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tv   News  Al Jazeera  February 12, 2023 2:00pm-2:31pm AST

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for to see if we're still in memory is on homeland. oh, now to sierra february on i just need rhinos and tigers in the whole poach to the brink of extinction. one. 0, $1.00 east discover how they're 14 happy turned around a year old from brussels, evasion of ukraine o jazeera looks at the impact, asks where events might lead from here? rigorous debate, unflinching question. up front mark lamb on tail cuts through the headlines to challenge conventional wisdom. nigerians vote in what's likely to be the most closely contested election in the country's history. from those that wielded to those who confronted people impala, investigate the youth and abusive power around the world. february on a jesse ah,
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press you to off to 6 days. trout, under the rubble, a baby girl is called out live in the tech, a city of hockey. rescue as digs for the rubble clinging to hope of finding more survivors in the f quake ramps takia and syria. ah, and i ride on inside you. this is out there live from just also coming up. i'm malcolm web in a rapidly growing camp for this place, people near the city of gamma in democratic republic of congo, people here. they fight this from the m 23 armed group have killed rates and mutilated in that villages. so they come here in their thousands on the raised decades in the making how iraq is looking to revive its past riding on its unique ah
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ah, has been nearly a week since 2 devastating earthquakes struck sullen turkey in northern syria. the voices that were calling out for help from under the rubble have largely fallen silent. the number of dead is staggering. only 30000 between both countries. and that number is rising every hour. but they are still miraculous stories of survival . a 10 year old girl was rescued after spending a 147 hours trapped under a building in untouched city. she was one of 4 people to be pulled from the rubble on sunday. another 5 year old was freed in half a province. and another moment of relief in the same area, and boy and his mother will pull from the wreck, a 150 hours off to the quake. stephanie decker is in nor dave, but 1st let's go to our correspond natasha. her name is live for us in hattie. so
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some amazing stories that we're hearing about people coming out of the rubble alive . tell us about the rescue efforts where you are and those search and rescue efforts and those miracles stories happened here in hud tie province, offering a ray of hope to turks in desperate need of hearing something to help fuel them during this devastating time, we are in the commercial district of this city called on taka, dating back to ancient times 300 b. c. it was founded. this is part of a commercial district that has been decimated. you see the windows completely collapsed from the chandelier and lighting store over here. it's pretty deserted, to be honest with you. there are more rescue workers, emergency workers, police officers and soldiers than there are people. but when you come to this commercial district in existence for hundreds of years,
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you do find some people here trying to salvage what they can from the buildings likely to at great risk to themselves. considering the fact that these buildings are not quite stable. take a look over here. you have this row of buildings including a, an electrician sort of tilted. we've spoken to business owners and they have said, at least in this area that they have lost everything. natasha when now hearing incidents of looting going on people presumably just getting increasingly desperate . oh absolutely. and we're hearing from the business owners. but on the way here, we stopped in a gas station about 90 minutes away. we went in to the store to get something the shells were cleared and we were told that it had been looted. just gives you an idea of how desperate people are across such a wide area. i'm showing you what used to be
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a shoe store. so clearly you see the ceiling has collapsed to the ground and underneath thousands of shoes, we spoke to the shoe owner. he said he came here on wednesday, he lost his home. he's been living in a tent and saw people looting from his 2 stores. he made an appeal, he said, take the shoes if you need them, but please, this is my livelihood. do not steal and they stole anyway. he says now he's asking that the government look after not only business owners, but everyone. this particular business owner, as i said, has been living in a tent outside of his home. he says that of course, he's so grateful that he survived. as i said, we're on this commercial district, it's called independence road behind me. and if you look at the street after street store after store, he says he has lost hundreds of friends in the earthquake and business owners along here alone. about 20 people he knows have been killed down. you see there's
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a jewelry store right here, vodafone, we've seen scenes like this. this used to be what we're told a jewelry store. we're not sure if they have suffered losses back behind another jewelry store. business after business gone on takia is a commercial hub known for selling cotton, tobacco olives. and as i said since ancient times actually, and takia has been a commercial hub. so the population here before the earthquake was about 200000 people. it's unclear how many people will remain after the earthquake. this man right here. we spoke to a little bit ago, this man in the code behind us. he owns a bookstore and he told us that his bookstore has collapsed. ok, thank you for that. natasha game. there for us and has a so many challenges ahead for the survivors of that earthquake. let's go to
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stephanie decker, who is in, nor the stephanie. of course, many people have lost their lives. but one of the survivors where you are, they getting access to food, water sheltered the basic necessities to live. latasha was talking to about a business dictate district. we're in a residential district. these are all apartment blocks, could probably, ah, sense the destruction. so even though these buildings are, i guess, officially standing there, there is nothing safe about them. they need to be demolished. the residents of all of these areas are staying in intense set up by the local, emergent, because off relief agency. not far from here, but it is incredibly cold actually today it's warming off a little. the rescue operations been going on here for 7 days. they managed to pull out incredibly, a mother and
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a daughter yesterday. you can see here from amazon dot emma, who been working incredibly hard. no, no. yeah. i did upload it because it's been 7 days. there's also 2 other children pulled from this apartment block i just a few days ago. you have a lot of the relatives who stay here, in fact, who told me to one man who's actually searching through the rubble. the 6 members of his family remain in that building 40 people remain there. he told us that now working floor by floor, they managed to clear the 5th floor there now starting to work on the 4th. and the way they describe is earthquake to us. is that basically when it came, it was like a tornado. he was saying, he says basically if the bedroom was here, it ended up being here. so you have an indian rescue team now also helping with the rescue recovery operation. as i said, 40 people remain inside. we were trying to keep up hope that perhaps there could be actually you can see a lady praying as she's sitting just
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gives you a sense, i don't know what she is paying for whether she has family in that building or whether she's just generally praying for the people of turkey because everyone you talked to here, there is a real resolve. one man was saying it's a credit how the world is hum to help us and we feel together at this time. but i, you are all see if people are having enough aid. well, look around it. i mean, all these people are going to be housed, sheltered, fed war didn't have to resume their lives with at the moment having lost everything . so it is a very, very difficult indeed, but certainly at the moment this kind of fee you're seeing across the entire region where natasha is. it's around a, you know, 7 hour drive from here in the entire region on and off. looks like that. okay, thank you for that update. stephanie deca, their 1st in nor they are more aid is trickling into rebel held parts of
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northern syria to you. and ag convoys crossed the bub on how i border on sunday. but the ones a chief martin griffith says that the international community has failed north west syria, where people have been looking for help. that hasn't arrived. griffith says his obligation is to now correct this valley as quickly as possible. santa hodder has more on the relief efforts. so deal was rescued from the rubble of her home in northwest syria, which too was hit hard by mondays, earthquake and southern turkey. as the 6 year old girl recounts the horror of her experience, she still doesn't know how much she has lost. pressure fell out of the building, swayed from one side to another, and there was destruction. everywhere i heard my mother calling my father's name. i then lost consciousness and woke up at the hospital. i didn't lose any one in the quake, but i haven't seen any one yet. heck, feed her to get her father and 3 of her siblings. died. that even here in my past
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the deal doesn't know yet. we also didn't tell her mother because we're concerned about their health. stories of survival and death are heard over and over again. the biggest natural disaster to hit the region in decades is the latest crisis for the people of syria who have experience, years of war displacement and hunger agencies worn the worst is yet to come. there is the lack of everything and, and, and, and of course is called the winter is going on. so people the to be kept warm. we've set up a small clinics just to look afters. people's injuries. serious health care system was already struggling due to the war. the world health organization says at least 20 health facilities across the opposition controlled northwest, including 4 hospitals, had sustained damage. and while emergency medical services have been overwhelmed
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with trauma, patients essential health services have been severely disrupted. got to be able to be, as you can see, part of the hospital was damaged. we lacked doctors and medical supplies to deal with such a big emergency. the needs are enormous and we don't have enough resources. aid has started to flow in, but the needs are on an unprecedented scale. the united nations is coordinating its disaster response from government controlled areas where it says it is working to gain approvals from damascus for faster and more regular access to the northwest. but people there say it is too late. countless lives they say have been lost because their appeals for help were ignored by the international community. santa hunter. osha's eda, doctor junior. that cove as a medical unit manager, doctors without borders. she says they are concerns about peoples wounds becoming infected. and the general state of the syrian health system were for sure,
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worried about epidemiological situation. ah, with a called i was a partially discharged destruction of the infrastructure were worried about what a born disease about respiratory disease about the funeral population. we are also worried about the access to the house care for the patience with a chronic diseases that we see quite a lot in syria. and if they are normal, health care is disrupted, it can beer are very like fighting oh consequences. we are worried about there in the inter people who manage to get the 1st surgeries, but then we'll have to deal with the long term injury and the rehabilitation and getting back their functionality. we're also in freight about the long, long lasting consequences of the infection because the hostile was overwhelmed and the surgery was done in a difficult condition. i were also worried about mental house. ah, syria student population in a northwest city is already in high risk because of prolong crisis and the
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difficult living condition. i think the 1st thing which will be ongoing right now, it's really to do her a thorough assessment of our, their existing health structure and how much it got damaged. we know it did better . the extent of it is still to be discovered and how much their, their regular house system is, ah, able to cope reserve, their regular activity, plus all the interests that are, that are there. so it's difficult to prioritize. one thing i think are all of them should be addressed sled all now. does air will live in west jerusalem is israel says it's going to ramp up grades against palestinians. and we build up to super bowl. 57 with hundreds of millions expected to walk around the world as the kansas city chiefs take on the philadelphia, eagles. ah,
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so to nearly a month, indigenous communities have been blocking the bridge leading to the town of latter katy in the rest of region of southern group demanding the resignation of president deena board. a lot of the army has converted the towns. bullfighting ring into a military base, a slice of constitutional rights, which is nationalist direction. i come in peace, but i tell you, meant to man, if you come here looking for us and things will be very different. the deployment of the army and the bow by many combatants indigenous communities to resist attempts to end their pro long national strike has shortly increase tensions and bruno. this is lake d. v guy, the home of the orders, more than 2000 of them walks you to live on the lake. this is where the empire was founded long before the spaniards ever came here. however, i'm popular. the president, ongoing strikes and roadblocks are taking their toll informed opinion for right
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extreme is there is real and need to be tackled as soon as possible. frank assessments. there was a joke about hearing from governments that it's not in for him. and nor does it go inside story on al jazeera lou lou ah, welcome back and watching out their mind to the top stories and all the 30000 people have now died from the earthquakes in turkey and syria. recovery operations are continuing in the worst hit areas almost a week off to thousands of buildings were destroyed. millions of people have been left homeless. but rescue was still finding people alive under the rubble. as 5
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year old girl was one of 4 people to free on sunday, and very almost a 168 is now trickling into rebel held part of northern syria rescue assets were hampered in a region already devastated off the years. many saying that they felt about let's get some of the news down. people are continuing to flee from fighting in the democratic republic of congo. the congress army says it is pushing back, fight this from the m 23 ohms group. you all mean says fighting is now centered around 50 kilometers from the provincial capital. goma not come web has the latest from the language, which is nigga my with thousands of people have fled. where we are just a few weeks ago was an empty field connecting the main road between gomer and so, okay, we're going to step aside so you can see what's here. now, in the last few weeks,
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thousands and thousands of people arrived the fleeing villages in the hills in mississippi territories. if we 1st came here a week ago, and every time we've come back since more these 100 more these shelters of sprung up more than double within the 1st year, we hear the size of this camp. an hundreds are arriving every day and they also tell similar stories of m $23.00 sites arriving in the villages. they report some people being shot dead. others being killed with michelle being re some being abducted. and this prompts all the rest of the community to flee on to, to hear to this camp. many people say that they're missing relatives who are missing children. they didn't know if that's just because they got separated. while on, on the journey walking through the hills for days, or if the people that they're missing are among those who have been killed.
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meanwhile, they say that the conditions here quite visibly not good at told is a shortage of food. and we've had several claps of thunder and stronger the wind in the last few minutes suggesting there's a heavy rainstorm on the way. israel says it will step up. it's raised against palestinians in the occupied east. jerusalem and the west bank prime minister benjamin netanyahu made the announcement on sunday. dozens of palestinians have already been killed by early forces this year is really only his field of access to the hundreds of palestinians who read accuses of carrying out the attacks that you've limitless. the appropriate answer to terror strike hard and referred to deepen our roots in our country. accordingly, the cabinet is meeting today to prepare for an even broader action against those carrying out terrorism and their supporters in east jerusalem and you there and some area like preventing as much as possible, harming those uninvolved. sarah congress. his lie 1st in west to resend sarah. so
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this cabinet meeting has just concluded, what more did nothing. you have to say wellness and yahoo said that they are going to be a further meeting that will be held this evening. they're going to be discussing 3 things. one of those top items is national security. they want to step up the military operation and also looking at expanding illegal assessments in the occupied east jerusalem and occupied west by now of course, all of this comes off the back of a 3rd attack in just 2 weeks. that happened on friday on friday, 2 people had died and the 3rd person, which is a child that year old child, died on saturday evening. and in that time there have been mass rays that been carried out in the area. so we're where the attacker says, year old palestinian comes from, they sealed a home that he was renting, but then they also overnight and sealed the home belonging to his family in an
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entirely different area. and this is the message that the israeli new is ready, right? when government is sending but not only will they be camping down on an attacker, but also on family we're seeing connects as punishment. that's being happen happening rather in the neighborhoods where these attackers are coming from. and to be the national security minister, had attended the site where the attack happened. he insisted on blockading the entire neighborhood. but then was said that lead you to be go legalities that they wouldn't be able to do that. however they did. and we saw this yesterday, they stopped every call that was coming out of that neighborhood. so this just gives you an idea of the situation. the new government is in 3 attack since it's come into power. and in a way they've not had to deal with loan walls and not really is a saw a thorn in their side at the moment. and this is what they're going to be discussing later. today. sarah car, there for us in west jewish and funky the head of the wagner
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mercenary group says it could take 2 years for russia to fully cease control of ukraine's eastern regions often yet. and you had asked if jenny prickles in statement comes, as the mercenary force claims have captured the east and village of crossing a horse nearby. moot area has seen some of the faces fighting for months. a 2nd, unidentified object has been shot down in north american aerospace, this time of in northern canada. canadian and american forces were tracking the cylindrical objects before a u. s. f. 22 aircraft shot it down over the yukon comes a day after another flying objects was shot down in the us state of alaska. and one week after chinese balloon was down off the coast of north carolina. is of war and instability in iraq have taken
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a toll on the countries rich equestrian heritage. and now there's been a push to revive the industry and attract new generation of writers. i made up the why he'd reports from nepa in southern iraq. for the 1st time in more than 3 decades in iraq courses compete in a long distance race. university student 40 mom has come to the ancient sumerian city of new port from the southern city of basra. and she's excited. she's one of very few female jockeys to take part. she says she's emotionally connected to her 4 year old arabian thorough bread mare is i always, she and i. we have been eagerly waiting for this competition. it had been a live stream to ride a horse. now until i real i said with the opening of an question club in my home city, i hope to participate in more competitions and represent my country abroad on our side. oh, mr. haney, the kind who i and 3 small cas,
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a breakthrough for equestrian sports in the country during the us led invasion, thousands of estate own thoroughbreds were lost somewhere to killed. others neglected or stolen and smuggled abroad for 3 decades. during goren sanctions, horse racing in iraq was told now, nearly a 100 joke is representing the most iraqi provinces are able to compete in a single race. it's part of a drive by the countries main equestrian organization to grow the sport and raise standards. bumper boycotted yeoman. my ears don't. we're trying to salvage the golden times, our team of national experts of many years of experience in gulf countries. despite all the hard times, our country has gone through and, and will still have some of the best breeds in the world, not offer some pure bloodsaw kept at the federation's main facility in the capital,
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baghdad here houses are vetted to ensure that in top condition to meet international standards and compete abroad. iraq used to be home to some of the finest arabian thoroughbreds. that value is judged by civil criteria, including strong physique, soft skin, wide eyes, a large nostrils to help them in hail as much as possible, while racing. but above all, it's their intellect and ability to respond to commands that sets them apart. back at the race track, the iraq equestrian federation is hoping the event with revitalized this port and fall tma is calling on other iraqi girls to follow her lead. ma'am, would abdulla algebra in the poor,
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southern iraq halls have opened in cyprus for the countries presidential run off election. last week's ballad fails to produce an outright winner. an ex president will face challenges including the deadlock and re unification. talks with tech as separates, as well as labor disputes. and the countdown is on city kick off with america's biggest annual sporting events at the super bowl. more than a 100000000 people expected to watch in the u. s. line, they mistakes reports, state farm stadium in glendale, arizona is gearing up to host one of the biggest shows in world sport super bowl. 57, the kansas city chiefs against the philadelphia eagles for many bows down to the quarterbacks . patrick, the homes for the chiefs against jalen hurts for the eagles. it'll be the 1st time that 2 black quarterbacks start the super bowl. it's going to be a great match up and you can ask for a better team to go up against the in the super bowl. i mean it's, um, yeah,
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a fun game and i'm excited for it. besides anything else that come with it? no, we are just wanna go live with our own alar. let it all hang. ah, do we got to do? sunday is not just about the quarterbacks. we'll also see 2 siblings face each other for the 1st time in the super bowl sheep's toy 10 travis kelsey against his older brother, jason, the eagle center divided loyalties to their mother. donna. oh, yeah. yeah. well now they've been dreaming about it since they were 10 years old. it would be on the same team and it would be for probably in the browns cuz that's all they knew at that point. but that didn't happen. and i think they landed in the right places more than a 100000000 people are expected to watch the game in the u. s. alone. and it will be shown in more than $200.00 countries in $25.00 languages. knowing time grammy award winner brianna will headline this year's half time show her 1st live performance in 5 years. i'll make this quick, mr. pina. i know you got some brownies to ruin. and as for the adverts,
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a 32nd spot will cost $7000000.00 for pina. this sabrina. what do you? yeah. hardy. april is a massive audience. that's a lot of people speak to at the same time. but it's more than that during the civil war. most consumers are excited about the commercials. they want to talk about the commercial, so it's not just advertising pundents like myself, we're excited. everyone is excited. so the stage is set to the advertises, entertainers, the players, and also the gambling industry. with $50000000.00 americans expected to better record $16000000000.00 on sundays game. more than double the amount from last year . after 3 more states legalize sports, gambling in the us. david stokes out his error. okay, and that's it for me, manning. i even ease continues here. now sarah, to entice, going to stay with us. ah
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. temperatures in southern china, half been up to over 30 degrees. that's about to change the ac is sweeping through . china is that massive cloud which will take rain through the south and dropped temperatures with it. the snow on the higher ground coming into a shower example, and the northerly breeze always a cold. one suggests more snow is likely in honcho may be hawkeye. fairly wet snow is not particularly cold as the avalanche risk will be higher. ticklers is mixed with rain, not far away, which runs through the southern half of homes. you're maybe briefly acute you. little bit of a cold breeze, but it's not that cold. beijing 7 is more or less where it should be. and of course it is that clear air pushes slowly south during tuesday and increases the likelihood of snow fall on the hard ground honshu at the same time. the south asia is not much going on to be honest. i call it is not that good, but it's bit of a breeze. so in some places that just churn over the air and improve things.
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there's no significant rain anywhere that i can see maybe well to sharon easton, paul, but there is something coming in from iraq and through afghanistan is the frontal system, which is sort of slow moving. so the b rain at low levels, snow at height and alco crossen lot left gas down into the far north of pakistan. but for the most part it is just sunshine. ah. 1956 to nicea gain. independence from france. but the brutal power struggle broke out between the b to this is monica. and the countries nationalist prime minister al jazeera world, tells the story of the downfall of the dentist and folded the paper. i read to him the decision to shield the last monarch of tunisia, power and politics on jessie.

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