tv News Al Jazeera February 13, 2023 9:00pm-10:01pm AST
9:00 pm
received concession or refinancing. these loans were made possible by the initiative administered by the key right good will from the q 8 fund partners in development. this is one of the most astounding that logical revolutions in all of history make our planner grid. we have to meet the seo tool emission targets electrical meet metrics in motion. many to be mind to where people are just talking about wind and solar sake that's can solve the problem. it won't. the world of distance and commerce is driving the energy transition is the promise of clean energy and illusion. the dark side of green energy on al jazeera, we understand the differences and similarities and cultures across the world. so no matter what moves in winter been used in current calls that matter to you a
9:01 pm
oh, you're watching a news our live from our headquarters in del high and daddy and abigail coming up in the next 60 minutes. more than 37000 people are dead and there's mounting anger and frustration a week after the devastating earthquakes, inter kia and syria emergency cruise and turkey continued to find survivors. but the un ain't cheap, says the rescue phase is coming to an end. as a kind of a victim, it hardships are a sign of love from god. if god really loves series of people, syrian say they feel forgotten and abandoned as international aid is slow to reach, the rebel held north also ahead anger. and israel is the parliament debates, giving itself powers to overrule the supply. in course. and on peter's famous with
9:02 pm
your school, the kansas city chiefs celebrating a food super bowl title. patrick holmes led the charge as they form back when a traffic encounter against the philadelphia eagles. ah, in it's been a week since 2 powerful earthquakes struck turkey and syria. more than 37000 people have been declared dead across the 2 countries. but the real toll is likely to be significantly higher. and against all odds, people are still being pulled from the rubble alive. a 13 year old was rescued after spending 182 hours under the rubble of collapse, building in the turkish province of her tide. meanwhile, the u. n. a chief martin griffith had said the rescue phase is coming to an end. what we've seen happening in these zones of the upgrade is that the rescue phase is
9:03 pm
dragging live people out from the rebel, from finding those who died in the rebel. that's coming to a close and now that you my turn phase, the urgency of providing shelter psycho social cat food schooling and a sense of the future for these people. that's our obligation now. while the un aid chief is also accusing the world of abandoning syria humanitarian aid, there is desperately needed but has been slow to arrive, especially in the rebel held north. we have a team of correspondence covering the story across turkey. but 1st sammy's, a don, looks back at how the 1st hours of the disaster unfolded about full 17 am local time. monday, the 6th of february. this security camera, from a driveway in civic southeast to kia, captures the rumble. and the
9:04 pm
power going out in another city, 2 hours or so further east. the earthquake sounds like gunfire. in gaussian tip, nurses rushed into the neonatal war to stop the babies. incubate his falling over. witnesses say the swaying roll of the earth lasted 2 minutes, but felt like a lifetime. and as buildings topple ah, crowds rush out on to the streets. laurel thought of the kitchen to save themselves yoga and surveyed the damage. oh, they are confronted with chaos. robin one good. the magnitude 7.8 tremor was one of the largest ever recorded in total care. it was
9:05 pm
powerful, as you can see, it was shallow and it was felt as far away as greenland. wow . across to the pier and the neighboring syria, the rescues began immediately on the torchlight and in difficult conditions. oh, people desperately digging through the rubble with their bare i engendered in northern syria rescue as from the white helmet group, pulled out a young baby who had been cradled in the arms of her dead, elder sister. i was left and his 1st light broke. the scale of the disaster became clear, sammy's a than al jazeera, no door to the kia, where we can now bring in sammy,
9:06 pm
joining us once again from norah died in cherokee. yes, so 7 days on families clinging to hope that their loved ones can be found alive. sammy, has anyone been located alive where you are? well, unfortunately, i wish i could say yes, but so far? no, since they are the rescue that was made here earlier with a 18 year old. saw that in the hopes that we would find her sister alive, what we found his sister, but sadly, she wasn't alive. he said the hopes was still holding on to hope. but as night falls is not only the temperatures that are falling and crashing here, it's getting hard to keep those hopes high as well. earlier, a body was located from here, we'll try and get you pictures. now what happened earlier as the, i'm going to pulled up, the crowds gathered the relative, gathered holding their breath a very tense moment. unfortunately, it was a body,
9:07 pm
a person who is not alive, and not in one piece. it has to be said, it was a very disturbing grizzly moment. it took them a while to get that body out of here. while immediately the family waiting here on the left on your screen, right. they will move to tears. you could see the crying. they were distraught over what happened and the ambulance pulled up to take the body away and it was in contrast to the moments before they found that mother. i think we got some pictures from earlier when that same family gathered round. the fire here was looking through the photo albums, trying to not only keep themselves warm, but keep the memories warm, keep the hopes drawn, more of their out of his would be found and alive. sadly, it didn't turn out that way that the hopes are still there. because there's still 5
9:08 pm
people behind me here in the rubble. and the window may be closing for the chances of finding people alive. but the rescue say they still going to work through the night and try and reach those 5 people hoping for a miracle. also continuing to be camped out here will be the family. going to ask joe if he can now pan the camera around and he will be able to see the family. they're still here. it's a freezing night. the perceived temperature here right now is minus 2. you know, a 5 and go to 5, going a fire can maybe warm up your hands and feet, but it's a struggle for it to warm up your heart when you're dealing with the loss of so many of your relatives and potentially 5 more. there's been a number of, of rescues, but now the focus is going to be turning towards the needs the needs which are only going to be increasing. as time goes on,
9:09 pm
the turkish president has been saying that hundreds of thousands of buildings are now uninhabitable. so those people need housing, those people need support. what we heard from nato earlier saying took he's allies will be sending housing support to, to kia. but there's a. busy lot of housing that needs to be provided quickly. the government is struggling to try and provide housing in all shapes and forms possible from dorms and schools and public buildings and so on. people are mobilizing to themselves. we interacted with a group over there, the other side of the road who had come from a 10 hour drive, another part of, of turkey. and they said way here because we want to help provide food. we want to try and help provide services. so people are coming together to try and help because they can see the scale of this disaster is very troublesome. this is the
9:10 pm
3rd earthquake zone i've been to. i have been in those quite sons when earthquakes at the time when they've hit. i've felt the buildings shake. i have felt the panic with everybody else and slight buildings. this is on another level, this scale of devastation. it feels is on ending when you drive through this earthquake zone. that in thank you so much, sammy, for that update from turkey or world. stephanie decker has been following rescue efforts on the city of her mon marashi. it was the center of the 2nd earthquake. it's a very active rescue operation that's been going on for over 24 hours. now, i can show you some detail. we have much more activity happening now than in the last few hours. you have the police helping miners taking out rubble as they excavate a tunnel toward 2 or 3 people that are alive. basically they called in the spanish
9:11 pm
rescue team yesterday they came with their rescue dog. the dog identified life. and as i was told, the dog is never wrong. and then they also double confirm that with thermal imagery, at least 2 people are alive. they believe that to be a mother. her new born baby, almost 3 weeks old and potentially also a grandmother. so what you're seeing now is meticulous rescue operation are they're digging a tunnel this way and they're also digging a tunnel the other way. and you had the spanish search and rescue team that have gone in in the last 10 minutes or so. they pushed forward again into this building because basically where they believe the people to be is 2 buildings through this building. so they're excavating through the rubble. it's a 7 story building that collapsed on itself on monday, 7 days later now. so i can tell you there is a throng of media here. everybody waiting for good news because of course, as we've been reporting throughout this week,
9:12 pm
it has been death and devastation and heartbreak. so these are the kinds of stories that people are really clinging on to. there are nearly 10000 foreign aid workers in turkey are now from 74 countries with more on the way in the port city of iskander. and the indian army has set up a field. hospital, bernard smith, reports the turkish public health system has collapsed here in a scoundrel. the indian army is filling the gap. it's field hospital in a school is the only health facility serving a pre earthquake population of a quarter of a 1000000 people. initially, we had dramas, lots of gloss of lymph head and go digest dramas. patients were buried in the rubble, we had to do an amputation to save a life of patient is leg was gangrenous. then finally, we have saved stabilized him and moved him to other a donna. now the patient profile is changing and al gradually immortal. the infectious diseases are coming in. the turkish government has struggled to cope with the disaster of the scale. so citizens are relying on aid from across the
9:13 pm
world. is that on the morning of the quake, i made a search says everywhere was hell. i thought i was going to die and i started reciting my final praise. we don't know what we'll do next. we're on the street. there was another trial that just a moment ago, and we're outside the public hospital. opposite the school is in too dangerous a condition to consider re opening with more than a 1000000 people homeless across southeast and turkey. many living intense. there's an increased risk of a wide spread outbreak of disease being an army says it'll only consider leaving turkey when the number of patients is treating begins to level off. there's no sign of that happening now. bernard smith al jazeera, is candor. what's better? how came honda, who's the head of mission and syria, a doctors without borders? he's joining us from gaussian tab. thanks for speaking to us on al jazeera,
9:14 pm
from what you are seeing what people need the most. now then for the 1st and so that we provided to the people, whatever was inside or inside jokey. first of all, we support, we focus our support to the hospital inside. because a 3 days following the squares, they've been going for a huge, a huge crowd. the flinders people who came to the hospital and so we were providing all our medical emergency support that we had in stock to them. we provide them or so for doctors and nurses just above them and ambulances. so like the 1st 3 days that to us. but the following day and the last day he was mainly about rescue or teams trying to rescue people under the rivers. now we are more focusing on providing montela support posts abortive care, but also to mention that she was already an emergency. even before the square was
9:15 pm
a country where it was more than a decatur law and order for james. so we are focusing on how to support the system by supporting some spit out of some some that has been some none bunks. and that's time we are focusing, i was a book providing relief for the center or received a new people homeless now and providing as well as medical services to those people . and what is it that you need from the outside world? man, me says i want to put on one. we have been in turkey. we were doing the split . we started to move the 1st day for the squared where has been been seen plenty of trucks carrying relief for people in turkey. witnessing plenty of
9:16 pm
brains from different country landing in turkey. soon or so many different rescue team for different country in turkey. but it's not all the situation and knowing that both country by us, which in serious so far we are very few rescue team. we have witness that from our police infest area that people are trying to rescue teams and those are best from the end we didn't. we didn't see so huge convoy that we have seen in turkey. there is not enough relief answering, entering syria, us as a medical condition we give, or i want to because talk to all of us now we're running out of because of bad to suppose be don't. and we're working our supplies coming from europe to enter syria . right, so just very briefly, obviously not enough aid is coming into syria as we've been hearing how,
9:17 pm
how challenging then has it been for you to treat people there? it's a big challenge because if we were having full access to iraq, if sue was benefited, many thing from the sense of brought us jokey was benefiting it to be okay to support the same people in the population. but so far, we're waiting for the same symbol, the 7 volume affirmative entering syria, and unfortunately, today's working from this about to come ok, we'll leave it there. we thank you so much for speaking to us from gathering tap now her tie providence is one of the hardest parts of turkey in natasha. her name is in the city. if i'm talking with more on the recovery operations there. untouched is now a city of earth, quake ruins. this st gives you an indication as to why it has been
9:18 pm
decimated. one man tells us we are psychologically broken. there are no services people have been told to evacuate yet some remain. that's because they are holding a soul shattering weeklong vigil waiting for their loved ones to be pulled out of the rubble. holding on to the hope, however, infants decimal that they will be granted a miracle rescue. eugene only that alicia, our loved ones need us to be strong. my beloved nephew and his wife are under the rubble g. know the tiny line between hope and despair. i'm going through this for the last few days, between miracle and reality. she was the people who remain are also living in the rubble. they say they've been given food, they've been given clothing, but they still don't have shelter. they complain that the search and rescue operation was slow to begin here in on takia. they say it took about 3 or 4 days after the earthquake hit to begin in earnest. since the earthquakes hit more than
9:19 pm
a week ago, there has been a national reckoning over the well known use of shoddy construction material. and the lacks enforcement of building codes in compliance with earthquake engineering standards. warnings were issued, amnesty is given. now people are angry coverages. it's wrong to blame the government, although they've made mistakes. i think all the responsibilities on the contractors, the ministry of justice has issued 100. 34 arrest warrants, arrested 3 people and police are searching for more than 100 suspects in connection with building code violations. as for the people here in antalya, they say they know this diverse city with each of routes will rebuild. but given the historic proportions of this devastation, they know it will take a very long time. natasha name l. jazeera and takia tortilla.
9:20 pm
at least 5700 people lost their lives in syria. and as we've just heard, anger is building there with survivors, saying the international community has let them down. aid has been slow to arrive and the rebel held northwest. i've been one, i'm customer ross who is one of those who feels abandons the well the one on here to watch. i remember you'll still book the memories here. i see my sister's rest, her son's clothes and all of them there. smell is here because when they remove everything i won't come back. i say here's their car because their water tank a lot of all the solar panels, memories good, all the shop, sort of the whole world lead the syrian people down. this is struction was in
9:21 pm
europe or any other foreign country. the whole world would have gathered here to rescue those killed runs gun. but here no one care where displace football no one ask about german and we were bomb. barrel bombs were dropped, but no one cared about us were put on fit. i don't know, we're getting nothing from turkey and not and not from the government side. you know, we hear besieged a cut hurry, a convoy of 7 trucks carrying blankets, winter clothing, tents and other essentials as crossed into northwest syria. from through. the convoy was organized by the charity cuts are funds for development. the charity says its immediate focus is on providing aid, but it will transition to rebuilding houses. universities on schools and earthquake had areas. russel stars are, has more from northern syria, fear in martyrdom, the sin in northwest syria. this place was not he, it's hard by the earthquake. however,
9:22 pm
there has been some nearby legions. districts here that were hit quite hot and as a result, thousands of families have been left without houses. now. they need tans. they need warm clots because it is freezing. cold, it's winter here and cut that has been one of the 1st companies that responded to the disaster in, in syria. so to they cut their sand. it's 2nd conway, off aid. and now we are here that it has been received by the people. so it contains diapers for the, for the kids, and also that tans and the heaters and many other essentials that are desperately needed here. so we can see that now the pants has just been set up and there are some other places also, the tans of the tans are being set up by did the, by the civil defense the by, by the civil society here. and also by the cut that he aid workers as well. so
9:23 pm
north west syria is roughly warm to more than 4000000 people. and it has seen a more than a decade long civil war. so disasters are overlapping here and they're receiving quite a little here. i have been to they really and, and weirdly i have talked to one of the aid workers here and said that they are quite receiving very, very tiny from the international community. so every drop of age really saves lives here. so that's why this kind of 8 convoys aren't quite essential here. and also have talked to the head of white helms, rosella, he told me that if they could have received an international aid earlier, they will be able to save much more lives. but now as of now, more than 5000 people have already died here and the rescue teams who are still dealing with the robbers. they said that they do not have the dead more than rescue
9:24 pm
equipment. they do not have the diggers acts away, tears and they do not have also the heavy lifting machinery that are quite needed here. and even they do not have the light that they can continue through the night . they rescue a force. however, that is the situation here, as i said, did the northwest syria, all of syria has been hit hard by 12 years of civil war. but now after the earthquake, that they had a lethal but the earthquake has taken data as well. and the 8th here is much more needed than ever. this will say that al jazeera, moderate machine, northwest syria, alpha 0 as amazon hela b is that a camp and syria's rebel controlled african region and families. their fear they could lose what they have left because of aftershocks. fee monta had colored these at home. we are standing at an area that cannot be described as a camp. simply
9:25 pm
a number of tents have been put up among the damage the residential buildings on the outskirts of our free, but i free for planning, right to show you those 10 c m we pan left to this mosque one which was partly damage as a result of death quite water. it is now a show to housing, dozens of families whose homes were destroyed for either other families. mostly women and children have taken shelter in the mosque or few of the aftershocks at the last of which was just a couple of minutes ago. we go back to the tenants. we spoke about earlier. this is a civil defense truck bringing more tense to house, more displaced families who were not able to go further into north west syria because of a power outage caused by earthquakes. here. mr. butler, mozilla, take it to the united nations in new york is salumi as joining us from there and kristen, a security council clerk session on syria has been taking place. i mean, how does the new and respond to claims that it's not doing enough
9:26 pm
well, you and officials are the 1st to admit that there are more needs to be don martin griffith, the chief humanitarian coordinator for the united nation speaking in syria on sunday. said that the people in the north west of syria, in particular, feel abandoned and that the international response has failed them. on the issue though, is that they need a mandate. the united nations needs a mandate to go into any country. they say that they are working to get more access to the hard hit areas, both coming from damascus and across the front lines of conflict. and also to get more access coming from neighboring countries as well. so far, so called cross border aid. the syrian government, they say, has been helpful and cooperating to get more aid cross line. but there are obstacles. this is a conflict zone in the un wants to be sure that their aid workers are going to be
9:27 pm
safe. they say they haven't gotten all the assurances they need on that front yet. and as far as cross border goes coming from other countries, they would need either the syrian government to allow that or the security council to pass a resolution. and neither has happened, despite an intense lobbying on both parts. we know that the security council is going to meet this afternoon. they're meeting behind closed doors. they're talking with turkey ha. and syrian officials about how best to do that. we asked the president of the security council of this month malta, earlier, what the security council was doing. and this is what she had to say. the wish to have an um avail, frank discussion with miss griffith from the ground because he is there that the series of my son because there's an issue of transparency. the is very clear that the secret company has to be abreast of me so well on this issue. we have not started discussing a resolution, but i'm sure that's who it so there's
9:28 pm
a lot of pressure on the security council to act. russia, which holds a veto in the security council, has said that syria must control access from cross border points in order for them to vote in favor of authorizing another cross border point. they want the syrians on board, they say it's a matter of national sovereignty. in the meantime, aid is getting through. there's been $58.00 truckloads crossing the the border into the area. but the un acknowledge is much more is needed along with funding from international partners to really address the needs there. thank you so much. kristen, for that reporting from the united nations still had only al jazeera news. our will have a report from chile, that's where crews are struggling to get the worst forest fires in decades under control. coming up and support tennis history is made with 1st chinese with ah,
9:29 pm
the spare that came out of the high grounded turkey necros as by john into iran failing to around its significant, particularly if you're in the parks on the roads, it melts quickly and the source of it is no longer a storm of turkey. it's very quiet here. the sun is out by day the windy weather is up in the black sea, but over the search area for those affected by the earthquake, it's a huge area. it's been night time temperatures have been a problem, not so much the weather for the sky, that's still the case where she everywhere sub 0 overnight, possibly worse on the turkish side, a leper there represents northern syria and we are minus 3 more consistently of the next 3 days us or for high school below where it should be. so it was had below average temperatures by the night in this area for
9:30 pm
a while and they'll stay that same way. the snow is moved away from town. it's for the science and iran and up enough kind of stem as well as rain persistence, but lighting q 8 and southern parts of iraq cipher that surprisingly it's really quite warm. suddenly breeze means doha is up to a very warm for this time of year 29 degrees. warmth of the summer combined. but humidity means big thunderstorms, lot of rain moment and most coming, most mozambique, and in by way, ah, up to years of over grace, the damage caused to the precious gross lance of chile is being reversed with one of the world's biggest ever conservation projects. they're pretty emblematic of the pedagogy and if they're plentiful and they're calm like this one is, then you know that the system is going back and that they feel no threat. and
9:31 pm
that's why you're high for re wilding patagonia on al jazeera. here's, i'll just here on the go and need to know out is there is only a mobile app is. this is where we dissect analyze. i got to find it. i guess going from out is there is mobile app available in your favorite app store. just set for it and tapped i made a new app from out. is there a new at you think it it oh i
9:32 pm
hello again. the top stories on the al jazeera, our more than 37000 people had been declared dead in turkey and syria, one week officer to the powerful earthquake struck the death toll is likely to be significantly higher. but there are still moments of hope and rescue. operations are still underway. a 12 year old boy was pulled from the rubble alive and turkey as high profit. and after being trapped for a week, a car carry a convoy of 7 trucks carrying blankets, winter clothing, 10 found other essential, crossed into northwest syria. furniture appeared, becomes of the un is calling for more border crossings and says, syria to be open for humanitarian supplies. to israel were thousands of rallied against prime minister benjamin netanyahu proposals to reform be judicial system. the demonstrators gathered outside the connected in western limits. parliamentarian
9:33 pm
started discussing the proposed bill. the changes would limit the power of the supreme court while giving greater power to the government. critics of the far right governments call it empty democratic iris has more from western gruesome saying, hey, we take the industry, we have a fight. we have different venue boards that are really concerned as to why the right way haven't seen. and it's been high history, while we're also seeing and hearing from people is that they are dog exist in this country. well, and if the record comes through because of the number of minutes is that all in this document that are in that position by convictions of racism over time. 2 including the rightly prime minute stuff that is config paid on its own trial corruption. what would be the best that something has to be done now?
9:34 pm
so any of things, but we've also heard from the president himself president, i'm need to discuss the position to government bearing in mind public opinion. let's take that. how guy matar was a journalist and executive director a plus $97.00 to magazine. joining us from tel aviv welcome to al jazeera, so what happens next, are the protest likely to increase as bill advances through the can asset? thank you for having me. definitely we are looking to see more and more. busy protests, we've already started seeing some direct action by activists trying to physically block ministers from leaving their homes to get to both in the class. so we are likely to see more of that and also more development by large hydro finance
9:35 pm
companies. they're putting their money away from his. busy so the protest movement is only going to increase in rise. the government's response, of course, is that these changes represents a much needed reform of a judiciary that has become too powerful and it argues that the reforms will strengthen what it describes as democracy. so i think 1st of all, we need to take into consideration the underlying factor that is really not a democracy because it is hard to regime an under apartheid towards helping and there is no democracy. and the problem is that this government is intent to escalate its attacks on palestinians as well as on journalists, civil society, the l g b t q coming in and so on. and to do all that, it's trying to remove the obstacles. that is the supreme court, the supreme court, israel, it has been kind of a rubber stamp for the occupation in
9:36 pm
a part time. but it had some limits in place to what the government can do it. the government is trying to get rid of even those and what about any sort of pressure from. busy the west or the international community. i mean, if the government actually goes off to the courts, then to think western countries will be willing to go step further in their muted criticism towards israel. hope so far. now, annually relation to to a part time is really work hard is what we've always heard from western powers has been now and see ations basically just words. very little action. i think both in the context of reported and of these recent news against liberal institutions with a miserable there is about a need for more criticism, for more direct action. not only from western parsons, also from states that have been recent years,
9:37 pm
started normalizing relations with israel. basically throwing costumes under the bus and that i think has to change in order for israel to actually talk in this race to the bottom that it's on. and some of who are criticizing this natania who personally have tied the reform plan to his ongoing corruption trial. it is the seen as a, as a sort of get out of jail free card for nathan, yahoo. and is this one of the reasons why he's pushing for it so much differently? there's a series of reasons why this attack is taking place. i'm just one of them is with them. yeah, i was attempt to avoid prison. he's facing very serious corruption charges. his trial is ongoing and there are very serious concerns that if he's able to beat the judicial system, he will be able to prevent that from happening. and he's also help captive by figures that are much more to the far right than him because they're the only ones
9:38 pm
still willing to sit in the coalition with him. whereas the kind of monitor at the right and the center are no longer willing to partner with him because of his corruption. so he's both bound to these fall right extremists who want to take further steps and needs to destroy the judicial system to protect himself. ok, we'll leave it there. thank you for speaking to us from television, nato secretary general has urged european defense minister assist speed up arms and fuel supplies to ukraine. that says russia ramps up it's offensive, and the eastern city of lute the mr. avi has more from keith, ukrainian forces, say they've repelled multiple assault on the town of vulgar south of the besieged city of buck moot. and claim to have destroyed more than 100 armoured fighting vehicles near there in the past week. wiping out potentially hundreds of russian soldiers,
9:39 pm
but russia says it is continuing to take territory in the east all be at one small piece at a time. and ukrainians have been killed by the doesn't the ground reality in this war of attrition depends on who you ask. the eastern front line is more than a 1000 kilometers long. fighting too small to register may not make headlines. but even the smallest skirmish seen through the eyes of one family, can become the greatest of tragedies, evacuating from fuller door, the agony of one families decision to abandon their home. outweighed only by the pain of knowing. they waited too long. the strain, perhaps too great for one grandmother. her heart stopped moments before reaching safety relief at being out of danger replaced by the grief of loss. because we have to convince the people for an hour or 2 sometimes. then your relatives persuade them. we talk to them the polish talk to then the military
9:40 pm
administration says you have to evacuate, but that doesn't convince them. for some reason. ukrainian positions and bullet are have held since the start of the war, but russians out number ukrainians on the front line and are making gains nor modest vigilance. i cannot say for sure, i hope, and i am sure that we will hold both willis and buckland. this is our land, this is our home, our relatives, our families, our cities are behind us. those living in the war zone experience freezing temperatures and a lack of food, electricity, and water. mid day was not from the i usually feel, god forbid our forces from retreating, leaving us behind enemy lines. god forbid, i will not survive this again. those who have watched loved ones die, their homes destroyed and are still here. say, this should not be happening in the 21st century. will the latest offensive get
9:41 pm
worse? can their military hold out against overwhelming odds? will there be more missile strikes? will more western help get here in time? days before a milestone, this country was hoping to avoid a year of war with russia. ukrainians are seeking answers to tough questions. one thing has remained constant throughout this conflict, where russia and ukraine meet on the battlefield. civilians suffering soon follows the bas ravi al jazeera keith in south central chile firefighters. from as far as 3000 kilometers away are being deployed to combat the country's worst, forest fires. in decades, nearly 300 fires remain active and new ones are appearing, especially in the rest of our county region or latin america editor lucy newman report from galvan moreno yet another wild fire out of control. in their agony, a region firefighters call for more help. unable to contain displays,
9:42 pm
when of hundreds of active fires that have been spreading throughout south central chillies until late january, ah, the commander of the fire fighting brigade tells his men to evacuate order to come up with a pickle. the situation here is very complex. the fire is advancing very fast, so we are withdrawing to a safer area while we review another strategy. this helicopter is trying to dolls water on the flames here, but it's barely ever in the bucket. as you can see. it's just simply not enough to deal with the magnitude of this fire here on this mountain or hill the fire the way over on to the other side. and they're only about a half a dozen firefighter here right now. this smoking to visit is really i impossible to breathe here. weeks of intense heat and strong winds,
9:43 pm
compounded by years of drought or feeding the flames. but that's not all right with missing. okay. can, can be 30 percent, i think up, which are the neighbors said they saw 3 people with bella covers, who started the fire back there. and other neighbors say they saw a green car and a pick up truck starting fires while they tried to put out the fires and one area they saw how the people in cars lit others all over the place. and i love it, then yellow shows was the house where she grew up and with her 80 year old grandmother lived until tuesday, gledware federal court of brother. the vast majority of the fires have started in forest, john by timber companies who have long been targeted by rebel indigenous, my put groups, and who carry out what they call acts of sabotage against chilean companies. and farmer is they claim this as their ancestral land, but so far, no one has taken responsibility for the fires, which are hurting ordinary residence. many of them also my poaching if i am
9:44 pm
a letter only luckily, gal at what hurts most is that this was the last thing left of my deceased grandfather. he built all this with the sweat of his brow. the loss in property, livestock, and human life is incalculable. at least 30 people have been arrested for negligence or for deliberately lighting these fires. a curfew is also in place from midnight to 5 a. m. but nothing seems to be enough to stop new towers of blowing smoke from emerging c, n human al jazeera, gardena, chile, hundreds of small businesses are collapsing and sir lanka due to the ongoing economic crisis. so getting an international monetary fund bailout comes with stringent conditions, including higher interest rates and subsidy cuts, making it difficult for entrepreneurs to survive. it's particularly hard for farmers on fishermen and rural areas as well. fernandez reports for
9:45 pm
more than 40 years. fishing has been a way of life from ireland and the need, the bundle in today, he's struggling to survive without walla lambert at the price of fuel is too high. it was 7 to rupees. a liter. now it's more than 4 times that the price of met have also gone up and they don't last as long things are very difficult. fishermen across the country are facing the same struggle. if they do land proper catch. they can't cover their costs debts, amounting to long as worst economic crisis in memory left the country bankrupt, unable to pay for basic essentials like food, medicine and fuel. ah, agriculture is the other mean and i and the former was own, but singapore marina. gam is not finding it easy. we met him drying his paddy before the rain set in. once comfortably off. he's trying desperately to survive over callaghan them bank oscillate. we don't have fertilizers or chemicals that too
9:46 pm
expensive and subsidies have been stopped. so costs are high and the yield is low, low hired labor and damage from recent floods have increased the cost. the government isn't buying body and the middle men become an offer very low prices. farmers are cooling with multiple hits, including a shortage of fertilizer, negro chemicals following a band by the former president since reverse. fertilizer prices have swung wildly between a dollar and a $100.00 per 50 killer bag. present runner, vicar missing. hm. at farmers in northern kill energy on sunday, and promised the government would start buying from them at a fixed price from next week. at some economy, see the government's handling of the crisis, including implementing i am, if conditions has been disastrous. rule have been on market pricing, energy. we've devalued the ropey. i interest rates went up from 6 percent to 15.5 percent and austerity measures by the government blessing so many
9:47 pm
as semi's collapse the country as well as in the north and as a means on the backbone of the economy. because nobody can survive on such high interest rates for working capital and credit communities like this are facing the worst effects of sri lanka, economic crisis, and skyrocketing global prices. they're struggling, survive, and say, government claims of better times ahead. sound like empty promises. minute fernandez, o g, a 0 politely in northern she lanka. her women make up half of nigeria as population, but only 10 percent of candidates running for office and this month elections. one woman vying for a state governor is raising hopes that voters may elect the 1st female to that position. act of a say this could mark a turning point for women in a male dominated society or from other denise reports in the eastern city of yolo.
9:48 pm
ah, this is a moment he may like to wish to nigeria. i have walked ha, ha, ha, ha, a woman from a major political party becoming a candidate for governor. and she is a front dra, i should have been on the over came religious and cultural barriers in the patriarchal society to get to you. she says it's been worth the struggle. it gives woman it gives, so a daughters and gives us says together and 2000. what does the confidence that to yes or sole, ah, who wore men, can walk towards occupying what ever elective position the desire. although women make a puff of nitrous population, they've long been on the fringes economically and politically. we know also by virtue of the never end of a de keshawn, particularly in this part of the country. the women out been at the disadvantage
9:49 pm
compared to men. ha, but actually say changing attitudes of their strength in numbers could work for them. this time. it's really time for women. and we don't, we don't want to miss this opportunity. we don't know when we get this oppertunity again. nigeria is general election lead to this bump is being keenly contested and closely watched women activities across nigeria. i'll beat the election of a female good, and dickinson died. loosen from that offers. if that happens, they say the process it could be within reach the outcome of the vote wouldn't be known for weeks. but for now, our supporters are celebrating what they have already achieved on say, momentum is on their site. it reese al jazeera eula, new zealand prime minister says 25000 people have received emergency assistance after cycle and gabrielle battered the north island. some people lost their homes and thousands are without power. authorities are warning the worst is yet to come.
9:50 pm
9:51 pm
9:52 pm
a classic against the philadelphia eagles. $38.00 points to $35.00. david stokes, as the action really 70000 packed into the state from stadium in arizona to see the kansas city chiefs and philadelphia eagles battle for the vince lombardi, trophy short motion with tickets going for more than 3 $1000.00. the 2 star quarterbacks did everything they could to give friends their money's worth. patrick . the homes and jaylen hurts both free for touchdowns in the early stages of the shop, looking for a child who had to brushing touchdowns himself to help open up a 10 point lead for the egos with the homes and seemingly struggling with a recurring ankle injury. heading into the half time show ah, 19 grammy winner. brianna was the headline act, and her performance certainly seemed to inspire mahoney and his team. ah pacheco.
9:53 pm
the chiefs came out firing with a score from missouri pacheco and then to quick touchdowns. put them ahead for the 1st time in the game. oh, it's go back came hurts though we get another rushing touchtone and a 2 point conversion to square things up your card. it's super 57. 0. then the key moment with seconds remaining on the clock. the homes cut through the field to set up a match winning field goal opportunity for harrison bucker. what your daughter, kansas city chiefs. super good, the city. 3835. the final score. the chiefs and the homes claiming the 2nd total in 4 years. i talked a little bit of everybody, it wasn't like i was only person talking and locker room and we just challenge each other around to leave everything out there and i don't want so we'd like tight in
9:54 pm
the 1st time that you didn't see that same joy that we play with and i want to guys just know that everything we workforce for this moment you to enjoy this moment. you can, you can at the moment overtake you. super bowl. 57 m p. p quarterback, patrick, kansas city 27 year old homes is the 1st place in 990. no into the season and b, p the super bowl and super bowl and b p in the same year. you'll now get a chance to celebrate back home with chiefs friends on monday, david stokes al jazeera super bowl winning quarterback pentagon hines was grateful teeth, teammates in kansas city medical stuff for helping him get through the game off to injuring his ankle. before half time. the time that i read the real i don't like i said the real hard bank was when he tackled he kind of rolled to the outside a little bit. and when you, when, once you have that high goes rain, when any little tweak like that happens, it just really magnifies it so that, that was, i mean, come into the game. i felt way better than i did in the cincinnati game. and
9:55 pm
obviously that happened there and where to get that locally were able to get in a have time and get some new tape on there and some movement to try to get some mobility back. and then you just, i mean you thing that we talk about math until they protect me enough for all the able to sit there and make it there. oh so it was. so now i was going to play through. but i'm glad i get a little bit of rest on it now. staying in arizona and scotty scheffler defended his phoenix open title to return to wool number one. the master's champion, finished with a 6 under par, round of 652 in by 2 shots at t p. c. scotsdale. it's his 5th pga to a victory and sees him replaced through mcelroy at the top of the rankings. but the shot of the day had to go to ricky fowler. take a look at this. he came up with a hole in one of the 7 which helped secure a tie for 10. history has been made in the tennis world with that wu, ye being becoming the 1st ever chinese winner on the atp tour. it only ever won 6
9:56 pm
matches before, but beat john is now in the final of the dallas opened the 23 year old, overcame $44.00 aces and saved 4 match points to win food face who was rank 1100 and 21st a year. ago but now he is inside the wolf top 60 as everybody now is my 1st time song or trauma. but right. i made history here for my country and for my own i margaret, part of myself, and i specially thanks to all the fans and my t mar will come here as award. i couldn't do this without you know, any of you guys. and now thanks again. later on monday in the premier league, it's the mercy side. darby between liverpool and everton, liverpool or at home. but they've been on a terrible run of form losing 3 of their last for their 10th. while everton are in the relegation places, although they did when they last game against leaders arsenal, we only can stop all these questions and discussions by performing to our top top
9:57 pm
level. and that's what we have to do and that's what we will work on. and that will not never happened overnight. of course the grades to be not the lead off the pack in a moment. but we are, we are in a position where we can improve a lot of the situation and table. and that's what we wanted to england made it to wins in a row at the start of the women's t 20 cricket world cup in south africa island batted 1st. in this contest, in the town of paul, north of cape town, the irish crumbled from 80 for 2 to 105 all out. the english one this match by 4 wickets with 30 football space. and that's for the sports vanelle beer again, later with mo 3. thank you so much, peter. and that's it for the news hour. but i will leave you with some of the images of the earthquakes in turkey and syria, as we continue to mark one week since that disaster, thanks for watching al jazeera bye bye, for now. i
9:59 pm
and a touchy money into african gold, but exclusive own to 0 investigation coming soon. russian war in ukraine has dominated well for the past 12 months. devastating for those in the line of fire or directly impacted. it has strengthened global alliances and deepened divisions with far reaching effects on the lives of millions of people. worldwide. in a week had special coverage al jazeera explored every aspect of the conflict, the human, the political, and the economic, and the possibilities of resolution. ukraine war one here on,
10:00 pm
on algebra. we know what's happening in our region. we know have them get the places that others cannot. i don't fear guy by the police on purpose. and i'm going on with the way that you tell the story is what can make a difference. scores of afghans have bled their homeland since the taliban take over. in a special to park report, $11.00 east fall is to women. determined to build new lives far from home on al jazeera ah .
16 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=24273529)