Skip to main content

tv   NEWSHOUR  Al Jazeera  May 15, 2022 6:00pm-7:01pm AST

6:00 pm
and reconciliation commission for this former warlord liberia has become the frontline of a drug war. it cannot afford to lose. he says it's a battle he will fight out of responsibility and killed for his past crimes and for his country. ah, this is al jazeera ah, hello, i'm molly inside. you're watching the news. i live from doha, coming up in the next 60 minutes. ah, siren sounds the 74 seconds one for every year since the creation of israel has palestinians commemorates knock by all the catastrophe. memorial services have
6:01 pm
been held across the occupied west bank and gaza to honor the murdered al jazeera john. this serene abruptly, was killed by is wearing forces. i'm lebanon holds its 1st election since by roots devastating port explosion and the financial collapse that follows on and says it will formerly begin the process of applying for nation membership, despite russian warning sweden is expected to do the same. ah, sunday may 15th marks, 74 years of what palestinians call the knock by or the catastrophe. it's when zionist forces destroyed hundreds of palestinian villages and created the state of israel. 74 seconds of sirens to mark 74 years since an entire people's land
6:02 pm
began to be stolen. ah, it began in 9048, where hundreds of thousands of palestinians were driven out of their home by dawn. it's on groups. make way for the creation of the state of israel to this day. israel has bob palestinian refugees and their descendants from returning to their homes in flagrant violation of international law. this is what designed this movement termed a land without the people. but in reality, during the 19th century, the land had an overwhelming majority native palestinian population. the majority will muslim with christians making up around the 11 percent and the small palestinian jewish minority of around 3 percent. but by 917 britain, it occupied palestine. the country's foreign secretary wanted to win favor with the powerful zionist movement off the bell for committed to supporting the
6:03 pm
establishment of a national homeland for jews in palestine. as occupation authorities settled increasing numbers of jewish immigrants from europe. palestinians began rebelling, jews from europe felt their religious beliefs and the historical existence of jewish communities and the land entitled them to palestine. palestinians felt their country was being given away by foreigners to foreigners. in 1947, britain announced its would hand over palestine to the un to sort out. in the same year, the un proposed establishing 2 states against the wishes of the majority, our population. the majority of the country would go to the jewish immigrant population, which owned only 6 percent of the land and constituted only a 3rd of the population. and the native palestinians, they'd get less than half of their own country. the jews accepted the un plan, but palestinians rejected it. war broke out during which design
6:04 pm
ethnically cleansed, the estimated 750000 palestinian arabs. in may, 948 design is declared. the establishment of the state of israel. the palestinians were out gummed a zionist, overran palestinian towns and villages in some places like that. he has seen zine. this forces massacred the civilian population. residence of other palestinian towns simply fled in fear. hundreds of thousands of palestinians were displaced as jews, celebrated palestinians marked the great catastrophe, all neck for the zine as quickly absorbed, conquered palestinian towns into their new state of israel. as many palestinians languished in refugee camps a park with fields and flowers. you know, they don't seem so tranquil now. but appearances can be deceiving because this was once the palestinian village of a bullet swept by the turmoil of an extra 10 israeli national park. today.
6:05 pm
the arab houses are gone, we wandered around, but it's hard to find the remnant of the palestinian village to touch or hold on to . and yes, for sure how to leave it all still there in his memory. now, living in holland dear refugee camp, he was forced to flee a butcher 1948 when he was 18 years old. but he still holds on to what left the keys to his house, the powerful recollections that sometimes capture his gaze. in your hood above albert, the jews attacked the town. there were 4 people with mental disabilities who didn't understand that they should stay indoors. so they were killed by designers shilling . i did not see the zionists, but i heard the show them. why haven't you gone back to and bought canada steady. yes. the elders decided we should stay out of the town for a week or a month or
6:06 pm
a couple of months until the zionists leave. but they never left our town. and eventually our hope of returning die. who was the head of your home? there were a few people who tried to sneak back into a badge at night, but the zines called them and killed them. how could anyone think of returning after that? he longed to set foot again in this village. he still remembers its water wells and trees fondly. but israel generally does not allow palestinians into what is now israel even for a visit if they don't have his railey citizenship. israeli id cards or special permits could only give him a glimpse of what it looks like today. a grandfather displaced heartbroken and still hoping to return his paul 1000 displacement is, is it's just into that, tammy, they dance al jazeera and alan deer. refugee can well, we have correspondence right across occupied palestinian territory. nita abraham is
6:07 pm
in the occupied west bank where al jazeera media network has been hosting a memorial for sharina barkley, our colleague, who was shot dead by israeli soldiers on wednesday. we have nick clark, who's at the damascus gate. one of the main entrance is to the alex said most compound in occupied east jerusalem. the 1st let's talk to him, ron kon, who's in shake to ra in. occupied is to re slim where the effects of the mass expulsion of palestinians in 1948 are still being felt to this day. and we're on shake to rise the neighborhood where the events spock the conflict in gaza. talk us through what really happened. well since the 70s or palestinians living in this neighbourhood have been under threat of eviction even before then they were under threats of eviction. but since the 70s they, these really government have been forcibly evicting families from their homes. let
6:08 pm
me just show you the geography of this particular neighborhood. this is, shakes are, are the house behind me. this one used to be palestinians, now owned by the legal, jewish settlement organization. these really law courts awarded that houser to them . but it's not just whole houses that have been taken over. if i just get the cameras hurt to spin around the house next door to me is actually used to be a to a room house. one of those rooms was actually awarded to a jewish settlement organization, or to the, to a jew settler family. the palestinians have to live behind that now used to be the entire house. now they have to live behind that. and that's really the kind of geography that we're looking at when we're talking about shaker our membership drop is only just one neighborhood in occupied east jerusalem. it just happens to be the one that caught the imagination or people there were violent protests. it took place and here when these really forces tried to evict people,
6:09 pm
then her mass decided in the strip or to support the residence of shake, draw. and it's after that that the war on garza began. but let's now take a look at the history of this particular neighborhood. in 1948 when the mass expulsion of palestinians from their homes, by what would become known as the state of israel took place. some 28 of those families came here to the shake gerard neighbourhood of east jerusalem in 1956. they settled here hoping that this would be the last time they would lose their homes. since then, they faced a constant struggle to stay in shape, dra forced evictions by the state of israel and jewish. a settler violence against them have made life unbearable. um some air tends to her garden telling us with the support of palestinians all around the world. she summons the strength of his stay here despite or she faces. i thought i learned about that and he had as our family and beat us, they dont care. my grandson 14 years old was standing in front of the main gate of
6:10 pm
the house. they came and took him, his father defended him. a lot of problems like that we have in this neighborhood. the settlers attack the house is trying to prove their rights in this way. it's a type of terrorism and trying to scare people in 1956 east. jerusalem was under jordanian rule in shake. draw. jordan provided the land and the united nations provided money to build the homes back in 1950 israel and jordan signed a treaty, dividing jerusalem in 1967. israel violated that treaty and occupied east jerusalem . israel then claimed under its control, all previous agreements were no and void under international law. israel has no legal authority over the population. it occupies a fact. it routinely ignores in 1972 jewish organizations claim, they own the houses. the palestinian families lived in after a hard fought legal battle courts awarded ownership to his railey illegal
6:11 pm
settlement organizations. since then, more decades long legal battles have forced the evictions of palestinian families. international outcry led to protests across palestine and the world which turned violent in early summer of 2020 was israel then bombed garza, in may of that year. as hamis which runs the strip showed solidarity with the remaining residence of shakira. the head of a palestinian thinktank says the issue of shakes euro is much deeper. is the question of control the question of claim sovereignty. and they have been crushing the best thing and pleasant angels. um, since 1967, you go for records all the time now, but it is that if they come with this idea of out law legislation ownership, what is what, what does not work? all these claims are not. yours affordability can perspective. it is only for ownership and control. some $300.00 palestinians are under threat of forced
6:12 pm
evictions. in march, 2021, these ready courts ruled that 4 families could stay in their homes. are pending a land arrangement effectively that's a stay of execution. it means that all previous legal decisions, a null and void, and those families can argue their case. but for the rest of the families under threat of forced eviction, their situation remains precarious. but even then, the final arbiter of that ruling is this really office within the ministry of justice for the full families. their past experience with these really courts suggest future decisions that might not be in their favor. but for them and other palestinians who still face forced evictions, they say support at home and abroad, gives them the strength they need to remain and fight for the right to live in their own homes. now these really say that the legal system is the right venue for any disputes to be settled, but the palestinians don't really have any faith in that legal system. decisions of
6:13 pm
often gone against them is also very expensive to actually mount court cases and the jewess, subtler organizations have very, very deep pockets of this. these disputes continue to go on and will go on for very long time. but it's not just if this is just one street, one neighborhood we're talking about in occupied east jerusalem. there are several others indeed many palestinian families. i've been reporting on this issue for many years now. always say to me, we go to sleep and we wonder whether we'll have or will wake up in the morning, or whether will be a victim in the middle of the night. him run con, there 1st in shake tomorrow. thank you. we're our colleague, sharina barclays killing buys railey forces, is another reminder of israel's brutal occupation of palestine. the toil blazing, palestinian american janice devoted her life exposing the unrelenting oppression of palestinians. mohammed jam june reports on what her life and her death means for
6:14 pm
her friends and family as well and what the, what did out the title, how come when a voice as vital as should ina, barclays is silenced? the former, the grief is immeasurable. the pain is almost too much to bear. sure. oh, known by many as the daughter of palestine. the veteran elijah's ina journalist was shot dead by israeli forces and the occupied west bank on wednesday, while on an assignment in the city of jenny. for her friends and colleagues, the loss has been devastating. she was born and raised in in jerusalem on their occupation. she was telling the story that she was living every day. she was not just telling the story of the people. she was telling the story this story off her life as well, and this is what made her magically and i could look up. shaheen was one of edges he had. his 1st field correspondence in having joined the channel in 1997,
6:15 pm
covering the 2nd into father didn't just turn her into a household name. it also transformed her into a role model. on the air, the palestinian american trailblazer showcased the power of journalism while off the air she taught journalism classes, inspiring women and men to always speak truth to power. for many of the younger journalists, in fact, for most of us, she was an idle somebody would look up to. she knows her facts. she knows the story . she knows how to connect to people. she wasn't here. she loved what she could. thousands came out on friday and occupied east jerusalem to pay their respects. but earlier, as the funeral procession began to st. joseph hospital in the shifts of rough neighbourhood, they were confronted with the ultimate sign of disrespect. ah,
6:16 pm
as mourners were attacked by his really forces, whole bearers struggled to provincial means coughing from hitting the ground. people were pulled out of the hearse. israeli forces also removed the palestinian flag. every one was there for $32.00 is to show their support and love. and at the end of the day, even a day she was not even that day close to the funeral was was violent. the funeral procession later resumed and reached a cathedral in the christian quarter of the old city. oh, where a service was held before shaheen was laid to rest. next to her parents, grave site at the mount zion protestant cemetery, pablo hawkins. she went into the hearts of every single palestinian, and i daresay, every arab household cousin touching the forwarding and the way that she had of
6:17 pm
bringing to life the reality of israel. brutal occupation moser, to the height, is that idea in her reporting? should ina barkley combined unwavering strength and steadfast empathy? you will know how well ethan johan, telling the story of her people as clearly and thoughtfully as possible, was her voice may have gone silent, but it will continue to reverberate. mobile homes are flaw nolan, ma'am, a jim jim, as visitor, we can head over to our correspond anita abraham, who is out of memorial that's being held today by al jazeera media network for our colleague sharina blacklight, who was shot dead by israeli soldiers on wednesday. it is being held here due to fact that those living in the west bank are of course, at the mercy of his riley authorities, their century trapped as they were unable to pass through is ready checkpoints to take part in her funeral needed the timing of sharon's death couldn't have been more points to the palestinians. talk us through what people are feeling that
6:18 pm
the timing is very important specifically that the last report it charlene has worked on was about neck back. it's air today. she wasn't here to see it. she knows that neck back didn't, and she had a lot of people who respected her and we are here in the wake. that is the 1st to be held here under my law. because many palestinians do not have permits that are usually issued by the read it to you to allow us to enter occupied times to. so let's take a walk here and show you. i've been seeing thousands and thousands of people coming here to the week to pay their tribute to condolences. they're saying that they loved her, being respected to her. she wasn't honest with people keep saying that they haven't
6:19 pm
believed how much people turned up for her. they knew she was famous, they knew she was when respected, the amount of people that were touched by her killing is, was beyond their expectations. all over with once here is accountability. i've spoken to the prime minister of how the size of how much they. yeah, about that and about connect with on the ground there is a systematic destruction of those states. as you rightly said, israel has always intended to destroy a possibility of 2 states. israel has fragmented by the scene until rodriguez's under siege. jerusalem is warned. city, a. hebron is fragmented between each one edge to the rest of the west bank is divided between area area be area. see, this is all designed to really destroy a future possibility of a state of palestine, not 2 states, but in but of the good are to destroy any possibility over. but as soon as that,
6:20 pm
what do you make of the current us administration and how can you push for a political process today for the 1st time since 1940 ballast indians in historical palestine are more in numbers by 200000 people. ballast seniors out of 6900000 people is riley jews out of 6700000 people. so this is a very important development when it comes to demography. geography is that the you, the israel is, will never, is still learned from underneath our foot. and our feet, this american administration has been calling for 2 states, which is, which is a good way because stedman the question is, how do we preserved was 5th, it is not enough to talk about 2 states. israel is system ethically destroying to us this and we are killing the whole world that this systematic destruction needs to be stopped. one of the things you mentioned is telling the world what's happening. our colleague beloved cheering. barkley has been killed by israeli
6:21 pm
forces fired white while she was trying to tell the world the story. what is happening in palestine. we know that there are efforts to push for the 5 to be at the i see at the international criminal court. how are you going to ensure that justice is going to be served that towards the general palestine is investigating the killing and destination of sharing? and i think in a week he will conclude his findings. we will make sure that every single evidence, all witnesses, a professional file when ducted and but about by very professional people at well beyond that table of the i c c. and it will be shared with those relevant about this is there know for sure that they themselves were the ones who can cheat in a box, then trash and community should hold israel responsible and this value should not get away with them out of that. thank you very much, took some hand, stay
6:22 pm
a prime and serve palestine for joining us here. as such as you know, nita, your interview, that was very interesting. can you give us an idea of what life is like the palestinians living on the israeli occupation? if i would describe it in 2 words, it's about fear and control. half people are leaving their houses who don't know if they're gonna make it back home is ready. chuck boy is weight is really supplements expanding with separate attacks against palestinians. and here people who would tell you that no matter the israeli narrative and the fact that that has been signed agreements between the palestinians and israel to lead them to an independent palestinian state. they're saying that everything israel is doing right now is ensuring that palestinians will not have access to that state. they won't
6:23 pm
have the money to build that state to do that over. so people here see that these really agenda please less palestinians. more often they would say that is really strength to types and it's measures to increase its restrictions to a way that people will find no other option to have to leave it. but this is precisely what palestinians are. again, they said they have no other option but to stay. and some of those people i met, they were in the south hover and help out with the occupied with faculty. of specifically, the facing potential is really eviction from that lab. but they keep saying they're not halima eunice's is red con. so there's her existence a threat just because she's a palestinian iraq eugene who was forced out of her home in 1948. now she's threatened to be evicted again. she's been living in this cape and miss ashford.
6:24 pm
yes. on the southern hebron hills for decades, said the lady, the 80 year old gave birth to her children here in the very same cave and tells us that she doesn't want to be buried anywhere else. while the moralists are lemme double in our suffering is not over. as long as we are here. they are brutalizing. like if they just leave us and let us be, we have a good life. halima grew up with missing shrinking palestinian lands and morally get ready. supplements. locals here have recently lost a 20 year legal battle to allow them to stay. they had little hope and ready justice, like many other palestinians, they believe israel supreme court is part of white washing the occupation. for decades. israel has been using different methods, the strip palestinians out of their land, closed military areas, weapons ranges, natural reserves, and state labs are old, but some ways to push palestinians out. at the same time israeli supplements
6:25 pm
considered illegal under international law are expanding on those very same lands every year. palestinians marked neck by which means catastrophe in arabic. thus when more than 700000 people were forced out of their homes by the creation of israel, 74 years on. many here, save that now isn't just a memory. but our reality with israeli land grabs evictions and illegal supplement expansion. they want the world to know that the neck back is continuing every day. those who left their homes thinking will be back within days, have had their children and grandchildren, born in refugee camps, refugees in palestine, and that they asper, exceed 6000000 people. i don't 10000 refugees live in the full war refugee camp near hebron city south of the occupied west bank since its establishment in 1948. its population has tripled. amazon as usual,
6:26 pm
volunteers to organize fun activities with children. while he teaches them songs about the return, he does not think it's possible in his lifetime. miss mary got l m and then we'll shave. i've lost hope. not that i don't want to return the situation and what they have planned for us suggest that it's over. we've lost our lands, they sold us as time passes, the waiting goes on and palestinians. now we're even struggling to stay on the little land that is left him l. jazeera, the occupied westbank was also the one year anniversary of israeli forces bombing, a building in gaza. housing, the offices of the associated press and out 0. human site has more liberal every year. may 15th palace, teens around the world to remember next or to get pasture fee. the day in 1948. israel was created in palestine. this hearing garza l. his you re,
6:27 pm
to marks the one year anniversary of the israeli bombing of a building housing its offices on the same date that attack came a spar to then 11 day battling gaza between israeli forces and pals to me in groups . it was the bloodiest conflict since 2014 and i couldn't see the 13 bit where they apartments and 50 offices were possibly displaced in a single night. hubs with high after we had of the donnas funding for the reconstruction. but mom's paused and nothing has been implemented yet. according to local officials is really for his targeted, high rise towers, apartment building, and bob thousands of other sites. more than 260 people were killed and at least 2000 others were injured. basic services for severely disruptive. according
6:28 pm
to the ministry of housing in costa, only $200.00 residential units have been rebuilt. israel also destroyed 15 media offices in gardena, including ultra us at the time. israel said her must operated. we're using the building but presented no solid evidence to back this claim. there were no or something in the apple car. we are certain that the person who gave the order to strike and destroy algebra tower is the same person who gave the order of breaking travaras arm and shake, draw. and is the same person who gave the order of this fascination of sharing a bu. and he is the one who must be revealed and presented to the international trial. today, as we recall, the memories of the bombing of our office. we are once again a jury tack. after the killing of our colleague, she read a barclay who was covering and israeli rayden. janine after
6:29 pm
a year of working for me for your locations and temporary offices are to 0. and now has a new garza barrow. but godsa, like the rest of these really occupied territory, has always been one of the most difficult areas for journalists to cover. but it has never detritus from our mission to report the news. you may see it l g 0, gaza. well, her monthly, the year. yes and was says israel must be held accountable for crimes. it's committing in the palestinian territory list effective in general, israel occupiers are perpetrating crimes and violating the international law in every sphere. the attacks on and it looks almost or in violation with international norms. that being perpetrated on daily basis, the evacuations of palestinians and shake gera continue with an effort to do to get the area. they also continue taking christians in the area by confiscating their
6:30 pm
homes. the occupiers continue building their illegal settlements on the lands they confiscated. does it against international law? israel must be held accountable for, disregarding it. they are not above the law, the colon, everybody to make the occupiers follow the rule of law. just move now so. okay. parties to re slim nick clark is ad damascus, gate for us. nick, i believe you been talking with a family in west her slim. this home was taken from them by israeli authorities. what's best story i bought it. it is hard to imagine how difficult, how painful it must be to 1st we'll have to flee your home. that's bad enough. then you assume you think you're going to go back at some point. but then you try and go back and the door is to slap in your face and you never set foot inside your house . ever again is just separate. great. and it's just take it never you never see in your furniture utilities were clothes. it's all just gone, but that was
6:31 pm
a reality for hundreds of thousands of palestinians. and we saw that install reality here in western and drove 1015 minutes from head to a neighborhood called calbee, or it was very affluent neighborhood for free. 1940 eights, where lawyers and doctors lived and so forth than the night that happened and most the houses were confiscated. and now it's out there with the the most expensive neighborhoods in the world. ready it's home to the, the house of these ready prime minister and there's diplomatic missions, and so forth. we met and a 2 year old woman who grew up in this neighborhood in the house and had to leave when she was 7 years old. this is a story. few original residents from the time of the night, but still alive. recorded. habash is one. this is your home. this is my house, this is my home. this is what i was born. and this is where i lived at the age of
6:32 pm
7. so that spends a happy childhood here until her family fled during the night by my father took as for security, with 4 children, not even to take our clothes, not even to the cover dice, nothing. everything, everything was left inside the house, the furniture you're tall, everything there with you never got them, but they would just require the size. what would by, by father these doors and then the origin of doors and the men door, the entrance to the home to my home is still the same. but i feel bad. it is not well kept. re badly kept cool. if you eat something without it being washed. yeah, yeah,
6:33 pm
to right. this is so melody fruit from a tree that your father planted my father plant than this one years. i did not forget. i was 7 years that what i did not forget. i still remember vividly my life, my daily life. you then my children, we made sure they know the history, the history of my nation, the history of the palestinians, and the history of our properties of our whole of my home, the home of my husband. and not only my then children and i have to get it. i had children, they know when they place from here, they say, this is the home of peter. this is the home of see them. we make sure they've done or how to get we're in any political situation at the justice.
6:34 pm
we want to please let them vestos. how can you have me said dean. and as long as we're here and we are here. me and my understanding of people really, really an extraordinary woman and the effects of her experience and that of hundreds of thousands of other palestinians back in 1948 trickled down today. not ver is still in a sense existing because we are the master's gate unoccupied. east jerusalem. it is a symbol of the palestinian struggle and it didn't go through that. you get into the old city, an area that the palestinians say, or see their capital, the capital a future state. these rallies have a next this area and they already see it as part of their capital. it's an ongoing
6:35 pm
battle. and if you go through the muslims christians and they all walk through that to reach the whole new sites you down here as well, is a police compound. and they're always watching over to kind of stamp of his radio sovereignty on this era. an error that the palestinians see very much is their own most quite frequently skirmishes here at times of high tension. it's quiet now. this thing is here. things can turn on the 16th and anything can happen. and that all relates back to the next. thank you for that. nick clark there for us at damascus. gates. we can go live now to ramana with sammy z down. who will take us through how palestinians amal king this summer, day of remembrance, some there marking it with
6:36 pm
sirens that were going off. so 74 seconds of sirens to mark 74 years of dispossession were here on the roof, helped to try and break it down for everyone to make it a little bit easier to understand such a complicated story that start with my screen, your screen left over there, beyond the hill and the houses, you'll find israel, the lands which the zionist armed gangs to cover in 1948, and announced the creation of the state of israel. in that process, hundreds of thousands of palestinians became displaced through massa because of the villages and towns all because they fled their villages and towns in fear of hearing about those mac. because, well, they settled the refugee camp around the world and also in what is called today the occupied territories like this one. this is a jealous own refugee camp, run by the un, very tight crowded conditions. the numbers of refugees, as you can imagine, well,
6:37 pm
they've increased over the years now that 7200000 palestinian refugees and some of them refugees on their own land isn't bad enough. you fast forward to 967. israel then occupies the west bank where we're standing here now. now they are living as refugees, having been expelled from their lines in 1948, but also on the israeli occupation. in the west bank, make things even more complicated. israel then build something like 250 illegal israeli settlements. they considered illegal under international law transfer populations. establishing settlements, there is one base eel. what does that leave those dispossess knocked by. ready 948 palestinian sandwich sandwich in the middle in places like that. refugee can sandwich in the middle with a very if front condition of life than the people who live in bates deal. these
6:38 pm
guys don't have a state. these don't have or no guys have any right, automatic right to return to what were their homes and villages. they don't have freedom of movement, their freedom of movement, freedom to go to their jobs or go to see a doctor can be restricted depending on the orders and directives of the military occupation. now to try and help bring this all into perspective and make it a little more easy to understand. we've got our guests sitting of the military occupation now to try and help bring this all into perspective and make it a little more easy to understand. we've got our guests sitting up here who are joining us. we're glad that yada howdy, senior analyst at the us, shabrika the palestinian policy network is here, good, heavy with us yadda. we're also delighted that we have the land at an art. she's the assistant professor of conflict resolution diplomacy and strategic planning at the arab american university here in ramallah. good to have you with us fill out
6:39 pm
the people sitting behind us. very different life is always saying they don't. they don't have statehood. they don't have an automatic right to go back even to the towns where they canceled in 1948 there, right? even to move can be restricted. tell us, what does that mean? how dehumanizing is that? for someone, if you're a castilian, what you make of your life from existence. thank is that me, well refugees do have a unique status. however, palestinians, whether and god's trip in the west bank and users for them, and that they ask for citizens of israel. every palestinian again, is a target to that radio occupation we deprived of the basic basic human right. i myself was born in jerusalem for example, and it says on my id, born in jerusalem. however, i cannot enter jerusalem without and is really pre med. were deprived from the basic. it's not in the universe advice of enjoying internet services. for example, we only have 3 g and the with bank, i'm done to
6:40 pm
a g in gaza. so it comes to the very, very minimal basic human rights when it comes to even my cousin estimate id cards who was murdered by the israeli occupation. his body is kept withheld by the israeli occupation. we cannot even enjoy the basic and you'll know exactly 5. you might be want to say, why is a body being held on price human? she'd probably ask for it back when we live under the israeli occupation. bailey occupation, practicing upper side on the palestinians, and it's a humiliating us in every way possible. and they're racist and upright side policies are becoming more and more creative in the 21st century. where even when it comes to burial, even when it comes to our education, our mobility, our, i'm childhood, our motherhood were deprived from the very, very basic life under the israeli occupation. yamma just to be very clear. according to international law. israel does not have sovereignty over this
6:41 pm
territory. israel does not have the right to apply israeli law on this territory. those settlements destroy does not have the right to build settlements and transfer population, right? all of this is illegal under international law. yes, absolutely. and national dictate everything is ready regime is doing in the occupied territories of the west bank and gaza. is illegal on we know in the west bank there are 600000 illegal settlers. is lighting? and these are just encampments, selena sort of makes shift residential areas there for long towns. they've built these settlements with the view in mind for them to stay forever. they is very permanent infrastructure and it's illegal under international law. and so is the displacement of the palestinian people and yet it's ongoing because and it creates, you know, hopefully cases are having a central them in the middle of the occupied west by needs to. it's all saying
6:42 pm
things like, well, we have to secure the settlement because the local palestinian population is not happy with settlers. they may attack the settlers, so we need to take roads crate buffer zones. we need to then put checkpoints. we need to put road blocks. think that something like that maybe a 100 and full to check points across the west bank 7. 100 road lot. so we'll just talking one or 2. what does that do to life for the rest of the palestinians in the west side, when you've got hundreds and hundreds of checkpoints and from roadblock, you're right. i mean, it's not just the settlements themselves as a whole infrastructure been built to maintain new customer roads such as all the different services, all the resources that they're stating from palestinians on effects every aspect of palestinian life in the west bank move men, residential areas where palestinians can even go go walking or hiking. there is a,
6:43 pm
you know, very limited space that palestinians can, can spend time, recreation, me and, and all this is designed to make palestinian life in the west bank. totally unbearable . so they pushes more and more palestinians out, and that's the end goal of design as tracy is to have as much as possible with as little palestinians as possible on that land and allow, you know, full view is watching this from the around the world. they may have very simple question or observation. surely the simple solution toll of this is and the occupation have one state with equal rights for everyone. that these people crammed in refugee camps just a few reasons behind us. go home. israel doesn't want that right. because of the need to maintain a jewish majority within the state of israel, supported by some of those will. will pals who wants to create this jewish majority
6:44 pm
at all costs, whatever it means for the day to thought of students. thank you, sammy, well, for any civilized citizen of this world, equal human rights and for palestinian citizens to live as equal citizens as the eighty's or anybody living in shanghai, fans or whether them were for example, this should be a very basic undisputable right for any palestinian however, mcpherson is not that we're dealing or come on the right thing, the university of the neck or the independence day of israel, where we have witness. last week, the president of the world sending greetings and congratulations to the state of israel. but the method today should be through ozetta to the international community on the international, the world that has created this entity, which is by the way of normal. i mean, it is very interesting to witness how israel, which is violating all kinds of international law, is all kinds of the universe at the clayton of human rights. un security council resolution journal assembly resolutions. and by the way,
6:45 pm
the palestinians have more than 110 un security council resolutions that safeguard our right. on the 67 borderline. we have more than 81. can you provide gently to the side. so also see that we see the case. so you know that the desire to stop a complete occupation breaking out a new crime, for example. exactly. but this is, this is the point that we have to be focusing on today. it's very important and we do appreciate that. and for, for investigations and for accountability and fort sanctions. however, there is a very urgent need to reset the narrative into ending this occupation. i'm in 74 years of continued work crime. we had witness and your viewers at witness on of the funeral day. the palestinian feds fastness, the perseverance, the resilience of the palestinian people. however, the palestinian people to day are angry are not happy with the international community because we had been promised a state for ourselves, an independent faith with sovereignty. for the past 3 decades. we had been hearing
6:46 pm
at the 3rd advocacy for the 2 state solution. when for god sake, and then they come and say that the palestinians had wasted opportunities, it's 74 years of continuous war crimes against this people. it is time to start with a macro approach, where we define the borders of the state of israel. we recognize the independence and sovereignty for the palestinian and we end this occupant few bows out for you all for coming here. 74 years on from the not for that's the situation. people with very different lives, people over there with their lives. very restricted people over there with a very different standard of living and standard of human rights being respected. that's from that well, 100 back to you really in the studio. thank you for that. i may say down there for us in ramallah. now as we have been reporting this years, napa has taken on even more resonance following the killing of the al jazeera, janice serene
6:47 pm
a blackly by israeli forces. this week she was of course shot dead on wednesday as she covered and israeli rate. and janine, in the occupied westbank, the palestinian authority says, israel should not be part of any investigation into the shooting of serene president mahmoud abbas says he will approach the international criminal court. well, investigative journalism group, belin cat, has conducted its own investigation into sharina killing. we can speak to jen color fiorella, who is the primary recessed her in that study joins us live from amsterdam. thank you for joining the program. now the israeli interim report the i d f into him, reports into sharina killing suggests they could have been palestinian combatants between the israeli soldiers and sharina. and that's why an israeli, so just bullet inadvertently hit serene. but your findings suggest that's not the case. explain thanks for having me. so based on the report that we conducted,
6:48 pm
which was based on the available evidence that we found online in the form of videos, pictures, and other mentions of this, a tragic event on different social media platforms. we did not see any evidence of armed individuals between the idea position on the street and the location where abu ackland was shot and killed. the idea report also suggests that palestinian gunmen fired at the idea forces and as a result could have hits abu sharina black lay in the process. again, you don't think that's the case. can you explain the evidence that we reviewed does show that there were armed groups that were located south of the idea position on this street. so just to give you a sense for, for the sense of scale and space, i believe via call in this idea of conroy that was parked on the street,
6:49 pm
was located approximately 190 meters away from the spot where a black blue was shot. and killed the positions of the armed individuals who we see in the, in the footage again that we found on social media. they were located further south . so the idea was, was located between where a black light were shot and killed. and these armed groups of the armed groups were further south, as i said, approximately 280 meters and beyond. so that's a further distance. it's a, it's a much more obstructed line of sight to the spot where, where this tragic got killing to place. very interesting that the footage available has also been able to help you determine the timing of the shooting. firstly, how did you do that and why is that important? so when we conduct an open source investigation and billing tag, what we do in order to determine that time is examined shadows. for example,
6:50 pm
if we do find that there are any shadows in video or pictures, that was the case here. so by conducting a shadow analysis, we were able to estimate that the shooting took place probably around 630, maybe maximum 77 in the morning, but probably closer to 630. the other way that we can determine, or rather approximate a time is by finding the 1st mention of the, the shooting on social media. so in this case, the earliest mentioned that we could find of the event was from about 6, 33 in the morning. the 1st video that we found uh, sharina, black, late on the, on the ground, was from about $636.00. and we found other videos that were from about that time as well. and so that allows us to make an estimate that the shooting probably took place around 6630 in the morning. the funny, let's discuss the video which the israeli ministry of foreign affairs and the prime
6:51 pm
minister initially suggested that sharina blackly was killed as a result of the shooting in that particular video. i. your analysis disproves this claim. i think we can show some of that video, can you explain shirt? so this is the video where you see an individual shooting, a rifle down an alleyway. and as you point out, there were some suggestions from, from our politicians, from media figures at the video in should i showed or could have shown that the person who, who shot and killed a black line. but as others pointed out, including including ourselves in our report, that alley way down which that individual shooting ends with a building and a wall. and it's located something like 260 meters away from, from the spot where she was shot and killed. so i just wasn't physically possible for a bullet to travel from that location with that individual as firing to the place
6:52 pm
where i blacklight was shot and killed. really interesting to get your perspective on this. jen color fiorella from my belin cats investigation who've been looking into the killing of serene abruptly. thank you. oh, nothing. and has confirmed it will formerly apply for nato membership in the coming days. it's long been neutral about the government. but it fed that the kremlin is unpredictable behavior has become a pressing issue. and of course as a 1300 kilometer border with russia, public support in finland for membership at the military alliance has more than doubled since russia's invasion of ukraine. ordinary people with their opinions, political parties, government, parliament, they have shown how strong phineas democracy is.
6:53 pm
as a result of that, we have today historic day fenmont will maximize its security. well, nato foreign ministers have been meeting in berlin to discuss felons, application and sweden's, which is also expected to announce its intention to apply in the coming hours ahead of nato wants to fast track the process. if finance and sweden applies am, i am the join ne thought, then that will be an historic movement load for europe of for finance review. for nathan, for the whole trans atlantic ball, it will contribute to spring criminals, reading nato, on also the strengthened stability across a human fatty gee area. well, after the nato meeting, the u. s. secretary of state antony blinkin said washington would keep up the
6:54 pm
pressure on russia. every member of the lions wants to bring this war to an end as soon as possible, but were equally determined to maintain our security assistance to ukraine. to continue our sanctions export controls and diplomatic pressure on russia for as long as it's necessary. the united states and our allies and partners are focused on giving ukraine a strong ahead as possible on the battlefield. and then he goes getting table so that it can repel russian aggression and fully defend its independence and sovereignty. poles and lebanon's parliamentary election are about to close it as the 1st vote, sense of economic meltdown began in 2019. some say the polls a real chance for change. wrestle said it reports from barrett. it's a town's day in lebanon, but they still hold for a nation that in the last 3 years, has suffered from an unprecedented economy meltdown a devastating exposure and a major political collapse. millions registered to work in parliamentary elections
6:55 pm
. they hope will bring about the future. with malackle, i urged only been his people to go out and vote. it doesn't matter who they supports. attending the vote will give us the chance to make their reforms and for a better country as a consumer, i'm not the lebanese society is deeply polarized bees. our sectarian loyalties, some political parties here, are regarded as more powerful than the state itself. and attentions could pose a threat to waters. the interior ministry has deployed some 45000 troops to ensure the security and transparency of his actions. at total of $718.00 candidates are running for the $128.00 seats in parliament, equally divided between muslims and christians. however, neither the muslims nor the christians are united in lebanon, traditionally to compete in camps have been dominate in politics for nearly 2 decades. the much 8 coalition that includes brought iranian and pro syrian parties
6:56 pm
allied christian for the patio take more men. and she was them, his will, law and emmel moment on the other side has been much 14 coalition, which consists anti iranian and anti cillian parties, such as christian lebanese forces. sunday was the future moment. andrews muslim, progressive socialist party. but things have now changed former prime minister south. how did he, who leads the future movement that previously held the biggest from the block in parliament? his book caught in the elections effectively and in the march 14 coalition and leaving destinies without a loo there. how did he support is how called on the soonest to boycott the elections. and that has raised concerns about a lot or not that could potentially help their appointments. the march 8 coalitions, many people, all the political establishment responsible for the problems they face. this has led to arise in so called mpeg establishment independence, who are now trying to pay a different way in lebanese politics. i actually have all of it isn't not do would
6:57 pm
for that there's an additional 40 bakers that were people, they stole our money, they could up people, they damaged our system. they incorporated the client, the limit scientism system and lebanon. i'm voting for new candidates for new faces because we got it because we, we want a new lebanon, lebanon. we would hope it's presidential election in october. so the outcome of this war would not only determine who will have a majority in the parliament, but also will have an impact on the appointment of the next president and prime minister rescue server alger 0 battle. smalley will soon have a new president chosen by members of parliament. the elections been delayed for more than a year, and been marred by corruption allegations and violence. most people in the capital city have been on the curfew until the vote is over. due to threats from armed groups, north korean state media have released its 1st images of
6:58 pm
a corona virus outbreak. as the official death toll rises to 42 young young 1st admitted it was dealing with a nation wide outbreak earlier this week. and now reporting more than 820000 suspected cases. that's it for me. some money in 5 for this news, i'll be back in just ah, ah a
6:59 pm
guess with talk to al jazeera, we also, what is the time table in your mind? when do you think that you can be off of russian gas? we listen when i've seen and played football with these refugees. i look at them and they're happy, they smile in we meet with global news makers. i'm talk about the stories that matter on al jazeera ah, with
7:00 pm
ah, al jazeera, with a 2. ready ah, and sound to 74 seconds, one for every year since the creation of israel palestinians commemorate napa, or the catastrophe ah
7:01 pm
no money down there alive from memorial services have been held across. he occupied westbank in garza to honor.

29 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on