tv News Al Jazeera February 12, 2023 8:00am-8:31am AST
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really diluted abdullah up till rockman says without it there's no point in keeping his radio again. i've been listening to it more than 30. his precious over bbc's finances would be mounting requiring at a hot choices to many inside and outside the organization. this has been a soft day. this is one of the most astounding technological revolution in all of the through make our planner great. the. we have to meet the c o 2 emission targets lecture casa major mitchum in motion. 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 and commerce is driving energy transition. each the promise of clean energy and illusion. the top side of green energy on al jazeera. ah
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yes, quite deaf toll across to keon, syria continues. decline more than 29000. now confound dead. but 6 days on survivors are still being pulled from the rubber. ah, hello there, i'm sorry. attain this is al 0 like from dar ha. was that coming up with ortiz in the city? at the epicenter of the 2nd quake assess the scale of destruction caused by what they say was less than 2 minutes of shaking serene. so sheltering and makeshift camps and the freezing cold. now the search for survivors is called off. and spanish side rail madrid when they're 50 club, well kept title with the 53 victory. i have a saudi arabia's allen. mm hm. mm. stays now after 2 devastation earthquakes. had to kia and
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syria hopes of rescuing any more survivors from the rubble are beginning to fade on a visit to the epicenter of one of the quakes you entered chief martin griffith said it was the worst event to hit the region for a 100 years. turkish president recipe bedouin says steps will be taken to rebuild broken cities within weeks. he is denied accusations that building codes were not properly enforced. meanwhile, the 10s of thousands are still without shelter across to kia and syria. many of them sleeping in the cold turkey state media report $48.00 people have also been arrested for looting in total more than $29000.00 people are now known to have died or begin our coverage with russell soda and cut him on mirage. the epicenter of the 2nd week this, this building was once home to the families that lived here. now, many of the residents are buried under the debit. the voices, from under the rubble are fading with every passing minute. and those alive and
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safe are exhausted by the tortures. wait. sometimes losing temper and control tension is running high and time is running out by these kids coming and anger rising o me people but a lot of the health has said his mother. but his younger brother, he's gone on, i mean, he says he is the oldest among siblings. and his younger brother shouldn't have died. first. be the one that was due yesterday. we are suffering pain. i don't want any one else to experience this. many lives here have been torn apart and families chevy, or talk to say the to earthquakes that hid the city, released energy equivalent to that of 500 atomic bombs. the skate of destruction is immense. the turkish disaster management authority says the duration of the 1st earthquake that he had sought in turkey was 65 seconds. while the 2nd one lasted
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for 45 seconds, the area was shaken severely for about 2 minutes. as a result, around 1000 buildings collapsed and nearly 6000 people died in carmel marsh. those who survived are now trying to cough the window to save people is shortening, and the cost of failure is too high. got a mitchell with mitchell. we've been working for days without stopping, i mentally down with but i have to stand firm and continue to work because they're relying on us. there has been some postings as well and hard work has gone through it. here, a 5 year old ceiling girl is being pulled out alive after 132 hours on the da robin . a moment of celebration and a spark of hope for those still waiting o. as the night falls on rubble, income and mirage, these rescue dogs sniffs through the debris. it detects the smell of some one below,
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possibly alive. and it is time again for the steady and delicate rescue work. rousseau saturday. i'll jazeera carmen marsh, southern turkey here on moving to another of ticket west het tans down alzheimer's . there, dan has been speaking to survivors in our die. it's a really cold night out here, as you can see, and some of the displays to having to do well whatever they can to stay warm burning. basically whatever they can get their hands on. and over there you can see a rubble building. well, that's the reason why at least some of them are out here right now. that was their home. now, the having defend themselves to a certain extent, help is reaching them. we've just seen some meals delivered and so on, but it's a cold night. going to ask me if i can warm up here. it's an abilene. my son has
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talked to him again. he has, i'm a chalk, so walk shall naturally assure sooner child i was asking her to really cold night. how is she living out here yet? mccloud? yeah, thought about finance, financial or the yeah. will that some of the about the talk she could ok. julie to kim is to leave off h a cut up lot in is ordered on the shadow mid market learned a lot of us with them. i promise, chosen florida. i was asking her about her relatives. she's got relatives still in that robin building. we hope, of course, we hope for miracles and we hope they'll be able to pull them out. but this is a very difficult situation. and when you hear statements by united nations, officials talking about an overwhelming devastation. well,
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this is one overwhelming devastation looks like. and this is one overwhelming devastation on a cold night. feels like sammy's a than on the outskirts of god. we had to, to kia an entire year almost a week on hundreds. and i was actually funding for themselves and it's the rubble of what used to be their homes. here's bernard smith, now with a look at what life at night is like in those rooms. the only heat, the only warmth in the city comes now from the fires made from the debris of the homes where these people, once lived, survivors cling onto the hope that somehow their loved ones may still be alive under the rubber. well hasn't good tech in that means his wife, 3 children, and mother in law to each other. we don't need food aid. what we need is technical aid. i need my 3 kids to be rescued, even if only one of my kids survived. it will be a hope for me to continue living. otherwise there's no point to keep on living. i
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don't know what to do, who will call me dad during age street after st. district after district. it took just 2 minutes of the earthquake to cause all this destruction. it's the most devastating, quaking turkey since $939.00. building regulations have come a long way since then. but enforcing them is a different matter. before the last presidential and parliamentary elections, the government grunted amnesty for building code violations. finding companies instead. now a 1000000 people are homeless and on tack in most of the city of 400000 has been destroyed. the challenge now for the government is trying to stop this catastrophe . turning into a public health crisis thick with smoke and dust. there is no sanitation. people are still living on the streets and their body still under the rubble. that is why there is such an urgent need to get people away from the
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disaster site and into temporary tented accommodation. there are now fewer visible rescue operations here. mother said, unfortunately, my country, which i love so much, has failed. i so disorganized and can't work at all. it's the 6 day and every day to different teams take part in the rescue. i haven't seen any officials here, neither from the government nor from the mayor's office. i don't want to say them anyway. i don't come here because they know we don't want to see them. this is was left of the home her son had made with his family michel number that would be an imaginable pain of losing a child or loved one. is being felt by tens of thousands of people, inter kia this week, bernard smith, i'll jazeera and takia, while meanwhile, in gauzy and tap and insomnia for turkish police have attained to 12 people over collapsed buildings. those taken into custody included,
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building contractors. beg has one out from stumble over hearing the round 12 people have been detained, a back, the construction of these buildings, not 2 of those done, but no one of those individuals just going, he's responsible for the construction of a 12 story building. and i tried to run $250.00 apartments and that building came down during the earthquake. now he was detained for twos, getting ready to leave from one negro. had some cash on him, which was confiscated by authorities. anything diamond for just the nick to the media? here he says that he's building follow the regulations that he doesn't know why the building came down that has the building still standing and that he had followed those regulations. but the public prosecutor has also protected pension orders and 29 other individuals surrounding the construction of buildings. not question of and also the government of been off of the government here around those building regulations and the standards of construction. now back in 2018, there wasn't,
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i'm going to be around the building regulations that some cases people just paid a fine and experts had warned about those standards in the event of an earthquake. now those questions continue to remain in the government. deny that building regulations were ignored, but this question will continue to remain as the weeks and months go on. when we spoke to solid, he's a professor at country it has university and he says, investigating contractors could also unveil a much larger chain of violations. obviously these contractors, i mean 1st of all, they're innocent until proven guilty, but they may have not followed the regulations to the letter and that would be their responsibility. but they are not the only ones who would be responsible if such as the case because they are those who approve those plans. there are those who are supposed to inspect those plans goes out. there are people who give them the permits are also co conspirators. if you will,
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should this be proven to be correct that they have not follow to the, to the letter? the regulations that makes it building codes or are tender codes have changed over a $150.00 times. in the past 20 years that we there had been quite a number of misty's. and of course, all that made cheating, actually a very valuable thing because then you make a lot of money, you don't follow the code and then you actually pay a little penalty perhaps. and then you get away. ready you get away with it and live right now. you get away with murder literally. well, at several powerful aftershock since monday trainers are also now being recorded in neighboring countries. excess of calling from a quality control during the construction of buildings to reduce risks in the quite print region to them cause he only has more from ankara much we continue
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seismic data. vital input to measure earthquakes. it is monitored process and assess in real time here at the turkish disaster management agency. turkey has had some 5 major seismic fall plants risking 71 percent of its population and 6 to 6 percent of its landscape, the largest. so those triggered to stronger earthquakes on monday, causing death and destruction in the east. and while we're speaking were shaken twice by tremors above 4.0 magnitude. this is part of life here. now, holland, after so simpler no longer the off, aftershocks were, were 3 points quite before martin to deceive him up as $16.00 will continue for much longer north. we are revaluate in the magnitude dimensions of the affected area. earthquake in line with the information from our field to to go to this amazon. what we see is a much bigger disaster. premier anticipated a halt yet for the other. this means the damage structures can still collapse,
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while other risks like snow for a way to earthquake hit airs. this lie, map shows all as quakes that whole occurred since monday is devastating tremors. just in 15 hours on saturday, turkey has experienced 330 earthquakes, and the country has been jolted. 2305th, the 6th time since what the turkish president called the disaster of the century, shows you, margaret, is your what mother you're a girl ought not, no need to be stern or exaggerated by saying this is the biggest tre calling you on that so i'm point for magnitude was approaching, it was area you didn't know i'm paid attention. as scientists say you can't resist nature, but build earthquake resistance set is a joint responsibility of the state. people and the local administration's seen em
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casala al jazeera and clara all the devastation is overwhelming on both sides of the border. in northern syria, thousands of families are now grieving and warning. the death of their relatives. stephanie deca has more from the tucker syrian border. we came to the border to cover the resumption of aid into northern syria. but what we saw was body bag after body bag being carry towards the border in the bag behind, clearly a small child. these are syrians who were killed in the earthquake into gear. he makes space for more, their families sending them back home to be buried. the smell of death hangs thick in the air here. within just a few hours, more than 50 bodies, at least. no relative wanted to speak to us on camera. but this is a grandmother and her 2 grandchildren. a father came to bring his own children,
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look at them, he told us clearly in a days the youngest is 5, the other is 12. he said, it looks like they are sleeping. the bodies of 4 children are in that vehicle and they're about to be put into the truck to be taken across the border. they came here to flee war and had to restart their lives all over again. many syrians decided to resettle here in hattie province, which is one of the areas that's been hardest hit. the man holding the paperwork, drives them across the border into syria. he also didn't want to talk on camera. he works 20 hour days. he tells us most syrians who fled the war will tell you that they dream of one day finally, being able to return back home. but not like this. stephanie decker al jazeera on the turkish syrian border. still a had here on out, is it for reasons. so the streets now for
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a 4th street dame demonstrating against government plans for pension reform and will hear from one midwife who refuses to carry out female genital mutilation. and saddam, and why the outdoor practice is so hard to stamp ah hello, the weather set fair across. so, southern parts of the middle east over the next couple days, and it will gradually warm up even here in casa fab more cloud, further north, that cloud thick enough to reduce them, outbreaks of cloud and rain through iraq into iran. we'll see some where to weather some when she weather coming through here. q 8, getting up to around 24 celsius and not too bad. 24 here in dough. horace. well, in this we go on into monday. we could touch 28 degrees with some pleasant sunshine
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returning to the region, but further north thinks to cool off quite around 900 celsius and snow coming into western parts of iraq, mo, 2 sides of some snow. just creeping their way into northern areas of to care by monday, i think by the middle of the week we could see snow returning across a good part of the kia may be pushing down towards northern areas. a syria ahead of that. it does stay dry, and of course, it will stay cold, particularly at night for the frosts in the forecast here for the forseeable future . one or 2 showers across the far north of africa. meanwhile, some showers, they're just around shanicea, northern parts of algeria, but from much of north africa it is fine dry and said less is the case across the western side of southern africa over to walls. yes. received very heavy rainbow flooding in the s. what teeny, i'm mozambique ah, oil companies, the big companies in the world had a very deep understanding of the climate crisis before the rest of us. and yet they
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did not tell anyone else. that's where the tribes 40 years of denying their own scientific evidence. i thought that i could afford to change your business plan. this was very naive decisions that have plagued our future is just pure evil. i don't know what to say. the boils big lives on on just a yellow. ah ah ah ahem! back to watching al jazeera, i'm associate a hit and or ha, that's remind you of our top stories. the earthquake death toll across to kia and syria continues to climb more than $29000.00 on that confounded 6 days on from the
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disaster. hopes of rescuing any more survivors from the rubble are beginning to fade in. montague, as president must apply that one says steps will be taken to rebuild broken cities within weeks. he is denied accusations that building codes were properly enforced, and aid is now trickling into rebel how parts of northern syria rescue efforts were hampered in the war to one region with many saying they felt bad. now another unidentified object has been shut down over north american ass basis. time over northern canada. canadian and american forces were tracking the cylindrical object before a u. s. f. 22 aircraft shot down over the yukon or the canadian defense minister. and he to and, and explained the government's decision to shoot down the object. the object was flying at an altitude of approximately 40000 feet, had unlawfully entered canadian air space and posed
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a reasonable threat to the safety of civilian flight. the object was down approximately 100 miles from the canada, united states border over canadian territory. in central yukon, it appears to be a small cylindrical object and smaller than the one that was down off the coast of north carolina. for us and jordan has more from washington dc because this unidentified object had strayed into canadian air space at some point on saturday. it was up to the canadian prime minister justin trudeau to make the decision to disable it. and for the canadian military to then gather up the debris and try to analyze it. it's not clear yet how long that's going to take because it's not exactly clear where over the yukon territory, that an american f $22.00 fighter jet shot the object down. now this is the 3rd
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such take down of a flying object in either canadian or american air space. in the last 7 days. of course, the 1st was the now infamous surveillance balloon that was taken down off the u. s . eastern seaboard. a week ago, saturday. what is important is that both the canadian and the american military's are now very much us sensitized to the use of balloons and other unidentified objects for surveillance purposes. ostensibly to try to gather more information about us and canadian military installations. about the movement of us and canadian, a military of vessels such as nuclear submarines that are known to traverse the arctic circle. as well as the concern about the possible interference of the flying of these objects with commercial aircraft demonstrate is demanding the resignation
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of peruvian president, dean above watching. have been out on the streets of the capitol. yes. again, security officers fire, tear gas there. as you can see, to disperse, the crowds, classes that between demonstrators and security forces in the last 2 months have left doesn't stairs. or brazilian authorities have destroyed an illegal gold mining area in the young mommy indigenous territory. the government is trying to expel 20000 illegal minors. they've been blame for causing a humanitarian crisis in the reservation. while it's now been 3 years sincere dance government band, a female genital mutilation, but the united nation says the practice is still happening. have been morgan reports from the capital cartoon for he met, has been a midwife and undermined near to me for more than 30 years. she is familiar with what her kid back holes and has used its contents many times to deliver babies. but before being bandon, put down to use similar equipment to carry out what's known as f t. m. o. that
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even to me, i used to carry out the practice on young girls the last time i did so was in 2008 on my next. but that hurt me too much so i stopped. the government outlawed it, but people still asked me till this day to operate on a children. female genital mutilation has long been part of for dance culture. those who practice it believe it protects girls on their and reputation. but medical studies show that it contributes to complication during childbirth and increases chances of infection. for denise rights groups have campaigned for years against the practice and in 2020 to dance, then transitional government outlawed. it's completely the practice of female genital mutilation. between the ages of 15 and 49 dropped from 89 percent to 86 percent in the decade leading up to the band and 31 percent in girls. a 14 or younger the us children's agency unit has the band has
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a further decline of practice in young girls. an estimated 25 percent. with most of them happening in rural areas. that's a drop of less than 10 percent. 3 years on the figure is yet to reach 0. despite those who practice at risk and a 3 year prison sentence, many and daughters are some of those who were subjected to the practice, even after the band wasn't forest. she high per face, a name out of fear of legal repercussions. yolanda missouri neal slung min at leaf. we went to the countryside for holidays and my mother in law. myself and my husband were against it, but she's older and we couldn't say no to her, not. she promised the midwife wouldn't cut a lot for my daughters, but the midwife did. and i didn't find out until 3 days later thing. eunice f says younger generations understand the dangers of f t m. and that help lead to a reduction in the practice. but other challenges remain in anything. it's
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altogether said, daniel, the midwives who continue with the practice do so because there is no supervision and the economic situation, the cost of living forces them to perform. it has the vendors, the issue of awareness of the law by the launch a campaign to raise awareness around the country that f g m is now against the law . but he says if she had known the dangers of f t m, when she used to perform the operations she'd have stopped earlier. she hoped that any awareness campaign reaches those who continue to call on her to perform f jim on their daughters. so they don't suffer the consequences. he will morgan august 0 cartoon. oh, there has been more protests in france against proposals to increase the retirement age. their thousands have vented their anger at present manual my cons. planned pension reforms said to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64. andrew simmons as at these demonstrations, this is a 4th day of action. and right now there's
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a battle for hearts and minds. opinion polls consistent and around 70 percent of the country supporting this sort of action 4 days ago. the numbers were reduced according to police, that it's hope by the organizes is going to change here. for example, in paris, rail workers haven't been striking to allow the metro and other lines allow more people in. furthermore, right across the country, we're seeing people in provincial towns in bigger numbers now. so emanuel micron does seem to have a major problem, will it subside? it's unlikely people are hopping mad about the retirement age, for example, across europe. it's a higher age, but the people here say they will accept nothing else, but 62 years of age to retire. already walked full of 42 years right now.
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i don't, i don't want to work more than death. that's it. oh yeah. again, the pension we phone because it's another attack from that comes government against a young people, but also workers in france. despite the scale of these protest, mark, chrome is adamant. he'll stand firm. the reform package had been the centerpiece of his election campaign last year for the presidency. and he is reported to have said that he wants to be remembered for these reforms. that could be a pronouncement he lived to regret possibly. her re on the dread have won the club wildcat for a record 5th time. the european champions beat out loud of saudi arabia. 3 and richardson was at the final in the moroccan capital robot. toys before an asian team had reached the club of world cup final, on both occasions, rail madrid was assigned to any hopes of a surprise when a saudi arabia is al. hello amy to become the 1st scene from outside of europe or
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south america, to lift the trophy gray on every time to discover that's enough. we also have the gym and he has a great team visit club. and ben is basic with the rail fans were immediately cheered by the sight of corinne benjamin leading the females, the striking back in action of the missing the semi final through injury know thing the school more goals and club, woke up history ban rail, madrid, and vinicius junior, quickly added another to that holly federico valvor. they made it to new. instantly 20 minutes. maria looked sent for a straightforward when he did their best to disrupt the narrative. newsome irregular breaking clear the shoot hissing pack in contention. the side of
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his junior really foot unlocked helen's defense in the 2nd half benjamin on hand to apply the finishing touch. albert, i can go made it one theory, vinicius junior rails much went in last year champions, league final against liverpool, also school point. hello luciana vieza was another player to put who goes by his name, with a wide open game finished by 33 out a record extend. 5th club, well cut when for the spanish site. when this competition was launched to the turn of the century, brazilian teams won the 1st 3 additions since then. there has been 15 european victories in 16 tournaments. this has become a competition where the financial superiority of the year.
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