that's where the majority of the budget is targeted progressives hope the democratic president would take some defense spending and put it into social programs. but that thinking has become another casualty of the war and ukraine. alan fisher al jazeera on capitol hill down other stories of falling. the alleged formerly drove an om group in, sudan is denied committing war crimes. as his landmark hearing opened an international criminal court alley mohammed ali abdur rahman was this suspected leader of the government backed changer. we'd fighters, he faces $31.00 charges, which he denies. da force conflict broke out in 2003. when rebels took up arms against downs previous government, the u. n. estimates around 3 100000 people were killed and more than 2000000 displaced the guilt we will do our best efforts are given where we are in proceedings to highlight cases of sexual gender based crimes, to the best of our ability to uranus determine relevance and the responsibility
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of mr. abdomen and also understand the depth of suffering that has been caught. but not even infants were sped brutality in the attacks. in could doom and been dizzy, and al jazeera had been, morgan is falling developments from sedans, capital hart, him the 1st for tearing of the man who is also known as alex shape of the international criminal court in the hague. on tuesday comes a year after his free trial hearing $31.00 charges of work, crimes and crimes against humanity, work on firm against him. he denies those charges, but the prosecutor general, in his opening statement recounted testimonies. testimonies from witnesses and survivors also were into for many who recounted, saying that they witness people being directly shot under the orders of nico shape or children being thrown into flame. now people who we spoke to in displacement
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come in the door for region express happen is that the process is going to be under way. but they said that they want to see the others who also wanted by the international criminal court for work crimes and crimes. against humanity in the duffel were also being tried. the prosecutor general also held a press conference after the 1st hearing, and he said that as much as he is happy, it would be more meaningful if the others who are once had by the courts are also present and are also being tried. now those others include former presidente, how many received the sudanese government and the del for the rebel group, signed a piece agreement in 2020 that includes handing over those ones to the courts and the government and the international criminal court signed. so cooperation agreements that place to do the same. but since the military took over power last october talks about kind of over those wanted, including former president, i wanted to see or have thought is worth noting that the current head of the sovereignty council, general abdel, put that on with
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a senior commander in the del for region during the war and his deputy german, how much sometimes is the head of the rapids support forces forces that have been accused by rights groups and by survivors and displaced people of committing atrocities in the region during the war. that's not clear if they will talk to the international criminal court about hanging over. those are ones that including former president bashir, but those who have been displayed, i've a conflict who's for to, to ask them what they think of hearing today. say that as much as they are happy to happening, they want to see others who are accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity and genocide, being held accountable. and they want to see just as being. so shank, as president, go to by raj, a boxer has revoked a state of emergency which came into effect on friday. it come to the ruling coalition, lost its parliamentary majority and with crime protest against the worst economic crisis in the country for decades. on monday, the opposition refused the offer to join
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a unity government off the roger packs that dissolved his cabinet. when l fernandez has more ha barricades, stop these protest is them getting close to the parliament building in colombo, where the elected representatives were meeting inside the chamber, the government faced a crisis. 41 parliamentarians left its coalition taking awaits majority. in the 225 member house, the prime minister's son who resigned with the entire cabinet on monday, questioned the cause for the president's resignation or philosopher. where is the plan? where is the rope? matthew, who is the leader who will be pointed out about the matego to buy arch or box, or resigns who would be pointed after death. has to be from this parliament just constitutionally no one can be brought from outside. the more that what happen should a person, i mean, if he is not part of this people struggle. will he be sent off his wrong but on i got the money,
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but angry she lumpkins are in no mood to listen to what they see as more excuses every day. more people join protests like these by health care workers who, along with medical specialists, are wanting of a shortage of life saving drugs. we have in fact, decided to our list, the items that are at the moment, short supply. so we are trying to discuss it with dorothy and then we might even roper international, open appeal if the authorities are unable to supply the think the through the, his for his services. again, him i went on the castle street hospital is a place where women that deals with any emergency at any time. but when we don't have the required supplies, we can provide a good service. and that's the situation now as the demands for the government to step down, increase, president got up a roger pox, a has called on all political parties to join efforts to solve the crisis. many have turned him down saying it's too late. bonaire fernandez, algebra colombo,
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we want to 20 am and now the country remains in one of the world's largest humanitarian crisis right now. united nations numbers make for some very bleak reading. they show that there are nearly 21000000 people in need. that's more than 70 percent of the country's population in desperate demand for food, housing and sanitation of those 21000000 people requiring the assistance will, than 11000000 of them. the children. almost all of them need help to access health services as well. more than 2000000 of them face acute malnutrition and that yemen has the 4th largest population of internally displaced people anywhere in the world about 4000000 people. again, half of them children have been displaced since the beginning of the war and 2015. yamini is cutting back on how much they eat, even after a day of fasting. in the muslim month of ramadan, cartier lopez, or diane reports, now this marketing,
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yeoman's capital santa is soft with food. most people can, before rising food, prices have become more evident during the month of ramadan. when traditionally muslims break their fast after sunset with large meals. grandmother gave them about critical to st. oh ramadan, this year is different from other years. price is a crazy. in the past, people were able to at least buy the basics, but this year they're completely helpless. i just couldn't, i access to fuel is limited in yemen, a 2 months ceasefire between what the rebels and the saudi coalition was to bring relief by easing a blockade. and by allowing feel shipments to rebel held areas. but the impact has yet to be felt. a ha, a lot of the value, the price of food is ridiculous. people are crushed as some of them can't afford to buy the basics. and it's a catastrophe. democratic 7 years of war have devastated yemen,
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pushing millions of people into hunger, and not being able to purchase base it foot staples has had communities particularly hard during ramadan. think about another level on how to send us back and we're started ramadan with great concern this year because of older high prices are limited to us, made everything more expensive. the cease fire went into effect on saturday. families here recognize it will take more than a few days to ease a years of damage caused by war. katya low missile a young, now to 0. last month ukraine received received help from ellen musk to provide satellite internet to the wharton country. but to astronomers are complaining now about light pollution produced communications satellites, as i latin america. as lucy newman reports from northern chile, satellite interference has become a particularly big problem. when you gaze at the sky, you're likely not only seeing stars,
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but increasingly low earth orbit satellites. there's so many, they often look like a moving glittering train. wow. closer to earth. children at this primary school in north central chilly are enjoying the benefits that i will know his of them and will the seller school was one of hundreds that had limited or no access to the internet until it acquired starling high speed satellite connection. you won't ante on the with it's an incredible change in terms of what we can do in class. now it's a very important educational tool, not just for us, but all schools that blackwell, m 2 star link is elan masks. latest aerospace manufacturing project, along with rival services such as jeff bezos, amazon, it aims to provide high speed internet to the most remote corners of the globe. where connectivity is difficult or impossible actually was the 1st latin american country to license at services. what's not visible is the starling satellite that
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makes all this technology possible. so far there are $1500.00 of them out there in outer space. but the company has been authorized to place as many as 12000 in the next 5 years. and that's the trouble. the satellites are competing with another scientific wonder, modern astronomy. the world's largest telescope, the e l t is being built in northern chile, which will soon house 70 percent of the world's astronomical infrastructure. but astronomers say light pollution and frequencies generated by low orbit satellites are interfering with all important observations of other planets. but what has to happen to, to be able to curve for together is, is communication and collaboration. if we don't talk to each other, we're not going to rit agreements. but mr. cheverly argues that observatories are just as necessary as internet from outer space
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a. we are going to be able to see if those plans have oxygen. for example, if there is any chance that the may be some kind of life in those planets, and we're giving those 1st steps into looking for future homes for humanity. united states office for outer space affairs is working on rules for frequencies and coordinate to create a global system for sharing outer space for the benefit of all of those on earth lacking large and small. she and human al jazeera when it kiddos children. now, to diaries on by british naturalists, charles darwin, including one containing a sketch of his famous tray of life, had been returned to camp university library, decades after they were presumed stolen. and his niece barker reports, priceless notebooks reappeared as mysteriously as they vanished. though some of the most remarkable documents in the history of science. so when darwin's diaries went missing from a strong room 20 years ago, after being removed for photographing,
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there was universal dismay with cambridge university library concluding they'd probably been stolen rather than misplaced. but last month, as mysteriously as they vanished the 2 notebooks re surface to the gift bag on the library floor. inside this printed message, saying, librarian, happy easter ex. they're happy tears, perhaps hazel. i think mr will be because they're not over the emotional rollercoaster. it means so much to us to have these. how many other people who don't have cctv in places where people just recreate is passing through that ccb motors the front of the building. it wants the back. they wouldn't. so, we have passed the ccd that we have available to the police, and that's a matter for life investigation. darwin sketched his ideas about an evolutionary tree in $1837.00 after a trip around the world. more than 2 decades before he published a more fully developed tree of life in his groundbreaking book on the origin of species. i honestly think i'm in the theory of mat reflection and evolution is
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probably the single most important theory in the life and earth environmental sciences. and this, these are the notebooks in which that ferry was put together. the library says to note books are in good condition and haven't been handled much. whoever took them and decided to return them, appears to have looked after them with care. a police investigation into the disappearance of the note books worth many millions of dollars is ongoing. the mystery of darwin's diaries is anything but an open and shut case leave balkan al jazeera. now fill a spot with santa in doha. thank you very much. mary ann wine, the champions league. manchester city have secured a one gall lee, the over athletic madrid in there, caught a final tie. fritchie had home advantage in the 1st leg on tuesday and came away with a one nail when given to bring with the only goal in the 2nd half of the teams will
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meet again. that when the 2nd leg, it takes place in madrid. next week she says other 1st legs are liverpool, take a big step to the semi finals that there was 31 when has that been feature about a humanity gave liverpool in early lead and before halftime, liverpool had their 2nd lucy as assessing upside your money at in the 2nd half been feca pulled one back, a mistake, a by fanatic gifted a chance to darwin, eunice. but in the final few minutes, liverpool restored that to gall advantage. and the ty, wendy, ask or the said to put them firmly in control ahead of next week's return leg at anfield. i am his red face defending champions. chelsea at stanford bridge on wednesday, but could be without their coat color. and she lottie hasn't traveled to london with the squad to as he is still testing positive for cove. 19 and to lottie is expected to take another test on the day of the chelsea game and travel if he is
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clear to do so. rush us for will. federation has dropped its appeal over fif as decision to suspend them from the 2020 to will cup for both well governing body. impose the banner after rushes invasion of ukraine, but they will continue to fight bands from other sporting compare competitions including russian clubs, playing in european football tournament. tiger wood says that he intends to play at the 1st gulf major of the year, the masters, which starts at augusta national on thursday. it was 6 year old, hasn't played competitively for 14 months after being seriously injured in a car crash last year. speaking at the course on tuesday would said as a for of right now i'm going to play. he admitted that he was fill in some pain, but things he can when the torment. thousands of fans have watch the 5 time masters champion, play practice holes at augusta. well, as of right now,
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i feel like i am going to play. as a right now. i'm going to play 9 more holes tomorrow. my recovery has been good. i've been very excited about harv recovered to each and every day, and that's been the challenge. do you think you can win the master suite? i do and what have you seen in your preparation that leads you to believe that i didn't like it? it just fine. i don't have any qualms about what i can do physically from a golf standpoint. his style walking the hard part, you know, send me to hold as long road and it's going to be a tough challenge and a challenge and i'm up for when i decide to hang up when i feel like i can't wait anymore and that, that will be it, but i feel like i can still do it. well, it's not just the funds we're excited about the prospect of woods returning to action this week. here's what some of his fellow play is,
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had to say about the possibility of the 15 time made to champion competing. very, very excited to have him back, chris, a lot of hype and whatnot, and shoot from the driving range. we could hear the loud roar when he came out of the club house. at 1st he that was pretty special to see and or to hear at least have land long ago. i never doubt the guy. i mean, if he, if he can get around, which seems to be the question, it turned out is golf, like i was in somewhat of issues. you know, trying to last year. what, 2 weeks after surgery? supposed to exactly an easy walk. so understand what he's up against and it'll be difficult. and there was a historic come back in the final of the men's college basketball championship in the u. s. kansas overturned a 16 point deficit against north carolina. no team had ever won the championship game after trailing by that many people in the final seconds,
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north carolina. mr. turns to send the game into overtime, kansas winning b and c double a title for the 1st time in 14 years. and the perils of being a, boxing referee were laid bare at about in mexico. where for a seuss granados was accidentally punched in the test by one of the fighters, that during this context we initially stayed on his feet. blood did then have to see medical attention did recover after treatment in the 1st aid room and didn't need to be taken to hospital and that's it for me. i had about to marry him in london. all right, santa thank you very much. we'll add it for the nissan, but we're going to bring you much more days, top stories and a couple of minutes, including including present ramirez landscape, 1st address of the united nations security council since the russian invasion of his country detailing some harrowing accounts of what are what has taken place just
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out? i can't worn out a couple of minutes. ah ah. a full of struggles full of pleasure. nozzler aguaro was of another able then went full full in with and this is he, i am with ivory. she blew in with got asia, me, boy, a. but when i get a good a our a brownfield, an intimate look at life in cuba maple i saw him thought lacrosse, i got my boss hang on me way, and i humana, but also to tell me who i am. me hang the my cuba. at this time on al jazeera
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ah, the shake, hama a ward for translation, and international understanding is accepting nominations for the year 2022 from february 15th until august, 15th this year. for more information go to w, w, w dot h t a dot q a slash e m. ah. the heart wrenching good buys loved ones, not knowing when they will united to get women and children heading wis to relative safety. often leaving men behind among deb, foreigners also trying to give out train rise of a free but it's on a 1st come 1st serve basis here at the bus station there only a few rides available and that's only to the surrounding villages. so people like
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for me in rose, now need to find another way to get out of the city. but for now they, like many others, would have to return home, hoping to morrow is a better day. ah . in his 1st address to the un security council, since russia's invasion present, zalinski says caution leaders must face accountability for war crimes, as he will know, more atrocities are likely to emerge. and ukraine ah, hello, i'm mary. i'm to my z and, and, and you're watching al jazeera, also coming up on the program or eye witness accounts from guardian co, which has been on the russian occupation for the past month. resident site, many forties were made buried in.
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