tv Pricing The Planet Al Jazeera May 13, 2022 3:00pm-3:56pm AST
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oh, by care outside the church you might be able to hassan with great tips by actually being played by itself and by the hair father party will tell them about it is important occasions where the scouts groups has been have been really and worked with the church to participate in this young funeral and usually they do participates and important events and funerals as well as activities and festivals during christmas and easter. and now all these outside outside of the church, i anticipate that the funeral is toward the end. and so how when the march towards the. 5 5 entrance of the church,
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then they wrote the coffee and the scott gruber leads the funeral from this area to words the graveyard. and then procession begins to modify, right? so that will be a that would be a walk if, if they did not count trans assistance from the israeli police and soldiers, they'll decide to drive to mount zion. how far with what i don't know exactly like what i am with you to probably say well, a soldiers not at the entrance of the guard outside. i'm not sure if they allow the us and the friends and i believe we need to wait and we did not anticipate what happens at the hospital. we come that extra
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bit. what will happen often work harry, for holocaust wanted little bit earlier and she was saying anticipated i tend to tell dad that his dad is willing to speak to. yes. yeah. what is the process there? is it a quick positive attorney with the 3rd part of this, of the funeral, if unit and starts at the home and then at the church and then a degree. and that would be a shorter up for a year, maybe 5 minutes before the bus is laid into the great problem. i everything from, from the hospital to what's happening here, michael, this is, this is a festival, actually a funeral, but also a festival. this is
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a day of sadness for the whole philistine community for the own journalists around the world. but it is also a day of glory and as you see and hear, the shouts and the crowds shouting. because as i said, we don't believe that the person who dies out is this is define of, of that person. there is, there is an afterlife. and this is where i had many people and rama la ron, when we said the prayer, asking, shooting to lee to god when she needs god. people who are saying shitty make you are pleased to god who will listen to you because of the oppressors on ad did not listen to you. i and this is where the whole community
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actually raises their voice, is asking justice for shooting and for many others who were killed among the palestinians. people got groups around the world are very much part of the children . we see a lot of children here today and people sold shoulders taking policies. this is the national nation again. this is not on the funeral. it said they that was recognized by the old coolest indian depot. and i mean, shooting is annika. she's been on the green, hard to pull us down, and i mean, these young people here did have a nice chevy window where they were raising, shooting on tv. and i think this is of the intensity of a group coming here in the front of the church. i'm calling for justice for sure. here we see. we see children. perhaps the camera man can just pony round to the
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children. the shoulders here, children in the crowd as i mentioned. what is it like for kids growing up here? well, what hope? i mean, i grew up here, i was one day, like one of these kids. we have grown up in this land witnessing the, the death of our friends, our relatives, our neighbors. i mean, when i was a kid like this kid here, i remember participating in the funeral of 900 who was getting killed. and bill jim i system they did by israeli for says that he was a p o. i spoke person and belgium and he was killed. and when we heard the news, i was a kid. and the whole village of the bab design came out i and
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celebrated the life and witness of another get another fullest indian. so this is, i mean, you can see the span of time 2530 years ago. i was a kid like this and i participated in a funeral over yet another a student who was assessing needed in belgian i d, 's riley forces. ok. so this is the story of the palestinian community watching their friends relatives, neighbors, families being killed. yet we recognized life. and we had a good nice that we will continue for fighting for freedom us up and challenging the occupation, challenging the international community. dorothy ignite the rights,
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the humanity of the fullest in the community towards a final solution. and i'm calling for an independent state of palestine and ending this conflict that that efforts would be made for decades. he said at serene green by withhold to you on the hurricane guy doing the well that tell the story of the occupation and yet we know the poor device. wait, wait, did we, june? the good may do what a group. nice. that fact. we never lose hope this on the tunnel may be long, but there is a light at the end of the tunnel because martin luther king said that the arch of justice ben's on the arc of chased events toward justice. and i this might take a long journey, but it was gone to an end,
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and some people will recognize that the fullest in the community of needs to, of their voice need to be heard. and they're suffering needs to be recognized. and it should be ends soon. any form of justice come from an investigation into sharon's death? will i job? i don't trust the israeli justice system. how many of people, workouts and israel traumas investigating these are tragedies, but nothing have had to come out of these. and this suggestions, i think we need to involve an international committee to do the investigation and that will do justice to shooting and,
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and for the palestinians. and so do you think you express a lot of hope you really do it? is that about most of why the community will i do express this strong hope because i do can even hope. and the way i do believe in home i, when i look at these kids could continue, the struggle will continue shouting. and this is a new generation that has not forgotten. this is a new generation that was not in culture rated into a capitalism and money and business and a fear. this is a generation that continues stood, agonized, the struggle of the palestinian people. father, thank you very much and can do appreciate you sure will speak to again in the coming. yeah, we're gonna now to all scenic and as you've been watching these extraordinary
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scenes, you surprised not at all but but yeah. well, let me say, i'm shocked, but not surprised by what we've seen. the last hour was something unprecedented. i personally have never seen anything like it. but in terms of the, in terms of the solidarity, the unity are the honoring of our colleague. i am not surprised at all. she was part of the household. and now they came to honor and had lost a time on board. and i think, i think it's just bringing everyone together, christians and muslims, and jews, i would say. and it's bringing us all of us journalists, those who work on the media are those what i'm that are back together. but also i
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think it is bringing a unique look, a general sense of the world. and i think just listening to your interview, your chat with christian priests out there in jerusalem. i think it's also important that sends a message to this or the world that this is not about islamic christian judaism. this is about a land and all of your patients and people are victimized by violence. and regardless of their faith, they come together to honor our colleague, a victim of oppression. a little hard to hear you. but as you're talking with you see, i think, you know, services coming to an end, the concert is making its way down the, on the church will soon imagine the crowd. and you can see a members of syrians, family, and friends. no consoling each other and tried to this
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event of his life taken to somebody who just went to work one day and came back did very sad occasions. one that we just heard from from the side is one which is the have to close with attorney. so the, because it makes its way out of the church in the 3 and i just remember to read as we watch these pitches, it's so hard to imagine that she's beside that task because she was so full of life full of energy, so full of love and it's difficult, this is very difficult to watch, and it's very difficult for me to see my friend trying sleeping because
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it's a huge loss for everyone who's speaking to a good father. and he just take a breath. if you wish to speak it to the father, he was telling us about how this is a very sad occasion, very tragic occasion to say a time as well. and possibly here series death could provide an opportunity to choose from contact with a. 2 everybody i inside i show a lot of people around the world have people know that what israel's doing is it.
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i talked with her about this kind of reaction with so because they tried doing job every aspect of our life, there were threatened by the presence of a flag which they removed from her casket, threatened by the presence of palestinian could be. they're threatening by all the people coming together and saying how much they love her. they're threatened by a watching procession in the streets of jerusalem. threatened by everything because they know what they've done. here is a war and they know that their existence is illegal. i haven't actually been able to save it. i imagine that what we're looking at here is the result a we're discussing a little bit earlier with ball the party. what happens out will be interesting because normally hope
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with the police went in system like co, as i said, you know, even in death trying to control our more than a day. they were fused to let shitty and be free, even if they refuse to allow us to more discuss with as she deserves to be more and deserves to sell with a household name. everybody. every person in her, if she was a person who she, she started in the 0997 during the height of the 2nd palestinian uprising, which was from 2000 on she was in that every single palestinian i personally ever called in 2002, janine, when she was in the refugee camp a like her and jenny and that she was the person who what
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happened inside. and it's so tragic that her, her standing coverage engineer went to work or is now led to israel killing of 202020 years later. what was it about her with she didn't care about meetings between high level officials. she didn't look for super documents. she didn't care about what went on behind closed doors. she cared about how the occupation impacted lives. she went into people's homes, sometimes she knew them and most oftentimes she didn't. but she had a way of expressing and telling the world what the occupation actually means for on a personal level for individuals. she had an incredible quality to the boys. her voice needed compassion. it exhibited humanity. and it wasn't just her voice. it
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was her entire manner because she genuinely loved people and genuinely was outraged by israel's action and wanted to the world to see if she wanted to work to see it. and she did a fantastic job showing at the, highlighting and expressing to the world exactly what israel is doing. she entered into every palestinian house and into the house. every single ex kids used to imitate with the did. she had a fantastic job. she would say her name and then pause for about a 2nd and she would say where she was reporting from. and many, many, many children used to stand in front of them here, emulate in herself. but it wasn't just her send off. i really hope they learn the lesson is of her actually reported of getting down and, and understanding and telling the story of occupation through the lives of people. not just through secret documents or government documents or meetings with all of
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just you care about. you know, i went to her office yesterday and saw the very office where she's to go every day . and that's teresa. but i also heard from anyone about how a woman k like an hour and a half, 2 and a half hours away from a roommate village. and she didn't know her personally, but she said, i just had to come because she was so much that's right. when she was part of everybody's line out there, all these people that you're seeing here, many of them didn't know her personally, but they felt as though they did because she had a way of really expressing and an amplifying exactly what it's like to live. she, she really, she touched everybody's you as a professional, you're, if you were like sure. where do you see the story good as far as she writes concerned. and the legal in human rights don't exist in
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a vacuum. they require people to actually push for, for human rights to exist. and this is now incumbent upon every country to be demanding that israel be held accountable. i'll say this time and again. if, if the israelis army had not been in jeanine shitty and would not have been a junior, it's just that. and so israel is entirely to blame israel's entirely accountable. it must be held to account and we saw a number of diplomats come and attend her funeral today. i'm hoping that this is the beginning and not the hope they just didn't come to pay their respects and then move on and turn their eyes as they have over the course of the past 7 and a half decades. i hope that finally, they realize that this shouldn't be allowed to continue on here 2022. every human rights organization has declared that this is apartheid. we've seen that that the committee to protect journalists is also documented israel's violations. when it
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comes to press freedom, it's time for the world to stand up and to put sanctions on israel because without that is was never going to learn anything. it's just going to turn around and in a few days, do the exact same thing again. it might not been to be to a shitty an hour. it might not be to a journalist, but it's definitely going to be to another house. can you look up the interest of sanctions? yes, i do. i do, i, i, i firmly believe that it is taken while it's taken the world a long time to get to this place. it's the world starting to open up its eyes and see that that, that israel shouldn't be allowed to bomb the buildings of the associated press. or the part of the building of the agency at our offices that shouldn't be allowed to logically from, was like a year ago, a year ago today, actually, that it shouldn't be allowed to break the arm of if audible. did it shouldn't be allowed to kill palestinian journalists, but it also shouldn't be allowed to maintain
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a brutal occupation and deny an entire people their freedom, including in death we were talking to the father about the kids. here we're looking children on the shoulder parents. what is the future for them when they see in here about stores like, you know, it said it's a, it's a childhood. that is that is full of insecurity. that children should be allowed to have a free life where they're able to play, to learn, to grow, to develop. and when it comes to palestine, we spend our time educating children about how to act when it comes to israeli soldiers. and when it comes to israeli police, we educate them that, that they have to be fearful. we educate them that they are directors. and we've seen this time and again, the in, in israel's eyes. everybody is a target. it doesn't matter if the person is disabled, doesn't matter if the person is a child that doesn't matter if the person is out of the person who is elderly with
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oh, how can we change shots to her arriving? you will see how you she's not here yet, but hold on until you once you get a hold of me for the charges charged, balder ringing, ringing across jerusalem. now as a sure means coffin is making its way toward the cemetery. all charged bows across jerusalem from what we understand are ringing out. now we can hear in the distance but i can tell you that after those
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horrific scenes that you saw outside the chart at the hospital when is ready, forces entered the courtyard and started beating mourners, where they almost dropped the coffin. they then started closing all the roads towards here trying to tightly control. because a brother was summoned yesterday by israeli forces telling him no flags, no palestinian chance, no walking procession ad. i think we are all beyond shocked. watching those images earlier of what happened to the hospital and i think it just highlights how even in her death, even in her death sharina is highlighting the occupation israel's occupation of the palestinian people, the flag, the flag has seemed to be such an issue since her death, they went into her house on the day she died 3 police officers telling them to
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switch off patriotic palestinian songs yesterday as we were outside the church where there was a hole where they were receiving mourners. there was altercations as a ripped down to very small palestinian flags that have been put on the gate of the church today. it seems that the reason why they entered in riot gear, the courtyard of the hospital was to remove the flag. it looks like israel has an issue with trying it. sovereignty here seems to be, you know, act at risk even though internationally recognize of course this is occupied east, jerusalem. this is internationally recognized under a un resolution, but the images we've seen today. everyone has never seen anything like this before . i think at the moment i'm not sure what pictures you're seeing or whether you are seeing the cough and moving towards. okay, so you are looking at the march coming towards the cemetery. i'm told i'm seeing
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some people starting to arrive now. this is going to be her finding resting place. and i think it's incredible how even after she was killed, even after the immense spotlight that was then put on her death on the issue of occupation here. engine speaking about it in the state department in the white house at the you and even then at a time when warner should be allowed to give her her for her final for final respects, these really, these really occupations still highlighting and we were just actually watching our slowly the good. i don't think actually we can get the shots. i mean, hold on, let me just see. there were lives you can. can you get the job? i don't think we can get the shop for now. there's a, there's an israeli police helicopter. also flying there is an israeli police helicopter flying overhead. this is usual when things are caddies here. but again, these are all elements of the israeli occupation of occupied east jerusalem. this
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is the wanted capital of any future palestinian state. and you've got brady helicopter overhead. they came as while early to close the door to the cemetery where we have those tensions, rules in place. they summoned the brother on the day that he was receiving mourners for his sister the day before he was going to barry or to tell him no flags. no tom, no walking her through the streets, no showing of palestinian unity no showing of palestinian identity. i think this is what it's really about. i'm just going to stop to allow you to listen to those church bells as a sharina coffin is making its way here. ah. and so her grave, which will be her grave. her final resting place i need can probably give you a, a kind of zoom people are starting to gather her. parents were buried there a long time ago. her mother in 1998 her father in 2000. this is very shortly after
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surgery and started her career as a young reporter. they know that never would have seen how good she became, how empathetic she was with people. how honest, how without ego a job on television, sometimes it corrupts people. people think it's all about them. this had nothing to do with her. she was a correspondent, as correspondence should be not about her. but about the people about the little things about the small stories about the daily grind that people have to endure under occupation. and this is why i think she's so loved and she so respected by, i think, safe to say millions of people. i've been talking to friends who have parents in the us. no palestinian middle eastern. i grew up in the us. everyone has a story and is affected by her death. and i think this is specific to sharina. this is not any correspondence. of course, the death is tragic, but she seems to have touched people in a very,
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very direct and intimate way. and i think this is why you're seeing these kinds of images of people. so, you know, coming here and you're paying there was, i'm just trying to see how far the coffin is now about someone bugging you, trying to get up here on the bargain going, but certainly slowly people are starting to trickle in here to the cemetery on mount zion, i, it's been very difficult for people, i think, certainly those images today i, we're all still shocked when we saw a huge range forces moving into the courtyard and all the hospitals beating more. there's her coughing that almost fell on the ground. and according to what we understand from those out all about the palestinian flag again, actually hold on. i'm just going to have a look. i think i think the coffin very close to arriving harold on sammy's a. so i think she's very, she's very close to coming. i'm think people with i'm hearing i'm hearing child's
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now. i say i just to just to go back to who serene was we were talking also her car colleagues inconsolable all of us in concern. but those who worked with her on a daily basis who you are intimately, most of the bureau chief values, there's bureau chief hero when he dug somebody talking about how she never really seemed to complain it. this is a difficult job. it consumes your life when it's 10, sir, it's a daily grind that goes from early morning to late at night in difficult circumstances, extremely difficult circumstances. if you've seen, she stayed with her life telling the story and she was telling a story of, if you will just another raid that happens. you're not the big raid that we were expecting. so it's a daily reality that the world seems to have forgotten. and i think today has highlighted once again, looking at those images before outrage across the board from everyone. really,
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i've been looking on social media is really journalist going, what is this, why is she not been allowed to be buried in peace? it was a threat to, to, if you say national jury or, you know, it's all usually uses national security as a justification for how it operates on the ground. i'm just let me just have a look at their talking. they're trying to read it, but i don't see. i don't see the coping yet. but it's got me. i think it's making which way close. and again, you can hear the church bells in unison across jerusalem. this is a very sad day, a very sad day for journalists, sorry to have to cut you off. it's, adrian shouldn't get to hear the studio in doha, just to where to bring up to speed with what we're watching here. at left a little after 1232 hours gmc a special broadcast from occupied east jerusalem. paying tribute to our murdered colleague shaheen, of actually the voice and daughter of palestine. she was shot in the head on
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wednesday by israeli forces while on a silent and janine are doing nothing more than a job of veteran journalist, the household name across palestine of the arab world. sharing the peak from the chung allies on all issues facing the palestinian people. and i'm sure you can tell if you've been watching or coverage over the last couple of hours with the number of people who have come out to show their respect. a death has left a shockwave throughout palestine and the world had reported for al jazeera for more than 20 years. shaheen was committed to her core to telling the stories of those who don't have a voice. and despite the many challenges of living and working on to what is the longest occupation history, she never gave up on telling the truth coverage will continue without teams on the ground in occupied east jerusalem. we also have our senior political analyst, maryland boshra standing by in london studio. he's been watching
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over the past couple of hours have as events have developed too. well, i just want to get your before we talk about about what happened a couple of hours ago at the hospital where should be ins, body had been kept overnight. i just want to get your thoughts on, on what we've seen, the funeral itself, the way in which that, that the people who wanted to attend, but couldn't get in due to the small size of the church. that the number of people who are now accompanying her body to, to the grave young. what do you make a little you know, adrian, the last 2 days we've been talking about should he and has a daughter by this time, i think now would watching jerusalem. and had a majesty jerusalem honoring her daughter sherry and saying goodbye. this is a one of those rare images. nowadays we don't see too much of it. although we see
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a lot of images of alex a mosque. but i think this is the it away in, on the question, part of the holy city of that kind of simian identity of the city. these images are stronger than any israeli claims of, of internal capital, blah, blah. because this is, this is the reality of it. all these people belong to jerusalem for generations and generations for centuries. they hand it back from jerusalem since the day or memorial. these people belong to the city. shaheen, belong to the city. she was born in the city. and now the city, as i said, and all her majesty is saying, go back to shaheen. shaheen that is and has restored but a spaniard identity to general set in today as we see have mourners and their
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thousands on getting her in her life. and then her that i don't know whether we can share pictures of what happened at the hospital, and it's difficult to describe the anger that the people felt watching. what happened. we're seeing it on the right hand side of the screen where it's ready, forces attacked mourners on the pool barris, who, who were desperately trying to, to, to keep shavings coffin off the ground. i just, i mean, at the time, i mean thank goodness we but we were talking through this and you, you had was when i was stunned into into silence. now you've had a couple of hours to think of it. what, what, what about what happened? what, what are your thoughts up to be honest with the address? i'm even more at a loss now that i was an hour ago. and for the simple reason that as someone who
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studies this rate is so challenge as a student to resign, to politics for decades. i tell you, it almost seems like is there is losing its mind. because this is not explicable, it's not justifiable, it is not. i mean, you need a psychiatrist, a psychologist, to be able to explain why the heck do dozens of security, special security forces. i thought the funeral when it is in no way threatening to anyone in the whole chart. you see, i mean there are certain things i can stay and i'm at a specialist in sociology of security. but this is not to be explained to not to be justified for sure. and then as i said, this stick aspect to with that is probably the, i always us and i knows all those people hot watching, there's something shown viciously violent in the way you at that people who are
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carrying a gasket. there's something terribly, depressingly, but a duck sickle about it. you honor the dead of a victim of israeli forces and you are being attacked while you're doing good by the israeli forces in out a big they say they killed the victim and they walk the funeral. what we're seeing here, something really an evil twist on that saying is there, i was basically killed shirley and now is violating her own funeral just like that comes out in the morning and they rated her house in the afternoon just like the fact that jeanine yesterday killed the journalist attacking it today. there's a certain arrogance that is continuously breathing, stupidity and foolishness on the part of israelis. i believe. i remember many thanks to our senior political analyst on bashar there in london. let's go back than to what to stephanie deca, who said that at the cemetery. and i'm sorry you said earlier when we
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spoke a couple of hours ago and it was a very peaceful see the cemetery should be that it would get very, very busy later on. just look at the size of that process for me. ah, yeah, she's a driving right now. i think i'm just gonna guess i need to get back to the cabin is trying to control. i mean, please, we're gonna just focus on what's in front of us now. showing bring brought in to the cemetery. it was a difficult journey for her to get here. i'm down at these pictures. i'm just going to get out of shop to see where exactly the company is. it's actually going to come behind the tree soon. so you saw the scenes earlier, the hospital adrian extraordinary. i think they're actually changing the route now,
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so i don't think you're actually going to see our participation is going to go. she's going to the back. yeah, she's already pause so you're not going to see or make pat. she's gone behind a tree, and then she's gonna be logan facts. i mean, maybe if you could just con our grave, is that the, what will be her grave is at the end there, where you see people gathering. she just came up here to mount zion use flying the palace thing and fly something that is proven so controversial and provocative to these really you're actually seeing now some of our colleagues from others. there are arabic. i'm watching, walking down towards the thea to towards where she's going to be laid to rest. as we mentioned earlier today, she will be next to her parents who died in the early days, the whole to her career with
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stuff where we take in the scenes. it may be timely to remind people of just why so many people have turned out for the funeral of television journalist. oh, she has, she's been and no sort of a all in her death named the daughter of palestine. the people that you're seeing here feel that they've lost their voice. the israeli occupation is something that has become normalized. everyone will tell you that the arab world arab states that used to really make jerusalem and palestine an issue. many countries have made deals with israel. they feel their voices have been forgotten and what sharina did working for place for china like al jazeera,
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they didn't just come here. when there was a big story. they, they stayed here every day and the, the irony, the tragic nest, the sadness of her dad is that she was covering yet another normal day in the occupied westbank. she was covering yet another rate. it wasn't something that would've called in the international media. she was documenting the daily reality and something that everyone you're looking at here and those who are not near the palestinian street, if you will, i will tell you they're going to forget and you can probably hear these really helicopter, which is hovering overhead. there's also a drone. this is very common, this is how israel surveys and carries out surveillance on the ground of people of faces. i'm keeping an eye on the situation. i'm trying to see if there's any way you don't know if you have shots of the coffin on another, on another feed, adrian, but the crowd is gathering. so this, this,
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this is why you've seen such an output of emotion and grief for sharina. and as we keep saying, it's not every journalist who can, who can do that, you speak to the people in this way, and this is what she managed to do. she was genuine. there was a gentleman we were talking to yesterday and one of our lives who was outside the church, where her family was receiving condolences. he said, i said why, why, why she's, what does she meet you? he said everything. she said she went to every palestinian. how she went to hebron, she went to jeanine, she went to jerusalem. she went to nobliss. i'm telling those stories and reminding the world that there isn't an occupation here that the palestinians want estate. i can tell you that the last time there were anything close to peace talks about the potential of a future policy and said was in 2014. and even that, they were talks about talks age and they hadn't even started to scratch at the difficult, challenging issues. so this is why people here feel that nobody cares any more,
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that this is simply managing, managing the occupation. so this is why people care and i was like, i, like i said earlier, people actively crying, telling me they cry, crying in front of me saying my condolences and saying actually one of my friends here is that it's, it's condolences to all of us. this is condolences to all of us, not just the algebra family are not just her family. it's condolences to all palestinians because it's yet another voice that's been silent. but really, i think looking at the funeral today, i'm looking at the funeral today. she, once again in her death, had highlighted israel's occupation of palestinians. the fact that the israeli forces entered the hospital as they were trying to carry out the coffin. they didn't want a show of palestinian unity. they didn't want this to become a big thing. it has it, but it is a big thing. they cannot deny it. so i think this is,
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this is why she this is why she has absolutely touched people's hearts because, you know, she talks about some have another other gentleman clambering into shops. this is why, you know, she spoke for these people and feel that they have long been forgotten. accept the consequences, right at the the burial side. you were telling us earlier that literally will be late to rest next to the grace of her parents. yet her mother and father a buried act, that graveside she will join them. her mother died in 1098 and her father in 2000 so a long time ago. and at a time when she just started her journalism career. so, you know, they never knew just how, how loved and how respected and how dear. she became not just the palestinians, but to the wider world that watches al, jazeera arabic. and as we've been reporting over the last couple of days since her death, this is something that's really become the parent. the love for sharina from across
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the board. how she spoke to people, how she touched people, how people say they grew up with her, grew up watching her during, let's say, the evolution of the situation here, the oslo accords, the into father, the ebb and flow of what happens here. the fact that nothing changes here, right from what i can see there, a re go ahead with no, not at all it's, it's a little, it's a little chaotic. they're basically lifting a root re and the, and the cross and making their way also now towards her grade joining it. you probably have a better view of them. we do hear adrian about where, where sharina body is at the moment, but certainly this is going to be our final, our final good bye. and i think it's, it'll be interesting to see what happens. you can hear me being there,
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you standing on the wall behind us. you can see the lining it to flying, palestinian flags. they're going to be on guard. those images that we sold, that shock does not just asa chalked, and the world i think whoever is watching will create a lot of anger and what is already attend situation. so we're going to have to see how things are evolved. it's very difficult to predict the ground here, but it is a situation these days that is not com. you have tension. this is what sharina worked so hard to continue to document. so i think now in the final stages, before people say their final goodbyes. you know, now they're still respect their sadness. there's honoring her. but don't you know, when people start replaying those images on social media such a powerful tool, adrian. yeah. you know, they're, they're, they're very, very provocative. how these really forces not moved on this today. mission
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unprecedented. i think shocking. there was no. there was no reason for it. we know the language on the ground here. there was no reason for it. ah, i'll tell you what we'll do. we'll let you do rest. remember, we'll keep watching. the pictures from the cemetery and mount zion. but i'll bring in our senior political analyst mon bushera again in london to pick up on of what you were saying about, about the power of social media and those, those images that have gone around the world. and about what happened earlier at the hospital and the fact that even even in death our colleague sharina is, is bringing the place that, that, that the oppression of the palace palestinian people to, to a global audience. yes and i heard one of our guests expressed something that
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i think it's quite meaningful despite her career being so incredible. so giving, so generous. it turns out that she is going to be no less giving after passing. and she seems to be uniting people to she seems to be empowering people. she seems to be a confronting occupation in a way that, i mean, it's basically driving. these really is mad in her death, which is, which is quite extraordinary again because, i mean, look what just happened the last 2 days. i think that, you know, governments around the world are inquiring as to what happened on one answers. i think for people around the world are wondering why this continues to happen. german is not killed and so on. these radius are totally on the defensive. and i think what you're seeing that asked
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a couple of hours only add fuel to the fire. i think the images in social media are not going to stop selling anything on the wall. then people are going to be asking questions. what i mentioned to you earlier, and i now as i said, i'm more convinced than ever that this. while it is not in and by itself, i cut that is what change i think it's probably reflects a certain break in the reality in israel palestine in the way that as i said earlier, we saw a break in the vietnam war. we saw a break in the iraq war. we saw a break in the occupation of garza, we saw even a break in nicaragua, salvador iran. there are certain images that we've seen all over the years at one point that very particular image reflected a change in an era i. i'm getting more and more the feeling that perhaps the
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images that we saw yesterday. and today our colleague laying on the ground. i thought she'd been shocked assassinating. and now the way half, you know, this being treated. i thinking more than i was holding a casket on their feet on their legs, affecting them with bait is on the legs. what does that tell you about the, about the occupation? what does that tell you about those soldiers and the order they had been given to the front a peaceful funeral. so i think all in all, and what we're seeing is really historic. it's, let's check that in, in so many ways. and i think even though as you would express and earlier, 2nd pessimism about the world does not paying attention right this minute. but i think when it all comes together, i think it's going to start making more and more difference. and i tell you with our sister network on here, i have it doing that kind of work. we are doing and,
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and chevy and having worked there and being watched there over the years, i can see now from the social media, the reaction to compassion, the, the sort of data to you that it's coming from various parts of the out of world is astounding. out 0 senior political analyst, mon, bashar that in london. my one for them on the many thanks luis, but i know a couple is full of 1st prosecutor at the international criminal. cool. he joins us now by skype from malibu, california. it's heavy with us again. so with your experience in this field, do you think that there is a case that could likely go ahead in the i c, sienna president, my foot abbas said that he's determined to take the murder of our colleague to the i. c. c. but, but do you think that a case could go ahead without justice? this would be more readily more virus. so we need justice and we need this people
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demanding justice. and then i will like to help javion adjusted here on but a son has to litigation, is it, it is an israel person can meet the crime, but it can legally cannot do it. therefore, who could do it? could be international, who in a court could give rise called, or because she was american, could be that us. so the issue is, but i had to do a great investigation that the phone today and didn't have to request that a good bit to get your means and if and exactly what happened and not just about the bullet. look at group like a forensic architecture in london doing incredible good analysis on, on the trajectory, the bullets who should from where that's the critique is important. that israel prime minister promise an investigation. ok. what this all is
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a same. what happened in accordance with the soul? yes. so what is ryan reaction? so we need to go back. it's very thorough investigation and then has that a possibility, but what i just it will help putting together all the footage for the counting degrade the food that we can do more and be badly man, just this is not just this will be with alicia. impunity means more violence in pilots and tribe is, well, doesn't recognize the jurisdiction of the international criminal court. does that matter? no, no, no, no, that he is already opened the investigation in palestine. jenny's bites are the jurisdiction, the issue, it is israel conducted generally mitigation as it should not be the me, but that the giant 40 via israel investigate see is lead that they've been up by it, but because pallets i had the prime medical and so in that so that's why it's so shut quality of the mitigation that is conducted today by the side and peter
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edelman just if not, we by hold on 40 palestinian journalists of been killed. and in recent times by us is really far know is really forces sir. service person has, has faced sanction for any, any killing. i mean what, what are the chances this times you think of, of so one of someone being held accountable for this that the i c c. remonstrance cor, actually didn't, particularly when the crimes are called means of the bugs that plan. so that another but the, the mitigation it. but i think i can show that these mother is it piece of it black that is very bored and to reach the international community court showing this is not an isolated incidents. it's but that blad systematic plan to attack journalism .
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