tv News Al Jazeera February 8, 2023 12:00am-1:01am AST
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african stories from african perspectives. i'm a marine biologist, a bizarre swim short documentaries from african feel. i'm going to do from south africa, ethiopia, and nigeria. we been to cobra from stuff in this classroom. she saw this as my, and my role africa direct on al jazeera. ah ah, hello, lauren taylor, this is the out as their news, our live from london coming up a race against the clock in took here and syria. the search and rescue operation
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entered the 2nd night of the 2 devastating earthquakes. a miracle in northern syria, the baby born under the rubble of a collapsed building, the only member of her family to survive. a struggle to get aid into syria, a region already burdened by years of bloody conflict. disaster trick is a global humanitarian response rescue teams and life saving supplies are deployed from around the world. and i am naturally sports. it looks like it's going to be hard grateful, flamingo brazil, or south american champions off the re to down against saudi arabian side. al, hello, in the club. well cup, semi final ah we're begin in took here and syria where for the 2nd night in a row, hundreds of thousands of people are trying to sleep wherever they can find refuge.
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government shelters, shopping centers, mosques, sporting stadiums, anywhere safe and out of the cold. after mondays, devastating earthquakes, turkish president rich upto ad one has declared a disaster zone for 10 regions and imposed a state of emergency that will last 3 months or them. 7200 people are now confirmed dead. at least 5400 inter kia, another 1700 in syria. and those numbers are just the beginning. thousands more are still missing. but 8000 people have been rescued. the maybe others still alive, buried in the bricks and concrete that once housed them. they survived the earthquakes, but now face new dangers as they wait to be rescued below 0 temperatures, snow ice, and the real threat of hypothermia or teams were around the world are heading to the region in the hope of finding and rescuing those survivors before they to become statistics, the latest numbers to be added to a growing death toll wrestle said are joins us now from karen marsh in took here
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the epicenter of the 2nd of mondays, earthquakes, and resort amongst the devastation there are stores of hope on their well, now have we are had just ascending on the bubbles off the collapse of building some of the collapse building some of the hundreds in this city. and right behind me here, you can see that there is a frantic, a force still on the way. the rescue comes from the that the authority off the disaster doubt. they are trying to get some people out of his robles. 3 of them are still alive. just a little our goal, a to a 14 years old girl whose name was a pack. she has been pulled out by the rescue team out of here that the robles and she was still alive, exhausted. while the rest routine was taking her out. despite the death exhausted,
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and all more than 40 hours beneath this robles, she just said that please say my father as well because her father was in next to her and then her mother was waiting for her after 40 hours. so she for the 1st time. so her, our daughter just been taken out of the robles and it was a manifestation of the happiness. however, now the rescue teams are trying to save her father as well. that the teams there, the officials here are saying that he's alive so they can hear his voice and also said her father, there are 2 other young persons as well gonna know whether they're female or me of other 2 other young persons as well. they are sending the message out, making voices trying to make a voice heard by the rescue team here. and so to the people are alive under his,
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a good rubble and waiting to be rescued. so i asked the rescue team, how long will it take before at least they need 3 hours. so the city has witness to a lot through the last 40 hours, and these really need to search good news, some spark of new port here. because the car, i'm unmerited, is the abbey center of the earthquake that affected more than 14000000 people in this country. just in this city, more nearly and on a 1000 buildings, how could lapse a more than 600 people have been killed a baby by the earthquake. it was one of the developed city of turkey. and recently i have just been here. it was completely at different cities than now. now, the shortage of the electricity and lack of food, water heaters. so it is making the life extremely difficult here. and the cold
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weather is also another factor that is worse than in distribution here. people i said if i was in the streets and trying to wal mart, they do not feel safe enough yet to get back into into their houses. because the after shots are still continues here. so today i took, as president richard pay about one has declared the state of emergency in town cities that have been affected by the earthquake. and that means the turkish military now is deployed over the cities to secure the order and, and, and also the good, bathed boat this morning on. there seemed that the house started to come into this cities because the extreme weather conditions was making the rescue for her extremely difficult. but now we see that the rescue teams, the vehicles, including earlier vehicles, obvious rather was this house. it is however, it is. these workers are covering quite a large geography just to make
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a comparison. it is almost equal to the size of native kingdom and affecting more than $13000000.00 people. and as soon weather's here, the last electricity's food waters, fearful of really struggling here. now still of the said, vivid, afford the frank a full on the way. this is just one of the scenes now where course 30 are, there are hundreds of such scenes that are really witnessing that i did these and that a map is see that are going on. but here 3 people are still waiting to be rescued. but they're not the only ones, probably that are some other life people still maybe hands of them still believe ms . robins. and according to the officials, just in common mirage. more than 1000 people are missing. rezo said, i thank you very much indeed for taking the picture. they are very devastation in
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where you are. thank you. lisa live scenes. now from that d a back here in turkey where chris at working into the night, turkish present rich up at type ad one says emergency teams are doing everything they can to rescue victims. dip human guinea speed, all i love it, you that in our work will continue on till we have saved every life that we can in the rubble. and until we are sure there is nothing else we could do further. we are mobilizing every possible operation in many thousands of people have been transferred to each and every province to help the limits on even hundreds of kilometers from the epicenter of the 1st quake. the damage is severe. earnest smith reports from a city of shallow, far in southeastern, took here a day after the 1st earthquake struck there still hope people have survived buried in the rubble 1st quake hit for 17 on monday morning. most people would have been in bed with no time to run for cover.
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this was a 6 story block of flats and shun loafer. in southeast and turkey rescue teams must work quickly. but carefully. there were 53 people living in 12 apartments here. 4 were pulled out alive out of us on an ottoman after the earthquake, i called my relatives to make sure the okay, 3 of my uncles on the phone, but one couldn't. we buried him and his wife to day. his daughter was rescued alive, but they are still 3 more people from our family in the rubble, piano gendarmes, i think there are still 25 to 26 people under the rubble. i had 2 shops under the building. they were all destroyed. there is nothing to do but wait, whatever we have is gone. hopefully the government will help us. shall we offer is 220 kilometers from the epicenter of the 1st quake. most of the buildings in the city of more than 2000000 a still standing. but the government is worried. many thousands of structures have
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been dangerously weakened. this is just a small example of extraordinary humanitarian challenge facing the turkish or bar it is now the scene is being repeated hundreds of thousands of times across this region. so severe is the crisis. the government phases that it's encouraging. as many as the 12000000 people who live in the affected area to try and get out offering 5 dollar tickets on flight out of hair to the western part of turkey and humanitarian flights that are coming in. we'll leave with people on them who want to escape the region. there is now a state of emergency in this region president reggie type heard one says the arrow will be flooded with humanitarian relief workers. along with the foreign rescue teams, they need to get here quickly. because time is running out. bernard smith, al jazeera sion luther in south eastern turkey village. tasha marys liaison officer with the i cook, search and rescue association. he chose his life from dana in to clear. thanks so
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much and for being with us. i want, if you can explain to us that some of the difficulties that you are up against in organizing these at rescue operations. well, the, some, this earthquake is unique in 2 aspects is that the one of them is that there have been several 100 aftershocks over a very short period of time. and all with significant magnitudes. and that just compounds devastation in, in terms of, if there are damaged buildings that were able to keep people alive afterwards. if people went back into those buildings and app the shocks, what would further collapse those building? so that's one of the challenges, the series of hundreds of after shops and the other challenges that as, as you mentioned your report, this whole entire event covers about 10 provinces. and it is across a very wide geography where the devastation has, has occurred. and basically, covering all the collab size, thousands of them in a matter of just over a week,
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where the herb research and risky window is existing, existing for the chance of finding survivors is the main, our main 2 main them to give us factors and challenges. one other thing is that currently the region is going through a cold snap, where the weather, the temperatures are much more colder than usual and below freezing throughout the night. and that creates further challenges for both the rescuers and the victims. you mentioned just their search and rescue window. how do you normally define that? what's the, what's that, what is that window? so social rescue window, as statistically speaking, most survivors will be able to will be pulled out from under the rubble in a, in a maximum period. of $7.00 to $10.00 days. if my memory serves me correctly so far, the record of finding a survivor on the rebel, it was 10 or 11 days and afterwards,
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because these people have to survive, they have to be hydrated already suffocated on the rebel. so usually, but 7 to 10 days is the time period when there is the highest chance of survivors still remaining alive on the rubble for the rescuers to able to extricate them a lot. and in terms of equipment, i mean, we know that lots of countries have offered help. what practice equipment do you need at the moment? we are you? sure so so the especially because of the cold temperatures, some a lot of are just like our teams. a lot of international teams deploying and technically classified teams will have sensitive technical equipment with visual acoustic and sees mach sensors. this sensitive equipment was sensitive batteries and because of the cold snap, these, the, the equipments became more more vulnerable to malfunctioning. so it is visual and
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acoustic and see it's meant devices that will be needed the most and also generators. january not only for rescuers to operate their equipment, but for, for, for the victims who are being housed up in shelters and tense so that they can be provided. you know, i'll be offered some sort of pete or shelter over the course during the cold snap. so it's mostly generated, technical equipment will be the shortage just to go back to the search and rescue side of things will. how do you prioritize, given the scale of what you've described at this stretching cross 10 provinces. how do you prioritize the, the places that you search? and so in theory, with rescue teams was sent assessment teams and then assigned rescue assets accordingly. so for example, a team with a lesson competitor, like slightly lighter capacity, would be able to address a collab structure which is of more simpler nature. but a heavy capacity team would apply. what would be a set would be sent to
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a complex structure. lucas? but here, because of the sheer number of, of, of collapse sites across a wide geography. and there are so many people still, strap on the rubble. games are being pulled by the locals, by the local, public and within a, within the, within their right. because their loved ones are in, in the buildings they are sitting in front of. and so the assessment of is the assessment stage that would usually happen and has kinda been fast forwarded to a full on rescue. and, and so it is, it is the currently, the priorities are more geographical then at the assessment of the collapse sites push estimate. we really appreciate you taking the time to talk to thank you very much and good luck with your, your work. i thank you. thank you. several dramatic rescues have been reported. the
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survivors are pulled from the rubble. people in a small syrian town of january snakes for the turkish border discovered a crying infant. her mother apparently gave birth to her while buried in the rubble of a 5 story building. the newborn was found with her umbilical cord still connected to her mother, who since died. and baby was the only member of the family to survive. serious for messaging european nations to send his country aid saying sanctions on no excuse not to payment carrying aid from algeria and the united arab emirates of landed in regime controlled areas of a leper and damascus. the roots used by the un to get humanitarian assistance into the country from tech here have been damaged ahead of us here in red crescent is also called for your sanctions to be lifted. so that aid can freely enter the country. a united nations high commissioner for refugees representative in syria. he says many as place of honors traumatized by what they've experienced. i
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have to say we're not. we're still really from from yesterday earthquake. it was followed by a 2nd earthquake yesterday afternoon and i've just been getting reports of a couple of quakes in the coastal areas of talk to some one at 630 this evening and one at almost 8 pm. so really the, the atmosphere of uncertainty here traumatized individuals is very pop. we have b, mobilizing ourselves as quickly as possible up the news of the earthquake yesterday to try and get our stock so relief items that we already had for the existing crisis out to persons in in need. i should add that the weather conditions that are prevailing at the moment are extremely dire. we happen to be in the height of winter. and there's also a snow storm that is literally raging in the last 24 hours. so it's extremely
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challenging for us to get assistance out to people in need. dozens of countries ascending aid to kia and syria. it includes offers of money, firefighters, and especially rescue workers. at least 20 countries or country blocks ascending rescue specialists. thank you. the u. k, the u, israel, japan, pakistan, and kata. there are many non government organizations accepting donations, including the turkish red crescent, the syrian red crescent, save the children, doctors without borders, and the international rescue committee. despite international generosity, the major obstacles to getting the a didn't. thank you, damage infrastructure such as roads and hospitals, contested territory, particularly in water and syria. and of course, the constant threat of the tremors, stephanie deckers and get in touch where aid is arriving. and we pulled up the call to the sound on this report. this is the 3rd line from comfort,
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and that is why here on tuesday, we are in the i'm se, in turkey, quite close to be at the center of the airport. it's been close to civilian aircraft. only me think about like this one lot of the on the day every admitted our dad up there just one of many, many countries that are going national effort. you can see that way from talk minutes on that and just wanted also. so they said that we joined board medical supplies, tend to set up 10000 times for people. a medical team also had the infrastructure to help you cut their sons. why? yeah, their search and rescue it because of course, you know, in the 1st few days all are such a master tragedy. you're still be able to find somebody that's, i mean it's very cold here. the people will in fact that there is an urgency like never before i got the 8 effort very much under way. many areas still haven't had
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any help. given people coming up on the news off from london for the 3rd time, hundreds of thousands stop work in front period is over planned to raise the retirement age. i thought i read with honor after death in exile, former prime minister focused on have asthma sheriff receives a military funeral and rel, madrid's coach takes a stand against racism in spanish football. awe is present, joe biden will deliver his 2nd state of the union address in a matter of hours, especially to highlight his achievements and set his agenda at of next year's presidential campaign. he's not starting that race and the best position according to approval ratings. the average result from 5 pose released in the past week show his approval rating around low a 40 percent mark, while his disapproval was,
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are in the fifty's. but inflation is at its lowest rate in the year. unemployment is at a half century low and fears of a recession, that easing on still faces some serious challenges. may include the need to lift the statutory debt limit, which could cause the u. s. to default on its bills. also rising interest rates are helping put homes out of reach for many and last week. balloon saga has shown relations with china. a still fraud now from washington, d. c. is steve clemens, a host around here. is us politic show the bottom line and founding editor at large, the new digital media platform semaphores. thanks for being with us. so what, what, what do you think the main messages would be for? imagine this? well, i think what the biden team is trying to do is twofold. one they're, they're trying to come together and tell the whole country that there are issues that both sides of the aisle can agree on. like cancer research,
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like supporting veterans and veteran care dealing with the opioid epidemic. basically kind of moving forward and things that they call a unity agenda. so that's going to be one element and a very significant element there. but we, we don't have all the pieces of the speech, but we know we just shut down a chinese spy balloon. and we also see that president biden has a guest of the ukrainian bastard of the united states asana, mark a rover, who will be in the audience, so he will be going to the audience and say it's a tough, complicated world. and america needs to be engaged in, in, in trying to stop russia and ukraine. and we have complicated interest was shina, china including defending american borders. so it's going to be a mix of things you know, states of the union addresses are always a hodge podge of a lot of issues. but i think the big thing they're going to do is to try to say there are things that americans on both sides of a political i'll can agree on. let's do them. and she mentioned kind of unity
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agenda on certain subjects or other, other areas on red lines where it, he's gonna have to say actually that there's some things, a non negotiable well i, you know, i mean, the non negotiable times are going to be basically that the president is going to be very committed to ukraine and continuing to make the case for strong federal support of both financially and militarily for what's going on ukraine. that is a controversial issue or becoming an increasingly controversial one across. yeah, he's also you just talked about his high degree of on favorability in americans, you know, running almost to 60 percent in a high fifty's, as you just said. and in that area, he's gonna try and remind people they pass the chip sack, they pass the american recovery act, they're spending, you know, joe biden has been going around the country and look it near major infrastructure projects like bridges and tunnels that are going to be redone and to try to remind americans that his administration is delivering real tangible results to them.
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because it seems like most americans are unaware of the impact on their lives from the various kinds of legislation that he has passed. and we also just learn to day, again on the international affairs front that on a february 24th, which is the one year anniversary of the start of the ukraine war. he's going to go to poland and be in poland there. and i'm sure he'll talk about that tonight as well. so those are some of the elements there. so we get to the non negotiable or, you know, less less. you know, the more you move away from talking about cancer and veterans and opioids and that element, then he's gonna enter into more controversial territory, particularly when it comes to sort of the costs of inflation and some of the debate about his economic programs. and i suppose weren't wanted dealings is, is the, is the divided congress. does he have to address that a t o is that? do you think they'll take care of mentioning that? well, i think he has to address the toxicity of this moment, which continues,
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there. we saw, you know, will have interestingly, kevin mccarthy, who is the speaker, the leader in the house of representatives. it took 15 ballots in the republican party to get him a elected as the speaker of the house. and so it's not just toxicity between republicans and democrats. it's toxicity within the parties, you know, trying to deal with each other. and, and kevin mccarthy came out today and said, unlike nancy pelosi, who ripped up donald trump speech right there on the floor. he said he promised he would not rip up joe biden speak. so maybe there's an opportunity there, but you also have a major issue coming up on the debt ceiling. and the administration has been trying to say that it once what's called a clean bill, no requirements, nothing attached to it. because if america defaulted on its debt, the full faith and credit of the united states would be called into question. and it would create calamity in global markets. and i think he's going to talk about
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that because there's been talk by some of the republicans that were difficult with kevin mccarthy, of trying to attach conditions to raising that debt. ceiling level on promised cuts even in, in what are called sacred territories, like social security and medicare, both health and old age protections for various americans. um, so that is no doubt going to be part of it because i think the president is probably, i mean, i'm speculating here. i'm going to try to paint that those restrictions as irresponsible, given how cataclysmic the conditions might be. if america did default on its debt, steve tenants, thanks very much indeed. tefilo nancy, thank you. my, my pleasure. a farm says experienced a 3rd day of nation wide strikes against pension reforms. hundreds of thousands of people were rallied across the country to oppose plans by president emanuel michael to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64. members of the national assembly metal
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monday to debate the bill. i reported spoke to protest as in the french capital. well, it fits another very big turn out. the union had warned people to expect perhaps if you are this tuesday because there's another big protest march plan for saturday as well. but there are 2 legs of this march through the center of paris. this is just one of them. and the numbers are substantial. again, in opposition to this proposal, i'm joined by a pharma from normandy and you know, he, who is one of those out protesting today. and i know my cause says that this has to happen, that there is a big hole in the budget because the pension system can't support the kind of expenditure that it needs to maintain the current situation. so something has to change, doesn't it? yes, something has to change something to go on for the 60 years old to go on pension. the 64, we know that you know, not of countries over the world. it can be $6567.00,
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but it's not the reason we have to be an ex. i'm an example for world that the pension starts at 60 years old. i mean, that might not be a reason because other countries have older pension ages, but manual michael says, the reason is that front simply can't afford this kind of pension outlay, given the fact that the population is getting other older. yeah, we think that's wrong. well convinced that all the value we produce when we work has to go to our protection to our social protection. and that's not, that's not the way. that's not the way you think. not more still to come this hour including terror and peruse homes, and people are washed away in a powerful landslide. a pole of display, a rare chance to say, almost all of them is paintings in the single exhibition. and we hear from the 2 quarterbacks about to make history at the super bowl that's coming up. ah
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hello there, let's have a look at the weather across europe and from the satellite image. things look rather unsettled, but there are still settled areas to be found, particularly across that central zone. we got high pressure in charge, keeping things cold, but still relatively dry. and we will see more in the way of sunshine once the fog and frost issues have been resolved in places like germany, as well as poland. but the stormy weather continues to plague. the mediterranean, as one system moves away from the southeast. so bringing a wintry mix to, to a kia, we're going to see things develop across the italian islands pushing their way into spain and portugal, but they will be more settled conditions coming at the end of the week. we've seen some settled conditions with more mild weather across more southern areas of england and wales, but when warnings that remain on wednesday for scotland, we are going to see things turn wet and wintry here. and that turns into
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a wintry blast for norway. once again, we could see some avalanches, warnings out here, largely quiet across germany and poland, but temperatures certainly coming down minus one degrees in warsaw on thursday for the south of this, the weather intensify. sicily as well as coastal areas of to nicea. but for portugal, some improvement by thursday, 15 degrees in has been ah, bitcoin block chain and crypto guarantees. disruptive technology joined with me and introducing a bill to outlaw crypto currency all the way to a fair, a financial system. with big coins, open source software, we can trade out or money without banks or governments. award winning filmmaker, thorsten hoffman looks at all sides of the complex crypto crypto p. it going look, change in the engine it on al jazeera ah
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for the $7200.00 people are now confirmed dead to cross to kia and syria. after monday's earthquake disaster to kias president declared a disaster zone for 10 regions and imposed a state of emergency the will last 3 months. serious foreign ministers as european countries descent, his country a doctor, the earthquakes despite western sanctions. i do, and i say, should say a di humanitarian crisis is emerging in the country already wrecked by 12 years of a tens of thousands, a search and rescue personnel working into kit and syria to free survivors. still trapped on to rebel teams from around the world. are heading to the region in the hope of funding and saving more people that i shall name is at an 8 coordination center in the symbol people here understand after seeing the images and hearing from their fellow turks just how desperate people are. and they know that time is of the essence, i just spoke to someone from the is don bull mayor's office. the city of is stumble
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is organizing this massive relief efforts that will go on for 24 hours a day for at least a month. and he says it's great that people are donating food clothes, blankets and heaters, but he says we need more tests and we need sleeping bags. you just heard from the vice president here in turkey, that people who have lost their homes are going to be relocated to areas where there is a sort of touristy areas for the time being. but clearly that may not be available immediately. 338000 people across the country have already been offered shelter in university dormitories right now though, the focus on is on the humanitarian assistance that is needed for a fellow turks. and as we're seeing today, people are coming together in a show of unity resolve. and in understanding that this effort is going to take historic proportions for the entire region has been rattled by earthquakes and
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tremors. since the 1st magnitude, 7.88, quake struck early on monday morning. will that? and the following magnitude 7 and a half quake on the dots. you can see here and read and they've been dozens of off to showcase as you can see the since then. many have been magnitude 4.5 or stronger . they all to taking place within the east anatoly and seismic fault system. david rather is a professor of planetary geosciences of the case and from university. he says it's difficult to predict how long we after shops will last so they will get weaker. as time goes by, it's hard to tell how quickly they will die away. i would hope that by tomorrow they'll be no more shocked to manage it 5 know before or lower, but it could go on for a week. certainly, if you're close to the, at the center of an individual after shop, you will still fill the ground. and of course, that's going to be alarming. so the local people, we can't predict when enough quite, we'll have to, we know,
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be the zones level for quakes to occurring close to a light boundary full. in particular, we know well now that the south western parts of the east and it's all in full to move, we may be concerned about the more know, based in part of that to know based of one of the original big quite was that hasn't moved. maybe the next 2 weeks will be that, but they could be 10 years. that is 100 years away. but what we can do to prepare is build buildings which improperly resilience. and what's your job saying of the damage in turkey and someone in syria is a 5 or 10 story apartment blocks which will be a wake. and every so often read one which is collapse were wanted those few collapse. they should have been just as resilient as the neighboring buildings. now maybe they were not built so well. we know how to build buildings withstand seismic shaking cost to stay in 2025 percent more, but you can't put it the way we know of grants. will reoccur in this region. it
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could be next year. it could be saw this time. it could be 50 or 200 years time, but we should build buildings which is more resilience for now. and the challenges faced by rescue cruise in earthquake zones, i'm joined by aren't de la cruz, the ceo of team rubicon, a global disaster relief and humanitarian organizations joins us live from los angeles. thank you very much for being with us and understand that your teams are ready to deploy and you, your organization works with a w, h o and the turkish ministry for health. can you explain to us what the, what the process is and how, how you get deployed? yes, the team rubicon is a veteran, lead humanitarian organization and we work closely with the world health organization in the ministry of health. the deployment processes such that we've sent a reconnaissance team, which is 2 people, a doctor in a coordinator, and their job is to understand the needs and coordinate with the people on the ground. as that is happening will constitute the needs in the, the, the composition of medical provisions and doctors and skilled personnel that,
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that can actually augment in the way that's productive. so they, they dictate what's the requirements in turkey. and we try to match that all deploy that team and in terms of the kind of medical requirements, what sort of injuries are you preparing, preparing to do deal with these situations. you know, it's a really unique thing to take a look at something like earthquakes, the injuries, you know, range from crush injuries to you know, injuries that happen from, you know, falling objects impact injuries. so there's a bunch of different things that we have to be ready for. in addition, as this begins to play out, and because infrastructure such as water and electricity, you know those things are inhibited. you begin to see other injuries that are actually a result of what is happening, like any situation like this to include, you know, earthquakes that have happened in our past that we responded to in places like haiti. you know, these conditions continue to exacerbate over the course of time,
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and it can conditions that can exacerbate over the course of time in this case for human read, the cold weather has an impact. yeah, the reality is it's cold, you know, it's damp, it's raining. people are out in the open which again brings different illnesses associated with exposure. and then you have different things, you know, because of the lack of, you know, water as an example. that can also be transmitted over the course of time. and finally, those injuries, you know, they'll be people that are injured with, you know, broken bones or things like that. but it could take days until they receive the treatment. so again, you treat at that point, but understand that over the course of time that these things can increase in severity. i understand that the planning, do you think that enough has been done, but you know, we know that he wasn't an earthquake zone. is it how, how well prepared is it and how do you assess the response so far? you know, the reality is this is a rapid onset disaster. you know, a,
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you can prepare to some extent and again, you know, a lot of that is infrastructure. the previous guess talked about some of those things you can't control. but at this point in time that the, the real thing that everyone has to center on is response in a coordinated fashion response in a way where they aid that is inbound is directed to the right place. and the other piece is also understanding the enablers. that will increase that ability to respond quickly. we know that the roadways, you know, are inhibited. we know that search and rescue is, you know, a primary effort right now. and then we begin to fall in place, not just with priority, but also with location and the skills you bring to bear out in the course. thank you very much. indeed. devit on your thank you. thank you for adding me. a un delegation is postponed, visit to a cam for internally displaced people in democratic republic of congo because it, protests people, voicing frustrations with the government handling of the n 23 group. they've been
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making more territory to advances in the north of the country. welcome, where report from a camp for the displaced in bilingual people from the villages in the hills on the outskirts of the city of goma have been fleeing in their thousands to come like this one which is just on the edge of the city. thousands have been arriving every day is rapidly swelling. people put up more and more of these shelters, running away from the advance of the m. $23.00 on the group as it proceeds towards the city of goma and $23.00 widely understood to be backed by neighboring rwanda. they were one that denies it. the un deputy humanitarian chief joyce and c. i was due to visit the escalating humanitarian crisis on tuesday. but on monday, the city of goma was brought to a standstill. roads were blocked by protesters with stones and wooden barricades, and the organizers were calling for the departure of all foreign forces from congo
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and cooling on the government, strengthening its own armed forces and take back the territories. last 2 and 23. okay, sounds former president, as michelle off has been buried in his home city of karachi, 2 days after his death in self imposed exile in dubai. at the age of 79 sheriff was taken to his final resting place in a convoy through the streets of country. he was buried with full military protocol, the army graveyard. but the current prime minister and president did not attend. the sheriff seized power in a crew in 1999 and let the country until he was forced to resign in 2008. while hyder has more from the capitalist, i'm about generated by ray and most shot out of bar day was broad or not special ed jogged along with a family member to the southern portion of karachi. the family had raised their d should be budded dead. they were the simple said in many, at our military area on the outskirts of garages city. after daddy were bought it
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in a military graveyard. many politicians in this country of gods where they queued them for several dodging their mom gracy by the ordered rela, gosh, pray them for the anti corruption campaign. and he started to show the real nature of budgets on a politics. however, and dad and divert he did relocate q them of the lines for the united states that got the country, $80000.00 live and hundreds of billions of dollars worth of infrastructure damage was shut up. of course, what is known as a strong data, but also known for dollars and i get your words the media. people have gone and focused on have makes reactions. but the government that ensure that the funeral does not get wide coverage and the local media and have mostly black out emergency crews in the u. s. state of ohio is still draining and burning off toxic chemicals
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from a rail crash 3 days ago. and there's still no timescale for when evacuated. residents will be allowed home. the train with a 150 freight cars derailed on friday, setting up a massive fire force. the evacuation of 2000 residents. 20 of the tank cars were carrying toxic and potentially explosive chemicals which need to be removed safely . a 1.5 can mutual exclusion zone is in place around the site. and he's 15 people have been killed in landslides caused by heavy rains in southern peru. the army has been deployed to help with rescue operations. the death toll in the iraqi for region is expected to rise or make assume sharif reports. oh, a lifetime's belongings gone in seconds. c oh oh, where does landslide and peruse sudden?
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i keep my regions swept away every thing in its part, villagers who moved up hill could only watch as hundreds of their homes were washed though. yeah, i got another thought. must the mill familiar? lucky because there were over a 1000 affected families, we can say that the houses of 90 percent of affected families were completely destroyed by that. ah, some people were unable to escape some bodies have been retrieved from the day bri. many i believe to be miners for villages were the hardest hit. the in an area called nicholas valko cell, where swing continuously for several days. they go further. bob is a very cold, there are no houses. this is a complete disaster and we've got corpses scattered everywhere. they're dead. where? oh, many people are still missing. officials in the city of
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r a keeper, asking the national government to declare a state of emergency the army has been deployed to help southern regions like our a keeper. what a starting point for major protest. after the arrest and dismissal in december of then preston pedro castillo, as well as a political crisis, and a slowing economy pedal now faces a natural disaster. who may consume sharif under sierra an giant b. p is reported record annual profits for 2022. the british energy company recorded $27700000000.00 in earning boosted by a surgeon energy prices since rushes invasion of ukraine. the figure doubled from the previous year. the other energy firms have seen similar arises. b,
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p is also announced. it's scaling back plans to reduce the amount of oil and gas it produces by 2030, saying it needs to meet current demands. a former police officer in london will serve at least 30 years in jail for sex offences. of being handed 36 life sentences . david carrick pleaded guilty to 49 charges relating to 12 different victims between 232020, including multiple rapes. it makes him one of britain's most prolific sex offenders . carrick worked in the innate unit for london's metropolitan police that protected politicians and diplomats, and he used his position to intimidate his victims into silence. police had ignored 9 previous warnings about his actions. nearly 350 years after his death, the dutch painter yaneth from in is about to attract hundreds of thousands of visitors to dairy adams to them. dozens of his paintings have been brought together from around the world for a new exhibition. that person had
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a previous she may have been an imaginary figure, but she's become one of the world's most famous faces. the girl with a pearl earring was created by johan as for mir and the dutch city of delphi, around 1665, and she's captured people's attention ever since. with amir paint never becomes packed when you look at his paintings. and also when you look at the girl was a pearl, you can never see paint. you see a woman looking at you. and there's a lot of mystery around it with an average of 2 paintings a year for me. i may have not been prolific, but all his work has made an impact, a master of light and color, he use techniques experts are still trying to understand to day for me as he 1st one, who painted blue shadows at incredible soviet lot of paintings in this sex additional, you could see this, and also you are the 1st one to make shadows in the face green. this is so special
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that makes also this painter subject will let you how you will love to see this sir . sparkling breath there, and the foreground of the spirit labor who studied for me for many years believed the master learned his techniques. from looking into a camera obscura, a dark box in which objects are reflected through a small beam of light, little stories, perfectly captured and frozen in time for centuries ago, and are all coming together here for the 1st time. in the next museum, their serene stillness draft, few as into 17th century lives. but despite using modern techniques to unravel, the thought behind farmers work one layer and a time, the master himself remains a mystery. or could it be him? there some speculation that this could be his only south portrait in tradition of other masters painted looking at their audience. but it's only a guess. the master also called the sphinx of delft because of his obscurity,
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did not leave much personal history. by scanning for me as paintings, anna caitler and her team got a unique glimpse into how they were created. this is a way to look over his shoulder and away when his painting, so we know which materials he used and we know how he started his composition and how he ended up in. of course, we will never, totally understand him. as a true perfectionist, he made a lot of changes before he decided on his final compositions resulting and paintings that 350 years after his death. at the age of 43, are still speaking to us. steadfast on al jazeera in amsterdam. so i had this news out in sports the best of action from the n b a is boston continued to fly high in east. that's coming up with gemma. ah
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ah ah jim is hannah with a sport. thank you, laura and i'll hello, have become the fust saudi arabians seem to reach the club of wild cup final after us 3 t when over flamingo our a given a penalty. just a couple of minutes into the game. up step salem, adults re add the math. he scored against champions argentina at the well up into let's away. this won't kick the south american champions. they were back in it when pedro equalized after 20 minutes from a guy, then gave away another penalty at the end of the 1st half. we saw just and given
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a 2nd delicate and sent it out. so he stepped up again and same results. the asian champions equinox, went into the break. it went up. right. celebration there was, i was very acrobatic. our lip to be in complete control when lucy on it. yes, i made it for real. i'm. it's 20 minutes today. i'll certainly do that one bedroom, one second of the night in the 9th and 2nd minutes to make it really easy and a novice finished for the saudis team. however, i will allow how's on it to reach the final and you it just didn't. it was watching for us in terms. yeah. well, saudi arabian football really enjoying some golden moments right now. there's a well cut in the pot line for the country. the country's also just won the rice, the house to 2027 asian cup, christiano and elder, of course, playing in the saudi arabian league with al nasa. and now i'll hello the asian champions through to the club world cup formulation flying. now these 2 teams met
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in this tournament and 29. same on that occasion. line go worthy when it's like 3 goals to want this time around. allow able to avenge that loss. really. it's all been about penalties, obvious tournaments, so fall for hello. in the 2nd round match against without casablanca, they needed a last minute penalty to avoid the fate, and then came through the penalty shoots up. and this time to 1st off penalties from sono to, sorry, a play who scored for saudi arabia. enough funny when in the world up against argentina, really put them on my way against fleming got you supporting the thousands of from anger founded by the wrong trip from brazil to morocco for this game, there are a few more important sidles to south american funds than this one in the front of the 3rd goal for hello school on origin pinion. another kindful already for them. got a hung coaches hung national team coach while he'd regarding, has described al,
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hello as the rail madrid of asia. and hello, could now play right out in this final rail, madrid versus i'll actually of egypt is the other semi final him. i'll just a 3rd asian saying to reach the club. well, cook final. they could now become the 1st thing from outside of europe or south america to lift the trophy while i was and he mentioned that round madrid or actually i await, in the final of the champions league holders have been training in robots and their coach calling on shot he is calling for more to be done to tackle racism in spanish football. he leaped to the defense arouse brazilian forward. if this is julia, he has been repeatedly is subjected to hate attacks since he joined madrid in 2018 most recently on sunday, during the defeated mocha last month and effigy of vanessia was hung from a bridge near the clubs, training ground before the madrid, darby against athletic religion, and probably most ugly. it's suggested that vinicius is the problem,
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but the problem is what happens around vanessia full stop. it's a problem in spanish football. i as a part of spanish football, i think we need to so bit some say that vinicius is to blame, but he's the victim of something. i don't understand. the mayor of paris, the said, is inconceivable for russian athletes to come to the french capital for the 2024 olympics, while the ukraine war is ongoing. it's a change in stance from and it i'll go who are last month, said she believed they could take part under a neutral flag to avoid depriving athletes of competition. the international olympic committee will ultimately decide he competes at next year's games. c, football week has kicked off with opening nights in phoenix, arizona. that's where teams make their 1st public appearance in front of fans and answer questions from the media. the chiefs and eagles, quarterbacks, and patrick the homes and jaylen heard so well aware that they're just days away from making history as the 1st player path black quarterbacks to start in the same
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super bowl. the homes is one of only 3 black horse backs to win the vince lombardi trophy. having let the chiefs to victory in 2020 i think about it a lot. i mean a, the corners the came before me, shockers, doug williams, that lay the foundation for me to be in this position. i and it goes across all sorts of you think about jack robinson and people that wrote the color and baseball . i wouldn't be standing here today if it wasn't for them. and so i thing about that all the time and, and the be lucky enough to be in this position. and the plague is another great guy like jalen as will be a special moment. leslie thomas. ah, yes it is this gord moment to be honest. perform in to do so many others so much installation telling them they're going to do a tune. so it's a problem to the m b a now and some impressive dumps in the game between the detroit distance and the boston celtics. but it was the celtics you came out on top
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. thanks largely to jason tatum racks up 34 points celtic sweating by 12 to say talk in the eastern conference at re australia's are in finch, has announced he's retiring from international cricket. the 36 year old who quits the one day game in september, bowed out as australia as a t 20 captain on tuesday, ending his career is one of the greatest and limited over players for his country finch. want to weld cups and scored more than $8000.00 runs across all formats that failed to reach the knockout stages of the wild card when australia hosted it last year. formula one driver alex, our one is calling for clarity from the sports governing body after it introduced a new rule banning drivers from making political statements. speaking of the launch of williams is carved the 2023 season album says that the situation is confusing. the new regulation states drivers will be in breach if they make or display
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political, religious, and personal statements, unless previously approved in writing by the f i. e. and that is all your sports from me for now is back to lauren in london. jemma thank you very much indeed and that's it for me. lauren taylor for this news hour. i'll be here in just a few moments with more days news bye for now. oh ah ah. ready ready ah.
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our planet great. we have to meet the c o 2 emission target liquid casa meter to mention the need to be mind to where people are just talking about wind and solar. is it that's going to solve the problem? it won't. the world of business in commerce is driving energy transition. it's the promise of clean energy and illusion. the dark side of green energy on al jazeera. we understand the differences and similarities of culture across the world. so no matter when you call home will but you can use in current to pass that matter to use a a race against the clock in to kia and syria. a search and rescue operation enters a 2nd night after 2 devastating earthquakes. ah.
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