tv News Al Jazeera February 7, 2023 7:00am-7:31am AST
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oil companies, the biggest companies in the world, had a very deep understanding of the climate crisis before the rest of us. and yet they did not tell anyone else. that's where the crimes 40 years of denying their own scientific evidence. i thought that i could influence them to change their business plan. this was very naive decisions that have plagued our future. it's just pure evil. i don't know what to say. big boils big lies on. i'm just gonna aah! rescue as in turkey or respond to its biggest earthquake in almost a century with thousands dead and many more still missing trapped hon. i can hear everyone stuck under durable but nobody is here to rescue them. we have
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finished and more misery from millions of neighboring syrians, already displaced by war with hospitals struggling to kind awe under claudser, alive from the holes to cut me off. i'm to see a new minute. beale beal region of south central chile, where forest fires continue to be out of control and wind current. national health is just beginning to trickle in china lifts to ban on 2 groups, traveling to certain countries after caveat induced 3, a suspension ah . as dawn breaks, some major rescue operation continues across southern turkey and parts of northern syria after 2 powerful earthquakes hit the region. early on monday, all night rescue continue to search for survivors. trump,
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people from the rubble and to transport them to a related hospital to treatment. at least 4300 people have been killed and thousands injured in turkey and in syria. freezing, cold temperatures, rain and snow, all hampering rescue efforts after shops continued to shake the region. didn't costello begins now. i'll coverage from a stumble. ah, this was the moment the 2nd powerful earthquake struck southern turkey. yet, this concrete apartment block in mallets, yet not able to withstand the earth's violent tremors. many had already fled their homes, fearing what might happen, ah, is it the miniature? ca him? a mirage is at the epicenter of the disaster. here 2 children are pulled from the rubble of a collapse building. i knew parents in display
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no, uh, just just the 1st quick strike while they were sleeping. oh, the 2nd came a few hours later as rescue tim scramble to find survivors from the 1st with their themes of distraction across at least 10 cities in southeastern anatolia, hundreds of people were killed and thousands of homes destroy. my nephew's hon with his wife and kids. god willing is good using so severely if we on them as the month when i woke up in the morning, i felt dizzy. i initially thought it was my blood pressure, but when i saw the chandelier shaking, i realize this was an earthquake. i ran outside my family. of course we were so shocked initially to put a bit of it in the city of atlanta,
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a cherry picker was used to lift a woman from an apartment building in danger of collapse. in a national address, present ridge at a parent on said the government was doing all it could to deal with the situation. troops, hello, look good, good news. the turkish armed forces an emergency and disaster authority have been called to the affected areas. i'll priority is to rescue those, anita, sorry, 9000 people are working now and the rescue efforts on turkey declared the level for alarm. that means international assistance is necessary given the affected areas so large and millions of people needs help and their need is even more acute because it is winter and they're facing cold temperatures, snow and rain ah, to kia sits on top of major seismic fault lines. and is frequently shaken by earthquakes. about 80000 people were killed in quakes that hit the northwest in
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1999. with a history of such natural disasters, many are asking why the country wasn't better prepared and why so many buildings collapsed. shanika solo, l to 0 stumble will at 0, corresponded to amal herani is following the rescue operations in ga santa. that are not unknown up here. if you ever have moved around carson tip and there have been a number of buildings that collapsed, we have been hearing people trapped under durable and calling for help. as we have mentioned, a large number of buildings collapsed because of the earthquake that had started turkey. especially the gaussian tip from where we broke up such pictures, showing victims being pulled out from underneath the collapse building. i let. observe reduce our modelled kathy. it is also in godaddy on top, which is one of the westgate stairs. he explained what he and his family went through during the earthquake we going through one of the heaviest earthquakes that i've ever seen. and i think turkey also seen that the situation was on describable
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. i mean, like, you don't know what is going on and you can feel that some of there's weeks that i have been witnessed before. it was like, you feel that the windows you feel the, the tv is shaking, but this fine. i felt that the wall is shaking the building, the whole building was shaking. it was like it's, it's massive like at the moment that we faced it. i couldn't think of anything just to put my kids on the table and stay there until they're gone. and i was wishing that moment to be a dream. i didn't want it to be like a truly what's happening. that's what we've seen. i just wanted to be a dream and start to pray at that time to be a dream. but it wasn't. after the quick, just finish for a 2nd, we just picked what we can get and we moved outside. and you can see the small tense that i had with me that's with my kids in it's my mother was just sitting
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next by the temperature is under 0. it's undescribable. that's what we've got seen . some of the building was falling down in got down to up and then i got my massage chinese foss and i've just received like a few hours ago. that's my uncle and his wife and she's 2 children was just dad, i'm the one of the forward part. can i talk to you so far? they couldn't get them out of there. and we are still waiting just for their buddies to be when across the border, neighboring syria, the quake struck the cities of aleppo and attack. yeah. at least 1500 people being killed. the quake has pub misery on millions of space, syrians, many is still living and makes you camps after 11 years. the civil war. so know how to has this a child is told to recite the prayer.
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i le, le dropped under the rubble of a collapse building. this is the human toll of a major earthquake that struck central turkey. it was felt hard in neighboring syria. hundreds of people have already lost their lives. buildings collapse, the cross towns and cities and on both sides of the front lines of the war in syria in areas under the control of the government. and those controlled by the opposition. 8 hello. * i'm desperate appeals for help from those already struggling to survive after more than a decade of war. in rebel areas, there are no state structures to deal with. such a disaster calls are growing for emergency aid as residential areas are leveled to the ground abuse because you can come in, civilian buildings have completely been destroyed due to an earthquake that hit the
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northwest of syria around 4 30 in the morning. the situation is dire and catastrophic. tens of buildings have fallen in the city of sel. kin is complete electrical blackout. its really catastrophic. everyone is on the streets. the buildings are either destroyed or barely holding here. many of the buildings that collapse were already not structurally sound. do 2 years of war. civil defense team say they need machinery to rescue people while the few hospitals that survive the government attacks in recent years are overwhelmed. that medical victor or the north northwest project exhausted by the bomb being by the station by the regime many hosp, the many doctors were killed by the big and the best time that we were suffering from the ban, demik covey, and after and after. now the media can stick to can not handle all of those
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insurance cannot receive all those injured people are already facing a severe storm. in freezing temperatures and aftershocks are making their lives worth. more shelter is needed. as many families are, again, made homeless in a region where millions displaced by war live, intense powerful tremors were felt in lebanon as well. they start to just after 3 a. m, when most people were asleep and lasted for at least 42nd. there was chaos, as many people evacuated their homes. damage may have been minimal here, but more tremors are feared. back in syria, the extent of the humanitarian tragedy is only becoming apparent that their elders either failed. well the l ms. stuff has been lumley, is the you and residency humanitarian coordinator in syria. and he says it's an urgent need for emergency supplies. it's
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a sub situation here in syria. we have already a difficult and a difficult situation before 11 years of ward. and now, nature is even making it harder on us in the poor. for example, we have already $4040.00 buildings, have collapsed, and numerous buildings are suffered to be structural damage and made to collapse my gloves in time. we are bare use in schools for sales to when people homeless people who are only they have been homeless, maybe before many schools have collapsed or so i'm no longer can not be used. so the restriction is difficult and not only and and, and homes but also the p and the, the coastal area, the homes, ition. we have a situation that is not easy for us up to in for infrastructure. the school, the roads. water is also have been missed. we live very much on the tank
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water, the water tanks, and many, many, many of them either need serious repair or need to be replaced. fuel is not available, stuff is not available. hospitals, some of them got damaged in and held up and navy in other places. we need a lot of help here where the urban union and the united states were among the sending international aid to turkey after and syria after the turkish government appealed for help. and nearly 20 such rescue teams including firefighters and humanitarian aid organization to be sent from you. russia is also sending rescue workers to both countries. and israel says it's ready to send emergency health syria. what would be red cooperation between the board neighbor's bellows? javante is the european commission speak to the crisis management and humanitarian aid. and he explained how the use emergency response mechanism works. in the early
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hours of the morning, turkey activated the civil complexion mechanism. now this means that our crisis management structures are being used to the, to the, for here in, in, in brussels. and we have been in touch with all of our members space to try and see if we're in a position to provide the 5th. until now, i can confirm that we have many to mobilize nearly 20 search and rescue team. from 15 you member states for more than half of the states have already put forward assistance, feel montenegro, shipping and sending a team to carry. these things are already on their way. some of them, for example, the hungarians, the romania, the bulgarians already arrived. they contribute to the rescue operations on the ground and gradually as me going to the 9th in the morning. more and more teams will reach a turkey. now, as a 2nd step, we are trying to focus now on emergency medical team. we have
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a feel for it's already, for example, spain is ready to send the team. you can expect more and more such teams is coming in in the coming hours and days. they are requesting 2 types of assistance from the european union. on the one hand search and rescue teams, this is the reason why we are focused on this type of assistance in the past hours . so mobilized nearly 20 such seemed this means hundreds of people were now on the way. hundreds of specialists going to work from you members and as a 2nd dimension, they are also requesting us to make available emergency medical team, which is now our focus. we already have a couple of teams and proposed by member states, and we will do our utmost to get them on the ground as quickly as possible. are still ahead here and out 0. the you fall out from the crisis hits you. one of the indians biggest conglomerates continues is protested, but from the economy. i could also present grammar lesser since he's listening,
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as only results from a national referendum, searches had rejected his reforms. ah hello there was that in the middle east, an levant, and it's a tale of 2 halves and got more settled conditions across more southern areas. but up in the north, across levant. you can see from that cloud that nasty winter storm continues to pull its way east across turkey and knocking temperatures down dramatically there. well below the average this time of year. and there's going to be more in the way of snow the likes of gas, the anthony of that devastating earthquake. if not that we could see some sleet as well as rain, but temperatures remaining bitterly cold over the next few days. now there has been some relief farther south of, of the likes of doha in catawba, as that shamar wind kicks up. we are going to see the temperature did down and it remains a very windy picture. in the middle of the week,
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we could see some sand storms, warnings out across the north of saudi arabia and the windy conditions continue across northern areas of africa, coastal areas of egypt as well as libya she, nidia, seen some very heavy rain in the days ahead. is the similar story for algeria and parts of morocco? the temperature being knocked down by the wet and windy weather across the mediterranean for the southwest, a windy but hot. picture. the temperature in a buddha, stretching up near 40 degrees, comes back down on wednesday. the weather weather can be found down in the south with some heavy falls for east and south africa. 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 coal. 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.
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when you humanize this narrative, you allow people to really understand the reality and break down misconceptions. the street on al jazeera, ah ah, are we going to watching out 0? her mind about top stories. this. as we speak, rescue operations are underway across southern took here, and parts of northern syria after 2 powerful earthquakes hit the region. on monday, at least 2900 people have died in syria, the crate struck the cities with pro huh. and the talk to you at least 1500 people
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been killed. craig is pulled misery on millions displays. syrian still living. the makeshift comes after 11 years of civil war. chile continues to battle is deadly as wildfires on record which have now killed at least $26.00 people. the blazes have been burning since thursday, and a heat wave is complicating efforts to extinguish the flames or latin america editor nicea, newman reports now from a son to julio and b. o. b, o. region of chile and inferno is raging across large parts of chile. these are the deadliest wild fires on record, and they're destroying everything in their path. santa, who? yes, he 3 year old into our look, a rascal inspector, what's left of the property? he's lived in his entire life. giving him a little dinner. this is where the iron stove was, he says, his cat and his dog were burnt alive with everything he and his family owned
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delivered to every other people for the family, from inside and on top of the house, the flames came. there was nothing we could do but to escape. wildfires can be fickle. donna's lot of those watermelons and a few chickens that hidden the vegetable patch survived. but not his 2 neighbors who were engulfed by flames when they tried to escape. scores of people are still missing in the nearby hills. many presumed dead. these satellite images demonstrate how much the fires have spread since friday. a little cocktail of extreme heat, strong winds, and to prolong drought is mostly to blame. wires are continuing to small her all over this area, and in other parts of the veal veal annually region of south central chile. and if the winds pick up as far as you seem to believe, they will, it will spread much, much further. this farmer who also lost his house, blamed chiles. powerful forestry companies who planted eucalyptus and pine trees
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all over the region. you will have done really to lower your li frontier trees, suck up all the water here. there's nothing left for us and it's turned our land in turn, matchbox, still, most people who've lost everything tell us they've already dried their tears. didn't are anyone, boy, our country is very peculiar. if we don't get hit by earthquakes, we have seen armies or floods and now fires. so we'd jillions of learn to be resilience. chili's government has begun receiving assistance from its neighbors and spain to help exhausted fire fighters. as we see more new fires emerging from the nearby hills, it's obvious that help can't come fast enough. to see a newman al jazeera center, one at chilly people in ecuador, appear to rejected reforms. lay down in a referendum cooled by president grammar law. so one name of the vote was to tackle the countries growing problem with gang and drug violence,
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but many votes is sort as a poll unless as leadership and as under amputee, has more on this from the capital of kita. president k, yet more last so had bet on sundays, constitutional referendum and local elections to turn around is political fortunes local, real ill. domingo. what happened on sunday was a call from the people to the government to know, and we are not going to evade that responsibility. but it was also to the entire political leadership and the state allowed. they did, the ecuadorian people have asked us, asked all the parties in groups to stop fighting amongst ourselves and to get to work a lot to solve the urgent and concrete problems of our people. the matter is that a majority of ecuador in sterns dear back on him, an election day voters said they were divided on the 8 questions of the referendum . that lasso said was paramount to address the country's current,
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political and security crisis. some voters believed him. i voted yes because i believe that these reforms necessary for the country. we are still at democracy in construction. but most perceived the referendum is little more than a way for last to try to regain initiative. after proving unable to pass any reforms through our hostile congress. no, no, no, no. i mean, last saw already had more than enough time to try and help the country that he felt there are no jobs and no help for the feel helpless. there is so much crime and we can't live in peace anymore. the referendum also called for the extradition of citizens, linked to organized crime. and the rise and violence also crept into the election campaign to let this mayoral candidates were killed before the polls opened. some had to vote under extreme security measures. something equity had never witnessed before. india and the real winner of the night was former left, the president,
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fail korea. you received the results. mexico, surrounded by his allies, candidates, have its party, took back the mayoralty of the capital quito for the 1st time in 30 years, that of the country's largest city. why a que korea lives in exile in belgium. he was sentenced in absentia to 8 years in prison in 2020 and controversial. bribery allegations, leather up. i'll, as it's as uneven lesson, i'll in the right last across support at national level. the conservative sexual pot in particular is left with fair. if he provinces, while we'll see the left handed particular progressive movements, that careers and the indigenous party rising by, it leaves the government in a much more unfavorable scenario relative, but it's still yet not the last leaves last. so with little to no space to my newer, he already barely survived that impeachment both back in june, following weeks of protest, the rock, the country,
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and raising doubts now that he will be able to remain in office for the 2 years left in his administration. allison, the and i'll just see that kita in india, there are a growing concerns about the financial impact of the scandal that is embroiled. one of the country's biggest conglomerates diatanni group has interesting ports, airport energy, and agriculture is lost over half its valuation since late january, when it was accused of fraud and stock market. manipulation of the maternal reports now from a protest in italy, opposition parties continue to freshen the government over the adult. oh, she just like these are taking place nationwide. the gathering outside offices of public institutions that basis my risk of losing money because of the crisis. no, where i to protest that outside an atm of in just largest public, that the state bank of india has loaned the adonis group more than 2 and a half $1000000000.00. they're also raising concerns about the fate of public money
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to india as largest public insurance company that invest in billions of dollars in the donnie conglomerate, the audits political savvy to pay all big financial institutions. and during the central bank tax authorities, regulators and investigating agencies are silent on the matter. they are under pressure from the government and the common people are suffering and losing money. the identical your marriage runs, he infrastructure projects in indiana around the world. these include coal in mines, power plants, and ports, no opposition. parties have long alleged that the company has benefited from the close relationship between the founder, bought them a donnie, and prime minister and that engine movie, demanding, and investigated by a government regulator into allegations. a broad level is by american. from hindenberg research. now, donnie group of companies has denied these allegations, even as valuations of these companies have nearly hobbs since these allegations emerge nearly 2 weeks ago. a former british police officer is set to be sentenced
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this week for a series of offences including rape that he committed across 2 decades with london metropolitan police. hundreds of officers now being investigated in british parliamentarian to describing the police force as rife with institutionalized sexism. sonya gaga has more they are the 1st port of call for law enforcement and prevention of crime in the you case capital with unique responsibilities and challenges. it. a crisis of competence has overshadowed london, metropolitan police. some $800.00 police officers are being investigated for sexual domestic abuse. revelations of criminals within its ranks, including when cousins who abducted raped and murdered sara, ever odd. as she was walking home nearly 2 years ago, and david carrick, who admitted to dozens of rapes and sexual offences against 12 women across 2
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decades have shaken faith in the force. policing in the u. k. relies on the public's consent and trust, but that trust has been in decline over the past few years, especially when it comes to issues of violence against women and girls. and the continuing disclosure of members of the 40 been found guilty of such crimes is only exposing how deep the problem runs. reports of sexual offences and domestic abuse have increased yet. convictions are out. historic lows, receipts of a pooling attitudes of, of disbelief and blame the, you know, sometimes when a report to us and, and that's, that obviously causes many to pull out of, of pursuing allegations. so we're not just talking about here about police officer pub traces, which is obviously, you know, absolutely, you know, should never happen, but also talking about it, you know, policing, which is not giving confidence. when supper jama reported to police,
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she had been raped and abused by her uncle. the response she says was one of disbelief when i wanted to show them fresh marks i had on my body. i said her like this is where he lost it to me. he burnt my back. i wanted to know what he did. she said to me hut she know he did. it said they didn't miss he and then that was very, it was very sad to me. restoring trust will be a massive undertaking. and in the wake of the car, trial and overhaul of the you case, entire police culture may be just one step to restoring some measure of faith in the force sonic. i angle out a 0 london by doing has partially lifted a 3 year band on 2 groups traveling abroad. china used to be the world's largest outbound tourism market. before current of ours, it probably has more and how some nations in southeast asia preparing to welcome
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back bus loads of tours. this is one of the 1st 2 groups to leave china. moments after ban on group travel was partially lifted. on monday the tourists flight left the southern chinese city of kwan don't. at 15 minutes past midnight, what i signed up as soon as i got the news of overseas tories, i'm sure. yeah, i travel with my wife and my daughter. ah, last month the government allowed chinese travel agencies to provide outbound group to us to 20 countries. as part of a pilot program. countries in southeast asia was some of the most highly searched destination by chinese national. before the pandemic thailand welcomed 11000000 visitors from china. it's expecting 5000000 this year and expect them to spend nearly $30000000000.00. we are very happy and i'm sure that the coming back up
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chinese would be, ah, bows up there, ty, economy significant. because as you get a revenue from the titrating and sep, chair of, of your quarter 20 percent of the g d p. so i, these, you can prove that the coming back of china or charlize back is the key of success of the teachers in this year. in barley, indonesia, officials are hoping 2 thirds of the 1200000 chinese visitors who came to the island before the pandemic will return of seo. the tourism ministry is planning to glue sticks marketing of barley as a paradise destination. and businesses are hoping for better times a haven't done finance impact. it's very significant because in our shop, 80 percent of the customers are chinese and so to speak for us, especially after we close down i'll shop for about 3 years. on monday, china also allowed cross border travel to fully resume between the mainland.
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