tv News Al Jazeera January 28, 2023 6:00pm-7:01pm AST
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but who always, if we don't know what we're eating in a disturbing investigation into globalized food fraud, people and power reveals long hidden scandalous practices that have infiltrated international wholesale markets and supermarket chains and asks, what's really on our plates. food in glorious food on out, jazeera, informed opinions far right extreme is there is real and need to be tackled as soon as possible. frank assessments. there was a joke about you from governments that it's not infirmary, nor does it guard inside story on al jazeera. ah ah hello, i'm adrian finnegan of this is the news i live from doha. coming up in the next 60
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minutes to settlers shot an occupied east. jerusalem. israel retains a 13 year old palestinian. his family says he wasn't responsible. tension was already high after a gunman killed 7 people outside a synagogue in the area. israel says lacroix, more troops. the violence escalated on thursday after his ready rates and the occupied westbank killed. mine palestinians had in other news anger across the united states after a video is released, showing police officers beating an unarmed black man. and on pete estimate with your sport. ukraine's president criticizes the ios. he's planned for russian and been a russian athletes to compete at the olympics. all while a tennis play from bella, ruth's arina sub olenka, wins the australian open title in melbourne. ah,
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israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu has promising immediate action out he meets with his security cowardice in the coming hours. it comes after a series of attacks and occupied east jerusalem, causing wising tension is really forced to say the suspect of friday's attack is 13 years old. and was wounded while being taken into custody. his family denies that he was involved. our diplomatic editor james base reports from occupied east jerusalem. the situation in east jerusalem is now extremely tense. israeli police said they're on their highest state of alert. after fresh violence. they say the latest shooting in sil, one in east jerusalem, filled in this video, was carried out by a 13 year old boy using a pistol. he's believed to have targeted to settlers of father and son. both were wounded. the 22 year old son is said to be in a serious condition when the 13 year old boy was also shot and was questioned by
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police in the ambulance on the way to hospital bill. it follows the tenant, come friday nearest synagogue in the settlement of navy called, also in east jerusalem was 7 people was shot dead. a lot about a guy stop here to help got out of his car and got a bullet to the head and died next to me. his son got a bullet in the back. i tried to compose myself. i saw him right here with the gun in his hand. i saw the whites of his eyes. i looked down and went back in the house and got a bullet in the window. please say the attacker, harry, i'll come aged 21. was shot dead in his car as he tried to escape from the scene. he lived in the mount of olives. his parents and neighbors who came to his house were arrested. 42 people in total were detained. kashana bush, only muffled. we're here after one of the hardest attacks in recent years. i convened
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a situation assessment with all the secret forces. we decided on several immediate actions. we have to work with determination and composure. i called on people not to take the law into their own hands for that we have an army, police and secret forces. on thursday, israeli forces went deep into the janine refugee camp. the deadliest raid since the un started keeping records nearly 2 decades ago. in one day, 10 palestinians, including an elderly woman, were killed. prime minister netanyahu now says they'll be further action. what form it will take will probably be decided by his security cabinet, which will meet later in tel aviv, ah, near the home of the 13 year old boy that israeli authorities say was responsible for the like a shooting that's been confrontation. stones have been thrown in the israeli forces of responded with stun grenades and tear gas things here, feel as though they're balanced on a knife edge. earlier on we watch 2 young palestinians were briefly detained by
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israeli police and then subjected to a heavy handed search. we saw one of them being beaten, but the officers tried to stop us filming. and a settler then berated and pushed our camera man. james bay's out jazeera, occupied east. jerusalem. often, bah, is standing by for us in ramallah will be with him in a few moments, but 1st let's go live to james bay's in occupied east jerusalem. so james, there is a security cabinet meeting expected to be chaired by the prime minister in the coming hours. netanyahu talks of immediate actions. what could that entail? yeah, that security cabinet meeting taking place in tel aviv we think clearly after chabad which is ending very soon because it's almost sun down here a probably about 3 hours time and we're getting some information on what is likely to be discuss the measures that might be put in place by the security cabinet
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meeting from one senior israeli figure has been speaking to these railey media. now that figures talk here about that, the 1st thing that might happen concerns gun permits. these really government has been encouraging people to apply for gun permits to protect themselves. well, we're hearing that possibly all those applications that have come in recently, they might all be improved approved very quickly. there might be a fast track to approve those. so despite the fact you heard benjamin netanyahu these rarely prime minister said people shouldn't say the lords their own hands. they are certainly going to put into those hands. it seems if this report is true, more weapons. the other thing that we're hearing is that there's likely to be measures taken against the families of those that the israeli, please say we're responsible for the recent attacks. we've seen this before demolishing of their homes. we believe that they're going to try and foster that too. so those demolitions happen very quickly and the other thing they're going to
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do is potentially arrest some of the family members, but also take their, their permits that allow them to live in jerusalem away. so they're no longer be residence of east jerusalem and not be forced to leave the city under the measure that the being considered by the security cabinet. we understand that's just from the one source, or we'll have to see exactly what they decide and what they announce when they meet in the coming hours. adrian james, for his live for us and occupied. he's jerusalem. james, many thanks. and dave, let's go to ramallah, then under my hose there, the palestinian leadership has been meeting at the day outlet. what have they been saying? the palestinian authority actually has been in an emergency a status as since thursdays is really encouraging into the air refugee camp engine . in yesterday, the issue our they decided actually to stop any kind of security coordination with israel. and today, the issued their 1st statement and reaction to the to attack unoccupied. east
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jerusalem, let me read some of the words mentioned by the palestinian authority and the statement. it says it holds the israeli occupation. government air 40 are responsible for the dangerous escalation in the occupied west bank because of the continuing military rates. since the start of this year, at least $31.00 palestinians have been killed. and so far, it also denounces the colonial settlement practices by israel as it says, and lent annexation and house demolitions and address and the policy of ethnic cleansing and appetite. it also, it says aesrael failed so far to implement any kind of international old bilateral agreement signed with the better se tinian authority often mother live for us in romano. many thanks and data i'd left said bringing omar, but off who's a political analyst and the former director of the arab american institute. good to
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have you with us. uh huh. at $32.00 palestinians have been killed so far this month alone. last year was the bloodiest in israel in the west bank since 2004, with the most extreme government in israel's history, vowing strict to policies us as we just hook towards palestinians. to what extent was this optic in violence inevitable? can it be stopped? it certainly was inevitable when you look at the trajectory over the is really government is heading. unfortunately, it's beyond just these really government. i mean, this government came to power democratically within the confines of jewish democracy. of course, we don't have a complete democracy because millions of palestinians who live under israeli to rural don't get to vote. so i say that word, i would some hesitation. but there is a huge shift in israeli public discourse in general. that is incredibly anti palestinian. where these people who are competing for public office are trying to outdo one another over who's going to be more anti palestinian and that's how they get boats. and the result is, as you said,
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the single most extreme government in israel's history. and certainly this is going to be pushing us in a direction of more violence. they've already announced that they're going after my saturday i thought and had a lot more. they are planning the destruction of palestinian towns and villages in the west bank with the intention of driving palestinians out of those areas. it is absolutely ethnic funding. that is the correct word to use to it. and in light of that, it seems like inevitable. it's inevitable that we're going to see a major escalation and violence. the, the u. s. secretary of state is, is due in the region that the state to pump it along with the un of urged utmost restraint from both sides to deescalate the conflict. i mean, will antony lincoln's visit make a blind bit of difference to what the israeli government does it more? certainly. i mean it's, it's most likely will not really have much of an impact because the by the administration has already telegraphed to these really government that they're not serious about meaningful accountability for israel. we saw it with the killing of your colleagues, dana barclays, where the by an administration was ready to just accept israel's self exoneration at face value. and repeatedly where it's important to,
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to even abide by american laws about the need to apply human rights conditions on military funding. all of those are completely out of the window and out of the question with about an administration, they made it very clear that they will have unlimited and unconditional military funding for israel and unconditional diplomatic protection for israel. so these call, 1st strength there is simply no reason for these really government to take them seriously because they know the policy is going to continue to be one of on conditional support. so that's effectively a much more powerful message delivered through actions. but israel can do whatever it was that i will always have the backing of the by an administration. you had james face looking ahead to this security cabinet meeting that the prime minister netanyahu is about to hold. it's pat, it's understandable that but, but he, they will want to respond and want to be seemed to be responding fast. what do you think we can expect in the coming hours? i certainly think that there is going to be this. that's a government knows only one language and that is the language of violence that has
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effectively been the only way they've dealt with palestinians from the beginning until today. there is every reason to expect that escalation. i mean, look, if we're serious about getting to the root cause of the violence, if we're serious about getting to a point in which you have meaningful de escalation. the route to that is towards ending is really apartheid an occupation and talking about achieving real justice. but since that is a non starter, then any instance of palestinian violence is going to be responsive to with even greater is really crimes against palestinians, which incidentally is going to lead us to the path of further competent, further violence rather than less. so it's a policy that is guaranteed to fail, but unfortunately there is 0 political incentive for the government to behave in any other way right now, except to pursue a path that is going to mean more suffering mostly for palestinians, but frankly, for israelis as well. and it's just not a policy that leads to anything, but if, as you say, the violence escalades and in the coming hours and days. and if as you say the, that the u. s. can be rely, relied upon to, to pressure israel to, to, to, to exercise restraint. is there anyone,
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anywhere who can act as an honest broker as far as peacemaker is concerned here? look, the entire national committee can certainly do more in terms of applying meaningful pressure on israel and to say that their words have consequences. you know, we already know that israeli violation of many un resolutions. we know that the policy of collective punishment that we're likely going to see soon, which is punishing palestinian civilians that have nothing to do with the violence that we've seen is also a legal under international law. and we see this monitor from the international community b at the when, or the u or elsewhere, where they're constantly condemning and denouncing and urging restraint. but nobody's really willing to do anything meaningful about it. frankly, it's a situation that calls for meaningful sanctions on israel to say that you can't deliver weapons and military funding to a country that in jason, this kind of violence. but ultimately it does fall on the united states as the country that has the most leverage on israel, the country that funds israel with $3800000000.00 in military funding every single year. it's really beat out of state as a unique is in a unique position of significant leverage. and that's really where the focus ought
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to be very significant positive movement in the, in american public opinion on this issue. but it has not reached the political level yet. we need that pressure to increase so that the american government understands that there is no longer an appetite for a kind of policy where he just support in apartheid regime was unlimited military funding. and with all the crimes that that entails without any question, that's a policy that absolutely has to change. good talk to you. i'm a manufactured teacher, being with us over butler. this is the news are from out there are still to come on, the program will take a look at why some in southeastern peru on the removal of roadblocks that was set up a bit ongoing antique government protests. and the struggle to survive in lebanon agency is warmed. nearly half the country's children are going hungry, less rushes cups. this war or invasion, war and slaughter, civilian population, if you great. they have no place in a free and democratic world. and in sports, we hear from a former tennis plan now fighting to ukraine,
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that's coming up later with pizza. ah protested, been held across the u. s. l to police in memphis released video showing 5 officers beating up unarmed black man. tar nichols died and hospital. the officials, the officers rather have all been charged with murder. u. s. president joe biden said that he was outraged by the video and cool for protests to be peaceful. will speak to our zeros gabriel elizondo in memphis. but 1st, his report and just a warning, you may find it disturbing. the police footage starts with what appears to be a routine traffic stop. but quickly the situation escalates. no any. as officers pull tyree nickels out of the vehicle and begin to wrestle into the ground, he escapes their grasp and flees his family later say he was scared of what police
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might do to him when i heard one. 0, shortly thereafter, other officers give chase and catch nichols on a dark residential street. oh, the police can be seen beating nichols and trying to subdue him with pepper spray. he can be heard crying for help and for his mother. 7 7 who happened to live a block away later, the 29 year old who only weighed 65 kilos due to an illness, appears badly hurt, while handcuffed and left leaning against a car. paramedics appear in no hurry to treat him with connor nichols died from his injuries. 3 days later, he was described by his family as a good young man who liked to write his skateboard and loved his mom so much. he tattooed her name on his arm. all 5 police officers were fired and now faced criminal charges ranging from battery to 2nd degree murder. they find that oh wait
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. oh, on friday night as the video was being released, protestors in memphis took to the street to call for justice roy. what kind of justice do you want to see? i want to see memphis police department be held accountable overall. you know, i'm, it only takes 6 months to learn how to be a police officer and it takes 4 years or in a college degree. and so that tells a lot about memphis police department. you mean to tell me you're taught to use forceful forces such as i used against diarrhea? i'm you mean to tell me that you, teacher officers did. i don't believe so. others said they didn't even need to see the video to know how they felt about it. said it was important, the video was made public. we deserve to be able to see this. i know that is is super alarm and we hear rodney king beating. we thing that, you know, so i mean, it just can or is what we had in 2023. and gabriel jones is now live from memphis
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cape. tell us more about the reaction to the release of that video. well in a word shock, i mean, it was several days that people here in memphis and really around the united states has been bracing for this video. officials had been saying this is going to be very difficult to watch. it's probably going to make you angry. and it's something that is certainly very troubling. that was the message from officials here for several days. officials who had watched the video a privately once, it was released. certainly all of that was very true. and even though many people here in memphis and really people around the country that had been waiting for this video to come out, were sort of bracing for the worse the sense is from people. we spoke to that they really were shocked by because you can really see from this video in a very visceral manner, the violence that occurred against tyree nichols at the hands of these police
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officers. of course, there were several different cameras, but the ones that were most shocking really were the body cameras that police officers here, where cameras that are attached to police officers best in the front, where you can really see as they continue over and over to restrain or try to restrain tyree nichols and then beat him repeatedly and also pepper spray him repeatedly as well. you can just get a sense of how violent it was. and many people here in memphis simply are now trying to process what they saw friday evening in the, in that video was released. i'll just as gabriel elizondo live 1st in memphis, gave many thanks. indeed, the testers in peru of isolated southeast and city of where so mold on all the milan maldonado after 3 weeks of road blockades, that demanding constitutional reform. some vandalized, the regional governors household, friday, marianna sanchez, is there. ah,
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this is the governor of meridian firing his weapon and friday to defend his family and home. after 8 unarmed police members couldn't stop a mob trying to burn his house, and he says to kill him if you're ever you're not bay of mu miramar. if i hadn't had my weapon, i'd be in the morgue. this is outrageous. what did i do to them for them to come throw stones and try to set my house on fire? oh, the governor wants to lift roadblocks. protesters demanding constitutional reforms have been blocking the only highway that connects the regional capital, but to maldonado with the rest of the country for more than 3 weeks, preventing food and fuel supplies from entering only hospital in the city has gone on emergency mode fuel from all the vehicles has been transferred to one ambulance to assist patients in critical condition. the hospital waste hasn't been picked up
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for 20 days. the patients meals are cooked with coal on to small pots. the director list chavez says his worst fear is if there is a blackout, it's almost are those days. we only have enough fuel for the generator to function for 6 hours. if there is a blackout, the patients who are on respirators are simply going to die. the streets of the capital are nearly empty. traffic is almost in existent shops, markets, restaurants, closed. most of put the maldonado is shut down. this is usually a bustling city. a transit area for business is both legal and illegal, including a lucrative gold mining operation run by criminal gangs. now authorities here say the sit is on the verge of collapse. many residents here see the prices of food and fuel in the black market have increased at least 6 volts or in the novels for gilton, and we are outraged. we don't have transport them. i've lost my job because i can't
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get their phone all to the little that although some hearsay, they want precedent, he never liked it to step down. others want the government to focus in and blocking the highway at whatever cost to say, i've never got any of this situation is getting worse every day. you to the connection of the state, the state has to intervene. but out of this a little on thursday, the government passed a supreme decree, ordering security forces to unblock roads. many here want an immediate solution, but fear the resistance in this jungle city could be fierce. medina, sanchez, i just need upward to my law. now, at least one pilot has died after 2 indian air force fighter jets crashed in mid air. the collision happened over the state of maria pradesh and rather stern. 2 crew members from one aircraft were taken to hospital. there were no details on those from the 2nd post jets took off from the gwyle or abbeys. agency say that for in 10 children in lebanon, a going hungry and they walnut lumber could rise sharply in the coming months. now
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to see rosanna hotter reports now from a community center in tripoli in northern lebanon doors that are used to be an orphanage. now it's also taking in children from what was once lebanon's. ready middle class here, children get an education, healthcare, and food for god and her mom, mary, runs this center which has been struggling to stay open because of the economic collapse this year. we are only offering for the boarding school food because we can't afford to, to give all the students this, you know, the ministry of social affairs used to help us. 40 percent of households are less than $100.00 a month. according to the united nation, parents are struggling to feed their children. agencies say 4 of 10 lebanese children and refugees from syria are hungry. we noticed manual question. we
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noticed the level of health care is very degrading massively. the state is close to the bank of the after decades of corruption and mismanagement. and the lack of social welfare systems means some of the most vulnerable are left unprotected humanitarian organizations. like said, the children born that nearly $750000.00 will soon be at risk of relying less on one foot. and we're seeing more screening kids with kids who are shorter than that age as well. which are all determinant long edition for seem like an increase in the number that was on the lebanon has ranked 6 in the world for the share of its population. facing a food crisis is also hosting the largest number of refugees per capita and per square kilometer than any other nation. or recent study by un agencies that
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1000000 people among them 700000 syrian refugees are not getting enough that they warn the number is likely to increase to 2200000 in the coming months. with ballooning inflation, a. d value local currency. rising unemployment, an increasing number of lebanese are dependent on handouts. a situation, humanitarian organizations have warned, is not sustainable. that there was a tripoli, northern lebanon, will go to weather update next on the user. then why cause a growing my jerry a to extend the deadline, but people to swap old currency going nowhere? tens of thousands of travelers are left stranded after a british regional airlines stops operating out of sport and eye catching move from one of the biggest stars in the m. b. a. that's coming on. pizza. ah.
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new york city has set a record for them most days, consecutive days above average at 32 and likely to set a record for the longest period of time are without snow hither, by the way. so 9 degrees on saturday, we got one system after the other rolling through the great lakes. this is a clipper system and it's dragging down arctic hair. so toronto, a high minus 10 on sunday. bullock new york rain 11 degrees for you. after the west we go and the winds are keeping this precipitation further toward the south, but we got attack about the cold. waken up monday morning, dark, the blue and the purple. the lower the temperature sub 0 from vancouver to portland . and winnipeg will wake up to minus 20 night things of also turn cooler in california for s f in los angeles, both below average. and we're getting that feed of warm air up from the golf
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meeting up with cooler air. so that's kind of spark storms once again from houston, great through to the mid atlantic windsor turning around a bit through central america. so temperatures are coming up slowly, but surely still somewhat weather to go for the yucatan peninsula. and it has been remarkably dry for venezuela columbia and paid rue, but storms still crossed the western amazon basin. and we've got storms from the northwest of argentina to the river plate to the southeast of brazil. ah ah ah, ah!
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being comfortable in one's own skin is a birthright, or at least it should be a black filmmaker raised by white parents in east berlin in the 19 sixty's embarks on a stunning journey of self discovery. a touching tale of family identity, lifelong secrecy, and reconciliation becoming black. a witness documentary on al jazeera lou . ah,
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hello again, adrian. something in here in dough. how about the do yourself? about 0. the headlines. 2 is ready. settlers have been injured in a gun attack and occupied east jerusalem is where the forces say the suspect is 13 years old and they've taken into custody. his family denies that he was involved. at least 42 palestinians have been arrested for palestinian gunmen killed several people outside of synagogue on friday. israel's military says that it's increasing its presence in the occupied west bank. the shooting came a day off the mind, people were killed in a raid, i is where the forces of the janine refugee camp. at least 32 palestinians have been killed by israeli troops or settlers. this month. british regional airline fly beat has stopped operating for the 2nd time in 3 years. it cancelled all of its flights, leaving tens of thousands of passengers stranded fly be resumed operations in april after going bankrupt. as a result of the pandemic, the company had been the largest operator of u. k. domestic flights. it carried around 8000000 passengers. a year were flabby
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operated flights to 17 destinations across europe, landing at $81.00 airports. it had about $320.00 employees, only $44.00 of them being retained. travelers who had their flights canceled have been told by the u. k. civil aviation authority to make alternative plans with different operators. daniel la, so hagar is oh, i'm sorry, and your arrest at sir andrew charlton is the managing director of aviation advocacy. he joins us now from colmerton, a cobra town, rather in the france. will. this is going well, i'm sorry to get your name wrong. i do apologize. flighty, started flying again in april last year, and under new management of the ceasing trading in 20. 20, at the highs of the pandemic, as we said, what's gone wrong this time? well, i think what's going on this time is what went wrong last time, which is that it's very difficult in such a competitive market to sustain ah,
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services way there are perfectly good other and such as trends and other other providers, other other raylon's that can get in and provide the service. it's a yeah, it's a dog eat dog world deviation. well, andrew, all the difficulties that fly be faced. unique to it, or are they common to regional carries in other parts of the world? oh, absolutely common. no, they're not unique to weed at all. it tried to in effect, fly below the writer by flying to small cities. i say that it has to be rude to them, but it by flying to small locations, putting together small connections. ah, but it also for the hatred, so e e tried to do things, it varies the friendly and my cost. why? but the reality used for ideation, certainly in europe, there are too many airlines and the too much competition. and also of course, excellent trying connections and are good right connections as well, making it very difficult in the sort of small regional market or so what is the
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future for regional airlines given that, but some of them provide a lifeline particularly to islands community should government be subsidizing subsidizing them as, as a vital public service. i doing this not a question that the answer the question is yes. if, if an airliner is sorry, if a community so remote and islands are obviously a very fine example of that, been around who'd public government, public policy reasons why the state, why the government should pipe to keep those things going. but i think is a more generally across europe. we have frankly too many airlines. yes. of course. full full passengers and for the staff i fly they this morning. it's a tragedy. i'm not trying to shy away from that. but as a general comment, we have too many airlines in, in europe and a, and european travellers better. so by having good, strong, profitable airlines than by having too many struggling all the time airlines. and
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so i'm obviously upset for the people to die. but as a general comment, i don't think this is all bad news. you say too many regional l as a spurs, as also the argument, the to, to aviation impact on climate change there. that green alternative means of transport readily available, at least in the u. k. and across most of the european continent there is, there's no place for regional airlines in this market right now. well, they said that it certainly had argument to sustain a place for regional airlines. that when is a perfectly fine trying connections, that he's, that he's available to you and often, frankly, by the time you go to the important on the fly and come back into the center of the city, of course, you often quicker. that said, i mean you're in a, you're in tricky water. he very sure, holy crap. you meet much less than a long way craft. in fact, it's the long haul flying. that's really the most unsustainable. but of course the most necessary in terms of they bang fewer alternatives. it's
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a complicated topic. entered sort of mac up your name at the beginning, the andrew charlton that is madison's right or a managing director of aviation advocacy in co. what's on it for us really good till to roger. thank you. and to you, take it 100 charities and human rights organizations have written to the u. k. as prime minister to denounce the housing of under age asylum seekers in hotels without proper safeguards. it's emerge the dozens of asylum seekers seeking children have been kidnapped by gangs or trafficked into modern slavery. the children, mostly from albania, had been staying at a seaside hotel run by the home office. journal hall reports. what began as a response to the small boats crisis has now become entrenched and needs to stop. so says the chief executive of leading child rights, charity eck pat among a 100 organizations calling on the government to stop putting unaccompanied under age asylum seekers at risk in government run hotels. we already know that these
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children are high risk of going missing and, and we already know that, that you know, that venerable, because they all say aligning and arrived many of them traumatized. they had terrible journeys and not least that some of the male in traffic in the country, and it's easy for trafficking to pick them back up again. following a search in small boat arrivals across the english channel in 2021, it's estimated that 600 unaccompanied children have passed through this brighten hotel, being run by the home office. they're free to come and go, and official data reveals that a $136.00 have been reported missing. more than half of those a still unaccounted for workers are prohibited from speaking out. but at another hotel, a whistle blower has said an estimated 10 percent of under age occupants disappear each week. this is harrison mister speaker vulnerable children being dumped by the
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home office. schools of m a going missing and i can tell the minister there is nothing specialist about these hotels. they're not in response to government admitted that to date 200 minus are still missing. 13 of them under 16 and local activists accused the government of an ongoing failure to protect asylum seekers, especially children often they get taken nc and like many drug lines like and household i, savage, she car wash and belt like working on building sites. and i think a lot of the time that are fed like home education at a job and they're in a place where they feel hopeless and unsupported. and he's very telling that children are leaving to go away with traffickers. is that a se, saving in a hotel that supposed to be a safe face for them once they've arrived? sussex police, the force responsible for this area says that the vast majority of these young
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people have no known connection to any one in the country. very little money and sometimes no mobile phone, meaning that very few lines of inquiry are available in trying to locate them. this, the 1st of several planned protests against the housing of unaccompanied miners in government run hotels. the prime minister richie sooner has called for an end to the practice. he blames pressure on the migration system. something that government he says, is determined to resolve. jonah, how al jazeera brighton daniels, hey, just the communications and campaigns, manager of the anti child trafficking chairs, he loved 146. he says the british government's behavior goes against child protection laws. they treat children of a born overseas, took total cost in a completely different way than they would do if the child was british. and that obviously goes against every child protection standard that we have in the country
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. in this particular case, the majority of pittsburgh albany and now one of the highest risk groups of been talking to children in the u. k. but they, they, children come from all over the low. we said upcoming again children that amused so it's, it's a global issue. first of all, they need to stop using the home towns and place children within the existing child protection. right. works on the local authorities for example, but we do need placements for his children. that means that people with the cameras when it can come forward, whether directly through the local authority or to organizations or selves to provide these, these young people with a safe accommodation or they need. it's incredibly difficult to recover children. and i've often found if they are found later on to, to of course. so please raise and kind of respect for tell, but they don't often have toys and you have the usual channels to try and locate
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them on both the place. and the tough can gangs know that, so they know that they can take these children and they disappear. that a puzzle has won the check republics. presidential one of those, his opponent, the full, the prime minister, andre banish. as congratulated the retired general around 70 percent of the voters turned out for the one off to none of the 8 candidates received an absolute majority. 2 weeks ago, the presidency is a largely ceremonial role. some people in nigeria face losing their life savings as they struggled to change old banknotes. the central bank introduced new ones last year and authority extended the deadline for the discontinuation of the old tender as al jazeera on that address reports. now, millions of nigerians aren't able to exchange their cash until the end of the month . oh, as it did, 9 looms tempest run high at the banks and at meet shift currency swept centers to oh. with only a few days left my wellness have you traveled 30 kilometers to swap how old narrow
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notes before they ceased to be legal, tender. she also once cash to buy her family's basic needs as businesses are started, rejected the old note. oh no one wants to take the old notes. wait, you don't want to risk it. we are stuck with them and cannot by no cell. in october last year, nigeria central bank redesigned some of its currency notes, introducing more security features. it says the move was necessary, but the p nigerians go through is mounting as 1000000 scramble to swap the old notes and estimated 64000000 ideas like access to banking services. most of them live in rural areas like this. weather is not. if people like this is going to lose some all their savings when the deadline expires. economy say that if that happens in it good was in the poverty range in a country. why more than 60 wasn't i population live below the poverty line. in
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kano, city, the country, 2nd largest, the cues at the banks and cash dispensing machines are long, leaving many frustrated would. it doesn't tell you that another viking i'm currently in debt. right now, i count withdrawal money to feed my family at close my shop for 2 days to look for money to pay back my small debts and buy food from my family. so far i'm unable to go and i always a problem that's even worse in crisis. hit northeast and north was nigeria. why? governors are worried that millions of their people will lose their life savings. who have or ne, 4 local government that have banks. even the for that admission. the capacity to satisfied people is there. the central bank is crumbling money deposit banks to the villages to ensure millions don't lose their savings. we
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took the step to find the bank and specifically insult them to pay this little isn't that would go back to this communities and pay them it. despite that residence of rural areas here, they could still lose their savings like they did in the civil exercise 39 years ago. but in the capital above joanne, monitoring the process is strict. it the complaints yeah. off in adequate supply of the new lot. but the cues are short, it was easy because the bank has been nice among. is it a nice to present it? fried from the money, come from the land and paint all in a con, unlimited supply of the new notes has disrupted economic activities across the country. the parliament has asked for a 6 months at station, but the central bank is resisting which could mean more chaos and losses familiars already struggling to feed their families. edris al jazeera cuddle protests and
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haiti this week of increased scrutiny of the gangs that have dominated the capital for months. jimmy sure is. here is one of the most high profile gang leaders. he's also known as barbecue and spoke exclusively to al jazeera about the crisis. john holman reports, i have to see that from policeman to the most influential strong man in haiti. this is jimmy barbecue should his yay. the leader of the g 9 from the coalition of some of the country's most powerful gangs that alliance control sways of the capital. who to prince? is it his full rival organizations, killings, extortion and rape have shut up the united nation, say the worst violence in the country in decades. but in his 1st interview with international press in more than a year, should argue the gangs of the root of have these problems with linking is you got a new bible. everyone sees only people with guns doing violence,
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but they don't see the corruption in the country. if you still state money, if you don't build hospitals and schools and don't care for those in need, all this will continue to spawn violence. even if you eliminate all armed gangs, if social problems are not solved, there will still be the same amount of violence. well, successive patient governments have long neglected the population. but now there's also a power vacuum in the country. not one official has been democratically elected. and many see the current prime minister, or yellow marie, is illegitimate. analysts say that, let the gangs of the lease well before the gangs acted as the kind of a mercenaries as to the. so with the economic lead and political leaders bad, the, you have a over the years diversified, the income sources and the have acquired is some kind of autonomy in
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from their sponsors. as they have became, become increasingly powerful. should easy. i says he's a community leader protects him, people under his control, but gangs in haiti control food, fuel and other commodities, passing through the territory, demanding protection money hijacking trucks. the united nations also accuses sure, vizier of massacring civilians and blockading the country's largest fuel terminal. last october, it leveled sanctions against him. he told al jazeera, he was innocent, and i'm worried about the woman who was of silver lindsey black. i was you. i don't have a problem with sanctions against me because i carry haiti in my heart until i die. it doesn't bother me because i don't travel, i don't have any goods and any interest in foreign countries. i want to stay and live in my country, just like the u. s. italians and canadians are proud to live in their home. i'm proud to live in haiti, but in haiti, the crisis continues. the day out 0 spoke to should vizier protest erupted off the
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more than 10 police officers were killed across a week, and x policeman him. so he says the outmatched an under funded ccr. that, that with lepers done like honestly the police lacked a lot of means to guarantee safety. but the country's problem is more political. it is the politicians who are creating chaos so that they can keep their power to make more money. these are all the reasons why they don't pay the policeman well and give them the means and they become discourage people to the united nations is advocating for foreign fools to intervene and help the national police bring law daughter. so father, no take his to lead it the rule, so serious doubts about whether there would be elections this year. but if nothing changes, men, light should busier, will continue to be all powerful. john hohmann out, is it still to come on out as her action from their story open final as arena subtle income finally secures her 1st grand slam title. that's coming up with pizza
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lou ah times for his peter, i do. thank you very much. ukraine's president has criticized the international olympic committee for exploring away for russian and bell russian athletes to compete at the olympics. president of all of them is the lensky intends to launch an international campaign to prevent any such move, which would likely result in ukraine and other nations boycotting the 2024 games in paris. he posted these photographs to social media earlier, which appeared, show athletes practicing they sports, surrounded by war,
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damaged buildings and facilities, alongside the pictures he wrote. olympic principles and war fundamentally oppose each other. russia must stop aggression and terror, and only after that would it be possible to talk about russian participation in the context of the olympic movement. named morrison nibbled, one cannot avoid being disappointed by the statements of the current head of the international olympic committee, thomas park. i had spoken with him on numerous occasions and couldn't hear what he was going to do to defend sport from war propaganda. that he returns russian athletes to international competitions. earlier we spoke to a former tennis place, so by sykowski, who's currently serving in ukraine's national guard and asked him what he felt towards russian and bell, russian athletes. many of whom he used to play against. i feel nothing but regret for them, for their insecurity, for their dear and or not willing to use the blood which they have
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to to promote stop this war, since russia did not de escalate. and to do was thing that they did, they, they talk through these time the infrastructure, they having hundreds of psalms or trains on the trainings freezing on. yeah. and i was, he said it was gonna be a good thing to, to give a head up to the russian, russia for they did, and reinstalled him back into the moment. they should been all russian and athletes worldwide from competing and show them that a mess. russia stopped this war, or invasion of war and slaughter of civilian population of ukraine. they have no place in the free and democratic world in any presence where they sports, whether it's cultural, whether it's political, any sort of the sport. they show a nation or they want to show russia basically did it for the. 4 minutes is more,
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they promote the regina. meanwhile, trading assets cannot prepare for the big 3. they cannot return. the russians are preparing all possibility and all the security they need. and yet we all believe olympics is fair for sport. equal opportunity. there's nothing equal in today's world in the 1st tennis grand slam of the year has been won by a bell, russian player in a sub olenka. but because of the invasion of ukraine wasn't technically allowed to represent the country, david stokes explains it was a packed house in the rod laver arena. maybe $15000.00 fans turning out to see elaina rebecca against serena's lanka to gladiators, competing for the 1st grand slam of the year. it was rebecca. he started strongest cas extent star looking for a 2nd major title in 7 months after winning wimbledon. last year. she took the
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opening, set 6 games to for it was the 1st set supple anchor dropped in 2023, but she began to settle down in what was her 1st major final the fit see that what her previous 3 meetings with rebecca. and she took the 2nd set $63.00 to square things up. ah, that effectively set up a one set shootout for the trophy and the momentum stay visible anchor. she got the crucial break and soon found herself serving for the match. she failed to convert 3 championship points, but at the 4th time of asking, she finally got over the line. is the 1st grand slam title for the 24 year old. because it belushi supported the russian invasion of ukraine. she wasn't allowed to officially represent a country in melbourne and she's the 1st ever neutral player to win a tennis grand slam for an amazing atmosphere. i hope next year i
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can, i can back stronger and then i'll show you even better anything you guys support me one more. ah, doubling his 11 straight when the year sees a return to a career high world number 2, ranking david stokes al jazeera now australian wild cards, rinky jakarta, and jason kubler capped off their incredible run in melbourne by winning the men's doubles to had never played together before believe it or not, the sir tournament, and beat 7, top 20 rank is to reach the final year of his came through in straight sets to be to her niece and young zalinski to win their 1st grand slam title. they succeed compared with nic chaos and fantasy. hawkins arcus as chad. yes. now to the n b a and an eye catching mood by one of the games. biggest stores. what's this?
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why did you and of course, that was yonah sent t t compo who else doing what he does best for them or will he but his gold 41.12 rebounds and successes as they beat the indiana pacers. 141131 from one store to another, and steph curry was in great form of the golden state warriors beat the toronto raptors. he landed some trademark 3 pointers to rack up 35 points, and 11 assists k thompson also add a 29 point, says golden state 1129170 the nfl conference championship games, or nearly here. and patrick, my home seen certain to play for the kansas city chiefs, they store quarterback, injured his right ankle, and they went over the jacksonville jaguars. but he's come through a full week of practice ready to battle the cincinnati bengals for the
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a f c. title and the place in the super bowl. the sheets are top seeds and playing in a 5th straight championship game. that looks, it looks good. i really move around. good. i think here graham play are a great team, great offense, heck of a quarterback. and now we know us ahead of us, we know we have to what we have to do in order to you know, overcome these obstacles. and we just gotta put the border, you know, being in the playoffs. you know, these games are one last, you know, on, in the trenches. so, you know, whoever's going to be playing the best, you know, as far as line scrimmage goes, that she was going to win the game. the philadelphia eagles are the top seeds in the nf c bell host, the san francisco 49 ers in their title match. on sunday, the 49 is on a 12 game winning streak, but the eagles have one of the candidates for m, v p in quarterback jaylen hurts. you know, i think every, every moment to teach warm bible, you know, i think i'm, this is
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a new moment. you know, so i think i'll really look up into the past or even a future. just gonna get ready for this game. golf a john rom has already won 2 out of 2 tournaments this year, and he's now right in the mix to make it 3 in a row. the spanish will number 3 shot a 6 on the par 3rd round of the farmer's insurance open to moving to 2nd place on 10 under is now just to behind leader american, sam ryder, who was even par on friday. but perhaps the shot of the day when to saw he ti lager, who hold out for an eagle at the 2nd hole. pascal verlaya has won the 2nd round the las yours formerly ye will champion saudi arabia the tag. hoya who should drive or did so in sensational fashion, fighting his way up from months position. this race was part of a double hit him. the 2nd race takes place late on saturday night from the better to the slow in quebec, canada, japan's enrico a murderer,
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one her 2nd straight free sound scheme, moguls rule copy, bent. she finished ahead of the olympic champion, to car anthony, the claim, the foot victory of her career. okay, we'll leave it there for now. be or again later with more sports news, that'll be in the 18 g m t, our adrian. later we'll see again a little later that said from this to yourself will leave you with a reminder of the eventually occupied palestinian territory. since thursday, 3 days of violence that have left 10 palestinians and 7 israelis dead and stroked fears of an escalation in the conflict. ah. 6 6 with ah
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public opinion better? no wonder how is citizen journalism we framing the coin. the video spread like wildfire, they deny the practice or more in your brain. the listening post dissects the media . we don't cover the move, we cover the way the news is cover unprompted and uninterrupted discussions. from our london broadcast center. on out to a 0, it round australia for tens of thousands of years and then disappeared. now, scientists the wanting to bring the tasmanian them back from the dead. 11 east investigates on al jazeera, under cover reporting an exclusive stories explosive results. al jazeera investigations, february on al jazeera, rhinos and tigers, in the pool, post to the brink of extinction, one o one,
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he's discovered how they're 14, have been turned around. a year on from russia's evasion of ukraine. jazeera looks at the impact and asks where events might lead from here. rigorous debate, unflinching question. up front mark, lamont hill, cut through the headline to challenge conventional wisdom. nigerians vote in what's likely to be the most closely contested election in the country's history. from those that wielded to those who confronted people. in paula investigate the youth and abusive power around the world. february on al jazeera ah, to ceteris shot unoccupied, east jerusalem, israel. the trains of 13 year old palestinian, his family says he wasn't responsible.
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