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tv   News  Al Jazeera  January 31, 2023 11:00am-11:31am AST

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says upper thigh than the 21st century. jerusalem, a rock and a hard place on al jazeera african stories from african perspective amid conditions select wireless cuz you with. ready short documentaries, from african filmmakers from booking a fossil. and it's really important to teach the present comes in do something that i can be proud of. the painter and she hides africa direct on algebra. ah more bodies are pulled from the rubble of a mosque and pakistan that came under attack and pis shower at least 93 people are dead.
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aah! were walking out as they were like from headquarters and del hind ending up again to also a heads. america's top diplomat calls for calm as he begins a visit to israel and the palestinian territories. 3 emergency responders are fired in memphis for not providing medical aid to tyree nichols the black man who died at the hands of police. we look at the impact on military coup and incident violence has had on the children of me in mind. ah, hello pakistan is mourning the death of at least 93 people killed in a suicide attack at a mosque in a highly fortified security. compound and p shower debris has been cleared as most parts the mosque have collapsed. rescue teams have been retrieving bodies from the rubble that happened when a suicide bomber blew himself up during afternoon prayers that the hurricane
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taliban pakistan denied its involvement after initially claiming the attack that target had police officers. let's cross now to come on hider joining us from a pitch shower. so how is the recovery operation going come all as baghdad toll continues to rights. well, the recovery efforts and of god. what did now or had god referred rod to? didn't great give a didn't it's fine. allow word heavy equipment that being used to remove big, cute, slab, gulf or concrete away door to be. but it will buried under the weight of the roof, which collapsed ob d. intelligence agency had issued a warning on the 21st of january, saying that number of suicide was from the mon monday agency dagwoods the fall mom . dr. eladio focused on along the avalon bar dot com and go for a shower and we're likely to carry out an attack. but despite that intelligence
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warning, there was a sense of complacency, the suicide bomber, or able to get into this come found that might have been bad at kids all along the way and was able to destination their weiss, which also needs many to believe that this may have been an inside job or that the explosive may have been added in a police re good and therefore we're not jake. now it is also important, as you mentioned earlier, that although the $30.00 bond budget don had denied that enrolled men, the brother of khalid quarter saw nice one of the founding members of the did. he could die the bond buckets on or didn't a splinter group known as the geometry rod. his brother claimed responsibility saying that's where the avenger jack holler told us tanya. jillian, i think i've already proven all honest on law still, so there will be of god many questions as to how the suicide bomber would be able
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to get you into such a tentative place behind me. you have all the administrative office of the province, the police just sitting in a still rushing go that same. but i have to have recovered another dead body from the rubber. how many people have good able to so why does a dag, what they the most, what john back would be put like gardening today is about 500 warship birds were predatory at deborah the same time as we're speaking right now on monday. and they will cause we're offering that bread and march, which came under attack. thank you so much. come on. hi there for that update from his shower a day after meeting the israeli leadership, the u. s. secretary of state antony blink. and we're whole talks of the palestinian president and the prime minister on monday,
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blink and hell talks of the is really prime minister benjamin netanyahu. the top us diplomat has urged israel and palestine to deescalate tensions violent surge between the 2 sides and the run up tube. lincoln's arrival. here's our diplomatic editor james bays with more arriving at tel aviv airport. the u. s. secretary of state is visiting at a time of high tension, but with few expectations. u. s. diplomacy could do anything to help. he spoke about recent violence to take an innocent life and an act of terrorism is always a heinous crime. but to target people outside their place of worship is especially shocking. a reference to the death of 7 israelis near a synagogue at an east jerusalem settlement on thursday. it's notable he spoke about incidence in which his rallies died, but didn't mention the raid jeanine refugee camp last thursday. a day on which 10
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palestinians were killed. before secretary blinking got here, there was another death, a palestinian man shot dead by israeli forces as he drove his car in the city of hebron. mister blinking has met benjamin netanyahu many times before, but this is the 1st meeting since he became head of israel's most right wing government. ever. the secretary of state said there must be a future where israelis and palestinians can live peacefully side by side. we continue to believe that the best way to achieve it is through preserving and then realizing the vision of 2 states, as i said, to the prime minister. anything that moves us away from that vision is in our judgment detrimental to israel's long term security. and it's long term identity as a jewish and democratic state. but the reality is that mister netanyahu in his key ministers don't support the idea of a 2 state solution. he didn't mention palestinians once, and instead focused on the threat from iran,
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most of the international community have seen the true face of iran. they've seen the barbarism of this regime against its own people. they've seen how it exports aggression. beyond its border and beyond the middle east. and i think there is a common consensus that this regime must not acquire nuclear weapons. let's bring in our diplomatic editor james base. joining us from master is on. so what is the message that we expect bite and to be delivering to the palestinian authorities? well, that meeting in ramallah is coming about 2 and a half hours time. ahead of that, we've seen more meetings with senior israeli officials. he's been meeting with your love galant, who is the minister of defense. he's also been meeting with the former prime minister. yeah. le, peed and in public it's we all agree. we have the strong friendship between the us and israel, but on the key issue of the palestinians and the israelis and the key policy of the
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international community, which is a 2 state solution. there clearly is disagreement because secretary blinking is reinforcing that idea of promoting the idea of a 2 state solution. and you have the most right wing is ready government in history, where many of its cabinet ministers have come out and said they don't support the idea of a peace process or to state solutions. there is a fundamental disagreement, i think with former prime minister repeat it also be looking at the other things that's going on within is rather than israeli politics, which is a big row about judicial reform. the idea of the new government is to, to weaken the power of the courts and some say that's going to affect the rule of law in its radicals. this comes with a backdrop of prime minister netanyahu facing his own ongoing legal troubles, as i say, 2 and a half hours from now. it's to ramallah discussions with mahmoud, abbas, remember that the policy no authority said after the attack in jeanine on july
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refugee camp. that raid on thursday last week, a day which 10 palestinians were killed, that they were cutting all security cooperation with israel. we understand that there is still some sort of cooperation and this is a threat that's been made many times by the policy new authority in not carried out . and i'm sure the secretary of state will be urging the policy to authority to keep cooperating with israel. but i'm not sure what the palestinian authority is going to get in return, because i said you've got an israeli government that doesn't agree with the international communities, basic policy going forward. and you still got a u. s. administration. that is not really changing its policy. and it's policy has been to urge restraint, but not really to get very actively involved in mediating this conflict. in the past, you've had special envoys appointed, you've had all sorts of talks taking place, trying to get the 2 sides together. the biden administration has been reluctant to get involved that deeply believes that there are many other things going on in the
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. busy world which require its attention and he doesn't want to get bogged down in the israeli palestinian conflict. i think it's a very frustrating time for ordinary palestinians. but also i think for the leadership of the palestinian authority, and i don't think we're going to see any movement already. breakthrough in the meetings that happened in the coming hours in ramallah and james, let me just correct myself. it is blinking. who is meeting with the palestinian officials and certainly not biden, as i had said in the beginning of our interview, but thank you so much and face are the fanatic editor reporting from western them. now the u. s. is hoping to buy up to 100000 artillery shells from south korea, so can give them to ukraine. the us defense secretary lloyd austin isn't sold for talks some estimates of just that. ukraine's armies using the shells at twice the rate that the u. s. and that you can produce them. south korea has a policy of not selling weapons to countries that are at war. 3, emergency medical responders have been fired in the u. s. city of memphis following
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the death of an unarmed black man at the hands of police. they've been accused of failing to conduct a proper medical assessment and adequate patient care to tie re, nichols 5 officers have already been dismissed for a beating him during a traffic fall. the 29 year old died 3 days later of his injuries. gabriel alexander has more from memphis. well yeah, this investigation is very much continuing here in memphis. officials say that they are still in the early stages of it and more charges could be pressed against officials or people that were involved in this, in terms of these 3 new people that have been fired. they were part of the fire department and 2 of the 3 were emergency medical technicians or paramedics and the other was an ambulance, or fire truck driver that was with them. they were fired, according to officials here, because as part of the investigation,
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they were some of the 1st responders that arrived at the scene. after tyree nichols laid on the ground helpless after he had been beaten for several minutes by those 5 police officers, all of whom have been fired and are now facing criminal charges. the fire department says they were fired because they did not render aid quick enough to tyree nichols as he laid their essentially fighting for his life. not only that, but the police department as well, has said another officer involved, other than the 5 that have been fired, has been placed on administrative leave. while this investigation continues, this particular officer was one of the 1st that pulled over tyree nichols in what they initially said was a traffic stop that led to him, fleeing from the scene after being beaten there,
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and then beat and later at another scene. so this is very much a wide ranging investigation, and the officials here that are investigator are casting their net white and far to figure out who all was involved and how they will be punished, peruse, congress has his poem the debate to move forward elections. it's now scheduled for choose last week the parliament rejected a similar motion to have the pull, the sir president, deena bla, warranty has worn politicians if they don't approve the change. she'll push for constitutional reforms to force early elections. there have been anti government protest since december, when former president pedro castillo, was impeached and arrested. our latin america editor, and see a newman reports from league aka in the pano region of southern peru. as she spoke to some of the families who lost loved ones during the political unrest. today is that bed which 17 year old psychology student yami lit. adel keep,
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i used to sleep. no longer has blankets or sheets. the indigenous custom is to remove them forever. 8 days after a person dies, miserable american. that's her. when she was small, look so i am hoping, though she is playing in her school band. ah, the family of 4 has been in warning since january nights when police fired live rounds for testers in the city of holy aca, infocus emma theodore and both got a comparatively man, had gone to the market by foot, who were not in the quotation, were 2 blocks away and suddenly she was shot over them at that army. fellows that must have killed my daughter and other innocence we want justice. justice is what we ask for these in the social biddy. muslim, who's this? ah, the government suggests stones and sticks thrown by protest as were responsible for the 18 people killed that day, including aca. but the autopsy report states that jamie led was killed by
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a 9 millimeter bullet confirming with the family already believed. ah, will yucca has turned into one of the upper centers of anti government protests in the poodle region of southern peru since former president federal castillo was impeached and imprisoned. 7 weeks ago when he tried to shut down congress, these people that you see here have been walking all night to reach the city of whole. yeah. got there from all over the bruno region. and as you can see, they are still very, very much determined to keep on protesting, to keep on blocking road and to keep on demanding that the president of them down the merge ends in the central square, where we find wood looks like a typical carnival. but in fact, it's a fundraising event for years, but i've been involved with a lot of business today. we are using our music to collect funds for our brothers who have suffered the repression of the state id, or many are still suffering from severe injuries. oh no, no, no,
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others tell us they're collecting money to send more groups to the capital lima to join the indigenous protests who are already there demanding immediate elections and the ouster of the prison. i'm helicopters, fly overhead. and so far nearby troops have not moved in unblock highways. after refusing 3 times, congress has now agreed to reconsider president deny bold what is demand to bring forward general elections for october. an offer that at least here seems to have fallen on deaf ears. you see a newman al jazeera, who yucca still had on al jazeera, not so gloomy, the international monetary fund raisers. it's global economic outlook for the 1st one year pond hockey, enthusiasts, hope global warming won't affect their beloved ah
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hello there. we've got a deep area of low pressure bringing very nasty weather to the north of europe. we're talking wintery wet and very strong winds to iceland as well as britain, an island pushing across into scandinavia. and we are going to see those wintry conditions. ajay way, further east, over the next few days, is looking more 2nd western areas of the mediterranean. when can be felt here. the worst of that weather has been pushed for the east. though on tuesday for scotland, we have got warnings out of those gale force winds, the talking 60 to 70 kilometers per hour. they'll also affect very north of the island of island, an edge in to denmark, as well as germany read warnings out here you can see it gets wetter and more wintry not just for germany as well as poland and the czech republic,
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and those wintery waves continue to work their way for the east. now it is feeling a lot cooler here and a happy feeling cooler for the southwest. the spain and portugal temperature. however, starting to pick up for madrid, tuesday into wednesday. lots of sunshine to be found still a little bit cooler for portugal. mo, settled across the mediterranean, just as blustery winds being felt. those winds are going to blow, does not the conditions out of the balkans and grease into takia. so they'll be sunshine in athens. ah, debating the issues of the day, the 5 largest polluters of the world are in india, jump into the street. they made their money on pole. they made their money on field, convincing those folks. no, we need to go. green is very, very difficult. giving all of voice we chose to do because we wanted to escape war and violence. when you humanize this narrative, you allow people to really understand the reality and break down misconceptions.
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the st. on al jazeera lou ah, hello again. the top stories on al jazeera this hour, the number of dead in a suicide attack in pakistan has risen to 20 and 93. rescue teams have worked through the night to find bodies from a mosque in the shower police headquarters. mass funerals have been helped us sectors stayed. anthony blinkin has met the is really defense minister. your galant and western slim lincoln has urged israel and palestine to deescalate tensions off to talk to prime minister benjamin netanyahu. the top us to pull not will had to it . i'm unlocked to meet president would have been 3 emergency medical responders
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have been fired in the u. s. city of memphis. following the death of an unarmed black man at the hands of police. they been accused of failing to conduct a proper medical assessment, an adequate patient care to tyree nichols. the international monetary fund says the world economy is in a better state than it was in october. it's latest update, revises the global economic growth forecasts for this year, slightly up to 2. 9 percent. the i m f says the increase is due to unexpected spending in the u. s. on europe. the reopening of china's economy and lower energy costs. it also says inflation will start to decline in about 84 percent of nations . as higher interest rates take effect news it calls encouraging. but there are still risks the i m f has warren, china's recovery could stole if there's another major coven 19 outbreak. and if the war in ukraine escalates, it could further do stabilize global energy and food markets. katrina, u,
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as in beijing and takes a look at china's role in this year as a global growth. i missed those. china will be a major driver of global growth. this year, due to pent up demand after 3 years of strict course, 19 locked downs. we've already seen a bounce in the chinese economy during the loo to new year period. there was an increase in consumption by 12.2 percent compared to the same period last year. but economists say we're not likely to see the same surgeon inflation that we have seen in other major economies. one reason is that while chinese households have been saving big household income has also taken a significant hit due to repeated lockdown. this says well, the spheres of possible future corbin waves means people won't be so quick to empty . their bank accounts, especially on big ticket items. also affecting consumer confidence is china's ailing property sector. while the government is raising to ease a real estate slumped, recovery will take time. china's state planet meanwhile says it's when working to
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stabilize the prices of every day. goods such as grain and vegetables through the costs of some items, including pork and fruits has been rising. the i meth predicts that china will hit a g d p of 5.2 percent for 2023. and while that may be good news for many here, experts say that rapid growth in china could lead to a spike in global prices for food and energy. daniel lee is the division chief of the i m f research department. so he says the forecast the downturn is not as bad as expected, mainly because of consumer spending in china. we are seeing a slow down in 2023, but it's not as lumet, gloomy as we thought. we revised the growth rate for 2023 up by about a quarter, a percentage point. china's unexpectedly, rapid reopening is of major contributed to that. china's growth as going from 3 percent to 2020 to 5.2 percent in our focus to 2023. and that has ripple
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effects for the rest of the world, given how china trade so closely. there's also been reason to revise upwards our focus because the unexpected resilience in the us, the euro area and other countries as consumers have gone out and spending even more from those savings they've accumulated during the panoramic. in 2023. this is the year where inflation really comes down globally. in fact, we think that globally, inflation already peaked in the late 2020 to 80 percent of, of 190 countries for which we do forecast likely to see lower inflation in 2023. and even lower in 2024, but even in 2024 for 80 percent of the countries inflation will be higher than it was before this surge above in inflation targets. and it's not until 2025. and beyond that we get closer to target levels and it's coming through
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a painful process of tightening monetary policy, slow growth, rising unemployment, as well as food in energy prices. finally, coming down from the ukranian troops say they're ready to fight off any military advance over their 1000 kilometer long border with bella roof. just a few kilometers north of where they've been training. russian and bella, russian forces are continuing major air exercises. natasha butler met ukrainian troops on the border and this will mir province. marsha lived in ideals. weaving through a pine and silver birch forest ukrainian forces on a training exercise near the border with ben a roofs ha. they practiced maneuvers to repel the enemy. ukrainian troops have been full to find that defences along the border for months. if moscow tries to launch a new offensive from the north, the soldiers said they prepared with doggy or proposals. 3 men were york were
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totally ready to meet them. that whoever brings the sold will fall by the sword were ready, mentally and physically. so were wait time of an underground bunker office, warmth and a place to rest. the border is just a few kilometers away over there in that direction. and on the other side of thousands of russian and bellow, receive troops or carrying out joint military exercises. minsk says the exercises are defensive, but keep nor taking any chances. it was nearly a year ago that russian troops invaded ukraine from paris and from russia. some military experts say the drills could be a diversion tag, take to law ukrainian forces away from the front lines in the east and the south. i live with a sham with shaft lavetia. we're not wasting time to think about what may or may not happen. we spend time preparing for everything for different scenarios, column attack. so saboteur groups attacks from all sides and even from the sky. you
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people here expected this war and no one pretend to know what moscow is planning next, but they're watching closely and say they're ready. natasha butler al jazeera, on the ukraine. better us border living conditions for people inside me and mars chaos state continued to deteriorate nearly 2 years after a military coup, nearly one and a half 1000000 people are now thought to have fled from their homes and basic services across the country. i failed. tony chang reports and chaos, states on the impact the violence has had on children who have been largely cut off from education and health care for these children. this was the highlight of a difficult 2022. and this year shows little sign of improvement. most have been forced from their homes for fear of air strikes and artillery attacks. but as the gifts are handed out, the smiles return bags of snacks and cake. a rare indulgence in difficult times.
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a dig, i've seen children with trauma because of the sounds of war, plains and artillery. they won't speak to strangers because they so scared when they draw. i see pictures of gums and abandoned homes. the parents are too busy trying to earn a living and can't take care of them. these 8 handouts are all funded from donations within myanmar. international organizations can't operate because of fighting and restrictions put in place by mia mars military. you're clear, ah, i see malnutrition amongst the children. there are grown ups and outlay people who aren't getting enough to 8. and they have problems maintaining a personal hygiene because they've been forced out of the homes. in another camp close to the city of to most of women do their laundry in the pools above a waterfall, an estimated 75 percent of the people in the state have been forced from their homes by fighting basic facilities like running water and electricity has stopped working, even the journey to school is now and
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a bunch of these high school students must run across a river in a dugout canoe just to get to class english lessons in a jungle clearing with teenagers, study for future jobs in the service industry, but it's hard to concentrate in these makeshift classrooms and teachers don't you have the basic educational to submit to tim earhart. we want to open up higher education but getting access to the internet and books for the library is still difficult. we're trying to solve this for most children in this area, even a basic education plans for the future. sim, a long way, all the best they can hope for is a hot meal. and if they're lucky, the full stomach, tony chang, are in the u. s. data, minnesota outdoor hockey, played on frozen lakes and ponds, has been a tradition for generations. but climate change is changing. all that, and john, 100 reports in the long winters of minnesota hockey is a way of life, the colder,
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the better we enjoy winter here. i love the 4 seasons and i love winter as much as summer. so for this community to be able to come out here and have a really neat event like this for free to attend, reasonably priced food inside. so families can come down here and enjoy hockey. the way nature intended each winter, the u. s. pond hockey championship bring out the hardy to chase a little black puff around lake nicole at the end of the day. i mean, look at this, this is unlike any where you're going to find in the world to have a hot hockey event like this and were just honored and humbled to be able to be caretaker's of such a great event. but as the planet warms the hockey season and shrinking climate change is chipping away, minnesota's winter ice. and when we look at the climate model projections for the future, and it's not just minnesota, but it's really the entire region that trend appears to continue. and so we expect a continued contraction of in or not just our winter season,
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but the opportunity to recreate the way that we used to during winter, minnesota, his launched an average of 10 to 14 days of lake ice over the past 50 years, according to state figures the shorter the winters get, the more work organizers have to do to make sure there is ice to play on. there is the shoveling. lots of it in snow blowing and finally this m bony smoothing, the ice to a glass like sheen. that leaves nothing but jersey clad players between puff and go, but they'll have to move the ice while temperatures allow researchers say by the end of this century, another one 3rd of the outdoor skating season route burner. due to global warming with john henderson al jazeera on lake new commerce and minneapolis. ah hello again. the headlines.

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