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tv   News  Al Jazeera  January 14, 2023 9:00pm-10:00pm AST

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a was somehow abandoned by the international community. we listen, we are paying shoot price for the roll. i'm going to terrance what's going on and so money we meet with global news makers. i'm talk about the stories back out here . with lou, this is al jazeera
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lou. hello, i'm emily and gwen. this is denise our line from coming up the next 60 minutes. a anger and frustration in the team is in capital way. demonstrate is a calling. the president i said to step down, demonstrate is take this straight, some television, calling for israel's foreign government to drop plans. they say threat that countries democracy russian missile strikes caused widespread damage to infrastructure across ukraine. at least 5 people killed in the city of denise pro u. s. president joe biden's lawyers say they've done more classified documents at his home than previously revealed. and our piece of statement of your sport, sebastian lou becomes the furthest driver to win spec already stages in a row. and you know, i should be meant to be at old trafford. make it 9 wins in
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a row. ah, welcome to the program. we begin with angie government protesting to new zia opposition lead rallies have been held in the capital demanding. the president stepped down over a worsening economic crisis. the rallies have been taking place on the 12th anniversary of the jasmine revolution. demonstrated have pushed through police barriers to get to the main boulevard, and the capital major rallies in 2011 led to be asking a former president saying aberdeen in ali and sponsor uprisings across the arab world. unity of positions is a power grab by president, said has reversed political freedoms gained more than a decade ago. a lazy involvement has this update from geneva. now the
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conversion at the different political movement to the policy has a very powerful lay the person who generally angry about those to the printer and press the reason we've had the national salvation front, which is and then and also the left. and if i see the sense enough, because this is such a unites as one with a print source, nice sounds like what we've been very, very high here around the city. the permit has been very, very why even the train turns us the presidential pilot. and they were one approach to that was found to be outside the present day. it's
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been one of the largest, probably the largest and most and adjusted places. the things i think i saw polygraph, my food stamps, now it's been about one or 2000 since to really well. i think it does say that they call you, they said to move out. and people had enough time to the show 2 to 5 and the president to just talk to them in a rather than real phoenician crisis. i'm sure you're asked the downward spiral, but the name for the past 2 years. let's take a look at what led up to this point and a president siad. fact his government and suspended parliament bank in july 2021. his opponents accused him of staging and curb, but science said he acted legally to rescue to nivia. he then awarded himself palace to rule by de craye. in september that year in march 2022 members of parliament tried to reverse his decisions. they had responded by dissolving
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parliament. then in june he 5 dozens of judges. the rest of the judiciary went on strike a month later, a new constitution that strengthened the presidency and wakened parliament was passed in a referendum, turned out was low and it was boycotted by many political parties. and in december parliamentary elections boycotted by the opposition for a record low turn out of 11 percent of voters on berto provides. here is an associate fellow at the international institute for strategic studies. he told me the lack of basic supplies, such as sugar and oil in tunisia, will cause more unrest. while there's that, there's been one of the most powerful off during the tradition political landscape, the since the independence of the constitution. it's also been awarded the noble prize together with the port at during the transition, and the can mobilize,
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people are much more than we can political part of the bus few years. so i think that the for president space. so yeah, we're now, this is the biggest, biggest challenge to its rule. and that the problem is that the country is also negotiating alone from the international monetary fund, which requires severe and economic reform, which are opposed by the news. so we are reaching the morning point to finish the put create the further our for the population which has been suffering from the lack of basic items like shoes, like florida and barbara for this for this problem. i think that's the so you will have to, to, to, to face. and if you can tell engine the most, that the
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ukraine says russia has strunk important infrastructure in the capital cave and more tax being reported in levine khaki. and in a probe, at least 5 people have been killed in a pro and several others, including children have been injured. while the governor of mich alive says, missiles have been seen flying through the air. but defenses working natasha butler has more on today's development from key. there are ongoing an air raid alert systems also in most of southern ukraine. here in keith though it is a bit more quiet. we certainly though, had a different picture this morning. we heard a needy, 5 very distinct explosions or that we later found out were strikes at key infrastructure in the city, according to local authority. some houses or so damage were also getting more information about a strike on an apartment block in the city of denise pro. that's in central ukraine
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. terrible pictures are coming out of there. a whole residential apartment block pretty much reduced to rubble. emergency services have been frantically trying to find survivors. they've been pulling people out from the rubble. we know now that at least 5 people were killed. and these 27 people injured, some of them very badly wounded and that includes some children. so very grim and bleak picture from denise for and those emergencies of a service work is still continuing to work to see what they can do. the same thing in the v, this is something we've been seeing from russian forces over the past few months, is targeting of this kind of energy infrastructure to try and make a life as difficult as possible for ukrainians. and it is you, you're dealing with a lack of lighting, a lack of heating, sometimes hours, days or on the end. a people are not able to have access to things like internet and children need that for online or schooling. people need it for communications
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are very difficult indeed, but of course many people across ukraine say look, we have to put up with this. this is what we have to deal with was we're in this situation, was our soldiers are out of the front or fighting russian forces. may more. ukraine has refuted. russia claims it's captured, the eastern town of solider president a lot amazed the lensky says his forces still fighting in the small so mining town which moscow wants to secure to help it's offensive on knee by back. not shall. stratford has more from just outside solider. well, judging by the noise that we're hearing here, the fighting is very much ongoing. we are suppose about 56 kilometers from solider, the military or warning us about going anywhere further down this road. we're hearing a lot of outgoing for what we understand is ukrainian artillery foreign over our heads toward solider to my right and tools but moot which is down the road behind we we've seen incoming landing and fields to my left over the last sort of 10
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minutes or so what we have not seen though is any kind of large scale withdrawal of ukrainian forces. no kind of flat beds with tanks being pulled out. there's very little traffic on this road. or indeed, at the moment, and we have to be speaking to some soldiers that we've heard that we've met close to close to this area. they saying that the fighting seems to be most intense on western outskirts of solider. they say that their men are still very much in a fight. they're having lost seemingly. you can hear that that's actually an outgoing, are either a mortar or an artillery canon firing it from, from the left. so they're saying that the fighting solid are, is very much on going there also saying though that what they describe was russian saboteurs. a, moving into a village to the west of solider also. so as you can here and as you can imagine,
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the situation is very tense here indeed, but no sign of any large scale withdrawal. now yesterday we spent the day with ukrainian special forces in the town of bok motes which is south of solid and very much we understand the attention now of russian forces as they try and move to surround it. u k has announced it will supply tanks and artillery systems to ukraine. if al is a fine call between british prime minister wishes sonic an ukranian president vladimir zalinski on saturday in crime. i received the british army challenge at 2 tanks that i seen as essential to wait capturing occupied tara chain. did him? barbara has moved from london. i. mr. richie c not told president lansky that britain would be supplying, quote, challenger to tanks and additional artillery systems. no figures,
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but the local media suggesting it could be around 12 tanks from the u. k. fleet of 227 challenger 2 tanks. which date back to the 1990s president zalinski has found the u. k. on twitter saying that it would not only strengthen the but to strengthen you create on the battlefield, but also send the right signal to other partners. now that's crucial because next friday, there is a big meeting at the ramstein air base in germany. west 50 defense ministers will be present and already russia through it's, i'm busted here in the u. k. has reacted negatively saying bringing tanks to the conflict zone. far from drawing hostility to a close will only serve 2 intensive, i combat operations generating more casualties, including amongst civilians. so it clear fear that there is momentum among western
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allies of ukraine to send this type of equipment. there is plenty more head on this new sour, including china, releases staggering figures, uncovered 19 related deaths following complaints about a lack of data. the u. k. condemns the execution of a british iranian national, convicted of spying in iran, and a record 6 the when in a row at the deca reli for this french driver, that's all coming out with peter ins. ah, let's head to israel now we're thousands of people are protesting in television, against plans by the new government to overhauled the judicial system.
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the new far right government, led by prime minister benjamin netanyahu unveiled a plan to make changes to the country's legal system that could weaken the powers of the supreme court, but is to say it threatens freedom and democracy a mankind joins us live now from mentality. if hello they in rom, what's happening where you are? well, it's actually very difficult to try and show you the scale of this protest. it actually goes back about how promot down that direction in all of the street surrounding here now laugh rate. the purchase is that they were about 30000 people this week. they said that that was going to be off for about $50000.00 people. we worked over the accurate figure until after this riley is over and it goes to me at least as well, but it's going to be about mark in that incredibly important number because this is an anti government protest. these people are protesting the fact that human rights
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violations may, will occur. the government, don't worry about the robot. a lot of george let you know who they say is a criminal. there's a lot of signs around here, a should not be the prime minister. you know now, well, they've very worried about this minority right within israel i, when it comes together and things of that nature, they hold that those things could be rolled back. but again, this is a long day. for example, i say it is, this is about it is a
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currently a strong turn out. is it likely that the government will listen to the demands of the protesters? i see one of the questions i've been asking for just organize is people. i chose a low a unit, which i'm galvanized people here go to those bonds because no one party has a majority. so if there's any sense of weakness, they may well be another election sooner than will the government plan coming up in another 4 years. so therefore we need to push our agenda now. is that how many were the government? the government feels like it has a very strong support within its own constituencies, particularly the 2nd community for the fall, right?
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community. and these guys are saying that there also getting can, especially from the government when it comes to things like the supreme court, which is, was angry, a lot of people israel politic. once again, that's the thing that one crazy thing logins on. so it's not about whether the government knows whether these people are here until a b, a ok, let us know how things progress throughout the evening. im, ron kon, live for stay in television to palestinians have been killed by israeli forces in the occupied west bank. they were accused of firing and is rally troops need you name these i mc g had group says the 2 men were 5 has from it's wing the l could spar games. 12 palestinians have been killed by israeli troops and settlers so far this year, including a 19 year old from janine who died on saturday from bullet wound sustained when his
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rally forces shot him 2 weeks ago. neither abraham went to the funeral procession in java in the occupied west bank. oh, it's only been 14 days into the new year. well, alice indians who are killed by israeli forces higher than that. one of them is this unit for 2 palestinians, 23 and 24 year old and dead. and as the dean and according to local sources here, they were killed after they've been teased by israeli forces after committing a shooting attack near by here in g mean, we've seen the car that they were in totally wrong in shootings as well in the court. and according to israeli forces, they say that they've found m. 16 right in the car. this is not the only funeral happening in jeanine,
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a 3rd palestinian has to come to his wounds after he was shot by. is there any forces earlier this year? this gives you an idea about the reality that the palestinians live about the frustration. the year 2022 has been the w. cindy occupied the west bank for over 15 years, according to the one palestinian in. janine has actually helped the 10th situation because 59, let's say we're kill my 3 4th. so last year, people here saved a language for people this year to be i last year because of the current right wing is where the government that has taking a power in israel. let's head to the u. s. now where law is full, president, joy biden. have revealed mall classified documents have been found at his private
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home in delaware, lead spring in patty calhane, who joins us live now from washington day say, hello there patty. what more has biden's legal, tame revealed? well, 1st is to set the scene. we do know the classified documents are found in it. office abiding news after he left the vice presidency here in washington, dc. and then during this week his a could, the white house council came out and said there was a document found, we believe it was in the library and one in a storage area adjacent to the garage. so now this latest statement from the white house council lays out a little bit more about what happened. he says, the president's personal lawyers were going through his things, his papers, they saw a document not marked classified. so because they didn't have, they didn't have clearance to look at any sort of secret or top secret information . they shut the box, shut the room, notify the department of justice. well, according to the white house council,
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he says he does have security clearance. so he went on thursday evening to wilmington, delaware, so he could hand over those documents to the department of justice. and he says when they did that, they found 5 additional documents with those classification marks. now what he doesn't say is what kind of classification in the u. s. government, there's 3 types. there's confidential there, secret, and there's top secret. top secret is basically defined as if that got out it could pose grave danger to the country to we don't know of though any of those documents were top secret. we do believe that at least some of the documents that were recovered in washington were in fact top secret. so what they've done is they've handed over to the justice department. the attorney general has appointed a special counsel to look into seeing exactly how these documents gather if anyone is criminally liable for it. i. so that is ongoing. the problem for president joe biden is, this is a story that just is not going away. every new document in it's leading all of the
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network news in the front page of the paper. so this is a big political heading for president biden. that apparently doesn't show any signs going away any time soon, said patty, this means now to potential opponents may 2020 full presidential election will be subject to special council pro to the 2 candidates for president potentially to special prosecutors. different sets of classified documents. but i think it's important to point out there are really key differences here. the bite administration is trying to stress that at the moment they realized that they had these documents, they call, they notified the national archives, which notified the department of justice. the trump situation is very much different. it was about a year after he left office, the that his lawyers contacted the national archives and said we found 15 boxes of documents. so those are contain confidential markets. so they sent them to what's called nora nar than said, we think there's probably more and they went back and forth in the end. it took the
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f, b, i get a search warrant going to president trump of florida residence mar logo, where they found is $33.00 boxes including a $11000.00 documents that didn't belong to the president. and we do know when it comes to the president forward for them. donald trump, many of those papers he had were labeled top secret. we believe some even had information about a country's nuclear weapons program. so in scale and scope and in process, these are very different cases. now we're going to be interesting is democrats came out very, very quickly, and really attract present. donald trump, including president biden, saying that it was just irresponsible republicans on the other hand, stayed pretty quiet about that. basically try to send a message. this is no big deal. the documents are back. well, now republicans are saying they're going to launch hearings. they're saying this is a chapter free for bide, and so when the tree shakes out,
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when both special prosecutors present their findings, it's going to be very hard for either political party to downplay the significance of this matter. so the republicans making a very big deal about this. now when it comes out, what president trump did, we'll see if they are able to maintain that level of outrage. thank you so much for breaking down for us petty calhane live for us in washington dc. ah, china has reported almost 60000 coven 19 related death since early december hospital say the fatalities were recorded between december and january 12th. it's the 1st data on cove at 19 deaths paging has released since it loosened restrictions in early december. several countries including the u. s, south korea and italy have introduced covert tests for travelers from china.
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katrina, you has moved from bay. this is the 1st acknowledgement by beijing that there has been up until now a severe under reporting of corvette data here. and it follows criticism from the w h. 0 as well as the u. s. and other governments that china has not been transparent about the scale of the outbreak. this really is the 1st indication really of how big this outbreak has been in china since the lifting of virus restrictions in early december. and the number is really spectacular before this, the only official figure we had about for a death hole was just over 5000. so this jumped 260000 is really quite big. let me just break down those numbers for you. what the government has said, they said between december 8th and january, the 12 there were 5503 people who died as a result of respiratory failure due to corvette and the vast majority, the 54435 died. as a result of the combination of one illness with corbett,
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they said that the average age with 80 and the majority of people who passed away were already age of 65. now the good news that the government is trying to focus on here is that they're saying that the peak of the outbreak has now passed. they said that peak occurred around christmas in 2022. so around december 23. and that there has been a downward trend in infections according to those coming to fi. the clinics at that figure is now down by about 80 percent. although we have to remember that this dig around 60000. this is just hospital depths. it does not record or acknowledge the depth of the youth who might have passed away at home. so we have to know that the true figure, the true death toll from corbett here, must be much higher. let's bring in oksana physic from london. she's a lecturer at the university college london school of pharmacy. ok, santa thanks so much for being on this news. our does this 60000 figures stack up given there are reports of hundreds of millions of people in china being infected
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with cove. it well, according to the w show and many other critics, there is concern that there's lack of transparency around these figures. other models have estimated that it's probably more likely that at the height of the peak, that $9000.00 people were dying a day. so that doesn't really add up to the estimates that have been provided by the ccp. now we do see that the demographics were in the big cities with the better hospitals and really just more capacity to give care. it has now spread more into rural areas of china, where health care systems are less developed and also vaccination rates are lower. so again, that devastation that's being caused, it's mushrooming. and although these figures are slowing down, we do know that the lunar new years coming around and there's going to be much more travel across the country. which means that we probably are expected another 2 ways
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as a result of just that travel alone. and it is still a struggle to get a particular pop into the population unaided. although i'm ascii, said remains high. it's not going to be enough to quell the spread of coven, particularly with more variance and circulation. i want to look ahead in just a moment, but firstly, how do you assess the breakdown in these figures? it's, they're saying that 5500 deaths are due to spiritual failure and then the rest are from other elements combined with cove at 19 this is a very narrow definition and it's one that many countries have not used to define a code. the death now there is a lot of variation if we compare it to different countries. but the w show has criticizes us to narrow definition because what we do know that is that it's not just a spiritual disease, affects all oregon's in the body,
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and it's linked to all sorts of different ways in which people may pass away predominantly through blood clotting and so again, that's probably a big part of the deaf and defining the data as well as people not being able to access hospital that there's no beds, no space people won't be dying in hospitals will be dying somewhere else. now you mentioned the learn and e, which is coming up in a matter of ways, what impact you think that will have? and do you think we've seen a peak on the number of infections? and so again, it's tricky because then the data that we are getting is perhaps not as transparent as we would like. so even if we have reports that it's coming down or slowing down, something like a lot of people moving again. we saw this at christmas. all across other countries
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with the x x, b, b, 1.5 area really picking up steam over the christmas period. united states now 30 percent of the country and has that very in circulation and it is set to overtake all other variance. not just in the u. s. for probably globally, so we would expect to see a similar trend happen in china with it's harder to say what variance are dominant there. again, just to know that screening is not being shared with other countries, but we don't show is asking for doctors and other health workers to also perhaps individually worse cases to try and get that transparency. but that's a, that's a really not ideal strategy in responding to this. so if we take the u. s. as an example, you know, just recently the huge, an increasing cases, a combination of a much more infectious variant with higher immune evasiveness that's linked to higher hospitalizations. that is going to very likely also be in transmission in
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china and pick up pace. so i think we were looking at least another $2.00 to $3.00 ways. as a result of that, really an incredible situation. we appreciate your insights of santa pacific electra at the university college london school of pharmacy. thank you. still ahead on al jazeera, we tell you how mexico is stepping up to feel the manufacturing void in north america. and liverpool handed a hiding in the premier league paid. it will have all that action coming up in school. ah, it spin, spotting was right in saudi arabia and in katara the last day or so. but the next storm, this building and probably will repeat the process is already there in the east mediterranean police, a lot of heavy rain in sudden turkey. it's now in cyprus,
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on sundays forecasts, rhymes the levant, and the secondary center is going to produce an awful weather in east, in libya, and probably eventually the western side of egypt as well. bay roots forecast suggest that rains arrived for a couple of days in that southerly brazen than it goes away by tuesday. that sunday's forecast to the east, the still got rain this time and iran is becoming rather weaker. now you'll notice temperature written a little bit in the heart. 22, it's been feeding cold recently, but the real code not quite visible on this chart is up in turkmenistan, where mornings had been down below minus 20 recently. so he's slow to warm up. but how we get to monday, the reins reformed in saudi arabia, mostly in the middle, probably avoiding reality is largely dry and iraq, heavy rain intensity is cause studying recently some damage. and it's still raining very heavily intensity. but south of that, the problem is one of heat r. pennington's 42 is approaching record high values for january.
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ah, ah, now jesse with oh, oh oh, blue teller, you're watching al jazeera, i'm emily anglin. he's a reminder of our top stories. this our thousands of people in that television, israel, of protesting, yet the government's plans to overhaul the judicial system. these and live pitches
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of demonstrators who say it could weaken the supreme court and then it threatens freedom and democracy. lawyers for you as president joe biden have revealed more classified documents have been found to add his private home in delaware. the white house previously said only a single page was improperly kept at his library. below is now say it was a total of 6 pages. the opposition into his ear has led a rallies, demanding president, i say, had stepped down over worsening economic crisis. the protests are taking place on the 12th anniversary of the jasmine revolution. and laura con has more on today's developments. protested like how be booking the avenue in the heart of tuna they want prison tastes lead out of power. the street had long been state for political change. 12
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years ago, protests grew here spread across the country. and within weeks toppled long time president vinnie alba deberry. oh no opposition. groups that have been rivals have unified. they include the national salvation from coalition and the free constitution party on the anniversary of the revolution they are more united than ever before. and that a lot of progress has been made in this particular point on the way out quite some or, or is it is actually a dialogue, a national dialogue between stakeholders in this country and national are, were presented to all the different you know, this is many saw as an attempt to placate the protestors, the president attended to rally on friday. one man shouted to him, they're hungry. the country isn't economic crisis,
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inflation is sawing jobs, his gas, and $1900000000.00 bailout from the initial motor fund is being discussed. but with many concerned, the country is becoming more authoritarian. the united states may block, it was months parliamentary election, saw 11 percent vote as cost ballots. it was meant to reshape the legislature to solve for the president of the seas. executive powers in july 2021. but now case said is on depression growing opposition, food and anger on st. nor han, 0 series. foreign minister says take year will have to end its military presence in his country to achieve a full reproach. reproach meant between the 2 countries. face of mac. dad made his comment, sampson meeting his iranian counterpart in damascus to discuss the ongoing dialogue
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between syria and tick. yeah. so let's take a closer look at the tense relationship between the 2 countries. take here has been a major backer of the political and armed opposition to syrian president busha al assad, 2012, the conflict and syria. but in late december, the defense ministers of turkey and syria held at landmark negotiations in moscow. the 1st subs meeting since 2011, the turkish foreign minister said on thursday he could make his syrian counterpart as early as february. mm. let's bring in that michael doran, who's in washington dc. he's a senior fellow and director of the center of pace and security in the middle east at the hudson institute. and michael, it's great to have you with us on this news hour. it's been more than a decade of hostilities between these 2 neighbors. what's the significance of these most recent comments by the sir and syrian foreign minister? i will, thanks for having me. i think the simplest way to think of this is as
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a turkish russian negotiation about syria. and what the vladimir putin once is a quid pro quo. and that is that a turkey that is president air. the one will recognise bashar assad and normalize with the regime and agree and principle to withdraw true to withdraw. turkish troops and the turkish back troops from syrian territory, in other words, recognized the territorial integrity of syria under our side. and in return, russia will and the acid regime, we'll stop backing the white p g. that is the syrian wing of the p k. k, which is the arch enemy of a, of turkey. and then the, what we see now on the latest steps here is the iranians are weighing in. and the syrians are factoring there. the, the syrian government itself is or isn't contemplating it's leverage of any over
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this or over this process. but the, yeah, turkish or russian negotiation is pretty advanced. we've already had the meetings at the ministerial level in moscow, and there are others that are on the books, the turkish foreign minister, trabusia lou is coming to washington next week, but to brief, the americans on what's going on. so i think there's, there, there will be a lot of movement on this. is it likely die that take year will, and is military presence in the country and, and follow the demands and syria. this is, there's a lot to unpack there. the, the, the turks are supporting about 70000 syrian men are in the syrian national army. and of course, they're providing security for big swats of territory in northern or syria, including in england that none of that can be undone in the day. but an agreement
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in principle could be reached rather quickly, and a confidence building stance between the church and the russians, especially could also it could also move quickly. what, what we're seeing here is a, is a, a result of the weakness of russia that has been displayed in the ukraine war and the boot and recognizes that he's weak, can syria, that of the turks were to make a serious, military push into syria. there's not much that russia could do about it. and so what we're putting is doing is, is turning a kind of, we can into a smarter diplomatic move. the complexities of the politics aside, michael, there are millions of syrian refugees in tacky. what does this mean for them? are they any closer to returning home? and do they even want to well, i think the more important question is,
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what do the turks want and, and if president ardon were able to get an agreement with president putin and, and, and put and delivered aside ah, that the refugees in turkey would be returned to their homes in syria, in short order, that would be a tremendous benefit to him as that the refugee question is one of the biggest questions that domestic turkish politics. so that's, that's one of that. that's one of the reasons why there is real momentum behind this diplomatic process. while we really appreciate you breaking down a complex conflict and michael darn from the hudson institute, thank you. thank you. the u. k says he will temporarily withdraw its ambassador from iran for consultation after the execution of the british, iranian national into iran alley rizza, barry, a former iranian defense ministry official, was convicted of spying for the you came in an audio recording. expiry said he was
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made to falsely confess. under torture. the u. k has sanctioned ron's prosecutor general after the execution, prime minister where she acts at barry's death, a warrant go unchallenged. while iran has summoned the u. k. ambassador in response, russell said it is into rom with more on the impact of back berries hanging. i lose that there is execution is one of the highest level executions in the more than history of the iraq. he was a prominent, well connected figure within the power structure in the company had close ties with top diplomats bureaucrats. and with this and steve central institutions in the company are also close. graduate with alicia county, who is the secretary general of the national security council. a body that overseas the, the nuclear negotiations and the regular report to the supreme dad be there. so dorothy is here or accusing him or spying for the u. k. i'm for years of providing the
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sensitive information regarding your nuclear activities. miss our program and the plans how to tackle that, the sanctions and also his regional policies as well. and we'll talk to his year say the information that he provided to you. k. let the assassination off more. see fox out there that the guy who has been assassinated in 2020 and he was did the top guy over senior on nuclear activities. and they said that that information, the same information, also led destination of the top general carson for the money to one to 20 in iraq as well. so he's been accused of being the main guy behind his assassination. so, and did execution is going to have a tremendous impact internationally and domestically as well. the ties between to run and london are already freight, and these execution is expected to for the deteriorate relation between iran and united kingdom. so within the iran, there is also a tremendous impact of this execution because now these solutions are accusing each
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other of not functioning properly. and the 2nd, the general of the national security council of the reportedly is expected to be removed from his course. so we are already seen the impact of these execution internationally. and domestically as north american companies continue to cut back manufacturing upper sions in china, countries in latin america stepping in to fill the void. many predict 2023 will say significant improvements to supply chain conditions of trade relations in north america boasted by my rap low explains from mexico city the a manufacturing plant in central mexico producing automotive parts that will be shipped across the border to the united states the company rips up is the preferred manufacturer among many international firms seeking specialized components at a low production costs. we have a very good quality,
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that's one of the strings we have the quality. we also have a very good personnel which is very well trained over the past 50 years, rips has grown from a small family run business into a global power house apart from automotive parts. this manufacturing plant in mexico city is producing components for various emerging industries, like renewable energy, and even aerospace technology. the vast majority of these components will be exported to the us and canada among other international buyers. at a recent summit in mexico city, the leaders of canada, mexico, and the us pledge to ramp up economic cooperation and strength in north american competitiveness. and as the us moves away from chinese manufacturing expert say, this will further propel the trend of near shoring the practice of expanding manufacturing in countries with a close geographic proximity to accompanies customer base. all of this is good news
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for companies like rips up, which seek to expand operations in 2023, making any make whatever the next goes in a perfect position to take advantage of a historic moment and replace china as manufacturer for the united states. and also replace the united states as a manufacturer for china. according to mexican government figures, some 400 international firms sought to move their manufacturing operations from asia to mexico in just the last year. business leaders like some when all that rips has found her. see success depends heavily on seizing opportunities for more trade . although they come to see if they are manufactured exclusively for a domestic market, it would be difficult to survive. this is why we depend heavily on export manufacturing. china remains the world's top manufacturing country accounting for more than a quarter of global manufacturing output. put experts argue that changing trends in globalization, such as the continued rise of near shore, it could soon put mexico at the leading edge of global supply chains. when river up
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a low al jazeera mexico city, hundreds of thousands of pilgrims have assembled on the outskirts of dac, of one of the world's largest muslim gatherings after the hage, tavia g. reports from the dishwasher each. him the hundreds of thousands of muslim diversities from all walks of life. from all around the world have gathered in bangladesh for 3 days or prayers and sermons. the bishop or global congregation of muslims held each year since $900.00. 67 aims to revive the tenets of islam and promote peace. gentlemen. public. i along with hundreds of others, came moved away from palestine on a long journey to learn more about the essence of islam and its teachings. the some i consider an expression of muslim unity, solidarity love, and respect the nag. when we came here to learn the meaning of life about why we
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were born, we all have to return to a law. you have to understand all these teachings of our profit and the koran. we can't learn these things by staying home. we have to travel. muslim, devote is spent 3 days crammed, entertained in 5 square kilometer area. those who couldn't find space on the stomach ground camped on the footpath level the color. we have heard so much about the large drama gatherings in bangladesh. now we are very happy to be here and participate in this spacious religious gathering. the large number of worshippers is a challenge for our part if there is a strong security presence and health care and the basic services are provided by the local level. this is a very large gathering of people from everywhere. it can be difficult, but people are in a good mood and smiling. we're here to please. alas, so it's not a hardship for us. it is estimated that more than $3000000.00 de brody's took part
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this year. the 1st phase of one of the largest muslim gatherings in the world. esther and the sun, with hundreds of thousands of muslims praying for global peers divine blessing. and the revival of islamic values on your child gives it to god's per still head on al jazeera, travel for evidence. as they slip further down the premier lane table and they board skipped the game over threats to their safety. details of pizza ah, around the world, powerful entities are working to manipulate and influence control fake news algorithms that have been developed and designed to push the content that says click me. every click we make is valued and sort of what, what ends in the 3rd of a 5 part series alley rays in mexico. examining how propaganda and profit shaped
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content all hail the algorithm on a jessia african stories from african perspective isn't well yet as a day, short documentary from african fill me from mommy and synagogue. can you see that is you're gonna download it to rig mom. i love it now cuz she's, i'm not sure of the adventures off of a car and led to africa direct on al jazeera lou. ah,
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it's time after sport, he's pater. and there's been a stunning come from behind when at old trafford. that is exactly what happened, the emily, and that's also where we'll start the manchester toby and united of beaten city to one at old trafford. for a 9th, when in a row, the opening goal of the game came could see of a 2nd half jack ghoulish dinner. if 40 hours men hoping to close the gap on premier lead is also at that stage. as emily said, there was a great comeback. the hosts indeed had other ideas. marcus richard may or may not have played a role in this controversial boone if amanda's equalizer, or that in a moment. but there was nothing ambiguous about this rash with knitting to become the 1st united places. first, tiana with elder in 2008 to school in 7, the success of batches that when put united into food in the primitive. but they manager says the seal on not title comes in as yet since may dream, but we not, oh, we have to keep bell. we're feet on the ground and, and fish that are in our game
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as a lot to improve is multi big deals as a big impact. and we have to keep working on that and keep investing in that cities the feet, leave the premium, the champions, 5 points behind all snow who play on sunday and the skull will no doubt be scrutinized to over the coming days. fernandez is equalizer was a now to stand despite rash would be clearly in an offside position. as they both ran towards the boy said, he's manager paypal ariella. was they fuming and insisted rash? what had interfered with play with it? we know what it is of chateau. no sight, dental is of sight made that intervene. every st. intervene here the easy st. 9 to ring and is a standing h. okay, we're dare to do. we're going to make her complain to then no. so go ahead relations ad from times happy in our sight. shantay then does eunice did it and belief bradford was intervening detection when it happened. so thinking of the
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saying is, is a tough not to play much better or tough like his entry elsewhere. liverpool were soundly beaten by brighton. some slick crossing in midfield led to the opening goal of the game early in the 2nd off. sali march, the man of the moment, much was then at the end of this, the fin smithing ball to double the advantage for the home side. and then you really shouldn't concede directly from a throw in with that. exactly would little did hear any well back saying thank you very much to complete the 3 know when more problems everson and the manager. frank lambert, as they lost the, bought inside south hampton to one in our 2nd from boston. emily, members of the edison board with fall to stay home of their home ground waft or what the club called the credible threat to their safety. edison fans held a sit in protest after the game on sunday. fans in saudi arabia will be treated to an are classical when round madrid, 2nd boss, the learner in the final of the spanish super cup. the king 5,
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the international stadium in riyadh will host the match between the 2 spanish super clubs. rail defeated valencia on penalties in the semi finals buffalo and also needed spot kicks against the rail. beth, it's to reach the final. a win for rail would take them level with barcelona on 13 super comp titles. no shares. i'm not sure if intensity is the best way to be parcel loaner. in order to be barcelona, we need to play a very, very complete man, defensively, offensively counter attacking. we need to handle the ball and manage the pressure. well, there are so many things we need to do. it's not only about intensity. we'll try to do that kind of game. the mom would watch the moment. we're highly motivated, we're very excited. this title would mean a lot to us, especially play against real madrid. it's a classical and yes, it would mean a lot to us. it would give us confidence and strengths to keep working. we'll have to move on, no matter what happens tomorrow the season will go on with the title in our pocket . everything's different. but yes, real madrid or strong. now,
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history has been made at the deck already with sebastian le becoming the 1st driver ever to win 6 stages in a row. the french 9 time world ready champion one stage 13 on saturday. lube is the 1st person to win 7 stages in one deco race since carlo exclaimed 12 years ago, but he remained in 2nd place behind the cutters. nasa, alexia, who remains on calls to when he fits deck already title. all that left is sunday, final run to dump them on similar to radio gulf coast me. meanwhile, the motorcycle category will go down to the closest finish in the rates as history australia to come back when it's the price leads the standings, but only by 12 seconds. for margin time katie mc beta in stage, when kevin benevita is to actually one the rates in 2021. benevita said stopped on the stage to wait for medical assistance. will matthias walker when he suffered a fall, he was given the last 23 minutes back where just days away now from the 1st grand
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slam of the tennis season in australia, but defending champion ref on the dog is topping his rival. never jock of it for this years when the doll is the top seed, but he has had a bad start to the year, having lost 6 of his past 7 matches. and he faces a tricky opponent in great britain was jack draper, these opening match on monday. i have been losing more than, than usual. so that's, that's part of the, of the business. i think i am in improvement moment that i have been better and better that every single week. i feel fast on the legs, i feel playing better with more confidence. the last 3 weeks of preparation for here had been very positive from my point of view. but i feel really honestly the defending women's champion ashley barty was back on since accord at kids day events on saturday since winning in melbourne a year ago thought he has retired from tennis and announced that she is expecting her 1st baby. yeah, i'm feeling really good. thank you. feeling right and yeah,
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he started to be back. i'm with both grow so many great memories. i often think of what i plan on this one. there's so many kids here enjoying it in to look to say so many. absolutely. feeling and brilliant. hopefully we'll have some fun. both he teamed up with current will number one, he gives fiance, kathy events, the poll as credits at basi for pushing her to become a better player. when i played against her, i felt like she, she just, you know, she has all these different game styles and slice and are given her book. she says that she has like 5 types of slice. i don't know how that's possible i'm. i still haven't figured out only on the one type but um, but yeah, i have like huge respects for ash and she really, she gave me a huge motivation at the beginning of last season to get even better. so i'm kind of grateful for that. there was a surprise results in new zealand where a veteran re shaw gasquet claimed the atp 250 title. the 36 year old fort from
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a set down to be britons, cameron, laurie in oakland. it's the freshman's whose title since 2018 and 16th overrule oh, oh, he was treated to a special hacker ceremony on court of to 20 years on to this was gaskets, 1st trip to new zealand. he's currently ranked 67 and recently passed 900 weeks in the top 100. and that's all the sports news. emily, thank you very much paid am. we'll have more news in just a moment from our london headquarters to stay with us. ah ah, along with
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are they protect his old profits? he is a free speech mosque is showing us how vulnerable space is online and truly are when they are controlled by billionaires of lago, documenting facts on the ground. i'm not a journalist, people trust individuals, more than the news or a purveyor of the state line. how can you show the destruction of a political war and still be a political unchecked?
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the media can distort narratives and reshape realities. the listening post keeps watch on al jazeera. once a month, social workers pay michelle nie a visit at home. michelle is a single mother struggling to get by on a meagre income in one of the world's most expensive cities. she can barely afford the basics for her and up to stick daughter since the start of the coven 19 pandemic. there's been a big rise, and people seeking relief for charity work as it's been particularly demanding. 28 percent of social workers quit that job in the last year. many of them left the city altogether. strict pandemic cuts and political uncertainty many relying the help find it difficult to get the support they ah a russian mission.

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