tv News Al Jazeera January 30, 2023 12:00am-1:01am AST
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minutes, palestinian homes seals and ready for demolition. positive israel responds to attacks in occupied areas. human rights groups call its collective punishment. a public health emergency in brazil, yano mommy territory. indigenous children die of malnutrition in an area where illegal mining has poisoned the land. and the u. k. the conservative party chairman deems the hallway, is facts falling, weeks of revelations about his tax affairs. and below the soaring high rises of hong kong desperate people turn on the passes into bedrooms as an epidemic of homelessness spreads. i'm devin ash with sport hold is nicola knox out of the f. i kept by brighton and in melbourne. novak joke of it twins a record extending 10th australian open to draw a level with rock by on the dow on 22 grand slam singles titles.
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ah, hello and welcome to the program. israeli government is announced a series of security measures sparking fears of a serge and violence against palestinians as the region is good with some of the deadliest unrest for years is right. the police have still sealed off the home of the palestinian government, who killed 7 people outside a synagogue in occupied east jerusalem on friday. then now preparing it for demolition and authority say they will do the same thing to the home of a 13 year old palestinian boy who opened fire on israelis on saturday. well, israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu also says he plans to make it easier for israelis to acquire firearms and will boost efforts to confiscate what he calls illegal weapons beyond rest response by a military raid on jeanine in which 10 people were killed in all israeli forces of killed at least $34.00 palestinians this month. palestinian homes have also been
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set on fire. israeli settlers broke into a house in a town north of ramallah on saturday and set it alight. are so sudden begins our coverage now from west jerusalem. with the 1st israeli cabinet meeting after a palestinian gunmen killed 7 israelis, also the synagogue on friday, prime minister benjamin netanyahu said his government was not seeking an escalation by the decision and asked afterwards. so just opposite hallmark blumenthal, we will step up the deployment and activity of the security forces. we will exact price to those who carry out terrorist attacks and their supporters up. so we decided to revoke the national insurance rights of family that support terrorism, including revoking identity cards and residency of families of terrorists that support terrorism. what michel bloomed, hotdog but human rights group say some of those decisions constitute collective punishment against palestinians as they are target. not only the alleged attackers,
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but also their extended families. really forces have already sealed of the home of one suspects family in occupied these jerusalem of the nathaniel promised a serious response. hours later is rally. bulldozers demolished a family's house there. that family has norman connection to the attack on friday, murphy, she, i knew i hadn't been at the warning. light keeps woke up screaming as they saw. is there any soldiers covered with heavy weapons and dogs with them? at least 13 family members are living in this house. we were confused about what to move out of earth. wendy king at la la. com 9, been in on sunday funerals were held for those killed in the attack. also the synagogue off, right. that happened at the after and israel read in occupied westbank, killed 9 palestinians. israeli forces how killed $21.00 palestinians since the beginning of this year. this rarely military is deploying the addition of troops to the west bank that has seen months of orson and violence. these railey army is also
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increasing his forces in occupied is jerusalem. these railey cabinet has also decided to 1st rec issue in weapons permits to thousands of israeli civilians. a decision that concerns many palestinians, there is no sign yet that these ready government is prepared for a full scale military response to the shooting on friday. with us secretary of state, anthony 1000000000, can wisdom israeli and palestinian leaders this week. they were expected to contain violence, but now with the most right to the government in his history and groping grievances from both palestinians and israelis. distribution is unpredictable. reset that 00 western ahmed myers. been speaking to a residence in the village of terra messiah and the occupied wes banquet. settlers have set fire to palestinian homes. we are here outside the house, which will set on fire by israeli settlers, according to neighbors eye witnesses in the village of messiah, which is 30 minutes drive from ramallah in the occupied with bank. according to the
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eye witnesses, israeli settlers 1st set fire to the car and then the fire turns into a full blown fire which damaged and stated. the entrance of this house. it could have been a human tragedy, had not been for the help and support of locals instead of messiah who rushed to booth out. the fire was not to trouble the neighbors and local, including a young fellow, a senior american who just arrived 2 days ago. and he told us about his efforts without the fire, as soon as we're all going home. or we get a lot of phone calls from our cousins our relative to come turn off the fire. if not, it would be burning the house on and burn all the neighborhood down. so we had to come, turn it off like we did, which are our best turn off. but for the firefighters come, and gladly we did. this is what many palestinians here who live very close to the israeli settlements, which are regarded illegal by the international community,
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fear the frequent and repeated attacks by israel settlers giving the ongoing tension and escalation and occupied with begg vs. federal attacks or not on police have been to be regular according to the united nations, as well as the settlers in the occupied with bank. carried out more than a 100 attacks targeting that athenians and palestinian properties only last year as the full day light till end. it was since my childhood till now that i'm 57. we've been living the nightmare of settlers and their attacks, which have increased one of just look north across the hills here. and you can see one of these really settlements and the balance pinions here. say the settlers are not troy about their main objective to seize moreland and make it harder for them to have their own state. dr. nancy hawkers that campaign of israel and palestine on the scenes, national secretariat, middle east, and north africa office. she joins us live from london if i can stop by asking
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about the palestinian home. demolitions can you talk to us about the effects this has on palestinian families and communities in occupied east jerusalem on the west bank? good evening, mary. i'm thank you for having me. yes, we heard actually that today one house was already demolished in east through some into the demolition of any properties that protects that population. that palestinian population in territories is against international humanitarian roles and could amount to or crimes. so absolutely, they should not be demolished as an exception for apps, military necessity, but the vast majority. in fact, all the cases that we have documented are not. busy military necessity, they are illegal demolitions of homes and they might, they might amount to. busy displacement which is also war crime. we have been
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looking at situations which is in the georgia valley, not the eastern or to be truthful is a particularly extreme situation because of the discriminatory housing policies and the population registry policies. so there's a pressure cooker in east jerusalem which in combining all these elements and leading to apartheid against the. busy palestinians and the facts that park had policies treat kind of nice through sort of like, wanted immigrants in their own city. and once in a while, when these kind of crises come about and their part had policies come into the same, they use these different methods. again, for palestinians, and one of them is collective punishment. so what we are fearing for, for the residents in this, in these coming days,
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is this threat of a collector's punishment in the form of dimensions. and that would again, possibly amount to a crime against humanity. very, very serious, under international rules. you can, you clarify why it's not a military necessity. military necessity is in a very extreme situation such as a battle ground where as you know, the population is to be evacuated for their own safety to be returned. of course, later and then as a military necessity would be, for instance, you have to clear alignment vision on something in order to be able to target military targets. but this is not a military target. this is, these are residential holes. properties of. busy palestinian families, as some of them are not natal directly. there's no proven direct connection to any kind of criminal activity. it is purely and it is explicitly stated. busy to be a punishment for these people you briefly mentioned with are free are to can you
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explain why you are concerned about certain places in the west bank and with suffering are to why is that case important? well they're about 60 percent of the occupied west bank is doesn't grow to the area what israel has complete control and where in fact the legal settlements are placed such as different settlements in the house of the hebron. busy hills like my own which gets extended to support from the israeli government and it was in the settlement building. busy tenders every year, so construction going on, the palestine residents of the same area, we're living their own ships if generations like they have to, they don't receive the building pyramids. this is part of the discrimination that we have documented. and that amounts to apartheid in the tuition is very serious.
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and we have we are running an urgent action to try and protect the residents from a forcible displacement about $1150.00 people that i visited in october. and i visited various homes, some of them had been already demolished several times. and they are an imminent risk of being demolished wholesale again. and. and that would be another that would be a mass, forcible displacement, again, which could amount to a war crime. and what we are calling for is this whole situation to be investigated by the international criminal court, the impurity for these past crimes. and so these ongoing crimes needs to stop. and you mentioned that you, you visited myself to the surrounding area. you spoke to people what effect of demolition have on living conditions in terms of just general stress and anxiety
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for children, but also poverty instability and then access to basic services like health care and education who roast violations. that help comes with the, the right to adequate housing. so we have the right way to cation, as you said. so we witnessed a few weeks a few weeks ago. in november, december, there was a demolition of school and the children are experiencing this grow up in a state of feeling that the names are not protected civilians or at least the civilians need protection. obviously, we will repeat and we will always repeat that attacks on civilians are a violation of fundamental principles of humanity. and we will always condemn all attacks against civilians. but there's
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a wider systematic problem in the occupied palestinian territories. and indeed, and israel that civilian, that palestinians are systematically discriminated against the children growing up in these conditions will feel hopeless. they will feel that there is no justice. they will feel that isolated and abandon industry where there's a role to the international community where everybody has a duty not to be. busy maintaining apartheid and not to be supporting crimes such as the settlement illegal project. thank you very much. talk to nancy hawker joining us from. i'm a senior national secretary out the middle east and north africa office. but frances is appealed to israel and palestine to engage in dialogue and as denounced what he describes as a spiral of death in the region. here are some of his remarks from earlier today.
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it's a great pain that i learned the news coming from the holy land, especially if the deaths of 10 house tenure, including a woman killed during israeli anti terrorism, military actions in palestine. and what happened near jerusalem on friday evening when 7 israeli jews were killed by palestinian and 3 were wounded as they left the synagogue. the death spiral that increases day by day only closes the few glimmers of trust that exists between the 2 peoples. and all the developments of following the region us officials is saying that a drone strike targeting a military facility and central iran was carried out by israel is trying to get a military factory of the city of the hall on saturday. the wrong defense ministry says to drones was shot down the explosion caused mine at damage. there were no reports of any casualties. several iran and nuclear sites are located in the san province. iranian tv is released footage of debris from the drones and damage the military facilities. roof estate use agency describe the drones as quad arches
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armed with bomblets. they have full roses and typically operate from short range is by remote control. it's a dormer roseville. this cowardly attack was carried out against us, our security body, so powerfully active to ensure maximum national security and such moves can't impact on nuclear. scientists will add intentions to achieve peaceful nuclear energy. the, the good thing is our life from london. self come, oh and southern peru were indigenous protest does say they've been ignored by the government for too long. why most voters have refused to cast their ballots into easiest parliamentary elections. and he women's australian open champion, celebrates of victory, but also faces. questions of have banned from wimbledon. that's coming up in sport with jemma. ah,
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brazil's government is declared a public health emergency in the country's largest indigenous reservation. children from the young mommy community are reportedly dying from malnutrition and other diseases caused by illegal gold mining. some officials of called it a janice i blaming the administration of former president jabal sanara, as i beg now reports these small planes are rescuing children in a remote part of northern brazil. they indigenous yonder mommy. people say they've been asked me for help for the last 4 years. it's finally arrived, but many have suffered his settle miles into vic sole. we see that they are serious cases. they are indigenous merely children with malnutrition, pneumonia, dehydration. they are usually children in a serious condition. so to me, to the amazon's yellow mommy population live in an area of fertile land. but mining
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has destroyed the habitat of animals. they hunt and it's had devastating consequences for them. hospitals are now filled with malnourished children. some now in intensive care facilities here are basic, but there are no hospitals in their remote villages. who do so, she comes at what we have been for for years without health assistance in the communities. a 120 communities are fighting for life. more than 20000 gold miners and diana mommy, indigenous land with guns are intimidating communities. communities are living with feel dodgy. military have been air dropping food and medical supplies. brazil's new president louis ignacio lulu de silver, has blamed, is produced as a jar ball to narrow and has pledged to help very neu, verbal ever we, buffeted as he should. we will take very seriously the task of ending illegal cold mining. and even if it's an authorized area for research,
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they can do research without destroying the water, the forest, and risking the lives of people that depend on not water to survive. but for now, yet mommy parents are hoping their children will get better. and they can once again return to the lands and live freely. as i bake, i'll g 0. fiona watson is a recession advocacy director at survival international and organisation that champions the rights of indigenous groups around the world, including the yeah, no mommy community. she explains how the illegal mine is brutally disrupted their lives in the gold mine has come in with diseases like malaria, sexually transmitted diseases. we know that they've been forcing yanna mommy girls and women to sleep with them, and that being cases documented cases of rape, they will say when they mine, they use these huge stretches which disturbed the river bed and then they separate the gold with mercury. so mercury's leaching into the aquatic system and into the
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fish, which the mommy eat. so there's a huge problem now with, with communities in the morning, things having very high rates of mercury in these bodies with their bodies, which is going to have a very bad long and impact on them. so also because somebody isn't leaving throughout the territory, they're bringing in the diseases and spreading them to lots of communities, glaring down to suggest annella, clover 11 percent of voters cost that balance in the 2nd round of tenicia, parliamentary elections. critic say it says sign, the public is dismayed by president chi sides. power grab the abil. hamid brings us more now from a capital tunis. just the trickle of both is the route to the polling stations remain via large, empty for electoral workers. a long, sluggish election day. the few casting their battle in older generation. we have century who believe it said eugene to vote. i know machine. here we are.
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the country is going to have people are not voting. one will remain the same situation. bedlam in the blue parliament with all political parties will be better because parties in the upward don't work for the sake of their country. election comes after to me just president. i said, 1st suspended parliament in july 2021. and they sold it a few months later, tunisians have so very little interest in this election. during the 1st round, back in december, only 11 percent of registered voters cast their ballots. and when you asked people why they tell you, they don't believe the new parliament will have the power to work in their favor around the capital. there is little side, little elections taking place. the opposition has boycotted the vote, but it's people's apathy. that should concern the president more. he got the very,
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a huge blow to his political road map. there is no question about that. and he cannot say with confidence that he's talking on behalf of the people because this is the symptoms he keeps that it be think that he is basically implementing the will of the people, which is basically the basic populace slogan. and that's what pay society is. the low turnout will also reflect on the legitimacy of the new parliament. oh, many saying that it won't to present them. is the future of the country elected by 9 or 8 percent percentage. so it's not good for the future of the country for our, our pictures with the war. it's not good of them. then years of the pollution and the rest of the people of the, in the, in the politic men. really it's it's,
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it's been for our country for our future. yeah. with inflation that nearly 10 percent denisia, the more concerned about the livelihood viable. but the economy has not been a priority for the president who's focused on political reform to turn out of this election, a reflection of how much he has alienated tunisians who put their hope in him. without that, how many elder tunis, millions of people are going hungry in haiti, where criminal gangs have taken over half the country in a spiraling political and economic crisis. the world food program is saying 4700000 people. that's nearly half the population of food insecure in the city. so late neighborhood, the capital ports of prince. around 19000, people are facing catastrophic hunger. the w. f. p says they need urgent humanitarian support. nearly a quarter of all haitian children are chronically malnourished. hey,
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she has been grappling with extreme poverty and natural disasters for years, but has been more chaos since the fascination of president jovan on louise. this was in july 2021. was the programs country director of haiti, john my power joins us live now from porter prince. and you tell us about where the situation stands at the moment we were mentioning the neighborhood of cities. so lay where the, which has been under siege effectively by the gangs. and we know that many thousands of people have been unable to leave their homes, sit to get food and water. is there any sort of access that you might have to that neighborhood? how bad is the situation that needs you to select are quite high me. you mentioned statistics about chronic malnutrition and hate which affect the quarter children in this country. but i see just the late acute now attrition effects one child satisfies that's a very high level. it's a little bit receipt, and we're,
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we're very preoccupied. but what's going on and see this way and we're doing everything we possibly can to deliver a central food nutrition assistance to that population. how's it affecting a population, there's on gangs of vine for control of the area. i suppose it means that people are unable to leave their homes. they can't go to work. they can't see can education and it's not a recent development. this has been going on for many months. this has been going on for too long. when i was just recently, i spoke to our mothers who were at a distribution site where we were providing food rations. and they told me that they were worried about the water they drink or drinking rainwater because there's no other source of water in that neighborhood of water. prince. they told me that the price of food incidentally had doubled compared to the year before. they're also very concerned because they just couldn't find work. people are just way depend on employment opportunities in the vicinity of the neighborhood. but what
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the instability, right now, they're unable to earn as much as they could before. so that means that they have trouble providing for even a meal a day for their families. so i could still be difficult because the way and that's why we have such high rates amount nutrition, not part of wordpress. and you mentioned that you have these distribution centers, all they inside the neighborhood and how difficult has it been to, to keep them of operational and to protect them from looting or any sort of attacks by, by armed gangs. we're doing again everything we possibly can to deliver this essential assistance to people in sequence a layer organize who distributions will be able to help more than 200000 people and it is a way i wish you monitoring assistance. now it's difficult, there are days, we can't go if there's fighting between arm groups, we cannot organize distributions, but we're not here to the ground. and when conditions allow, we do go in to provide that assistance. and how often is that
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a road blocks and obstacles in place? how do you find ways of circumventing those blocks and getting around them in order to access the people that need your help? what was the case? is this a lee and other neighborhoods like it in puerto prince? this is actually a very sensitive question. and i can't go into full detail for operational security reasons why we don't want to to put our staff on the ground at risk. but we do go to see this way when we know that it's safe. and then when we know that we can organize a food distribution in security and dignity for the beneficiaries in haiti, overall, we do have the constraints of puerto prince being up the exits to put a prince being controlled by arm groups. and therefore, we use helicopters every service to get around the road blocks and ensure the continuity of humanitarian assistance and to travel with the central humanitarian personnel to support the color response and the response to that shooting security affecting the country. what does it mean for the local population,
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particularly sexual violence against women. if you have these on gangs and control of so much, terry training could it be much more than 60 percent? they basically in control of large parts of the country. haiti right now is facing a complex emergency with cholera and that means that many different areas that are, are affected. so you get to school on buying food on the market. the pattern, the job just the essential of life continues disrupted by the situation right now. this is the change, and i think we need to ask ourselves, what are we waiting for in order to mobilize the action is needed and to change things. yeah, well, thank you very much for bringing us more on this story. wsb has recorded catastrophic hunger levels in a t where half the population is facing acute hunger. so thank you very much for
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costing the light on that for your month. how about from the world food program? to mirror with and use our life from london still ahead on the program. we look at how lebanon's financial crisis is pushing the education system there to the brink of collapse. bryce alonda late blows her. all cold is liverpool out of the f. a cup show you the goals and sport ah how low there, unsettled cold weather dominates across europe over the next few days. it is, however, looking a lot calmer across southern areas as that low pressure has pulled across the mediterranean, taking the worst of the windy and wet weather to places like grease. we've got some warnings out for wind here, as well as to a kia but still
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a smattering of showers here and there remains largely cool across the southwest, the spain and portugal, but the worst of that wet weather. continuing to affect the very north, we're going to see that spread across more central and eastern areas as well. now the gales that start to die down those busby showers clear and there will be some sunshine and dryer spells coming in the southern parts of england for britain, an island. however, the rain does start to pull back in on tuesday, but it's really pulling across into norway where we see that wintery mix wind warnings out for germany, as well as denmark and the baltic, seen some of that snow that eventually pushes its way into western russia now as you move further southward slovenia and for voc here that are going to see the worst of the wind and some of the wintry weather over the next few days. but for the south of this a lot, quite a lot quieter for places like italy as well as greece, the, spain and portugal. a lot cooler, as i said, but we are going to see things warm up over the next few days, especially in madrid. ah,
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bitcoin block chain and crypto guarantees, disruptive technology joined with me and introducing a bill to outlaw crypto currency all the way to a fair, a financial system with big coins, open source software, we can trade out or money without banks or governments. award winning filmmaker tools to and hoffman looks at all sides of the complex crypto. well crypto, that coin look changed in the internet on al jazeera ah diet. define who we are. but who are way? 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. the def, infiltrated international wholesale markets, and supermarket chains and asks, what's really on our plates. food in glorious food,
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on to one out just sierra. ah ah the news out live from london, the main stories now israeli police have sealed off. i'm of the palestinian gunmen who till 7 people outside a synagogue and occupied east jerusalem on friday. they are preparing it for demolition and authority sale. do the same to the home of a 13 year old palestinian boy who opened fire on israelis. on saturday, brazil's government is declared of public health emergency in the country's largest indigenous reservation. children from the young mommy community, forcibly dying from now nutrition and other diseases caused by illegal gold mining
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. and preliminary data suggests only little 11 percent a vote as cost that ballots in the 2nd round of to means yes. parliamentary elections critic say it's assign the public is dismay by peasant chi site ground. well here the prime minister is she soon act has 5. the chair is ruling conservative party at the in the hallway after weeks of revelations about his tax affairs. soon i ordered an inquiry last week after facing political pressure. he says it's clear that his army breach the ministerial code for failing to declare that he'd paid a penalty to the u. k. tax office. when he was finance minister and in bomber reports now from london, sacked by the prime minister, but many are asking if he should have gone earlier on monday, which he soon i quoted an investigation into allegations. conservative party chairman the deems a hallway page $6000000.00, including a penalty to settle a dispute with a tax authorities known as h m r. c. now he's written to so how we saying following the completion of the
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independent advisors investigation, the findings of which he has shared with us both. it is clear that there's been a serious breach of the ministerial code. the report criticizes the hallway for several failings. he didn't mention in h m r. c. investigation started in 2021 in his register of interests until last summer that was after then prime minister boris johnson had made him chancellor of the exchequer. last october, when re she soon, ac appointed him party chair and minister without portfolio. so how we failed to mention, he'd paid a penalty following his sacking many in the areas or how he represents in parliament was scathing. i think it brings shame on the town. shame on the contrary, ah, and shame on the part that he represents while i think it's obviously cold for and if he's trying to push things into the carpet and not to clad certain things, and it's obvious a desire to finance speaking on thursday, the prime minister insisted he acted as soon as any concerns were raised. what when i pointed nadine, all we to his current job?
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no issues were raised with me about that point and it's really important to say. but because that seems to how we himself put a statement into the public debate and there was other reporting, there are questions to answer. and that's why i off the independent advisor to conduct an investigation to fully established the fact. but the opposition labor party says it's not good enough, but i think it does speak to his weakness that it's taken so long to walk. but this isn't just about the teams. the hallway. we had well, a brothman who also brought many serial code and appointed back into government to trace across policy committee in parliament concluded that reappointments. so that's a dangerous precedent when it comes to how breeches of a ministerial code of dealt with. now the question to being honest about how much richie su not knew of the dean's hallways investigation by the tax. so authority and when still on the horizon and investigation into numerous complaints of bullying by deputy prime minister dominic rob and parliamentary inquiry into whether boris johnson misled the house of commons over drinking sessions held
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during pandemic locked downs known as the party gates scandal. the prime minister 2 coffees, promising integrity and accountability. those themes won't be disappearing for a while. nadine bob al jazeera london, a protest or has been killed in peruse camp at lima in confrontations between demonstrators in police. lat takes the number of those who have died since the unrest started to 58. this is all after the foreign prize. pedro castillo is impeached and imprisoned. in december, rhodes, in the south have been blocked by protest as after mainly indigenous lead is called a national strike. our latin america is salisia newman reports now from southern peril. this is the road to the poodle region of southern peru. humanitarian truce is supposed to be in place to allow food and fuel through along the 400 kilometer route from the andean city of co school. oh,
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the route has been blocked for nearly a month by indigenous communities. they tell us they are outraged about the deaths of more than 50 protesters. almost all of them here in southern peru since president be number one, they took office in december. man, i'm not that good day, not motivated them. we one told this to changing. we want polarity out. we want the congress out. we women are going to fight till the very 8 by come on. i may live, bruce, southern and in region is worlds apart from the capital or the north. this is home to poor, mostly indigenous farmers, and miners who voted for peruse, now deposed, president federal castillo, early pharisee that but his removal, they tell me, is no longer which feeding a regional uprising, the federal scope at all. pharmaceuticals here, dickerson not only peruse rich and natural resources, but what good does it do us, we get no support from the government, from the sale of our minerals, and guess we're still as poor as our ancestors. that's why we're finally rising out almost year symptoms. ah, the traffic starts moving, but not for long. well,
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so much for the 24 hour to smith road is block to know was going forward or backwards were trying to get to the front to see if there's any chance to let us pass. oh, not that not a single one of class is a terrorist. it being paid by drug traffickers like the government, caesar. we are here out of one feature. eventually a few of us are allowed to pass, but only to the next road block. the people on this side aren't letting anybody pass, even though they really don't have that much to stop us. but it underscores the fact that there is no central leadership. in the closer we get to know the bigger the road blocks people cart or drag their goods as best they can, but they don't complete. this protest is taking place 24 hours a day. each community turns blocking the road and put it in re jazel. oh,
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the protest is here. the news, the congress has just refused again to meet their demand for immediate national elections. a clear sign that like traffic on this road peruse acute political plumb flute, is at a standstill to see a newman al jazeera in the poodle region, peru. some news from madagascar now at least 25 people have been killed after tropical storm janay. so swept through its western coast, dozens are still reported. missing. torrential rains in floods of damaged houses. displacing nearly 40000 people. storm made landfall 10 days ago, and then moved back out to see where intensify to a cycling. lebanon relies heavily on foreign aid and money from people it in its diaspora to deal with the financial crisis. but it's not been enough to revive the economy and prevent the collapse of institutions. now, a future of education is also under threat. they know what to report from beirut.
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lebanon's economic crisis has devalued its currency and is hurting many in this once middle income country. among them public school teachers who want better pay do not get to work. we need $4.00 a day. how teachers going to survive, education has been disrupted for a 4th year financial support from international agencies, like unicef has so far prevented the service from a total collapse. but there's only so much they can do with the international community unit that has been providing support to the entire education sector for many years. and we have intensified that support. i'm providing school books, providing funds for electricity for schools, school funds, parent council. i'm. i'm trying to do our best to keep the schools open. we urgently call on the governments of lebanon to find the resources to be able to pay the teachers a livable wage. public education is not the only sector in crisis and dependent on
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support. the world health organization provides medicines and pays hospital bills and staff at public health institutions. while the world food program feeds a 3rd of the countries, 6000000 people, the army to receive food donations, and cash assistance for its soldiers. the list goes on, aid that came into lebanon in 2022 is more than the state budgets. so if you just look alone at the aid that came in through the u. n. program, it's around a $1000000000.00. that's the state budget for 2022. and this gives you an idea of how much we've become dependent on. in fact, the lebanese economy is today, mainly dependent on 2 things, aid and, and coming transfers from the day after. the dependence is expected to increase as the political elite sales to address the financial crisis since 11 on financial
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collapse in 2019 the international community changed the way it has been dealing with those empower here. it is no longer injecting money without conditions and when it does it channels, funds through institutions other than the states that sustain financial support is worth living on need to be able to respond to the needs of its people. but that means reforms to the way it is governed, and that means politicians losing authority and control over the state and society . and whether they root hong kong is facing its highest rate of homelessness in a decade for the most expensive cities to live in. and rising inflation has sent the cost of everything from food to rent soaring, jessica washington, our ports. this is the image of hong kong that dazzles visitors, a bustling, glamorous city. but under ground a different reality appears. oh. busy there are many mosquitoes and bed bugs here.
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you see so many on getting fungal infections. he has slept here for 4 years and looks to rubbish bins for left over food in takeaway boxes, official figures released in november show the number of people experiencing homelessness. is the highest in a decade and is a sharp rise in the number if women experiencing housing insecurity. that report also said there's need for better services and more funds for hostile accommodation as the situation wesson's. this is a very wealthy city. you know, it's, it's extremely wealthy with one and 5 at this moment, or having food insecurity that cannot afford 3 meals a day. you know, it's, it's an amazing city where you see the haves and the have nots. it's in your face all the time. impact h k is an n g o. founded in 2017. so far they've helped around 500 people find shelter. they also welcomed people into their community centers for hot meals and fresh clothes. over 90 percent of those individuals have no emergency contacts. they have no
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friend or found no member in their life. in the isolation, you know, plays a huge role in their, you know, step towards becoming homeless. he says, emergency shout is provided by the government. don't address the needs of the city and a difficult for people to access the hong kong government toll down to 0. social workers give assistance to those willing to accept services. in tyco china, there are more than 30 people sharing this underground space. it's the middle of winter here in hong kong, and the temperature often drops below 10 degrees at night. people in this underpass of repairing for another night exposed to freezing conditions. alec used to be one of them. he spent almost 20 years on the streets there. oh, how i have a place to live. i have food to eat and a job. i'm happier, more cheerful now. now he works in the community center, distributing food and essentials to people sleeping outside, helping them through the same dark days. he experienced during his time on the
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streets. jessica washington out his era, hong kong. phil i had for you on this news out from london. i'm rob reynolds at the sundance film festival in park city, utah, poor this year's big winners. we'll have a report coming up our here from novak jock of a child's, he clenched his 10th australian opened to make it 22 grand slam titles. ah, what is the price of luxury? an undercover team travels deep into the legal cocoa plantations of the ivory coast . simple solutions are very hard to find for something as complicated as the child with chocolates, hearts of darkness, encounters unpaid child labor as working in a 100000000000 dollar industry. over half of the countries, cocoa producers live below the poverty line on al jazeera.
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hope frances is set to visit the democratic republic of congo and south to dawn in a trip that is meant to heal the wounds that is still bleeding. will the pontiff visit started chapter apiece and reconciliation ending the internal conflicts of these 2 nations? pope in africa on al jazeera, with clouds, with, with freedom is always worth fighting for both and untold stories from across asia and the pacific one or one east. all now to sierra. ah, ah, the sundance film festival is wrapping up in boxes. you top. it was held in person
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this time off denying virtual for 2 years due to the crown of ours pandemic reynolds takes look now at some of the prize winning films and the people who pick the witness. you need me to say, wow, i need a 1001 directed by 80 rockwell, one the grand jury prize in the festivals. us dramatic competition. it's the story of a young single mother struggling to raise her son in poverty. it's sort of a very gritty, realistic kitchen sink style movie for 3 quarters of it's running time and then you get to the ending. and there is just something that like, it's like you're being like, kicked in the guts by a horse, by the twist. that comes scrapper. a british coming of age film, one the world cinema. dramatic competition. who decides on the winners? and how do they do it? nigerian american filmmaker food m a duca, was on the jury, that picked scrapper. it was really,
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really hard. we had 12 films from around the world and you know, as a jury were all coming with our different experience as julian filmmaker mighty alberta is documentary the eternal memory carried away the jury best world cinema documentary prize, which is a love story. you know, i'm alzheimer's, love story, but in it, in this love story, it unpacks a really important political history of she lay and finishes crimes. however, the. busy politics of subtext of the storytelling, and i think that's always the best story telling the process of judging films can be emotionally intense. i mean, there are no fistfights, you know, go away. well, we there fats and passionate words about the meaning of film and what films, what films need the award we're filmed, dawned what films? you know, what, what rubric do you use to award? audiences get to vote on their favorites to mrs. law chair. nod 20 days and mario
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bowl one, the audience award for best cinema documentary. i and sometimes a small move lee from a small country can really stand out. arsenal procedures getting shinagle like maria cup, the rods is slow for which she won a directing award. i spoke with her after the award ceremony and she said, you don't know what this is done for lithuanian found the and i said, you don't know what you've done for lithuanian film. sorry, altogether. 32 prizes were awarded at sundance. and so for 2023 is biggest and most influential independent film festival. that's a rap rob reynolds, al jazeera park city, utah sport, now as jama in dela. thank you, marianne. we starts in melvin, when ne, that jock of inch is one. the australian open for the 10th time describing it is the biggest win of his career that's often sweeping aside. as stefano sits
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a pass in straight sets, david stakes reports what a difference a year makes. no bad joke of it was deported from australia 12 months ago. not being vaccinated against private 19. now he's back celebrating a record extending 10th title in melbourne. it was a one sided final against greek 3rd seed. stefano sits a pass who liked joke of ich knew a winwood ern him. the world number one ranking. oh, since the past it only ever reached one grand slam final before. and he lost that one too joke of which the french open in 2021. his inexperience showed. and despite some anger exchanges with his coaching team, jock of its wrap, things up comfortably in straight sets. ah, the serbian star has not lost at melbourne park since 2018. a street spending a record 28 matches. the motions were running high as he embraced his family understands and the magnitude of his achievements sunk in i have to say that this
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has been one of the most challenging tournaments i've ever played in my life. considering the circumstances, i'm not playing last year coming back this year. oh, only the team and family knows what we've been through in the last 4 or 5 weeks. and this probably the, i would say biggest victory in my life, considering the circumstances ah, a 22nd major title moved joke of each level with rough and a dough at the top of the all time list. his next chance to add to italy will be in the dallas back yard at the french open, which starts in may. david stokes al jazeera, you saw jokers, which is coach goran ivanisevic in that report. and he predicts the serbian will stay at the top of the game for at least another 3 years worrying for his rivals is next. he will say things, the hamstring entry joker,
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which was suffering with would have caused most players to withdraw from the event . 97 percent of the players who've on saturday when you get the results of their moray, you go straight to the referee office and pull out of the tournament. but not him. he's from other space. you know, he's brain is lurking deacon different. he's getting crazier and crazier this i can say that, you know, in a positive way. i mean, and the guys unbelievable is just, i don't know how to describe the words. you know, i thought i saw everything and then you know, you see this probably going to see something ghost women's champion arena. sub lanka says, have victory over yelling at rebecca in saturday is fine or still hasn't sunk in the bell. russian set sail in melvin's botanic gardens with a trophy for the traditional winners. photo col, with russian and bell russian plaza, not allowed to compete under their flags because of the russian invasion of ukraine
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. sab lanka is the 1st and neutral athlete to win a major. she still though not sure if she will be able to play at wimbledon, which is band players from the 2 countries over the wall. where do you see that right now? applying will be in the sheer, ah, ah, well, i love so i've, i always love to play there and i'll be, i'll be happy to, to, can be there again. do you think your wind puts more pressure on wimbleton in allowing players on delaware and russia to compete? i don't know right now it's a right now. i cannot think about that. i'm just trying to enjoy the moment and, and that's it. later on in the f, a cup as brighton scored in stoppage time to not cold as livable out of the competition. you can clap side were beaten, 3 nailed by, the same opposition in the premier league 2 weeks ago. but it was liverpool who took the lead after half an hour through harvey elliot's brighton equalized before
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half time when he shot deflected in off lewis dunc, just when it looked to be heading for a reply, it failed cow. we've been so much snatched victory for brighton in the 92nd minutes . but that place in the 5th round for didn't celebrations, is why you can see what that means to them. can you think of late drama? and the french, vaguely. sancho, massive on or off on assessing much, i'm thinking run name all p s d in front. in the 2nd half, pissy had more k baranski central shortly. also he'd only be on the pitch. he was initially given a yellow call me a change that to read yes, the looks like they would hold on to victory, but they can see to install time as it finished. one was now to the biggest rivalry in the m, b a, the boston celtics against the los angeles lakers, and some big controversy in this one lake has thought the brom james talk scored with 41 points with the schools remarks right at the end of regulation time would
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have went for a game winning layout. i was adamant he'd been blocked by jason. jason, i'm deny joint here, just replace show phones rights, but the specials didn't agree. which meant given free, who could have won the game? one of his teammates even tried showing officials with a camera from a court 5 photography, patrick forever and make it was there. so it's ended up winning in the title. they say told in the while the lakers are way down in 1st place in the way, we're in a room, you have to call a cat, a cat. you know, you can look at something and try to pretend is not what it is. and he's a guy and just because he doesn't flop when he doesn't flail, that he's not screaming when he, when, when, when he's shooting a ball and like i see a ton of other players doing. he gives penalize for the best way owners caregiver, coal, so amazing to have the candidates for the m v. he went,
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had to had denver's at nichol. your pitch. and joe allenby for the philadelphia $76.00 is finished with $24.00 points for the nuggets. it wasn't bad, but he couldn't keep up with his rival on this occasion. and b came out with that impressive 47 points. and 18 rebounds as the 6 is when it comfortably 126 to 1. 19 the nuggets lose for the 3rd time in full games. although they do lane top of the western conference, it was double delight for new zealand in rugby sevens with both their men's and women's teams. victorious and sidney at the 5th leg of this season's wall series. the all black 7th, howard south africa, 38 mil in the men's final. that's a fine turnaround. after the blips folks defeated the new zealanders in the group stage. as for the women, they also won their final while keeping a clean sheet. they thrashed france 35 mil to flinch. a 3rd straight types in sydney. the key was lead the men's and women's i rule standings. well, number one,
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golfer rory macro, we will take a 3 shot lead into the final round of the dubai desert. classic, the northern irishman is looking to win this title for a 3rd time and began his 3rd round with full birdies in a row. mcelroy made 4 more bodies on his back 9, but finished up with a bogus the 18th after finding the water. but still a 7 under 65, put some top of the leaderboard of 15 under i still don't feel quite in control of my game, but, you know, today was much better than yesterday. so about i was a positive. i love this golf course. i love this tournament to 51 here, a couple of times you, this is my 1st start of the year. i don't think i've ever one of my 1st started a year, so i had plenty of chances now, but i'll be down the road over the years. and i never quite got it done so you know, tomorrow's a nice opportunity to, to try to do something that i, that i've never done before. where i'm madrid have drawn with arousal, sit out of one of their players. rodriguez has been attempting to harness power
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from brazilian. great, we're now day during the last month, swelled copy cats. all you can see here how he was hoping without. his brilliance could rub off on him and it does appear to have paid off lottery, great scoring at the top ronaldo at the bottom to very similar goes on against the same opposition as well, who to source it that is only a spot for me for now i lovely. thank you very much, jenna. as it for the news, al, but i'll be back with you for another full bulletin. around up the top stories coming up in a couple of minutes. i'll see you shortly. ah .
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this is a popular iraqi dish, colton as gold fish grieved on an open wood fire for decades, fish markets to thrive to across the country. but these days the industry is floundering. farmers say they need more government subsidized vaccines weighing just 20 grams. this finger link needs to be and q weighted for about 6 months before it's big enough. roughly this size, we ask at the agricultural ministry, what authorities were doing to protect the industry? the water crisis is hitting many regions across the work, not only iraq to increase productivity. scientists suggest introducing more robust strains to build up the fishes resistance to disease. until then, the survival of this beloved tradition of dish remains in doubt.
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african story from african perspective. a mint condition, select wireless cuz you. ready wisconsin, that's one syncing with short documentary from african filmmakers for booking. of it's really important to teach. the present comes in bill something that i can be proud of. the painter and she hides bench africa direct on algebra. we understand the differences and similarities of cultures across the world. so no matter what, when using calendar for that matter to you. ah allison, you know, home sealed and ready for demolition. part of israel's response to attacks and occupied areas. human rights groups call.
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