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tv   News  Al Jazeera  February 12, 2023 6:00pm-7:01pm AST

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all right, europe compete with the u. s. and china president loses the post ratings on demand, low interest rates in brazil, but what it, what town called faces, the highest rates of homelessness in a decade. counting the cost on al jazeera a ah ah
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ah, you're watching the news, our life from a headquarters and i'm getting obligated coming up in the next 60 minutes. rescued after 6 days trapped under the rubble, a baby girl is pulled out alive and the turkish city of i'm talk for many outside the rubble, the anxious wait for relatives goes on. and so it bubble over into frustration. i'm sammy's life, i've got them on the, at the center of the 2nd major earthquake. also in this news, our israel steps up. it's raised in the occupied westbank days after a car rammed into a bus stop killing 3 israelis, and the russian mercenary group. wagner says it could take 2 years to fully seize control of ukraine's eastern region and famous of your sport. the weight is nearly
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over. we build up to suitable 57 with hundreds of millions expected to watch. as the kansas city chiefs take on the philadelphia, eagles, ah, in it's nearly a week since 2 devastating earthquakes struck southern turkey and northern syria. the number of data staggering more than 35000 between both countries. and that figure is expected to rise significantly. there are still miraculous stories of survival. however, at least 4 people are rescued on sunday morning. after spending nearly a 150 hours beneath the rubble. meanwhile, turkish officials have issued arrest or ins for a 113 people in connection with the construction of buildings. that collapse and mondays earthquakes. but the government is also facing scrutiny for not enforcing its building codes and 2018 more than 39000 buildings were deemed unsafe and the
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epicenter of her mon marashi. we have a team of correspondence across their chia covering the latest developments. we have stephanie decker is in nor daw natasha. the name is an untouched can, has hi province. bernard smith is an can their own. but we begin with sammy say, done. who's joining us from the epicenter? carmano marie saw me. so the death toll at a staggering $35000.00 unexpected rights. and we've seen a bit of it here today, daddy. and when a body was pulled out from the rubble behind me, placed on the floor immediately. well, you could smell death in the air. you could hear the shrieks and the cries from, people assumed only relative when they will met with the reality that another victim has been claimed by these earthquakes and emotionally taxing day temperatures. and now while they're crushing,
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they're falling as quickly as the moods lifts and fall here. but there was some good news today from come on, but i should have time. 8 people pulled out of the rubble that lives. but hope that gives people hope and we saw a bit of that. maybe we'll come to the drone and try and give you an idea of what we're talking about. on the one side here, you've got the rubble and you've got the heavy machinery. the bulldoze is which is usually brought in, at least in that fault when they're pretty sure, but there's nobody left alive there on the other side and see if we can get the drone. this may take a minute to turn around. so bear with us while i let me call out to the drone operator. oh, mute lute friend, obligation will turn off. we can move, i'm just asking them if they can turn the camera around. on the drone, on that side, we have had a different story. and with the nice thing is with the drone. well,
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you are able to see how really tense, distressful. and you can see the contrast in a small area on one side they've, you know, they stopped for the moment. on the other side, we've had a tense situation where they were calling out. they're giving the calls of life on the vat rubble, because they thought they'd found somebody alive. this is all going on in a very, you know, in a tight area, but it's packed with people as you can see on those drone shots. and maybe if we come back to the camera here, you'll be able to see what's going on here. people are camped out, people are trying to stay warm, these are people who have lost their homes. these are people who are looking for their relatives and it leads to frustration. it leads to frustration. as
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our reporter russell settled down explains into this report now from carter, i'm on marsh. this building was once home to the families that lived here. now, many of the residents are buried under the deborah. the oysters from under the rubble are fading with every passing minute and those alive and safe are exhausted by the tortures wait. sometimes losing temper and control. passion is running high and time is running out by these kit coming and anger rising o. the people who bought a hail has saved his mother, but his younger brother is gone on. i mean, he says he is the oldest among siblings, and his younger brother shouldn't have died. first. these will noble idea to look. we are suffering pain. i don't want any one else to experience this. many lives here, heavy, torn apart,
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and families chevy. or towards to say the to earth create that he'd the city released energy equivalent to death of $500.00 the atomic bombs. the skate of destruction is immense. the turkish disaster management authority says the duration of the 1st earthquake that he had south and turkey was 65 seconds. while the 2nd one lasted 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. i'm on my rush . those who survived are now trying to call the window to save people is shortening, and the cost of failure is too high. yet. mitchell with mitchell. we've been working for days without stopping, i mentally down, but i have to stand firm and continue to work because they're relying on upset if there has been some postings as well and hard work has gone through it. here,
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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 rubble, income and mirage, these rescue dogs 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. the so saturday, i'll jazeera carmen marsh, southern turkey. well there are still miraculous stories of survival. a 10 year old girl was rescued off to spending a 147 hours tramps under a building in on tucker city. or she was one of 4 people to be pulled from the rubble on sunday. another 5 year old fried and hats high province, and another moment of relief in the same area. a boy and his mother pulled from the
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wreckage a 150 hours after the quake. well, all of those operations are painstaking operations. they take time and time is something that is not on any one side here, not the least of which are the relatives. sometimes things can boil over into frustration we heard yesterday. one of the foreign rescue teams had to temporarily pulls their search because there was a tense scene going on between groups of people. really stressed out about this situation. that means one thing security natasha of a name is life ross from on takia city. thomas natasha. how officials are managing that security challenge well, we are in a commercial district and there are soldiers with machine guns who are positioned throughout the district in an attempt to continue to stop looting. there has already been
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a great deal of looting from what we understand from talking to businesses. in addition, thousands of trucks full of humanitarian aid have been dispatched to the southern provinces, declared disaster areas. some of that aid has been stolen. 57 people have been arrested per the ministry of justice. president earl, no one has said that looters, any one who engages in corruption or capitalizes on what he's calling the catastrophe of the sent will be punished. or tuan also says that this is one of the reasons he declared a free month, the state of emergency. we spoke to several business owners. both of them that i am thinking of in particular lost their homes. one has been living in a car with his family, the other has been living in a tent. one of the men said after he was able to stabilize things and ensure his wife and children were safe. it was wednesday by the time he was able to get to his to show stores here in the commercial district. he says, when he arrived,
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5 to 6 men were looting before his eyes. he says he has an inventory had an inventory of about 7000 shoes and he pleaded with the men not to steal. he said, if you need the shoes by all means, take them, but please don't steal my livelihood. and those please fell on deaf ears. another man we spoke to said he grabbed some of his family members as soon as he could get down to the commercial district to stand guard over his store. but when you look at his store, the ceiling has collapsed. there's lots of debris and concrete and it's hard to imagine that any thing is going to be salvage from the store and that a bulldozer will likely end up flattening the whole building due to it being structurally unsound. the men were extremely grateful despite the fact that they have no home to live in no store. one of them says he now has 7 employees who are
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unemployed, but they said, we know we are so lucky to be alive. both of the men have lost friends, they said they still have friends, family, underneath the rubble. and that is why, although many people have already been evacuated out of on taca because they are living outside it's cold, there's little food, it's very uncomfortable and not especially safe. he says at this moment, not knowing what's become a family and friends. it would be a terrible time to leave. they must stay there saying this that they have stood behind the stage for years now. now they're looking for the state to stand behind them. one business owner said he hopes that in this ethnically diverse city. it is full of kurds and syrians and turks. there's a christian community here. he says, he hopes that aid will not be a people won't be discriminated when it comes to distributing aid. he says that he hopes that irwin stands by his promise to help rebuild. irwin is resettling
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victims of the earthquake into places like university dormitories and hotels. and he has vow to rebuild their homes within a year to give people payments of about $1300.00 in 2 installments. and the people here say they are hoping and that this government is sincere and they will make good on what they promised. everyone we've spoken to wants to stay in and takia, they say is a beautiful place is an ancient city, a historic city. and now 2023. this earthquake will remain an entry in the history of this city, given the devastation that's happened here. but they hope it will also in that entry, be added that the city was able to recover let's hope they get unless hope they get the support that they're looking for. natasha. miss natasha. when i'm there from untouched city. thanks so much. well,
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natasha mentioned the. it's a bitterly cold, ny looks, every bit like it's going to get as cold as it was last night. when bernard smith was out in about spending the night with displaced people. people trying to put the pieces back together of their lives, from the rubble of what was once their 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. take 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 kid 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 i'll do. who will call me dad during age street after street,
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district after district. it took just 2 minutes of the earthquake to cause all this 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 untouched. 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 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,
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unfortunately, my country, which i love so much, 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. they don't come here because they know we don't want to see them. this is was last of the home house on 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, algebra, and takia is getting quite smoky. hey, i'm going to ask joe out if we can try and get a little shot of the horizon. not sure if you can see it. i don't think it's only because people are burning stuff, but this is, you know, there's
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a lot of kind of recovery work going on and bulldozers and cranes and picking through the debris that's kicking off all of the stuff. maybe it's a good time to try and bring in our our drone. the drone hopefully will make it a little clearer for us, you can get a feel for what it's like. all of the clouding defenses also clouding the emotion. there was a situation here not long ago, where a journalist right here in this spot saw a body coming out. he walked over, although he wasn't filming at his camera around his neck. the minute people saw that a journalist had approached the body. you can imagine what happened next. people got very excited. the crowd lifted him out. it's a, it's a tricky situation where you, you have to find the balance between. we want to give the public,
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the right information and the right to know and to feel the pain and the suffering that's going on here without treading and intruding into people's painful moments. and talking about painful moments. been a painful moment for a 113 people have been ordered, arrested by turkey in connection with the collapse of buildings. a property developer arrested on fridays. the tried to leave the country and opposition parties are accusing the government of not enforcing. building regulations on sit in costs. all lou had to look at some of those building regulations in this report . much continuous seismic data vital input to measure earthquakes, it is monitored process and assess in real time here at the turkish disaster management agency. turkey said some 5 major seismic fall plants risking 71 percent
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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, we're shaking twice by tremors above 4.0 magnitude. this is part of life here. now, harlan, after so simpler delong videos, aftershocks over $3.00 for marketing to to see the numbers are 6, will continue for much longer. though we are reevaluate in the market to not dimensions of the affected area. earthquakes in line with the information from our field to to go to this amazon. what we see is a much bigger disaster premium to support to the healthier for data. 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
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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 faster of the century, shows you might get a drug issue or what? well, they get a go or not, no need to be stunned or exaggerated by saying, this is the biggest tre calling you on that. so on point for magnitude was approaching haley's area, you know, and paid attention, wendy, as scientists say, you can't resist nature, but build earthquake resistance series, a joint responsibility of the state. people and the local administration's finances solo al jazeera and clara. so a lot of regulations there's been, i'm explained, but that's raising a lot of questions as to what happened. well,
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i'm delighted to have with someone who can talk a little bit about that. we've got the unit, emory cut your mother. he's an architect, an expert in this kind of situation. i'm going to start by asking him, basically, what happened were the regulations followed here or not? you know, cut your mouths, but all of them never know, do you offer, then it's him in a demo. she'll be with you on the phone or did they follow the regulations? did the unfortunately we had to go in for one of diverse to natural gas afterwards . what about was $7.00 and a half point c, causing the magnitude rate? that's the unit has taken place. we have to divide into use actually at the regulations you for $999.00 before
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than most of them are now unfortunately demolished for new buildings have collapsed as bad. we have been expecting this earthquake for some time actually as a professional architecture association. we had been expecting this and this is a very large scale in comparison to what we had back in 1939. and as in john. and then it's the, the biggest problem here is because the buildings regulations are not being observed. yup. let him check that out. so enough process of being constructed. so not enough for that. and then by now little really you don't get enough controls and not enough. yup. within it's him that many things
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actually showed mom after 2000 and the regulations had improved certain extent and also not only regulation, but also the controls while they're being constructed heavy can prove to a certain degree. but actually, vanity has not had the right to. and so is that who you know, buildings because the structure is not latoria and them you know, nobody ever actually, in my opinion, never checked the soil and ignore job. joe religious work had been carried out so that for all the buildings were built in this area and in their wake or just waiting for the translation to finish that we don't talk over each other.
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this of course, raises a lot of questions about responsibility because as humanly, it's not just the contract is who might be responsible. there are levels of authority that it's supposed to be over seeing what was being constructed. so i'm just going to ask that question now in turkish. burned down can sort of live. well, thank you sort of the done. but i was from all these who's responsible from this is basically doors who actually had a city is pan in texas and who give permission to those buildings so that, that would be able to add what responsible impact and magnitude and or can learn to think every nation around the world who want to look into data to be regulations when it comes to being affecting people from the
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damage they can cause. but to talk you really have the means to actually pat are those who are responsible for making things happen. don't seem to be doing what they are supposed to have done or out of outline, but we are going to have to find out who are responsible and then hopefully bring them into account for day to not be in the professional constructions. all right, unit henry, catch a month. they talk to check it. i didn't thank you so much for joining us. well, of course, come on us. come on mama. she's not the only place for questions being raised. there are plenty of questions being raised in plenty of different areas. stephanie deca explains now from the epi center of the 1st major earthquake,
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the note tens of thousands of people seeking shelter. there is a tented area. i don't want to call it a city, but it's growing. set out just a couple of blocks away where people are having to now live, at least temporarily until a more permanent solution is found because they're not going to be coming back to their homes here. any time soon, there are still a couple of buildings where people remain under the rubble. when i say people these days, it's much more believe to be bodies. however, one of the sites we spent the day at 40 bodies remained there, but they did pull a mother and a child alive from there yesterday. so there is still a glimmer of hope. certainly the rescue workers are exhausted, but they will tell you what i asked them. no, do you get any sleep like maybe an hour or so in our vans that we don't, you know, they're working on adrenalin, they're working on needing to find people needing to find the bodies for the families who sit day and night and the bitter cold waiting a for any news,
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and even if it is, you know, tragically more and more bodies that are being brought out but to be at least able to bury them, talking of the dead. it's been an endless stream of dead to really that we've seen since we arrived here. we went to the turkey syria border yesterday took her to cover the aid, the renewed aid that was entering serious part of the year. you and you know, the mechanism that's been in place during the war of course that was put on hold since the earthquake. well we actually saw that completely. florida's was a constantly car is arriving and bringing out body bags of the dead. all right, what i want to do now is try and ask joe, this is might take a 2nd, he's having to fiddle around with some equipment lighting equipment here, but something is going on. an ambulance has been cold in the spot we've been talking about for the last few hours where they were giving the coal of life.
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joanne, can we pan over and try and get a shot of the ambulances which had been brought in. now, one would hope one would hope, of course, that means someone alive has been found. one hopes we don't know for sure. of course, i have been instances where in the end the body is pulled out, but the person is not alive obviously. so maybe we'll just take a 2nd to watch what happens and see if anything unfold. all right. looks like the ambulance was moving a little bit. 11 would hope that that means. well, someone was found alive, we're not sure. we'll try and gather some information. with our producer moves here,
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hopefully we'll find out what's happening then. let's hope it's good news. good news. something that everybody is hoping for. that's not forgot. on both sides of the border aid has been trickling into rebel held areas of northern syria. but of course, despite to you and convoys having that on sunday, crossing through the bible, how're this still a lot of anger against the un there? as they know harder explains sir 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, we count the horror of her experience. she still doesn't know how much she has lost, precious. 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,
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but i haven't seen any one yet. had you go to her father and 3 of her siblings. died. said the name that the deal doesn't know yet. we'll so 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 warn 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
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northwest, including 4 hospitals, had sustained damage. and while emergency medical services have been overwhelmed 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 there appeals for help were ignored by the international community center hunter osha's either by
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while as night falls. hey, you can probably see the bull. those is behind. they're going to try and step out the way that back at work in that area behind me. and just moments ago, we had a few ambulances rush by which could be indicative that people have been found in the rubble. now one would hope, of course, that they're alive, but we really don't know this point. but one conversation i had with an aide work today was that he was saying more than a 100000 people have been rescued around the country. and that really makes you think, if more than a 100000 people have been found, how many more people are in built the buildings and didn't make it out it's. it's a scary and harrowing thought. and we saw an example of that earlier today when right at the spots. a body was brought out from the rubble over there,
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placed on the ground just behind me. immediately we had people screaming as you can imagine, a very tense moment. and here we are now and step out the way you might be able to see in the same spot. relatives have gathered. again, people have gathered back and their lighting fires to try and stay warm tonight. it's a reminder of the painful cycle of life and death. i guess you could say life trying to re kindle itself again in the very same spot, attend situation. we're going to hand it back now to you in doha. sammy, thank you so much for that time is done reporting for us from goverlan, marsh and turkey. so here's a reminder of the latest developments right now surrounding the earthquakes in turkey and syria. more than 35000 people are confirmed. dad. recovery operations
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are continuing nearly a week after a 1000. the buildings were destroyed. millions of people have been left homeless. but as you've been hearing, rescuers are still finding people alive under the rubble. and this 5 year old girl was $1.00 to $4.00 people to be freed. on sunday, she'd been buried for almost a 150 hours. an aide is now trickling into rebel held parts of northern syria. rescue efforts were hampered in a region already devastated after years of war, with many saying that they felt abandoned. while the united nations, a chief says the international community has failed in helping earthquake survivors in northern syria and a tweet. he said the turkey a serial border today, we have so far, failed the people northwest, syria. they rightly feel abandoned looking for international help that hasn't arrived. my duty and your obligation and our obligation is to correct this failure as fast as we can speak to by that he came,
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who's the policy and advocacy manager for the norwegian refugee council serial response. she's joining us on skype from amman. jordan, welcome to the al jazeera news hours, so we see, and we hear over and over that a to syria is not nearly enough and the responds to syria needs to be scaled up. how are you doing that at the norwegian refugee council? thank you for the opportunity really what, what we are trying to do is to support our teams and colleagues. what already on the ground are we are scaling of our response trying to understand exactly what are the needs, what the people need and the how to help them in the most efficient way. we started distributing, i'm very little items, cash for people to be able to buy fuel to buy water, to buy food. because they didn't need everything and the needs are out of really, really, really important. syria was already going through 12 years of war of 15000000
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people were in need of humanitarian assistance before the earthquake. we are talking now about 5 more 1000000 people who have been displaced by the earthquake. so people who have been experiencing a displacement after displacement after displacement in northwest syria, only 5 percent of the areas would affected by the earthquake were actually searched by search and rescue teams because of the lack of manpower or the lack of heavy machinery. so we're talking about her country, it was already going through the worst humanitarian crisis in his life. going through a new and new disaster and adding a new layer of suffering. we understand now as a focus and syria has shifted from rescue to recovery is the reason why they're no longer rescuing peoples because like you're saying, aid and manpower did not go in in time. yes, unfortunately, and as we know we'd, sir, now too late to,
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to rescue people. there are very few people who can still be saved from under durable. so there is a focus on recovery. her very few teams are still trying to rescue people from the rebels, but the manpower and the heavy machinery and the material that would be needed also for, for a very specific for search and rescue the late a latest. i mean, the last hours in days of rescue usually need very specific machinery, electronic machinery to be able to identify exactly where people are still breathing or alive within the buildings. and that that material does not exist along well. why does it not exist? i wonder if you can tell us the reasons why that is and also there have clearly been issues with access to the country. so have you at the n r c had to deal with any of those challenges accessing areas? so we, it, we work with teams who are already on the ground and their access is not limited
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because unfortunately, unfortunately they are part of the people who have been affected. and that's the, that's the tragedy, this seeds that the humanitarian actors who have been responding and have the response short develop their shoulder. are the ones who are actually on the ground than were affected by the response i during gazande deployed the you went coordination and by and g o. in sitting organizations had delta coordination, and teams in there and the offices, or inside see the how, where, where the teams were deployed. or why this material is not available in syria. because it's a country of war where borders have been closed, to, to most external or external learning material heavy machinery and the other a specific, specific care. her, i'm sorry, specific elements are also not allowed inside city of where a sanction reasons for counter to arisen law reasons. and so
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a tactics axis. so syria has been very complicated for naming during response before the earthquake. and now it's showing that the access humanitarian actors have usually is not sufficient to respond to a disaster as big as this one. to what extent do you think that the serv craig is actually going to worsen that humanitarian crisis? you speak often syria, a considering of years of sanctions on the country as well as years of war. well, what we see is that, like i said before, the war of 15000000 out of more or less 2022000000 in syria were in need of the most basic elements like water, food and houses. and so when with the earthquake this, this number will probably arise or the people who were in need of humanitarian assistance are finding themselves in an even worse situation in nor do i, syria, a lot of displaced people. for example,
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what we're living in house is who are very badly and very quickly built over the years during the war with very cheap material and quality. and those are the houses who actually are, were destroyed by the earthquake. and so we're talking about families who have been going to a war death trauma for 12 years. and now we're adding an additional trauma to all of it. for humanitarian actors, it's going to be very difficult or to, to be able to continue responding. and i really, i really salute all those who are responding on the ground who have been up on their feet and trying to support the most vulnerable since the top of the catastrophic and so on. but we, we really need to make sure that we support them and that's enough funding comes into not receive a response that the access is allowed for all humanitarian assistance to come in. all different, all kind of him and that in assistance. because her,
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because otherwise we will fail again the syrian people over live with her. thank you so much about that i can for speaking to us for i think you're a man. thank you. while the mirror of tough har has met the turk, as president, the 1st head of state, visits in the earthquake struck on monday, raja ty berto on greeted shaft, i mean been hammered and sunny and stumble. cuff our was quick to sun rescue teams and aid in the aftermath of the quakes. its also provided 10000 mobile homes for those who have been left homeless. armenia has opened a border crossing with turkey for the 1st time in 35 years to allow aid for earthquake vixen. the 2 countries have had no diplomatic tides for decades. this crossing was last used in 1988 when armenia was hit by an earthquake. and a turkish red crescent stepped up to provide aid and the greek foreign minister has become the 1st high level european official to visit turkey in the show. support comes this by decades a stream ties because then the promised grease would do everything it can to
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support your kid and said they should not wait for natural disasters to improve relations. to other news now in israel says it will step up. it's raids against palestinians and occupied easter islam and the occupied west bank prime minister benjamin netanyahu made the announcements on sunday. dozens of palestinians have already been killed by is really forces this year. there is really army has sealed off access to the homes of palestinians who accuses of carrying out attacks, but to the probate 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 judea and samaria was preventing as much as possible, harming those uninvolved sir. hi roth has more from western, ceylon they're going to be discussing a military operation expanding that,
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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 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. tracts include the ceiling of the homes of anyone they seem a terrorist, but also anyone that they deem as a supporter of those harrison. the home that was sealed overnight belong to the family of his sin, has in the 1st year old from occupies east, through 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
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. chips for anyone in the occupied is truthful. and again, that they deem as a terrorist, or related in any way. the head of the wagner mercenary group says it could take 2 years for russia to fully cease control of ukraine's eastern regions of donnie. ask lou hans, you have any prisoners in statement comes as the mercenary force claims to have captured the eastern village of cross the horror on your bus route. the area has been, has seen some of the fierce fighting's fighting for months or summer. been job aid has more from moscow. wagner is the group, which is a private contractor labeled as mercenary army by the best and powers 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
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about how well the war has been going. the concentration of the conflict is around the eastern parts of ukraine. 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 where the most of the fighting is concentrated around. weird 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 well, 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 site against what it calls its war against . not to them. sherlock has presidents as appearance,
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a tunnel minorities to engage with his government development initiatives. he also promised to devolve powers to them right now with chris thing is reaching out to the minority group ahead of next month's regional elections. but as mental fernandez reports in the northern city of jobs, now it will take much more than that to overcome the divisions left by sir lank as civil war. his present run as vicar missing her wants to reach out to the tamares in northern she lanka. arresting those demonstrating against his visit is probably not going to help university students and political activists. and jonah 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, montana, tigers took up arms against the government. the community said it suffered unfair and unjust treatment by the sing holly's majority. the tigers were crushed in 2009,
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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 a tamela 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 do hit as of private land taken over during the war. some of it's still occupied by the police, military and government institutions. roger sacon em thunder man's land as 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 occupation affected families like his very,
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very badly no. they are only more land they were there. and are any other houses or anything they are endowed over the great from here they're going to trade in blindly do tournaments family has on the property still under military control. president ronald vicar, missing her, open 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 brutus from the buddhist clergy who have opposed the amendment from its passage. those watching the developments in the north are skeptical that autonomy is within reach. how is from going door handle the protesters? how is he going to tell them what they are 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 an issue for many here. tamara said their leaders must be willing to go beyond it
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to truly address their grievances when they're fernandez. i'll jazeera jaffer now than shall anchor. still ahead on the al jazeera news hour after a grueling season. it all comes down to one match. the kansas city chiefs faced the philadelphia eagles in the super bowl. ah, my name is the shop of me. i'm just a simple girl with big dreams and distant to do something big in the world of cinema. one has to be mad to actually come to won't be, and live the dream. most of the artists in one b lloyd would in general, they get paid forwarded. this is where exploitation comes, the word expert,
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if we get paid 90 need after that really cost off those short, i don't really exclude that way for the longest down the supporting character and i'm happy being supported the guy that that's all right, but i don't get any dialogue with that? so question mike, you find the supporting character even up to the junior are these later is a vague didn't like you know, and it shouldn't be that too. i always told myself that somebody would be famous blue ah, the sportsman's, here's peter theory. thank you very much. the count down is on to the kickoff of
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america's biggest annual sporting event. the super bowl or the 100000000 people are expected to watch in the us alone. as high to jo, castro 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 boils down to the quarterbacks. patrick, bow homes for the cheese against jalen 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, it will be a fun game and i'm excited for it. besides anything else that come with it? no, we all just want to go. leave it on the line. that it all. hagen. how 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 a super bowl. she's tied and travis kelsey against his older brother, jason,
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the eagle center divided loyalties for their mother donna. oh, yeah. for them in dream and about it since they were 10 years old, it would be on the same team and it would be for probably the browns because that's all they knew at that point. but that didn't happen and i think they landed in the right places, more than 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. 9 time grammy award winner rianna is the headline act of this year's half time show her 1st live performance in 5 years. i'll make this quick, mr. pina know you got some brownies to ruin. and as for the adverbs, a 32nd spot will cause $7000000.00 or paint this, if you know, what do you, people is a massive audience that's a lot of people speak to at the same time. but it's more than that. during the superbowl, most consumers are excited about the commercials. they want to talk about the
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commercial. so it's not just advertising pundents like myself, we're excited. everyone's excited. so the stage is set for the advertisers, entertainers and 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 legalized for gambling in the u. s, heidi jo, castro al jazeera, now the 1st of sundays, primly games have kicked off of manchester united away at leads. it's currently to know to manchester united, thanks to gold, from marcus restaurant, and alejandro got natural united a 3rd in the league. but i'm now sick to go. second above mentioned the city temporarily at least city pay aston villa in the late a game on sunday. so united and city both looking to gain ground lead is also who held to a $11.00 draw at home by branford ivan tony schooling. the equalizer branford,
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of the gun has missed the chance to go a points co, the top full place new casa world, held at home. over in france, paris sandman lost a 2nd straight game, and all competitions of being knocked out of the french. got monica beat them. $31.00 in the league, which means they lead at the top is down to 5 points. p s she faced by munich in the champions league last 16 on tuesday. as for bye, and they remain top of the german goodness league, off the thrashing them 3 mill. thomas smith, the among the school is in that one sitting them up nicely for that trip to paris. round madrid have won. the club will cut for a wrinkled foot time. the european champions beat al hello of saudi arabia, 53. and he richardson was at the final in the moroccan capital, rabbits, and toys before an ancient team had reached the club well cup final. on both occasions, rail madrid with the sites and hopes of a surprise when
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a saudi arabia's al hello aliens become the 1st teen from outside of europe or south america. to lift the trophy gray on but the out of my they every time to discuss that, that's enough. they all are not of the gym and he does the good to you for that. it's global spin. it's my dad bought when he'll basic with this so that it be i that he lou round hands were immediately cheered by the sight of cream benjamin leading that female the striker back in action of the missing the semifinal through injury. no thing. the school more goals and club woke of history ban rail madrid, and vinicius julia quickly added another to that holly federico velvet. i made it to new. instantly 20 minutes. maria looked sent for a straightforward when he did their best to disrupt the narrative. newsome
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irregular breaking player to shoot his c back in to contention so it is in his junior, really foot unlocked cells defense in the 2nd half benjamin on hand to apply the finishing vote. i can go made it one serial vinicius junior rails match wouldn't. in last year's champions league final against liverpool also schools point hello luciana vieza was another player to put who goes by his name. the wide open game finished by 33 out. a record extending 5th club will win for the spanish side. with this competition was launched to the turn of the century. brazilian teams won the 1st 3 additions since then has been 15 european victories in 16 tournaments. this has become
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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 on 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 the richardson algae, sarah, rebecca, korea, irving, and lucas on judge claim for the 1st time as dallas mavericks, teammates, but they will be and that's sacramento serving, join from the nets on monday and had 28 points in the game while don't switch to live a 27. but who was the aaron fox who sold the show with 36 says the kings took victory in overtime. really, really good doctor to rugby 6 nations where england and lead or are leading 8090. know right now it's wicked. i mean, while island, i'll celebrating a bonus point victory over defending champions. france, if you go keen on one of the full try scores in dublin, keep will so frank
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t mancuso, the grand sam, $3219.00 the final school bringing an end to france's run. a full t straight winds with less than 3 weeks until the started before me to one season, the teams continued to unveiled and new cause alpha tower e, all the latest. and they chose to do the reveal full day a t o full model at new york fashion week. as for the drivers this year yuki sonata will be partnered by f one, rookie nick, the phrase, as they look to improve on the line place finish out of 10 last time round. that's all the sports needs during. thank you so much, peter. thanks for watching the news, our analogy 0 will take a short break and we'll be back in just a moment and much more of the days news and all the latest had like cnn. ah ah, ah. i
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women, ron micro businesses are key to center goals development and to improved food security . access to finance helps them succeed since 2014, nearly a 180 micro enterprises. collectives and small businesses across senegal received concession re financing. these loans were made possible by the initiative administered by the q right good. will fund the q 8 fund partners in development in depth analysis of the days headlines from around the world to try right. extremely, there is real and need to be tackled as soon as possible informed opinions. why is the sale of position concerned about this rubbish more between turkey, anthea rose, than on the really route through blue shield, 30 misses and so forth. frank assessments, you know, that was
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a joke about going from government or it's not interact with, nor does it got inside story. on al jazeera, that light emitted from history kept alive only in the family. tales of those who survived is had to believe for people who didn't fit the 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 analogies era. we know what's happening in our region. we know how to get to plate that others and not as far as i said on going on. the way that you tell the story is what can make a difference. ah
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