tv News Al Jazeera January 31, 2023 1:00pm-2:00pm AST
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in an arab said he with the capital of jerusalem, every one is welcome. but as the default structure of that meant in the colonial project, that's what we refuse. it was one of the founders of a settlement with this and the story of jerusalem through the eyes of its own people, segregation, occupations, discrimination, injustice. this is apartheid in the 21st century. jerusalem, a rock and a hard place on al jazeera. we understand the differences and similarities of cultures across the world. so no matter how you take it will be the news and current affairs that matter to you for ah, hello there i'm the stars the attain. this is the news our life im,
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our headquarters here in doha, coming up in the next 60 minutes tension and occupied east jerusalem, where palestinians are protesting against israeli plans to demolish homes. more bodies are pulled from the rubble of a mosque and pakistan that came under attack and the shower at least $95.00 people are now dead. 3 emergency responders are fired in memphis for not providing medical aid to terry nichols. the black man who died at the hands of police and the search is still on for a tiny radioactive capsule that was lost in western australia. and in spoil in our mess. he says his now has achieved everything he wants in football. mercy has put argentina's, woke up wearing cutter above everything else that he's achieved in his career. ah
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oh, we begin this news hour with a tense stand off an occupied east, jerusalem by palestinians of and protesting in the town of jabal, macabre where israel is planning on demolishing several homes there in the coming hours. now this comes ahead of us secretary of state antony lincoln's visit to ramallah, to meet with the palestinian authority. president mumford abbas just a day after talks with israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu. he has again called for a d escalation by both sides and to try to seek away towards a 2 state solution. there's been a rise in violence in the run up to lincoln's arrival in that area on monday, who will have plenty more. i'm lincoln's visit from ramallah and west through slam and i'm just a moment. but 1st let's speak to wrestle, sada, who is in double macabre in occupied east jerusalem, where those demolitions are expected. wrestling. there's plenty of anger where you are. can you talk as to what you've been seeing there? well, is the town stay here in javert? macbeth? jesse in the morning, there has been confrontations between the palestinians and israeli border police
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here. so people started to gather here early in the morning and they are blocking the roads by the garbage trucks and by rocks and erecting the barricade, and also setting fires on tires. to prevent these ready, bulldozers and board the police entering the entry in this district. gibbon, macabre and 15 palestinians, how being injured by the israeli forces here, people are trying to prevent them because right after the draconian measures took by the israeli security cabinet. these, according to the residence here, these rider authorities started to call them and told them that the houses are going to be demolished. so, after these repeated calls look of the mans here. yesterday they made announcement into the mosque and asking people to join the general strikes and the protest and to prevent the israeli bulldozers and a did the and the board, their pool is entering the region. so that's why people are now here gathering here and trying to prevent their so here they did that. demolishing of the houses is
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irregular practice conducted by d, israeli, or tortoise. i've ever often did their canyon measures taken by these riley cabinet . so this process is, is accelerated, so, and here it is, the javelin mac about is taking place at the south east or is occupied east jerusalem and is a very tiny packed place and is in this very tiny pack, please. there are 213000 palestinians that are leaving at the mood among this palestinians is quite task because the next house to be demolished could be a house of one of them. and to day is rarely bulldozers are expected to demolish several of the houses. but palestinians here, across all the roars, we can see that there are several gatherings and they are ready for the competition vessel, said i, with all the latest forest on the ground, unoccupied easter. yes. and we'll have more from there in just a minute that to now thank you very much wrestle who not to go to ben at smithy. he is in ramallah for us than that really quite the timing there for visit financing,
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thinking the stager under the blanket arrives in the occupied west bank where the situation, the likelihood for peace between the israelis and palestinians is never looked more bleak. violence is steadily rising and with the west, the rest of the will distracted by the war in ukraine. meanwhile, we have $35.00 palestinians killed here just this month. then compensations with israel with israelis and palestinians face this extreme right wing israeli government packed with ministers. eager to prove to that constituents how tough they can be on palestinians. one of those ministers at my bank of a wants to get more gum permits to israelis. he wants to increase settlement construction and he's making like very, very difficult of palestinian prisoners cutting off power. one of the prisons rating cells of female prisoners that's going on at the moment about matters because what happens to prisoners matters on the street on the palestinian street. so with all of that, you can expect the situation here for palestinians to deteriorate until they are
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totally reliant. i have no leverage the policy, no party really over israel. so the total are aligned on the americans raining in the worst excesses of these rarely governments. so mac mood about might be hoping to hear something about that for months in the blink and how it can at least try and keep a lid on things. the blinking might be asking mahmoud abbas to restore security cooperation with israel out with withdrawal. and last week after the rates in janine i might be asking is the policy needs to stop pursuing? israel will be international. criminal court from the palestinians is very, those are really the only 2 cards they have to play against is right. so let's see how those talk. sco bennet smith, they're following that for us in ramallah. thank you very much, bennett. well, let's now speak how diplomatic get it a james base. he's been following things for us from west treutlen, james, today's discussions and a muller coming off the back of some very closely watched meetings there in israel . yes,
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absolutely. and i think one thing is all it already very, very clear. the u. s. position has not changed despite the fact we've had high tension recent violence. and despite i think, please you're going to get from the palestinian authority, the us position. even though other members of the un security council would like the us to be much more proactive diplomatically and get back involved, trying to restart negotiations between the 2 sides. there is no appetite. i think that for that, for the bite and ministration and part that's because you hear that. could you blinkin talking as the whole international community does and has done for decades about a 2 state solution. and you now have a file, right? israeli government where the ministers of that government, many of them have come out publicly and said they don't believe in a 2 state solution. so on the central plank of the international communities, peace efforts. there is a total disagreement, even though in public when you see israeli officials meeting secretary blinking.
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there are all these words of friendship and the lines between the 2 nations i think, is also worth telling you about 2 other things that are going on. not with regard to the palestinians, but with regard to us israeli relations. one is this controversial idea of judicial reform that the new right wing government wants to push in israel. that is, with the backdrop, of course of providence, and that's near whose own legal troubles the new government wants to try and reign in the courts. well, that is something the u. s. doesn't like at all. they believe it's a threat to the rule of law. it israel, and i think even though they're not mentioned that much publicly, there's quite a lot of pushback we suspect in private and the other thing going on in private, it's nothing to do with the conflict here. it's about the conflict in the ukraine. israel is very much on offense because it has good relations or reasoning, good relations with ukraine. it has long, good relations with russia. it doesn't really want to get involved. the u. s.
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though, would like to see israel more involved on the cranial side. for example, there are some old hawk missiles that's an antique aircraft missile defense system . the us sent to israel, and the 1960 is sitting in storage sitting in warehouses. the u. s. would like that to go to ukraine. a difficult one there for these railey government. the doesn't want to anger russia. very interesting. james, based out of america on the ground in west through some forest. thank you very much, jane. i'm leaving on pakistan as morning. the death of at least 95 people killed in a suicide attack at a mosque and a high security compound in the shower. debris is now being here. as most part to the mosque has collapsed. rescue teams have been retrieving bodies that from the rubble. it happened when a suicide bomber blew himself up during afternoon press. the direct taliban pakistan denied its involvement off the initially claim, the attack that targeted police officers. that's cause now to come all high that
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he's in, push our come out. we're approaching now what nearly a full day after the bombing. how is the rest, your operation going that? well, as you can see, people are still busy because one person, they're still missing. they're trying to see if they can find the heavy equipment up. god said being taken away because this particular risk, you're in relief, effort did now all war been more of a gabriela, to be frank. after the morning, odd they were working throughout the night, were standing on what was the roof of the marsh volume break drifted metters beams, column beams of the whole building. and it's also very difficult to walk around. but as you can see, paperless still trying to find out if they can account for that missing person. they have been moving chains across the province because the dead bodies of the
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police men have been taken to the native religion moving scenes. their families have a dead body and i've got a lot of questions that i had to haul their suicide bomber was able to come in tradition. march reports to david about 500 warship bird for the afternoon prayer were bridge. and inside the march, the suicide bomber was all sure inside it was in the front draw. busy of the mark and i did renew detonated there. why? so a lot of questions through how secure area could come under dag and obviously as you can see, people are still searching for that one missing person. and i've got also a lot of questions as far as the people are concerned, because what they're saying is that the local leadership, the politicians, are busy with politics trying to settle. but it is the people who are facing the
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brand of this new fresh rave of attack commodity on the ground for us in charlotte . thank you so much. come all well for more on this. joining me in our studio here is our correspondent, or some of the events i'm just picking up on what kamala saying there plenty of questions being asked the death told potentially set to continue rising. but this was a really high security areas, so i know an investigation is underway. what is the government thinking at this stage? well, i think from the looks of it in some major security breach in the heart of the provincial capital, in a secure reads on multiple checkpoints. and then even walk through gates at the entrance of that fast and the suicide bomber. or if it was a suicide bomber not a planted bomb, i was able to go in detonate himself amongst all of this crowd of hundreds of policemen. so it's a major security lapse when it comes to that. and you've seen that being indicated by the leadership at various parts in bug, sun b, at the provincial level, on the federal level. a major questions are being asked to how this person could be
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there. and then, what does it mean for further security in that area? because you, as, as kamala mentioned, that there's been a spike in the tax in the last few months and years. and that the he could tell about pakistan which says it's not in world has been attacking security service, has been belittle, or police personnel, or military. you talked there about the terry kit taliban pakistan. i want to ask you about their seemingly confusing came at responsibility, and someone said they did do it. and then they've said that they hadn't. can you give us some clarity on, on what's going on whether they're eager taliban pakistan is an amalgamation of various groups. there's the more money group, or there's the bizarre group there is the, has been, has will as up his will are, are there eagle are. so there's multiple groups within that. there you can fall upon pakistan, one faction claim responsibility. and it is very interesting that it was a few hours before the central leadership or the center command of the vedic a thought about focused on distance itself. this was coming after everyone
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including that of con thigh. lamont condemned the attack or the the there. now realize that this is an attack which is not going to win them any popularity up. so is it because it's attacked? retreat from that claim where the actually involved could this be a fraction which is not listening to the central leadership of the $30.00 bond. but there are lots of questions in here within that claim. because as you see, the da da da, where these hard lane groups work for them, unity of power and unity and their message is really important and by the looks of it. this is one thing where the ttp seems to be at odds with itself. so potentially instability in the group, but also instability in pakistan itself. the country has been having a really rough time of things, the crippling act with an economic crisis that we've been covering here. and now this, what you have to remember this is an election year. so everything including securities up for politics and this is exactly what is happening in pakistan as well. there is a certain division of power and how the country works. this is there, the provincial police force which is responsible for securing major events and
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major security installations, including highly sensitive positions as well. and then there's a federal government. so there's a lot of blame game that is going on and doing the rounds and who is responsible? was it this government of the previous government? is the provincial government? what should the federal government do more? so you will see a lot more of that happening and it's, it seems that pakistan has found itself in a perfect storm of sorts where it's going to the i m f. unless the money from the m f comes through, there's going to be a major, a balance of payments crisis. so it's election year. the economy is going down the drain, and then on top of that, you've got these hardline fractions off the tyler bond. would you been emboldened by the afghan balaban taking over across the border? we're seeing that they're continuing to attack pakistan and speak and challenging times. indeed as jonathan j. that thanks so much for joining us here on that. and thanks for sharing or expertise with us. well, there is still plenty more ahead. this news our including not so gloomy, the international monetary fund raisers. it's
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a global economic outlet for the 1st time. any. yeah. and in sports, australia's new rugby coach sets himself a big target for the year ahead. santa will be here with that is doing ah, 3 emergency medical responders have been fired in the u. s. city of memphis. following the death of an unarmed black man at the hands of police are wanting that you may find some of the images here, disturbing. they've been accused of failing to conduct a proper medical assessment and of not providing adequate patient care to terry nichols. 5 officers have already been dismissed for beating him during a traffic stop. the 29 year old that died 3 days later from his injuries. while the 5 officers who beat the young black man, terry nichols are also black, the actions are raising questions about race and policing. cable others on their reports now from memphis. tyree nicholas
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a young black man beaten so badly by police. he died from his injuries. the 5 memphis officers were fired and faced criminal charges for the beating all share something in common with nickels, skin color, and that has not been lost on people here. how do you feel the fact it all 5 officers were black? do you have any thoughts on that or no, i have a lot of thoughts on had the sydney, it's for it to be our own and i'm going to speak on my behalf of my community for it to be our own black brother brothers out there doing it to another black brother, actually the shots are hard because we preach every day that black lives matter and you know that the white man is the problem behind this, a net, but for it to be our own people doing this to another black brother is more devastating than ever historically in the united states, the job of being a police officer was reserved for white men. but the last 10 to 15 years or so, there's been a push to change that. the thinking goes like this. hiring more black police
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officers, primarily in cities with large black populations, would help diversify the force and bring down cases a police brutality. memphis, perhaps, proving that theory was all wrong. the city of memphis is about 65 percent black, and about half the police force are african american officers. one important lesson to draw from this is to not be naive and for believe credit, we simply put black people in the positions of power. but we don't change anything else that things are going to get there. and that will not work well. some analysts say the issue is not skin color, but systematic problems with policing, they go beyond memphis. the problem is the sort of been black culture in general, right? this idea that the police believe that they stand between order and disorder in
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they are, you note sort of operating in u. s. society to protect order. but really what that is meant is they're operating to protect those who have wealth. they operate to protect private property and they operate to police to folks whom they might see as threats to that. as for the family of tyrene, nichols, they just want justice regardless of the skin color of those accused. gabriel is hondo al jazeera memphis. now the u. s. is hoping to buy up to a $100000.00 artillery shells from south korea, so it can give them to ukraine. u. s. defense secretary lloyd austin is in sullivan talks. some estimates suggest the new kinds all me is using michelle's at twice the rate that the u. s. and you can produce them. south korea has a policy of not selling weapons to countries that are at war from mcbride has more now for us from. so the global search for $155.00 millimeter shells for ukraine's
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guns has now turned to south korea, which doesn't want to antagonize russia because of its influence over north korea. right now ukraine is getting through about $90000.00 shells per month. that's double the rate of which they're being produced by both the us and europe combined . the u. s. has reserves here, and it's buying more than 100000 shells from south korea to replenish stocks, being sent to ukraine. that way soul can help its western allies without contributing directly to the war effort. now, the international monetary fund says the world economy is in a better state than it was in october. its latest update revises the global economic growth full cost for this year. slightly up to 2.9 percent. the m f says the increase is due to unexcited spending and the u. s. and europe, the reopening of china's economy and low energy costs. it also says that inflation will likely start to decline in about 84 percent of nations as high interest rates
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. take effect news that it's poor, encouraging, but there are still risks. the i m. s. has wanted the chinese recovery could stall if there's another major craven, 1900 outbreak. our porters have the view of the m f outlook from both china and india. his katrina, you fest from basing i muscles china will be a major driver of global growth. 50th of 10th up to mon, off the 3 years of strict cars in 1900 locked down. we've already seen a balance in the chinese economy. during the 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 inflation that we have seen in other major economy. one reason is that while chinese households have been saving big household income has also taken a significant hit due to repeated lockdown. this as well as fears of possible future causes waves means p warranties. so click to enter, that bank accounts, especially on big ticket items. also affecting consumer confidence is china's
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ailing property sector. while the government is raising to ease the real estate slumped, recovery will take time. chinese state planet meanwhile says it's been working to stabilize the prices of every day. goods such as grain and vegetables, though the cost of some items including pork and fruits has been rising. the i net predicts that china will hit a gdp 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. the food and energy india is a bright spot at a time of global economic slowdown. those are projections from the international monetary fund. it rejects in economy will grow at about 6 point one percent. now why that is lower than last year? it is expecting the indian economy to rebound in 2024. now interfaces various global challenges like the ongoing war in ukraine and high inflation. domestically . unemployment is the biggest concern. the only one in 12 indians is out of work.
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the finance minister will be announcing the budget on wednesday, and economists hope it will prioritize increasing wages, grading jobs and reducing inequality at a time of great global uncertainty. well let's bring in eric cheney. he's an economic advisor to the institute montana. think tank dedicated to public policy in france in europe. he was also a chief economist for europe at morgan standing. he joins us now from paris. eric, so this is obviously an economic global, good news story, but it's not quite the same everywhere, right? this is largely been driven by china and while the prospects for europe seemed better than expected, there's still some uncertainty. yes, that's absolutely right. the big swing factor which justifies this oakwood revisions by the i m f, is the reopening of china. but also, ah, the decline in energy prices or oil and gas. and that explains why the
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a mouth is becoming a bit more optimistic for 2 important countries in europe, germany and italy, which were supposed to experience a recession, but which are now supposed to skirt the research and by of to 10th of percentage, thanks to stronger global trade and lower energy prices. and eric, i recall just a month ago the i'm f for saying what half of europe would be in recession this year. that was obviously based on the october forecast. i believe. now you say that a lot has changed because of what's happened to energy prices, but presumably that will be the same across the continent. yes, you're right. are the main revisions by the i m f r. indeed, on these 2 countries, germany and italy where they were supposed to be in deep recession. and now the aim of his expecting these countries to grow just slightly above 0. ok. so for
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germany and what is important for germany is important for europe, because germany is the largest economy in europe for germany. the main good piece of news is the reopening of china. because germany of the exports are germany, exports a lot to china. well, if the chinese economy starts importing again, that is good news for germany. so that explains why the prospects for germany are better than expected. now, for other countries such as france, for instance, the m f as not changed it's forecast, is going to be very sluggish. growth helped by government subsidies, but in the context which remains very difficult. of course we know that reserve banks are also set to continue increasing interest rates to try to deal with inflation. could that put a dollar on things? do you think? well, you know, the job of central banks is not to stimulate growth. the job of the central bank is
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to make sure that inflation will settle down in the medium long term. so the european central bank does not have the choice. they have to continue to raise rates, which are still much below inflation right now. so if the c b does not continue to raise rates, europe will continue to have high inflation in the median long term. is it negative for growth? may be slightly, although i would say that labor market type in most of europe and or so, governments are spending a lot of money to support consumers and companies. so on balance between the central bank which has to tighten and the governments which are spending money, i think that the net result is positive. interesting times ahead. eric cheney, they're an economic advisor to the institute,
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montana. thank you for sharing your thoughts with us, announces eric, thanks for joining my pleasure. stella had here on out a 0. we look at the impact that the military coups and, and suing violence has had on the children miano and, and sport host nation, algeria targeting a place to the final of the african nations templeton. ah, hello there. we've got a deep area of low pressure bringing very nasty weather to the north of europe. we're talking when she 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,
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worst of that weather has been pushed for the east. so on tuesday for scotland we have got warnings out of those gale force winds. we're talking 60 to 70 kilometers per hour. they'll also affect very north of the island of island and 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. 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 gonna blow does not conditions out of the balkans and grease into takia. so they'll be sunshine in athens. ah,
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there is a huge group of people at work behind our screens and the power they have is nasty . that urge to keep swiping through your twitter feed. that's designed the way we all click. i agree to the terms and conditions that's designed, and most of us never even give it a 2nd floor. and actually, that's designed as well. i'll re explore how designers are manipulating our behavior in the final episode. all hail the algorithm on jessie. when the news breaks, when people need to be heard and the story told, it's incredible that more people were injured or killed. this is mary save on the ukrainian capital with exclusive interviews and endeavor through all that i did a lot more than $2000000000.00 that might could have addressed. nigeria is going by deficit. and widespread public al jazeera has teens on the ground to bring you more award winning documentaries and light lunch router feed.
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lou ah, holiday watching out his era anastasio here and go home. let's remind you that up stories, the number of dead and a suicide attack and pakistan has risen to 95 rescue teams that worked through the night to retrieve body is from a loss, get a heavily fortified area for shower. mass funerals have been health, 3 emergency medical responders have been fired in the u. s. city of memphis. following the death of an unarmed black man at the hands of police. there. they've been accused of failing to conduct a proper medical assessment of tyrene. nicholas after he was beaten by officer palestinians are protesting and occupied east through slim against plan demolitions
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of homes comes ahead of us extreme state antony lincoln's meeting with palestinian authority. president lockwood abbas and ramallah lisa on tuesday. well, it's not bringing diana booty. she's a human rights lawyer. she joins us now from ramallah. diana, as those meetings in ramallah are about to kick off. let me ask you a few reaction fast ab lincoln's time in jerusalem in the last day or so. it's not clear why he's coming because all that he's intending to do time. and again, is just simply part israel on the back and to give it i get another green light to continue to kill palestinian. so i don't know why these secretaries and stayed on these foreign minister or show up if they don't intend to do anything other than to continue to give israel good green white to continue the job to continue to y'all to continue to call it. i say it just doesn't make sense to me. oh that we've been hearing our correspondence to caution against any expectations of some kind of breakthrough. yeah, there's all very much feels like a reaffirmation of the status quo. it's worse than
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a reaffirmation of the status quo. the problem is, is that the status quo, what has gotten into this place in the 1st place? but more than that, it's the continual green light that the united states and europe continue to give israel. but we have a government in place now where it's led by people who call themselves fascists and homophobes, who are open in their desire to ethnically cleanse palestine. they're not covering up, they're not making it a secret. and yet time and again, instead of seeing the world community, boycott israel, or put sanctions on israel or isolate israel, there instead embracing them. and so this is, the problem is that we continue to see that time and again, these world leaders are saying to israel and you can do whatever it is that you want against palestinians. and we will forever continue to support you financially and diplomatically. diana, given what you were saying about the relationship between the u. s. and israel, can you give us a sense of what the relation ship is now between the,
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by the administration and the palestinian authorities on that side? well, the problem is, is that this administration, rather than undoing the harm that was caused by the trumpet, ministration seems to continue to cement it. in other words, they haven't reversed any of the decisions that trump took, but instead have continued up full steam ahead with them. and so today in today's meeting, all they're going to continue to do is reaffirm their position reaffirm that a longstanding commitment to israel, in other words, to the of the cleansing process and do nothing for palestinians. so it's the same as it was under trauma, as it was under previous governments as well. every single u. s. government continues to do nothing other than kick the can to the next administration. and that is the problem. diana, having been involved yourself in negotiations at various points, do you personally think that a 2 state solution is still being regarded as a realistic possibility by both sides?
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oh, no, not at all. i mean, that dives long long, long ago. and the fact that people continue to speak about it shows you just how out of touch with reality they are. no, i want to be clear. the reason that that 2 state solution died is because there is no political will on the part of israel to and it's settlement project. it doesn't want to stop settlements. in fact, is the opposite. it continues to build an expanse almost if they were truly committed. you would have seen the colonization, a reversal of the settlement process, but instead it continues to be entrenched. so we neither have and is really government that wants to see an end to colonization. and to the occupation, nor do we see an international community that wants to see. and on to it, they simply keep talking about a 2 state solution that they're willing to do nothing to make sure that it sees the light of day. diana beauty, their human rights lawyer joining us from her mother. thank you for joining us and sharing your thoughts with us. diana. my now per is congress has postponed
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a debate to move forward elections. it's now said you'll that for tuesday last week, parliament rejected a similar motion to have the pull this year reson dina, blue anti has warned politicians that if they don't approve the change, he'll push for constitutional reforms to force eli elections. there had been anti government protests since december when former president pedro castillo, is impeached and arrested. a latin america editor lucio newman reports novel react in the printer region of southern peru where she spoke to some of the families who have lost loved ones during the political unrest. today, it's in the bed. we're 17 year old psychology student. yeah, me lit, i will keep i used to sleep. no longer has blankets or sheets. the indigenous custom is to remove them for ever. 8 days after a person dies. musical american, that's her. when she was small, i me though she is playing in her school band. ah,
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the family of 4 has been in morning since january nights when police fired live rounds, but testers in the city of holy aca infocus, emma theodore and both got a comparatively man, had gone to the market to buy food, who were not in the quotation. there were 2 blocks away, and suddenly she was shot over them at that army fellows, it must have killed my daughter and other innocence we want justice. justice is what we ask for the social biddy mozilla with these. oh, the government suggests stones and sticks thrown by protesters were responsible for the 18 people killed that day and coolly aca. but the autopsy report states that jamie led was killed by 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 pool or region of southern peru since former president federal castillo was impeached and imprisoned. 7 weeks ago, when he tried to shut down,
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congress is people that you see here have been walking all night to reach the city of hole yet 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 roads, 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 been with us today. we are using our music to collect funds for our brothers who have suffered the repression of the state id for many are still suffering from severe injuries. oh no, no. you know, 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 president. i'm helicopters, fly overhead. and so far near by, troops have not moved in unblock highways. after refusing 3 times,
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congress has now agreed to reconsider president deena bowl armitage, demand to bring forward general elections for october. an offer that reduced here seems to have fallen on deaf ears. you see a newman al jazeera, who yucca a former brazilian president, jaya bol scenario has applied for a 6 month tourist visa to stay in the united states has request comes after some democratic members of the us house of representatives called for his visa to be revote boston aro, went to florida and december after losing the election to lewis, and last year looted a silver. you recall a week later, thousands of his supporters stormed brazil's presidential palace, congress and supreme court, calling for the election result to be overturned. are living conditions the people inside men must kaya state, continue to deteriorate nearly 2 years now. after a military crew, nearly one and
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a half 1000000 people are now thought to have fled from their homes and basic services across the country failed. tony chang reports now from kaya state on the impact the violence has had on children who financially been 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 paused 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. a digger 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,
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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 the personal hygiene because they've been forced out of the homes. in another camp close to the city of da, most of women do their laundry and 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 at a venture. these high school students must run across a river in a dugout canoe just to get to class. english lessons in a jungle clearing was teenagers, study for future jobs in the service industry. but it's hard to concentrate in these makeshift classrooms and teachers don't even have that basic educational tools. said there are no to mer harder. we want to open up higher education. but getting access to the internet and books for the library is still difficult. we're
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trying to solve this to most children in this area. even the basic education of plans for the future seem a long way off. the best they can hope for is a hot meal. and they're lucky, a full stomach, tony ching, oh, dessert. now there are warnings of another storm in new zealand, largest city after a rec or down for there. over the last 4 days. people in oakland are cleaning up after flash floods and lands rides that were triggered by heavy rain. for people have died up to $200.00 structures, including homes and businesses have also been damaged. prime minister, chris hipkins blames climate change. a state of emergency is in place and oakland climate change is real, it's with us, it's having an impact on our weaver. we are seeing more of these extreme wither events. we're going to have to deal with more of these extreme with the ravines in the near future. um we need to be prepared surveys and we need to do everything that we can to to combat the challenge of climate change. while across the tasman in australia, the search is on for a small radioactive capsule,
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full of hazardous cesium, 137, and mining company rear tinder has apologized for losing the capsule, which is believed to have fallen off a truck on the way to its storage facility as such, policy is now combing the area. health officials are wanting it can cause radiation burns or sickness if it's handled well, let's bring in ivan camps and he is an associate professor by a physics at the university of south australia. he is also the university's radiation safety officer. he joins us now from adelaide. and ivan, i was looking at scale images of this canister. it's remarkable that something so very, very small can be so very, very dangerous. it seems. yeah, it's very concentrated so you can get off radiation. the boat is so small. can you give us a sense of the kind of radiation exposure that we're looking at? i understand it's really close contacts that were most concerned about here. yes, that would be. what would be most concerning is this that was in close proximity
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for a long period of time. so the real danger with somebody walks along. so we're interested in, i thought it was curious and picks it up and put it in their pocket or held it for a long time. so it was close to them for a long period of time, and they could experience radiation toxicity. so it's not necessarily then super dangerous for people outside of an immediate and immediate circumference say, but close to it. yes. so i wouldn't be worried if i walk past this and didn't even recognize that it was there that would impose much of a risk that would really be that laundry ration so same if you were outdoors and you walk from your car to your house. you wouldn't be worried about getting some burn, but if you spend all day outside, you would start to get worried about the damage from the radiation from the sun in the the right. so it's similar to a bar. so i say it appears to have fallen off
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a truck somewhere on the great northern highway. i grew up in west, in a straight. we're talking huge, huge distances here. isn't this just to vast for a geiger counter? how do you even try to find something like this? it's a long road as many roads that are in destroyers. so there's a lot of searching that needs to be done. if it was just to try to find that by looking for visually, that would be extremely difficult. fortunately though we have very sensitive radiation detectors that can detect the radiation from this from several maces. it's not maybe 10 or more meters away. so just by driving slowly, you're moving slowly along the road with these detectors should be able to detect that, but it still sounds incredibly challenging to find something like that. say small, i'm curious like how does something like this happen? i mean, given the level of potential danger you think that it, they'd have prepared for bumpy roads to say yeah, it's exceptionally rare. and that's
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a lot of radioactive material that's transported regularly from sorts of different purposes or analytical equipment such as this. there are 26 and diagnostics for medical applications. so it's very heavily regulated in control for the transport, the storage, the disposal of any material like this. so this is exceptionally rare. and so that's really been a leaky parents, that this is manage to slip out of the equipment and fall off the truck. either let me ask you, then what happens if they don't actually find it could potentially have an impact on the bushel animals there? yeah, i think that was fine. that's just a matter of time. but like you mentioned, it is very fast the area to look for so it could be several days isn't found then for random moves, i don't think that they would spend long enough in contact with. so that might be
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some very localized effects within a few meters on the floor of the plans. so i think any animals would just pass that too quickly. well, that's good news for them. at least ivan chemist in there and as a professor and by a physics at the university of south australia, thanks for sharing your expertise. so that's an out of there. i'm my question. now put francis is on his way to africa for a 6 day visit. the leader of the roman catholic church, his jews arrive and democratic republic of congo. later on tuesday, it's the 1st time that a pontiff has visited the central african countries since john called the 2nd travel. so what was then as i am back in the 1980s, the pope was deliver a message of peace and reconciliation. let's speak to mark web. he joins us now from kinshasa. malcolm, i know the pope hasn't been very well of late. how significant is this, visit them? where we are right now. tell some of the story. i'm going to stand aside. so we can
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take a look around where the st. joseph's hospital in can chassis from the main catholic hospital in kinshasa. and this is in a country where the catholic church provides about 60 percent of all of the health care and education services. and the government provides very little. so we're looking at the waiting area, the reception window at the side. next is the cash his desk. the patient is say they pay about half of what they would pay in $1.00 of the private hospitals, which are known for high prices and poor standard people. he say they know they're going to get a certain standard, a health one the more easily be able to afford lists. a similar story in the rural areas across the country where often the only functioning institution in a small town will be the catholic mission by the church or cathedral, a nunnery and a school and
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a hospital. and not can often compu to the entire service provision in town or village. this is just one of the reasons that the catholic church is significant . the people here in democratic republic of congo, we spoke to some of the people who are preparing and waiting for the arrival of francis. let's take a look at our story. i'm afraid we'll come to that story a little bit later on here on out there. but for now, we'll leave it there. thank you so much malcolm web on the ground for us in kinshasa time leaving on and in the us days of minnesota and outdoor hockey, head on frozen lakes and ponds has been a tradition, generations, but climate change is changing. all that, as john 100 reports, in the long winters of minnesota hockey is a way of life, the colder, 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
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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 the little black puck around lake nicole, this is 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 such a great event. but as the planet warms, the hockey season is 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, but the opportunity to recreate the way that we used to during winter, minnesota, his launched an average of 10 to 14 days of late guys over the past 50 years,
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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 there's em 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 well. temperatures allow researchers say by the end of this century, another one 3rd of the outdoor skating season group burner. due to global warming with john henderson al jazeera on lake new commerce in minneapolis. i'm still ahead here on out as aaron and sports will hear from little messy as he speaks in depth about his country's welcome. when captain ah
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ah ah ah, welcome back, it's now time for sport in santa we've been hearing from messy again. yes, the, his, he's back argentina captain l no message says he's woke up a winning cut communes. he's now achieved everything he wants in football, the 35 year old that has been talking in depth about the crowning achievement of his career. messy, finally won the wall title and his 5th woke up. torment, appearance cause a door when you are going to have a chief, everything with the national teams that i ever dreamt of, of achieved everything in my career at barcelona, on a personal level to winning the world cup was closing my career in a unique way. when i started with all this, i never imagined that it would be this way that all of this would happen to me. and
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i think that reaching that moment and cattle was the best. said that her thought, yeah, it's over, it's over. that's what i felt the welcome trophy was saying to me after the finally the come and grab me. now you can touch me. that's it. i was finally able to do all that. i saw that the trophy was shining, that it was sparkling in that beautiful stadium. and i didn't think about it. i just went over and kissed it. good, but it will make you go forward, but you might think, i think the group match with mexico was the most difficult gang because of all the risk that was involved in the last to saudi arabia the, on the results. i think it was the game when we played the word because we had to win, no matter what. and that sometimes makes you play differently. i was confident that we were going to do well and that things were going to work out for us. i think that if we didn't have the group of plays that we have the situation, it would have been very difficult to overcome. the guild was time be to adobe county 3 and l to move into the 5th round of the english as
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a cup goals. boeing and mikhail antonio or enough for the permian need to be the 3rd tier. opponents with time will face manchester united. the in the next round everton have appointed former fernley bosses. sean dies as at their new manager. your place is frank lampart, who was sacked last week with a club, 2nd bottom in the premier league. 51 year old is everton 7th, permanent manager and as many years thy shes 1st game is against league. leaders are small. how to learn about the group. go down to the pitch or know about the funds thus for show. and our precious club is to them and showing them that we're ready to work and we're ready to get what they want. and certainly that starts with schwann monsieur ben vesa. but a feel again, but some of the basic principles, web m, football club in my opinion, stood for for a long time, tougher times at the moment. but we want to bring back that feel that good feel and all i can ask for a bit of a breather. you know, because i know there's a lot going on at the minute. now, house algeria will be aiming for
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a place in the final of the african nations championship. later this tuesday penalty decided their core to final matter guess ivory coast and set up a loss for game with nisha. finagle versus madagascar is the other semi final or we've been talking to, i'll do in football, right at my home is that he about the unique qualities of this torment is kind of like the african couple nations, except you can't call upon players playing outside of your domestic so for example, jerry, i can't call on the likes of re admirers. he just can't call unless it's a laugh. you can only play with your parents or malick if you're old jerry a players that play for his yes can be in the or a movie and a great train them. and to sort of test out that, you know, the levels of every single lead domestic league in africa. and there's a lot of great young power as well. so i think the fact that so many fans have come most of the stadiums at times of had 30040000 go to matches that the host nation is
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not playing. and i think really shows that the fans have been start of competitions like this for such a long time. africa always had was a sort of keep the investors on the customer to try and develop a domestic football. and in another age, you know, the 970 and then how many, many countries, including countries like all gerry, by the ivory coast they hadn't laws and that would not let the players leave their domestically until they were the age of 26 from 728, so great players like laura who rebec manager they weren't allowed to leave their clubs until they were late on in their career. sometimes they had to get presidential decrease to let them leave if they really, really serve the country well enough. so i think this is another way of doing things. it's not as for coney and, and on the contrary, i think it really promotes and helps a lot of younger players, australia, new york, because says the team needs to win this. he has woke up to revitalize the,
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came in the country where eddie jones is back in the job for the 2nd time with just a few months ago until the sports biggest event gets on the way in front. jones has just finished a 7 year spend to as england's coach and team finished as one of the 2019 walcott. if you look at well rugby at the moment, there's 6 teams not separated by, by a cigarette piper. yeah. they're, they're so tight. and the team that learns my so the next 9 months would be the team that leads. william were bellas trophy, stud the france on the 28th of october at about 11 p. m. and were intending that to be us. the orlando magic ended the philadelphia $76.00, a 7 game winning streak in the mpa. paulo bunkerville was the star of the night, or 29 points in line. we bounce more. it's wagner added 22 points. as the orlando magic hit back up from a 21 point deficit,
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419209 victory. red arrow fired for free and damien letter that scored a 42 points and 6 assist to lead the portland trailblazer to victory over the visiting atlanta hawks up. it loads at 5th $48.00 point again. oh yes. and actually support for me. i had to back in a 2nd. thanks, donna. well, that's it for this news. our doreen will be here in just a minute and i will see you after that to stay with us here on out in ah ah and a city defined by
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military occupation. there's never been an arab state here with the capital of jerusalem. everyone is welcome, but the support structure of that maintains the cold on the project. that's what we refuse. it was one of the founders of a settlement with this and the story of jerusalem through the eyes of its own people, segregation, occupations, discrimination, injustice. this is apartheid in the 21st century. jerusalem, a rock and a hard place on al jazeera, the american people have spoken. but what exactly did they say? is the world looking for a whole new border with less america in it? is the woke agenda on the decline in america? how much is social media companies know about you? and how easy is it to manipulate the quizzical look us politics, the bottom line february on, i'll just, you know, rhino is in tigers, in the old hosting to the brink of extinction. one or one, he's discovered how they're 14 happy turned around a year old,
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from russia's evasion of ukraine. elgin 0 looks at the impact, asks where events might lead from here? rigorous debate, unflinching question. up front muslim on tail cut through the headline to challenge conventional wisdom nigerians vote. and what's likely to be the most closely contested election in the country's history from those that will they to those who confronted people impala, investigate the youth, and abuse of power around the world. february on al jazeera ah tension and occupied east jerusalem, where palestinians are protesting against is really plans to demolish homes.
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