Skip to main content

tv   Inside Story  Al Jazeera  October 24, 2022 8:30pm-9:00pm AST

8:30 pm
obsessed with football, the the love the game, and so i promised myself that i'm going to be delivering the best only descriptive commentary for them. life is giving me the opportunity to, to share what i feel inside my heart or vis game through my voice, and explain and build a maximum for somebody will share this feeling accessible via an app on your phone . this type of commentary has become increasingly common in europe, but arabic hadn't heard of the major tournaments. and so last year's arab cup, audio descriptive commentary made it well. w in south africa in 2010, but this is the 1st time it will be available at the finals. in the arabic language, this specialized commentary we offer in arabic and english at every game. during this world, when we speak of the potter was the top, we all speak of legacy was this tournament will leave to the region. and i hope that the descriptive coming through will be
8:31 pm
a part of this legacy. it's about making football in the middle east, a more inclusive experience. just one long term targets of this world cup and the richardson al jazeera, doha. ah, this is all, these are the top stories and has made history by winning the conservative party leadership is set to become the 1st to u. k prime minister of indian origin. i'd like to pay tribute to live trust for her dedicated public service to the country. she has led with dignity and grace for a time of great change, and under exceptionally difficult circumstances, both at home and abroad. i am humbled and honored to have the support of my parliamentary colleagues and to be elected as leader of the conservative and unionist party. alan fisher has more from dining street in london. he of course,
8:32 pm
at the time said the idea of tax cuts was nonsense. he warned that the country was about to go into some serious financial difficulties. and it turns out that he was right. this time with petty mordant and boris johnson decided that they weren't going to run against him. and he has no been appointed the leader of the conservative party. not yet prime minister. he's got some a some waiting to do before that is up to las truss to make an appointment with buckingham palace to travel to see king charles and formerly tender her resignation . like a sally journalist, arshad sheriff has been shot dead in the canyon capital nairobi. it was an unspoken critic of pakistan's government sheriff had recently received death threats, prompting him to leave pakistan at least 60 people have been killed in an air strike by the men mar military and the northern catching states. the victims were at an event celebrating the anniversary of the caching, the ethnic groups political wing. the maritime border deal between israel and
8:33 pm
lebanon will be signed on thursday brokerage by the u. s. the deal and decades of facility over the cornish gas field located in the eastern mediterranean. it's going to allow for energy exploration on both sides and lebanon's. parliament has failed to elect a new president for a 4th time president michelle owens. his 6 year term ends in a week, but lawmakers are unable to agree on his successor. those are the headlines. these continues here on al jazeera, after inside story. good boy, ah. at least 220 people have been killed. and the latest fighting in sudan is created
8:34 pm
more turmoil a year after a military takeover scuffled transition the civilian rule. so what can bring stability to suit on this is inside story. ah hello there and welcome to the program. i'm laura kyle. the south of suden has seen some of the worst violence between rival ethnic communities in months. at least 220 people have been killed in the past week. security forces have been deployed to calm the situation in blue nile state. near the border with ethiopia, the houser and butter tribes have been fighting since july for access to land and resources. witnesses reported heavy gun foreign homes burn to the ground.
8:35 pm
international agencies are urging all size to allow them to enter the region. the fighting is triggered protests in the state capital calling for the governor to be sacked. the un says at least 1200 people have been displaced. unholiness these displaced now in school of large groups for these habits. i'm not fit to be cameras and doesn't have the proper health condition. there are a lot of complications and we can't handle the situation because the flow displaced is still ongoing up. and that is why we are calling on 8 organizations and friendly countries and the federal government to fin the necessary aid. well, the ethnic violence has created more instability and sue dawn, a year after the military takeover soldiers shot dead, an anti cru protester in the capitol car table on sunday. i've been protest throughout sedans since army chief fatter alba, 100 seats pallet in october last year. and ousted a civilian lead, government talks resuming the democratic transition have made this will progress.
8:36 pm
bossy. economic situation is western world bank says inflation is at 380 percent. a 3rd of su dan's 45000000 people don't have enough to eat. bolling, we are demonstrating to make one thing clear. we don't want political compromise partnership with the army negotiations or a political solution. we want to overthrow the crew for that we are ready to pay the price even with our lives. let's take a brief look back at who dan's political upheaval in the past few years beginning in 2019 that when a long time need a share was pushed out, then a 3 year power sharing agreement was established with a bill handled as a prime minister, he served for only about a year in the military, arrested, him seized power and cost protest against the takeover. since then, the military has expanded its powers. general abdel father albert hon with sworn in as head of the ruling council. protest against me. she will be held nearly every
8:37 pm
week since october last. yeah. ah, was bring in august now and in a cartoon we have had jude cook political activists and member of griff not. that's a non violent resistance movement and minima. we've got abdul league shade that's a suit and he's a nice lawyer and political analysts very good to have both of you on the show. thanks for joining us. had jude as a loss of instability in sudan at the moment. it's a complicated picture, but let's start by focusing on the blue nile state and these extraordinary levels of violence that we're seeing at the moment. what is the situation there? now? it's, it's horrifying. the pictures are coming from there. the videos that are coming for there are just simply horrifying, sweetheart to look at. we've been calling our friends there and they're just
8:38 pm
talking about how the humanitarian knowledge stability is really bad. and they need medicare and help. and we're not what's really complicated because it's tribal conflict and these tribal conflicts are rooted in political issues and rooted in feeling that you're not heard and all of those things. but they're really being complicated. and then that would the government right now hasn't been to terry government is all these security measures to tackle it. and these major is definitely not working. so right now the people are left with fighting each other, fighting the military, like a total loss of control over the over the blue nile. and there's no solution because the country, the only thing they have in their hands, it's weapons and these are not working right now. what's needed is 2000000000 solutions. and as the current government is unable to even start processing, pardon, understanding the depth of the flu, they will be looking
8:39 pm
a little bit more at the the government in call to me and just a moment for the moment, honey shave, i want to just focus a little bit more on this situation in do not because this was a relatively calm state until july as far as i'm aware. so why at the tensions being breaking out then, and again now we thank you. thank you so much for, for having me. i think, i mean, broadly we need to understand that, you know, tribal conflicts with and they are not new. they are renewed every now and then because of the lack of governance or her to me. and this has reflection in the, in the, in the region. but what do we need to understand is that there has never been an inclusive process in the blue nile. or the south could define which are basically the areas where the conflict on our corrupting. so it just started in july as part of, you know, a dispute over land. it has always been, you know,
8:40 pm
just gets over over land. but this, again, i'm out of pollution by, you know, politicians, how to use it and also need to understand and keep in mind that you know, the ncp, the national congress party when the, when the have been tough old and the in the fall of years regina this has left the sudanese with a vacuum in these areas and each, each, each group are using that vacuum in a different and a different way. and this creating different allies between, you know, within the, within the, within the scope. so we need to understand that and keep in mind it was relatively calm, but not necessarily will lead to any trouble if. if we don't seem to address how far you agree with that, because many do say that what we're thing right now and not normal cycles of traditional violence that they do have the added factors of being infiltrated by other sudanese who are competing for resources for power do you agree with that? i totally agree with other guests. i mean basically this level of erection can
8:41 pm
happen in other places that blue nile is shocking because they've been more peaceful because there's less tribal conflicts in the past in blue nile. so it is shocking that this is happening, but it is something that we're used to another place that part of sudan. and right now because of the political situation in that village, off the l. a. led by my like i got to actually become a, we'll civilian government and, and make the people who and i feel that they are all equal. so all of these things . so the political part is definitely a big part when, when the government fail to show people that they can control, they can bring justice and what not. people revert back to their tribes. and when you go back to your tribes, all these issues that have been building on for years come come to the forefront and that's what's happening. the inability to solve the conflict is not in sudan. always going to have these complex,
8:42 pm
but you always have to have ways to solve these complex. and right now there is no way to solve these conflicts, and that's why they're roughed. and when they abrupt you, there's no way to hold them back. i guess what i'm trying to get to the bottom of is whether the, this particular bonds is a rob saying, because it's being ignored by the military government and cartoon of because it's being stokes, by the military. so both, both in the same level, it's more like they're in able, they're not able to control them. so it's not that they're using them to, to do anything over there. but these problems are there. there's a huge economic issue because of the one year into the qu, cannot economy of the countries collapsing. there's all these issues that need to be dealt with. there is all these promises that were given after their illusion, and all of these have not been answered. so now you're just sitting there waiting for, for things to improve and they're getting worse and where they're getting worse,
8:43 pm
people are trying to solve. there's no government to talk to. so they start going back to the tribal routes and these issues erupt. and that's more like what's happening in, in blue and in other parts of the country, there is more conflict because you have people who are 7 or not. but in blue nile it's more the failure of the government to actually act or to become or be able to even address the issues that are happening in the country a year into not having government that can run the country. so actually, what would you say are the reasons for the government failing to act? i think it the more stupid competition. i mean i'm mission part of it. i mean, if you look at my car, he said that he's bringing more north, which is part of the uber peace agreement trial that i was in the mountain. i'm heading to sidney's also on the bridge and he's not part of the job. so you could, you could look at it from that, from that uncle. and also this is not
8:44 pm
a conflict. it's not, you might have been in a conflict with the government before the, the lease agreement before the 2019 malcolms to show the ration. so he's always been part of the equation in how things should fall. so if you look at that, and then you look at how, you know, different community they're trying to take the or, but different positions. you would understand that the technological i'm fine, it's just tribal and that in that sense. so if you don't find a solution to the, to the, to do it to, to, to a piece, a long lasting piece in the blue, topical defined benefit amount is you will likely see this repeating, older and older. i think this is part to part of it. yeah. is it not that the elite, the military, but share affiliate steven the pro democracy movement. they're all too busy in khartoum. focusing on getting power. we are, they are too busy. this is one thing, but there's also a big, it's not, there's no interest at the moment. i got to strike
8:45 pm
a piece to get into the mountain. i'm the end of the month to the bill, and there is no interest whatsoever to tween negotiate. did you? but piece agreement to me to make it meaningful for these people to bring peace and justice and security. so if you look at it from that perspective, i'm also the lead come in for the day she and her to me. they are focusing on getting a striking deal, which is basically a compromise rather than a political solution driven by genuine political process. so you would, you would understand how things are difficult not to solve in the not. i mean, i had huge rather these problems, these tensions, they stem from access to land. certainly the house would never given indigenous land, right. they've never indeed been given sydney's citizenship the job, a peace deal. it was supposed to address these land rights issues. what happens, or why did it fail to implement these policies? okay, i think i think to, to bring this into,
8:46 pm
into perspective because it seems very complicated. there's, there's an ulcer that, and the also that it's tribal to, than, than the speak, the lad having all the issues. and there's this idea of a new to that where it says citizenship where after post evolution to that, it's a sudan where we can become a country right now when, when, really, when, when you trying to solve the issue, by having this piece agreement that is basically talking about the rights of different groups, attitudes, sorry, go rights that are right based on your ethnic group and what not. it also always makes you to go back to your ethnic groups and the more and you want to strengthen your ethnic group. so you get these rights and this makes a conflict between the different ethnic groups. so, and this is why we have all these tribal conflicts because really you get power because you're tribal, are your tribal power or because you have rebel group and you have arms. so, and this is the alternate, so really with, with id of the, all to down, what happened? did you buy agreement and all that you,
8:47 pm
we cannot move forward and you always have these issues because of that. so there are of illusion was always about less, become a country less let it become part of your writing, the constitution, it's all be equal. let's solve all these problems. the root cause of these problems that divide all of us and make us all not have a certain identity and not be part of this one, but you on the same level and the, this is the idea of the design of the revolution. and these are the answers, so that as long as you try to solve the issue, not the router just tried to solve on the surface, you're just unable to and you're never going to get to the point of government and you're never going to get to the point of a country you never going to get to the point of ending these, these issues of land are the issues that are deep rooted in where you coming from, which here you came to this country, the house. you just been there for 100 years or 20 years and these groups have been long and so all these issues are just historical issues that have the blue it
8:48 pm
issues that need to be solved. and this will never be solved by the 2 by 3 men or by, by having these smaller ways of dealing with, with the problem in small by let's bring him back re l jack. i'll med needs a visiting researcher at the doha institute of graduate studies. good to have you with us. a jude was saying that you can divide sudan into olds who don and new sudan for looking at the crux of the violence is broken out in the blue nile state . how can we overcome that for it's a for thank you for me. i would appreciate the opportunity to speak to you today moment as well. so a sudden moment of the country, but to your question, let me just say it's in a post colonial country. it's not, it's not unheard of to have private conflict on it and that's something has been around. the difference is, in the last 30 years, i think they have to share investment from the authority. i mean here,
8:49 pm
the regime they invested in extreme policies are delightful. and i have to add, in the aftermath of over $22021.00. they have been even investment in tribalism, politics, ethnic politics. i knew the tribes of the substitute on a property, forgetting for the power. so from that perspective, i would say on, but she played the game, you know where she's redeem always knew the game for they played it out in la donna and not as well. but the difference is they used to be identified. some of the security products used to have a control over what they were doing. they tried other tries and they always had their minds. a plan i'm going to speak. i think it's the weakest
8:50 pm
point in history. i would argue, let us know government of the day in the country that could say that they have control over the country or not even, you know, i don't even have control over the military check was lower from the 60, but i think you're going to see what's going, what's going on in blue and i is not. that is outside the ordinate. the difference is now we have an official government investment in making ethnic division. and i was using tribes the wheel dividing. we actually use it as a way of finding you by 20 all trick divide rules, not something you but it is dangerous because no one has diabetes to control and how it might go in terms of talking to all to the new she's done. i think the country is going through a transition. we are witnessing all the institutions that i'm not talking about
8:51 pm
talking about. so she had it so you're not make an ethnic try, but this year they don't have that ability for the country where they used to be. but also the unit that we're talking about becoming includes other kind of political shapes on the phone are far away from being utilized. we can, well let's, let's just jump in that because i to help you get the extent to believe or think that to don is going through a transition. we've caught up the fatter elbow pledging to step aside for a civilian government pledging elections. do you think that's going to happen? do you think we'll see the rise of the resistance committees into government? i think this is it will and it will not happen. so basically pledging to transition are no longer in transition. we have a qu, basically a government,
8:52 pm
which is the fact or government in place, a cartoon that the government is a military. we don't have a great to council, which is basically to come from the nature of the depletion of separate because we have civilians which is not which not which, which is no longer the case. now i think in july they said we can have a we need the civil us to stick together and agree on another way forward that is unfair because he's basically saying for the, for the, for democracy movements to say with the, with, with the movements and the groups that supported the, the, the military, whether this will lead to anything and the, the dialogue we are seeing currently her to them is basically just track a political compromise rather than, you know, solve the problem. because you have the for democracy movement. you have the r c s, you have those who have been, you know, part of the qu, they are one camp, and then you have, you know, the military and, or supporting them of the, from the, from the critical part is the, are, or the job a piece signatories,
8:53 pm
there are also another come and then you have those who haven't been part of the process. so i think, i think the, the, the question would be whether if you're going to have an election with international community, denies an agree with the election. will it be a fair election? do the surveys, do they have the ability to go into the elections, doing the political parties ready for that next? i think the answer to these questions are, you know, is, is, is no, actually, you know, how do you agree with that? but now is not the right time to bring elections. so i totally agree. i totally agree that to actually get to the point where you can have elections, you need that additional period. like he just said, it's completely stopped in the military. no period has stopped the basics to become, to go into watering or not. you need media, you need rules, you need certain distributions to be put in place. they're all not there. so we
8:54 pm
cannot actually act like we can go into into democracy. we need the tensional period. we need a real sense period not like what happened before. and, and we don't have that right now. so right now we're back into a state of revolution and i feel like what is really amazing over a year into it is the maturity level of the resistance committees. and right now i think in the street the consciousness of people industry has reached a level where they realize that the 1st step into democracy to have a parliament and to have a parliament that is a representative parliament that's meal. and this is what we didn't have during the time. and the, and what we want to start with not prime minister is a parliament that then can do the prime minister. and then we can win and reach this, the bases where you can have a democracy to come to say one thing i want to correct the resistance committees are never going to go into power. okay, not a committees. what the reasons can we do want to do is they wanna oversee the
8:55 pm
creation of a parliament that starts on the grass root level, local parliaments, that then end up into a national government. let me be just all jacked. how many do you see a girl? a parliament based from the grass fruit growing from the grass roots level as a realistic, immediate prospect for food on i don't think so. i can be on a rather really complex and i think i'm a student here from a complete develop propose that i think if the country has a job to stay unified and avoid going into cowards and brother, or they have to be a serious commitment to dialogue, that would bring a pro democracy group as the from the mentally group that speaking to the dreams of people. but at the same time, if we don't reach enough for us to provide you with the,
8:56 pm
for some type of party to put the foundation for government, i don't think by going to get out of the i think that these are really 5 body and i was on a paper on the committee and i think what they're, what companies, but from what i understand that might be what they might think that there is specific bodies that people are going to use. but these are not fine, but i'm not really that is better than i do. yeah. but, but from that i don't even know based on what i mean, we can actually get to talk to the apartment that did that kind of situation. but i think it could be one of the stairs rather than know, that would bring in different political actors and they're usually not get funded. they are good. ok up to do, do the right thing is the way how do we create
8:57 pm
a judgment group that has the benefit of something? we're going to open that ticket for the last word, very briefly to how lee, what needs to happen immediately to stop this instability m bruno site and west quota font spreading. throughout su, dawn, i think what you need, what you need to look at, it's basically you need a genuine clerical process in the, in the, in the country in that process. once it's in there and hard to make things easier for the travel violence to stop in the region, otherwise, on tribal communities will have to take aside based on the medical competition between between which is basically a parent and evident. unless this is we reach an into to, to, to this competition, we're going to see morals, this conflict. i've seen it in july and not interrupt again. it's september and october. okay, up on a gentle we'll have to leave the discussion that had huge cooker abdel colleague
8:58 pm
shape and a back me l jack l med. me. thank you very much taking the time to join us on inside story and thank you to for watching. you can see the program again any time by visiting our website that's al jazeera dot com, and have a discussion to go to our facebook page. that's facebook dot com, forward slash ha inside story. it was a during the conversation on twist that we are at a inside the story from me laura kyle and the whole team here. as my friend ah ah
8:59 pm
indonesia your investment destination, the world's 10 largest economy is busy transforming, ready to be your business partner with a robust talent pool, politically and economically stable and strong policies. being the power house, indonesia is confirmed by the g. 20 presidency, bringing opportunities for you, invest indonesia, now november, other just as the footballing world's greatest tournament kicks off, all eyes tend to cattle as it prepares, the spectacle like no other old ways for new days. first nations frontline discovers how traditional knowledge is helping solve modern problems. israel holds its general election in less than 4 years. will this round draw a line to its political crisis?
9:00 pm
generation football meets the inspiring players, tackling social political issues on and off the pitch. americans vote in defining mid term elections. the results could see biden and the democrats lose that congress majority november on a jesse the dumpling in bond, which is an important part of indian culture. it's no surprise and many people want to book in the ones on that and one side about family expectations and cultural tradition. i guess the way now with the reality of working in the giving industry probably with weakness inspiring films from around the world based on the violence until the power is best witnessed award winning.

18 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on