Skip to main content

tv   News  Al Jazeera  February 12, 2023 4:00pm-5:00pm AST

4:00 pm
yet more rain and snow ah, the wind blows the fishing boats home as it has for the countless centuries people have lived here. these are malagasy migrants they move from the drought ridden south in such mem means to survive. and their story is the interface between climate change and biodiversity loss. the arrival of the migrants is adding to the precious on fish docs and marine by diversity, already stretched by over fishing. and this is going to happen all over the world is impacts like sea level rise goals, people to move further and further in learn, putting more pressure on environmental resources for people fleeing the impacts of global warming. it's survival at all costs. ah
4:01 pm
ah, hello, i'm tom mccrae. this is the news. how alive from doha coming up in the next 60 minutes. rescued after 6 days trapped under the rubble, a baby girl is pulled out alive the turkish city of n tanikia. but for many outside the rabble. the anxious way for active goes on, sometimes for some of them bubbling over into frustration. i'm sammy's, aidan live from ga hm on marsh, the api center of the 2nd major earthquake. also in the news, our israel's government decides to stick up rides on occupied territories. days after a car rammed into a bus stop killing 3 people. the russian masonry group, wagner says it could take 2 years to fully seize control of ukraine's eastern regions. plus, i'm malcolm web in
4:02 pm
a rapidly growing camp for displaced people need. this is the, is go, must democratic republic of congo people here. they fight is from the m 23 armed group have killed rates and mutilated in their villages. so they come here in their thousands and we build up to super bowl. 57 with hundreds of millions expected to watch around the world as the kansas city chiefs take on the philadelphia, eagles. ah to it's nearly a week since 2 devastating earthquake struck southern to kiya and northern syria. the voices that were calling out for help from under the rubble have largely fallen silent. the number of dead is staggering. more than 30000 between both countries. and that number is rising every hour. we have a team of correspondents covering the story across to kia stephanie deka is in
4:03 pm
nevada, near the syrian border. natasha and i'm isn't and tucker and hot ty province. bennett smith is in skidded on, but we begin with semi's ident, who is in a common model. sh. yes, tom. when you say the voices of long delay fallen silent, it's because we're getting more bodies just moments ago before we went away. we had a situation here of another body being rolled out from the rubble of that building behind me there. and immediately the air was filled with the smell of death and with the sounds of people crying and shrieking, it's of, it's a very disturbing situation. it's a very disturbing vibe here, but incredibly, it hasn't been old death to day. there have been cases of people being pulled out of the arrival of buildings and caught them on marsh, alive after more than a 144 hours. but that, of course, it really isn't enough for all of the people,
4:04 pm
and there are a lot of people camp out here around me while waiting for their relatives. they hope alive more. we're going to try and do not to give you an idea of. busy we're talking about is to come to some drone pictures. we're going to drone here. just to give you an idea of what we're talking about. this area is quite an in heavily inhabited area. there's a lot of people can't tell either because they lost the house or because they're waking for relatives all because of both. and that sometimes bubbles over into frustration. now, you might be able to see as well, from that drone shot, the scale of destruction when officials talk about, of course, the talking about across to a key and not just got ahmad marashi, 6000 buildings destroyed. and the president, talking about hundreds of thousands are uninhabitable, 29 more than 29000 people are dead until here and syria, more than 80000 people have been injured. that you can understand from these
4:05 pm
pictures is, was generating a lot of frustration. as result, sardar explains as he kicks off for this package from got him on marsh. this building was once home to the families that lived here. now, many of the residents are buried under the debris. the oysters from under the rubble are feeding with every passing minute. and those alive and safe are exhausted by the tortuous wait. sometimes losing temper and control tension is running high and time is running out by these kids coming and anger rising o these people, but a lot of the higher that has saved his mother, but his younger brother, he's gone on. i mean, he says he is the oldest amongst siblings, and his younger brother shouldn't have died. first. these one mobile audio to look
4:06 pm
. we're 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 earth, craig that hid the city, released energy equivalent to death of 500 at the atomic bombs. the skate of destruction is immense. the turkish disaster management authority says the duration of the 1st earthquake that he had sought and turkey was sick if 5 seconds while the 2nd one last 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 car am on 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 motor, mitsubishi we've been working for days without stopping, i mentally down,
4:07 pm
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 under the robin . a moment of celebration and a spark of hope for those still waiting o. as the night falls on the rubble in common mirage, this rescue dog sniffs through the debris. it detects the smell of some one below, possibly alive. and it is time again for the steady and delicate rescue work. grissom sam dash al jazeera carmen mirage saw them turkey. but there are still miraculous stories of survival. a 10 year old girl being pulled out alive. rescued after spending a 147 hours, france under a building, an untouched city. on she was one of 4 people to be pulled from the rubble on
4:08 pm
sunday. another 5 year old is freed in her tie province. and another moment of relief in the same area. a boy and his mother pulled from the wreckage a 150 hours after the quake. but sadly, of course, is not always a happy ending for those waiting for their families waiting to see their relatives . again, sometimes that frustration, the frustration of waiting can boil over into tent scenes. that means a need for greater security. let's go over now live to natasha or named. she joins us from an takia, how our officials, they're dealing with that challenge. well, there are soldiers in the streets and police officers protecting businesses. in particular. i am walking through a soon as you can see, it is eerily deserted. buildings toppled over debris all over the ground. the only sound you can really hear is the sound of us walking over pieces of concrete
4:09 pm
and broken glass on takia is an ancient city. founded in 300 b. c. it was one of the great cities of the roman empire. now 2023. it will be remembered as a city that was decimated by this earthquake and take a look down. you can see we're in the portion of the souk full of spices. we saw some store owner is a little bit ago moving things out of some of the heaps of some of the stores to try to salvage what they could looting has been an issue. president irwin has vowed to crack down and punish looters, but clearly with the damage so extensive here in on takia and so many places across her kiya, it can't be sought completely. we spoke to a few shop owners today. one of them owned a shoe store in 2 locations. he said 1st he needed to stabilize and make sure his
4:10 pm
family was secure. he lost everything his home. he's been living in his car with his family. he said he couldn't make it until wednesday to check on his 2 stores. in this commercial district, he said when he arrived 5 or 6 men worth removing shoes from the store, he said he made an appeal. he said, if you the please do not steal the shoes and sell them. they left, he said with about 7000 pairs of shoes. we spoke to another man who store was so flattened. he can't even get inside to see if he's able to salvage anything. but it looks so bad from the outside, he'd be surprised if he can salvage more than 1020 percent of the goods. we're going to walk you through just a little bit farther into the souk here. and you can see more remnants of the spice market. this store owner that we spoke to said we have supported the state all of these years. now we're asking the state to support us. we want to stay in on taka.
4:11 pm
we want to come back, we want to rebuild. president irwin has told people that he in fact will do just that for people like the 2 men we spoke to earlier today who've been living out of their cars, been wearing the same clothing all week. they are going to be given shelter for the next year. president irwin has vowed that their homes will be rebuilt within a year. families also will be given payments in 2 installments of $1300.00. i asked these men, why haven't you left? there's no la electricity. if there is no security, you have no home and right now you have no business. and they told me that with so many friends of theirs, underneath the rubble with family members who are injured, it simply would not be right to leave and talk yet at this very moment. or another of my colleagues. thank you for that. as i showed the bonus vents,
4:12 pm
as i'm sure you know natasha, one of our colleagues, he spent the night out in, on tactile with the displaced people who are trying to put the pieces back together of their lives. midst the rubble of wall walls. once the homes 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 don't know what to do, who will call me dad during age street after street, district after district. it took just 2 minutes of the earthquake to cause all this
4:13 pm
destruction. it's the most devastating, quaking turkey since 1939. 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 unpack 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, the sick 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 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,
4:14 pm
has failed. i so disorganized and can't work at all. it's the 6th 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 i know we don't want to see them. this is was last of the home house on had made with his family, didn't only cell 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, algebra, and takia. while carr has ordered the arrest of a 113 people in connection with the collapse of buildings. and the property developer was arrested on friday as he was trying to leave the country opposition. policies are accusing the government of not enforcing building regulations phenom cost. so although now takes a look at how those regulations hutch,
4:15 pm
we continue. 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 70 percent of its population and 6 to 6 percent of its landscape, the largest. so those trigger to stronger earthquakes on monday, causing death and destruction in the east. and while we're speaking will shake in twice by tremors above 4.0 magnitude. this is part of life here. now, holland, after so some blood delong reduce aftershocks over 3.5 for marketing to, to see the numbers 16 will continue for much longer north. we are reevaluate in the market to not dimensions of the affected area earthquake in line with the information from our field to, to go to this amazon. what we see is
4:16 pm
a much bigger disaster than we anticipated a halt yet for the other. this means the damage structures can still collapse, while other risks like snow for a white earthquake hit areas where sly map shows all earthquakes that how 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 my director, is your work mother. you're a girl or not, no need to be stunned or exaggerate by saying, this is the biggest tre calling you on that. so on point for magnitude was approaching was area, you know, unpaid attention. as scientists say, you can't resist nature, but build earthquake resistance. it is a joint responsibility of the state people and the local administration's senior
4:17 pm
care solar al jazeera and kyra. all right, now that the body has been removed, i'm gonna step out the way and ask our cameraman, joe, i'll, if he can give you a little bit of a close up of what's going on here. right now, a, c, c. they have brought in the heavy machinery and that heavy machinery is at work. they're trying to dig through this rubble. maybe it's a good time to also bring in the drone again. so you can understand the scale of the destruction here, the earthquake signature, visible everywhere. it's like graffiti, you can see it, but it's an unwelcome wherever it's written. it's calls god ahmad marashi is not the only area that is full of scenes of destruction and anxiousness like this. the epi center of the 1st major earthquake
4:18 pm
was in no dar, we got stephanie decker standing my life ros. this, stephanie, what's going on there? pretty similar scenes as we're seeing across the south easter rescue recovery operation behind us incredibly. they pulled out a mother and her child yesterday. from this building, 40 people remain inside. we were talking to some of the rescue workers. in fact, one of them volunteers again, what is extraordinary? so many people have come together to help here. but he's actually a resident of the building, he wasn't home at the time and he said he has 6 members of his family. still inside on the 2nd floor. he said, what they've done is they've cleared the 5th floor now and they're moving to the 4th. it's, it's amazing how they know what floors they're working on because as you can see, it is hold horizon sort of oil also makes when they do still find almost
4:19 pm
a week on survivors underneath this pilot heavy, concrete and surviving the incredible cold. it's, it's, it's a miracle and you can probably see members of turkeys done that my, they're taking arrest. this town has been pulverized. not a single apartment remains livable. you see many building standing, but all of these buildings are structurally unsafe. fatty is probably panning up is building where you can probably see a bedroom where the, the bed has been thrown up into the yard. our we all know now very clearly and, and chillingly that the earthquake struck at 4 17 in the morning and everyone pretty much, most people would have been asleep. so this is the reality of just one town in south eastern turkey life stopped here. ah, at 417 on that monday morning. it is of course now the question about where these people live. of course,
4:20 pm
we talk about the dead. we talk about those pulled from the rubble, but you have hundreds of thousands of people homeless. and this is not a temporary problem, they're going to need shelter and food for i would say a best part of not more than a year. at the same time, we're in, nor did he, yesterday we went to the turkish syrian border because aid had finally resumed going into syria. that kind of help you see here has not reached syria at all, i think is fair to say. but when we were there a heartbreaking scene, suddenly, unexpectedly, it's not what we were there to cover. so where we were thinking about, we saw cars and cars arriving with relatives pulling out body bags, putting on the back of trucks and then sending them across to series, be buried. but this, the number it was, it was non stop. we were there for couple of hours and we saw at least 50 bodies are. these are of course people that fly door and came here to start a new life. absolutely heartbreaking. this is our report. we came to the border to
4:21 pm
cover the resumption of aid into northern syria. but what we saw was body bag after body bag being carried 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. this may 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 grand mother and her 2 grandchildren. a father came to bring his own children, 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
4:22 pm
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 high 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 the 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. while more aid is trickling into rebel held northern syria to u. n. a convoys across the bible, how of crossing crossing that border? but as dana for the reports that still are in the united nation, sir deal was rescued from the rubble of her home in northwest syria,
4:23 pm
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, precious fella, the building swayed from one side to another, and there was a 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. voltages her father and 3 of her siblings died. so the name of 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.
4:24 pm
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 with trauma, patient essential health services have been severely disrupted because 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
4:25 pm
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 ita. as you can probably see here now it's getting rather smoky and dusty. as you can probably see, the part of that coming from the big is let me try and step out the way this side part of it is coming from the dig as they're going into action. part of it also from people trying to stay warm every the drone schulte will be able to show us, you know, it's, it's a sunny day. but that can be a little misleading. this is a cold day in terms of weather. and in terms of the harshness of the situation,
4:26 pm
we just had a body pulled out and where that body we didn't, we didn't caught to the shots at that time as we wanted to be respectful. so that, that people obviously and for their relatives, that body was laid on the ground there where they've now lit a fire. it's somehow symbolic of this emotional rollercoaster of this, this cycle, this bit a cycle of life and death and life again, trying to stay warm are handy back now to dull ha ah. but to other news now, israel says it will step up, its rides against palestinians and occupied east jerusalem. and the west bank prime minister benjamin netanyahu made the announcement on sunday. dozens of palestinians have already been killed by israeli forces this year. the israeli army has sealed
4:27 pm
off access to the homes of palestinians who it accuses of carrying out attacks, but true, oh, no myrtle. the appropriate answer to terror is to strike hard and further deep now roots in our country. accordingly, the cabinet is meeting to day to prepare for an even broader action against those carrying out terrorism and their supporters in east jerusalem and judea and samaria, what preventing as much as possible, harming dote, uninvolved. asada hot up is that lie for us from west jerusalem and at santa a cabinet meeting has was held earlier. what more didn't yahoo have to say why he said a meeting is going to be held later this evening where they're going to be discussing a military operation. expanding that, especially with these recent attacks, they will so said they'll be discussing national security as a whole, as well as expanding the illegal settlements in the occupied east jerusalem and
4:28 pm
occupied west fight. now all of this, of course is off the back of a 3rd attack that happened on friday. that's the 3rd attack in just 2 weeks. and certainly in about a month since this new israeli government has come in and netanyahu has made it clear that he will come down hard. of course, some of those measures are being false, trying to include the ceiling of the homes of anyone they'd be mis terrorists, but also anyone that they deem as a supporter of those harrison. the home that was sealed overnight belonged to the family of his sin. has it in the 1st year old from occupies eastern them from a neighborhood called i so way is so this is the direction that the government is going towards. and of course they have to be seen as clumping down hard. they've already been stepping up. those rates, and some of those measures that they want to introduce is revoking citizens, chips for anyone in the occupied is truthful. and again, that they deem as a terrorist or related in any way and anti government protest into the 6th week. what's the turn out been like it was the
4:29 pm
highest in the 6 week week process that happened on saturday and they had to turn out roughly they said about 145000 israelis. not this new government is the most right wing government in the history of this country, and they're all real major concerns towards a potential judicial reform, but will be taking place now a vote is going to be held on monday. it's one, it's part of a 3 stage, but as to whether those traditional forms will come in. and that is reforms include the government that basically having the upper hand over the supreme court. and the, you know, some of those laws that they want to ratify, the supreme court might strike down. they will, the government will be able to decide whether those go through or not, regardless of the supreme court, not as major concern. they're not just from opposition, but we've seen opposition from the academics here as well as the tech industry
4:30 pm
where some companies are also deciding whether to take the money out of the countries as major concern here, especially as some of those ministers already in this new government have convictions, including the national security minister who's convicted of racism and of course, benjamin netanyahu, who is actually on trial for corruption. so that just gives you an idea of the situation that the government is facing here. certainly does. thank you so much. that's not a hot us for us from with jerusalem. well, it's time for the wither now. his robe, that board and the coal, c cycling gabrielle you can just about see here and it's on its way side of says already trying to effect the north and using not as a complete cycling. but all the elements of that has a strong wind and the heavy rain and that has been warned about already. we've seen one land slide and there sandbagging up around oakland. do you remember 2 weeks ago? oakland was affected by well reco, breaking flooding. well, this is also an unprecedented event because it's the rain and his company by severe
4:31 pm
gales at least. and it's not entirely focused on ot, and that will be the windiest place. but the whole of the north of new zealand, at least during monday, and then the thing is still slow to move, it might lose some of its strength. but look at this, this is the heavy rain, and obviously the arrows mean the strong wind to that's monday. and the warnings which are red warnings continue until tuesday as the thing expands and brings it's right across the down towards christ church is leaving north allen. the winds are equally strong here though they won't be as ferocious. i have to say that is tuesday, by the time to get to wednesday. it's mostly but not entirely off shore, and it's left nor fallen in recovery if you like, with fine conditions. but in christ church, you still got windy and wet weather for the same reason are still ahead on al jazeera, we are in northern priscilla were a major operation is on the way to drive out a legal gold mine as from indigenous land. plus i'm harder. mendoza in south dana county, trying to recover from years upon me,
4:32 pm
find out why it's not easy for me. one army made up of government forces and format the rebel fighting. and the best of the action from morocco as reality, the trip when the club world cup for a record extending 5th time. ah, this is one of the most astounding that no logical revolutions in all of this for make our planet great the day. we have to meet the c o 2 emission targets electrical meet mitchum in motion. the need to be mind to where people are just talking about wind in solar. if that's going to solve the problem, it won't. the world of distance and commerce is driving. energy transition is the promise of clean energy and illusion. the top side of green energy on al jazeera, examining the impact of today's headlines. this is one, it's all about ensuring that we cannot continue. let count on that and setting the
4:33 pm
agenda for tomorrow's discussions. i don't believe that. i'm think in mystify, feed that is willing to kill international filmmakers and world class journalists, bring programs to inform and inspire you. we need to have a media ensuring that voices are heard on al jazeera blue. ah, you're watching al jazeera reminder about top stories. the salad, more than 30000 people have now died from the earthquakes and to kia and syria. recovery operations are continuing in the worst hit areas almost
4:34 pm
a week. after thousands of buildings were destroyed, millions of people have been left homeless. but rescue is are still finding people alive under the rubble. this 5 year old girl was one of 4 people to be freed. on sunday, she had been buried for almost 150 hours. aid is now trickling into ripple house, parts of northern syria. rescue if its were hampered in a region already devastated after years of war, with many sang they felt abandons the head of the wagner mercenary group says it could take 2 years for russia to fully seize control of ukraine's eastern regions of donates. can the hans, you have guinea? prego. sions. statement comes as the missionary force claims to have captured the eastern village of class in a honda near back. moot, the area has seen some of the fiercest fighting for months. let's bring in osama bin javin and moscow. now in a summer, that's her brother, remarkable statement from the hit of wagner. it is
4:35 pm
indeed if you take into account that from the russian side, we have not heard any timelines after that 3 days to meet him that they gave for this so called special operation against ukraine. and as we all know, its nearing its 1st anniversary. wagner is the group, which is a private contractor labeled as mercenary army by the best and pub is who are opposing it with ukraine. and according to the russians, an important part of the russian security team, which is taking part in this special security operation. so this statement that it might take years is going to be a surprise to not just people who are observing things here in russia. and it is not likely to go down well amongst the military commanders who have been talking about how well the war has been going. and i'm not the to the, for if we have to go as far as me pro, in the special operation will take 3 years. if we need to take the people's republic of nest and the people's republic of the hands, it will take at least another year and a half or 2 more. so the concentration of the
4:36 pm
conflict is around the eastern parts of ukraine. the russian forces have been making steady gains according to russian accounts, things that i've been denied by the ukranian counterparts. this back, the army has just posted videos of taking more areas, villages in the harkey region, and this is where it is in the don. yes, hans and hockey region is there. the most of the fighting is concentrated around where russian forces are seeing that they are not just reinforcing positions, but also trying to take back take territory as much as they can and on the ukrainian side who are trying to take it back as more and more ribbons have flown into this conflict where powers of accused russia, of taking weapons from iran and north korea. and russia has accused almost all of western powers of backing the ukrainian side to get a war anytime soon. and for the 1st time, it's being admitted by one of the keep one of the people who is at the tip of the
4:37 pm
sphere spearheading what seems to be rushes advances. okay, thank you so much for that update. that is, some have been jeff aid for us in moscow, where people are continuing to flee from fighting in democratic republic of congo. the congolese army says it's pushing back fighters from the him. 23 armed group. it's his fighting is now centered around 50 kilometers from the provincial capital goma, thousands of people seeking shelter and a rapidly growing make shift canton blinker, just outside coma. malcolm, which has more from that camp where we are just a few weeks ago, was an empty field connecting the main road between goma and saw k. we'd like kiva . i'm going to step aside so you can see what's here. now, in the last few weeks, thousands and thousands of people arrived the fleeing villages in the hills in mississippi territory that we 1st came here a week ago. and every time we've come back since more these 100 more these shelters
4:38 pm
of sprung up, it's more than double within the 1st year. we hear the size of this camp an hundreds arriving every day. and they also have similar stories of m. 23 sciences arriving in the villages, they report some people being shot dead, others being killed with some being raped, some being abducted. and this prompts all the rest of the community to flee on to, to here to this camp. many people say that they're missing relatives or missing children . they didn't know if that 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. meanwhile, they say that the conditions here quite visibly, not good at all. there's a shortage of food and we've had several clap of thunder and strong gust the wind
4:39 pm
adjusting. there's a heavy rainstorm on the way in the half 1000000 more than half 1000000 people. according to the u. n. u fled been displaced in m 23 c. waves of territory from the government in the last 8 months. many of them living in camps at the end of last year, beginning of this year, there was an outbreak of cholera in one of the come to the north of the city of gomez. several people killed that. and to this comes brung up many of these shelters. to put in if there is indeed heavy rain is going to be a massive problem for the sanitation here. quite clearly. the ranks of self so down tommy and now made up of both government troops and full marivel fighters is part of the pay still signed in 2018, but many in the new me don't have weapons to do an arms embargo and that is great and concerns about how it will maintain peace and security. her rheumatology reports from juba. the body forces in south don's army have been told to be loyal
4:40 pm
to the country and not to politics, individuals, or ethnicity. the formation of a military made up of both the former rebel fighters and government troops is underway. we have managed to unify the, the top actually of the command where you to complete the unification of the, the middle actually. which is really key because the process is unification and they're not integration. so that's why you have to unify at all level. and before you unify, especially at the top level, under middle level of the senior officers also have to go through orientation and training. these soldiers form part of the 1st batch of graduates. many don't have guns. the government says an arms embargo imposed by the united nations security council in 2018 makes it hard to buy weapons delays and implementing the 2018 p. still
4:41 pm
a force of us permanent countries. first presidential election for those elections to take place. people displaced by years of conflict need to feel safe enough to return home. according to the un, there are more than 2000000 internally displaced people in south done. and another 2300000 have played the country as refugees. fighting in some areas continues to kill and displays large numbers of civilians. the press has been slow. it's been slow. the political elites i've been drugging benefits is simply because there are 2 principles. his excellency crested them and his excellence was vice president. if a high deficit entrusted confidence for walking together is a patmos to deliver the counter from violence trapeze. oh, sa sedans, president saw the kia has promised to resume talks with armed groups that did not sign the 2018 piece deal. that agreement stopped the west of the fight, but the i lingering tensions in communities that possessed many weapons and that
4:42 pm
will make maintaining peace and security even more difficult for salted on the new and poorly equipped, unified national army. had matessa out there. deborah, brazilian government task force as attempting to remove 20000 gold miners who are legally occupying indigenous territory. the activities of the miners have poisoned the young mommy's water supply and killed off plants and animals. they rely on for food. when occur. yeah, nike of reports from boy vi must state ah yellow, my me, children outside the emergency field hospital in war vista, the capital of the northern state of what i my, these are the lucky ones. rescued in time from the ongoing health crisis in brazil's largest indigenous territory. both old and young gentlemen me have been dying in their villages, from hunger and disease,
4:43 pm
despite living unprotected land. the size of portugal in the heart of the amazon rain forest in co op and you know, mommy, her the onslaught of illegal money has polluted our rivers with mercury destroying our forest and livelihood. we cannot fish or we cannot drink water that we cannot bathe without getting sir e book young o mommy policy junior gentleman, me is responsible for indigenous health. every day he receives shocking pictures from the yellow mammy villages and desperate cries for help. like this one from a man who walked for days in the jungle to sent an urgent message. there are 5 children were so sick, they can't even walk. he says, send us a helicopter. we have no medication to treat here. nothing. helicopters are being sent to take supplies, rescue the sick and chase away the legal miners. but this is something you. during
4:44 pm
the past 4 years, former president j able sonata has ignored and even encouraged the invasion of indigenous territory. bossa nova vienna. anyway, mama, not half open and there were many reports that a humanitarian crisis was under way fuzzy, but the former government dismantled organization in charge of protecting the rang for us and the indigenous people were then either we knew what was going on, but were not authorized to act as we should do now, that has changed fed up in the last 2 weeks there in daily flights to destroy equipment used by the legal miners. all of these helicopters then small airplanes that you can see here have been used to take supplies, fuel and food to the eagle miners in the yano miami territories. now they have been apprehended by the federal police and are shown as proof that there are much larger interest at stake, and that somebody has been financing this whole illegal gold mining operation.
4:45 pm
moving the invaders is only the 1st step. the biggest challenge will be to keep them out and clean up the rivers. they have destroyed monica in our give. i'll jazeera or the step brazil, or demonstrators who are demanding the resignation of peruvian president in apollo r t. i have been out on the streets of the capitol yet again, security officers 5 t guests to disperse. the crowds doesn't have been killed and the violence between demonstrators and security forces in the last 2 months of thousands of people have marched in nicaragua, in support of the government's decision to, to port 222 gerald opposition. figures and journalists to the u. s similar opposition rallies have been banned by president annual ortega in the past or target and his wife, vice president rosario marilla accused the opposition members of being what they call us on some terrorists. the group of prisoners have been given humanitarian parole by washington which allows them to climb asylum. 2 shall anchors president
4:46 pm
has appealed to tamela minorities to engage with his governments development initiatives. he is also promised to devolve powers to them and on what grandma sing is reaching out to the minority group ahead of next month's regional elections. but as michelle fernandez reports from the northern city of java, it will take much more than that to overcome the divisions left by shrill anchors civil war. his present run, his vicar missing her, wants to reach out to the thomas in northern she lanka. arresting those demonstrating against his visit is probably not going to help university students and political activists and java spoke out against the president's visit on saturday. but they faced the same treatment as anti government protested in the south. efforts to reach out to the tamar community has its roots in the civil war of the 19 eighties and nineties. when tamar tigers took up arms against the government,
4:47 pm
the community said it suffered unfair and unjust treatment by the sink. at least majority. the tigers were crushed in 2009, which led to accusations of gross human rights violations by the military. vicar missing, who is dealing with a major economic crisis is under pressure from the international community to address those wrongs. earlier in the day, the president attended the ceremony to dedicate atamo cultural center gifted by india mer farm. am i, let's get together and go on this journey to rebuild the school and country. then it will be everybody's country ahead of his visit. the president ordered the return of 40 to hicks as of private land taken over during the war. some of its still occupied by the police, military and government institutions. roger saker, m thunder man's land was part of that return. his property was occupied by the army, which he says filled his patty fields and built on it. we asked him how the
4:48 pm
occupation affected families like his very, very badly no. they are one is more land or they don't are any other houses or anything. they are endowed over the threat from here, they're going straight and blindly. do tournaments family has on the property. still under military control, president ronald vicar missing her, opened the culture center behind me. and he's promising to address the longstanding grievances of the tamares, including implementing the 13th amendment to the constitution, which would give them great autonomy. this drew immediate protest from the buddhist clergy, whoever paused the amendment from its passage. those watching the developments in the north are skeptical that autonomy is within reach. how is some going door handle the protesters? how is he going to tell them what they're doing is wrong at a time. he's being challenged for other reasons. right? so it's going to be very difficult for him to, to do that. 36 years after being introduced. the constitutional amendment is still
4:49 pm
an issue for many here. tamerinz said their leaders must be willing to go beyond it to truly address their grievances in f and, and as our 0. jeff? no, no. then she'll anchor the north island of new zealand as being lashed by a strong cyclone. 2 weeks after record breaking floods the light, a storm has already come out. a thousands trees have been up rooted and there are reports of flooding in the region of northland meteorologists have forecast winds of up to 130 kilometers an hour. some domestic flights have been canceled. my main message to people across the country am, is to take the severe with a warning seriously and to make sure that you're prepared and to follow the guidance. and that's being issued locally. there's no need for panic. wine over years, right? they begin as well. or years of war and instability and iraq have taken a toll on the countries rich equestrian heritage. but now there's a push to revive the tradition bummer adapter. why he reports from the per and
4:50 pm
southern iraq. for the 1st time in more than 3 decades in iraq courses compete in a long distance race. university student fatima 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 thoroughbred mayor is our she and we have been eagerly waiting for this competition. it had been a live stream to ride a horse until i real. i said with the opening of an equestrian club in my home city, i hope to participate in more competitions and represent my country abroad on our side. oh, when was the hail at the kind who i am greece marcus, a breakthrough for equestrian sports in the country. during the us led
4:51 pm
invasion, thousands of estate own thoroughbreds were lost, somewhat killed, although neglected or stolen and smuggled abroad. for 3 decades during goren sanctions, horse racing in iraq was told. now nearly a 100 jockeys 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 race standards. barranco 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 we still have some of the best breeds in the world out offer. some pure bloodsaw kept at the federations main facility in the capital, baghdad. here houses are vetted to ensure that in top condition to meet
4:52 pm
international standards and compete abroad. erac 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 fatima is calling on other iraqi girls to follow her lead. i'm with abdullah. hi alicia sierra in the poor, southern iraq. traditional bolivia, music has filled the year in the historic mining town of auto. ah.
4:53 pm
tourists and prisons flocked to the festival of bands where 5000 musicians were performing. presidents, louis, i'll say, attended the ceremony and danced to the tunes, along with government officials. the 2 hour show takes place every year in front of the sanctuary of believe he is patron saint of minus the count on is on to the kick off of america's biggest annual sporting event, the super bowl. more than a 100000000 people are expected to watch in the us alone. as david stalks reports, state farm stadium in glendale, arizona is gearing up to house one of the biggest shows in world sport ship about 57, the kansas city chiefs against the philadelphia eagles for many bowls down to the quarterbacks. patrick, the homes for the chiefs against jayman hurts for the eagles. it'll be the 1st time that 2 black quarterbacks start the super bowl. it's gonna be a great match up. i mean, you can ask for a better team to go up against the in the super bowl. i mean, hm, yeah,
4:54 pm
our fun game, i'm excited for it. besides anything else that come with? no, we are just want to go live with our on alar. that at all hanging. 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. sheeps toys, 10 travis kelsey against his older brother, jason, the eagle center divided loyalties for their mother, donna or lona, them into or even about it since they were 10 years old. it would be on the same team and it would be for probably 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. marina and i know you got some brownies to ruin. and as for the adverts,
4:55 pm
a 32nd spot will cost $7000000.00 for pina. this sabrina. what do you yet? martin's april ha 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 or the commercial so it's not just advertising pundits 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 legal i sports gambling in the us, david stokes out his era. well that you had have won the club world cup for a record 5th time. the european champion speed l. hello, of saudi arabia, 53. and he richardson was the and the final in the moroccan capital robot, you don't twist before an asian team had reached the club of world cup finals. on
4:56 pm
both occasions, rail madrid was assigned to in hopes of a surprise when a saudi arabia is al hello aiming to become the 1st team from outside of europe or south america. to lift the trophy gray. i read that every time to discuss that's enough. we also another big jim and he has a great team visit club in the been in the basic with the with the rail fence immediately cheered by the sight of cream benjamin leading that female. the strike back in action of the missing the semi final through injury know, seeing 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 know instantly 20 minutes. and maria looked sent for straightforward when
4:57 pm
they did their best to disrupt their receipt. newsome or reagan breaking player the shoot his c back into contention. the side of his junior really foot unlocked helen's defense in the 2nd half benjamin on hand to apply the finishing touch. now that i can go made it on serial. vinicius junior rails much went in last year champions league final against liverpool, also school point. hello, luciana viet. there was another place to put 2 goals like wide open game finished falling 33 out. a record extending 5th club will cut when for the spanish side, where this competition was lowered to the turn of the century. brazilian teams won
4:58 pm
the 1st 3 additions since then. the have been 15 european victories in 16 tournaments. this is become a competition where the financial superiority of the european club game plays itself out on the pitch. in the longer term. saudi arabia is perhaps one of the few countries that has the appetite and the resources to one day rival europe's best teams. but for now, ram madrid has continued their continents dominance of global club football and richardson algae, sarah rebec. well, that is all from a tom, a crisis news hour, but i will be back in just a moment with more of the day's news. ah,
4:59 pm
how do you say controlling felicia moscow is one of the last 2 vail tickets in the world. it has an incredible facial recognition technology. how does the narrative improve public opinion better? no walker asked, how is the citizen german? listen, we framing the story. the video spread like wildfire, they denied the prayer or more in your brain. the listening post dissects the media . we don't cover the move, we cover the way the news is cover. their plight emitted from history kept alive only in the family. tales of those who survived is hard to believe for people who didn't seem to be astonishing. story of the polish women and children who endured the siberian glass and sought refuge in africa, never to return again. an epic odyssey of resilience memory is our homeland.
5:00 pm
on al jazeera. this is the image of hong kong vessels. visits is a bustling, glamorous city. but under ground, a different reality appears. official figures released in november show the number of people experiencing homelessness is the highest in a decade. and this shop rise in the number of women experiencing housing insecurity . that report also said there's need for better services and more funds for hostile accommodation as the situation was, since it's the middle of winter here in hong kong, and the temperature often drops below 10 degrees at night. people in this underpass of repairing for another night exposed to freezing conditions. ah.

27 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on