tv News Al Jazeera February 14, 2023 12:00am-1:01am AST
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on al jazeera, ah rushes war in ukraine has dominated well, he's 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. well, white in a week had special coverage. al jazeera explores every aspect of the conflict, the human, the political, and the economic, and the possibilities of resolution. ukraine war, one here on, on, out there. ah,
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ah, hello, i'm the fargo. this is the algebra. news our life from london coming up to find the odds. one weeks as the earthquake struck on young survivors pulled from a collapse building in turkey. many areas, hospitals, now part of the rubble in a scantron, an indian field hospital is the only source of medical care we report from inside syria. as a 2nd installment of guitar, e 8 arrives there. thousands of people are in desperate need and the report, the profiles, decades of abuse by members of the portuguese catholic church identify more than 4800 victims so far. and i'm peter sim doe. how with your sport, the kansas city chiefs are celebrating a 3rd super bowl title, patrick mo, homes lead the charge as a fallback to win a classic encounter against the philadelphia.
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ah. run to the news hour. it's been a week since to devastating earthquakes, hit to a kia and syria, and the u. n. is now warning, the rescue phase of the response is coming to a close or the 37000 people have been declared dead across the 2 countries. but the final toll is likely to be significantly higher over $31000.00 of these victims were in turkey. and in syria, 96000 people have been killed. the focus is now switching to caring for survivors. but there are still some astonishing stories of survival. on monday, several people, including young children, were pulled a lie from beneath collapse buildings of to 7 and a half days. be in special aid effort is continuing, but supplies are running low in both countries is bitterly cold. posing a challenge for relief workers and survivors made homeless by the quake. serious
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president, bashar aside, is under pressure to allow more aid into rebel held areas and against all odds, survivors are still being found. a 13 year old was rescued on monday. after spending a 192 hours under the rubble of a collapse building of the turkish province of hattie, have also been moments of hope and joy and the city of adiana. a young girl who has been named as mary was also rescued. cruiser said to be close to reaching her oldest sister as well. but we got a team of correspondence covering the disaster. natasha. her name is an antique. yes, stephanie decker is in caravan marsh. bernard smith is in, is kendra and wrestle soda, as in mark mission in syria. and sammy zaden is in there, die. he joins us live from there now. and sammy, we mentioned there some of these extraordinary stories of rescue and survival. the question is, as the days and the hours take by what happens to a sense of hope that i'm sorry to say in the vows. last hopes were
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extinguished moments ago before we came to you live. when the last 2 bodies of the last 2 children who were trapped in the rubble of that building behind me were finally located up, pulled out, deceased. it was quite an emotional ending to a very tense day that started with hope. with 18 year old. saw that being pulled alive from the rubble telling people my sisters in there. my youngest sister in the she's alive, please reach her. while they struggled, they called in extra teams, international teams even joined the effort. they eventually found her sister. sadly, she was dead. and as time has gone by, it's just been an emotional rollercoaster hoping that perhaps the next member of the 15 members of that family would be found alive and one after the other. they were all located and sadly brought out in body bags. and we saw this cycle of hope
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turning to grief. we. we have some pictures, i think of early of the family that has been camped out here waiting for their relatives. they were trying to keep their hopes high, looking through albums of their family members, hoping for the best is they. they hope that some of those family members, if not all, will be found alive and be pulled out alive, camped around the fire, its freezing here, the perceived temperature is minus 2 degrees. so they've got the fire going to try and keep themselves warm, but it's only so far a fire can go. it might warm your hands and feet, but a car warm your heart when it development like this just chills you to the core. well, i spoke with someone else who knows the pain of loss only to well, oh no to boy as he's been camped out here with his relatives as they suffered the loss of their family members here too. so oh no.
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you lost some relatives here. our condolences for that it must be very hard to be here right now. it's really hard right now. love it. it's only hard our only live really if, if you say say stanley got get them out after the building as soon as possible in the 1st 2 or 2 days total. sadly they, they were killed yet. they were di, new coin from far away to be with your other relatives who are alive here. right. right. and why did you feel it was important to be here? because dale, my uncle lost his brother and his son. he was only 2 months married for on for 2 months now. he lost them both of them and his credit is said
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right now and terms of support of them. we are, we want to support them. france, i me, this must be a huge. the emotionally charged time for many of the people who have been waiting there, hopeful the loved ones would best, would be able to survive this devastation but, but now that the recovery operation is starting to wind down, where does the focus line next? well i, the focus is going to intensify on things that this or as his have tried to provide since the beginning just get out of the way for this truck. as you can see, as you were saying, nave, it's winding down and that's clearly what's happening now. they've switched off the lights here. there's this is going to turn into a clean up operation that's going to be an intensification of the, of the focus. and as well to provide for the people who are left alive and what to do with more and more bodies that will now come out of the rabble in increasing numbers in body bags. that's going to put
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a strain on the system too. and as i said, you can't see it now it's, it's night time. so we can get the drone up. but there's a tent city which the authorities have put up here. and those people, they are now getting things like blankets to them. they're getting food to them, but there's still an issue with some basics, like electricity. it's a vast area of devastation, so it will be no small task to get the electricity. they've got drinking water, but when it comes to sanitation, they need water for, you know, the bathroom, they leave water for showers. i spoke to one cousin of the relatives who died here and he said, i have to fairy the family members 3 hours away just to take a shower every few days. and i said to him, well, if you've got relatives far away, why can't you just stay with them? he said, you know how big the extended family is. so it's that kind of logistical challenge
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which is going to intensify and no doubt intensified the focus of people and authorities here going forward or challenging situation. and it's going to continue for the foreseeable future. neeve, indeed a huge amount of challenges yet to come from any of those who have survived the devastation as sammy zaden. and no di and turkey many thanks or se workers. some dozens of countries have been working for days to find survivors in turkey. i'm syria. stephanie decker has been following rescue efforts in the city of carmel. marashi was the epicenter of the 2nd earthquake. it's physically and emotionally exhausting. sleep is brief. no one has stopped for days. but the determination of these rescue teams, both turkish and international, many of them are, volunteers, is unbreakable. we have been working with the same minor people from target and then they call us do coffee and with our dog and our local feet and not be mistaken
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ever. they have miraculously 7 days on identified life and are working to reach what's believe to be a mother and her 3 week old baby. but they have seen too much death here. i'm in the really sad thing and we have been talking about this way. we have got it. when we found people, their children are within the bodies had tried to reach the children that coming today to their bedroom. the task of the rescue and recovery walkers is voss you can tell where the devastation begins, or where it ends as one volunteer told me, he said it was so, damage across the southeast that makes what is already an incredibly difficult task . even more challenging, keandrea is a local volunteer. he's been working with fire fighters from missouri by john. john, are the synagogue estimate, even though we remove that body and we give the course to the family. they still hug ourselves and think awesome. and then they got the body back and ask them to
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pray over and dirty, grateful even to be handed your dead. this is the reality of this unimaginable tragedy. one rescue worker told us, even if all the countries in the world said teams to help, it would never be enough. stephanie decker, al jazeera god, i am on my dash south eastern takia, where there are now nearly 10000 foreign aid workers in turkey, and 74 from 74 countries with more on the way in the port city of as kendra and the indian army. and set up a field hospital that earned smith reports from his kendra. 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, loss of loss of length,
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head and oh, the gesture, almost 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, now gradually immortal. the infectious diseases are coming in. the turkish government has struggled to cope with the disaster of this scale. so citizens are relying on aid from across the world in the main character. on the morning of the quake, how made a search says everywhere was how 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 trend there just a moment ago and we're outside the public hospital. opposite. the school is in too dangerous a condition to consider reopening with more than a 1000000 people homeless across south east and turkey. many living intense.
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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 about happening now. burnett, without a 0 is candor. and anger is building in syria with survivors saying the international community has let them down. after more than a decade of civil war, delivering aid to syria is incredibly complicated. control of serious, serious territory is mostly split amongst 4 groups. pro government forces turkish back rebels. high up to here, alshaun, previously known as the alumnis were front and kurdish forces. the earthquakes devastated areas, each of them control 4100000 people in the northwest already relied on age, but the syrian government doesn't allow many international age groups into areas. it controls the only route for aid into rebel held areas is via the bob or how a crossing on the turkish border shipments need turkish approval 1st,
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and roads to that crossing are severely damaged. the opening of more crossings to acts as different regions requires un security council approval, which serious ally, russia is likely to veto wrestle soda was where the could ari a convoy that enters northern syria. beer in martyrdom, the sin in northwest assyria. this place was not he, it's hard by the earthquake. however, 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 said it's 2nd conway, off aid. and now we're here. the aid has been received by the people. so it contains diapers for the, for the kids, and also the tans and the heaters and many other essentials that are desperately
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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 to buy by the civil society here. and also by the cut that he aid workers as well. so 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 are receiving quite a little here. i have been to they really in them. 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
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talked to the head of white helms, dr. sally, 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 rebels. they said that they do not have the dead more than rescue equipment. they do not have the diggers acts await theirs. 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
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needed than ever. this was out of that, i'll just 0 margaret machine northwest assyria, missouri saying the a situation in northern syria is incredibly complicated, incredibly challenging, and the whole thing is being disgusted. a closed session of the un security council in new york from where kristen salih. me now. joins us live and kristen, we understand there may have been a major development when it comes to access to northern syria. him or what more can you tell us? well, we're just learning of a major breakthrough. the security council is meeting behind closed doors, getting an update on the situation on the ground from representatives of turkey, a, syria, and also from the you ends, humanitarian relief chief martin griffiths, and they are being told we've just confirmed with the united nations that 2 more border crossing points have been allowed by the syrian government president bizarre . bashar al assad has allowed 2 more crossing points into the north western part of
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syria, the hardest hit part, which is under opposition. groups control. i previously only one border crossing as you were talking about had been authorized there. so now bob, i'll salaam and bob o rave from shaqia into northwest syria will be allowed as a crossing point to go in. now i, originally, syria had opposed aid getting in this way they preferred all aid to go through damascus. and under their control of the un said that the syrian government in fact was cooperating on making that happen. but given this was a conflict zone with other groups in the area and the safety of the aid workers. a concern going in their appeals were made by martin griffith's in damascus. in fact, he's briefing the security council via video link from damascus about these latest developments was able to make the case to the syrian government that on
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a humanitarian front, this access is necessary and in fact will be allowed. now for some 3 months going forward and this was necessary for the united nations, people may not understand. but under international law, they need a mandate either from the home country or from the security council. and the security council was hamstrung without the permission of syria because russia would defer to syria's request and serious request that their sovereignty be respected. so now a major breakthrough, the u. n is hopeful that this will accelerate aid getting into the hardest hit areas and 8 as needed on all fronts from food and medical supplies to shelter to heavy equipment, to help with the ongoing, ah, a digging up of structures in, in, in securing of structures on the ground, so some positive news here from the you and that hopefully more help is on the way for those in most need. right. so an agreement in principle,
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let's see what difference it actually makes for those people in northern syria desperate for how kristen salumi the you and many thanks for now. or somebody who knows northern syria specifically a leper incredibly well as wad alcohol abuse. a syrian filmmaker inactive as she joins us now live for me here in london. and can i start by asking you about your reaction to this latest suggestion that the assad regime is now willing to open these much needed border crossings from turkey, a into no more than syria. what difference if any, would that make i yeah, it's going to make a difference. i'm just really surprised with the reaction of people who are very optimistic and they feel like really hope. i mean, since when we trust the regime, there is even was killing the serial people all over his 20 years. there's him who didn't like even announced that syria under disaster when they as quick hit northwest and the regime areas 6 days ago. and i really also can't understand how
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the u. n. is celebrating, establish this or feeling like that they've done or achieve something when they didn't even show up in syria or to the sea and border. and the 1st 6 days when, when lives could be saved. i just really, i mean, we have so much anger, we have so much like, ah, action, you know, we wanted, we wanted to do, and we've done already just a couple of days ago after the essay. quick had syria and we had trucks in front of the you and telling them that the work they've done is 0. and the real heroes of, of, of the city and people. and of this ward are the white hermit's who were doing impossible mission and syria, under the circumstances. so it's too late. within this, it's their duty to act now and their duty to, to serve the syrian people and to head with any of it into syria. so to little to later in your opinion, i censor of course, a huge amount of frustration and anger coming up from you. explain to us though,
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where is the need greatest at the moment in northern syria, when there's a finally starts to arrive, where is it needed most desperately. now people are still in the states. they are still and there they are. it's all a tease, you know, like home towns have been destroyed by the i said quick. these people have been displaced many times by this he energy by russia, who's now, you know, like people celebrate that they allows a to enter into syria. so that people like need everything from the very basic need of food and water to, to shelter, to safety, to feel like they, they've not abandoned. and you can watch, you know, like the, the, the pictures coming out from syria. and so i'm so glad that you are correspond, that was able to be in syria and to us this by, by there on our eyes and to deliver this to the world. the need is very big, especially into the circumstances in that cold. and we need everything for these
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people just to to at least, you know, be, be saved in this very cold weather. i want to reference your extraordinary film for summer, which was dedicated to your daughter, a documented 5 years in a leper when it comes to bombardment. how does this earthquake add to the tragic story of your city and the people that you know, you know, we've been through a lot so the last 12 years and we felt for so many ways we won't make it out, we won't survive. and that's maybe the story of more than 12 millions of the city and people have been displaced internally and outside as well. but yet, i think what we're watching now is something more than what even we can imagine. our families, our beloved ones, so many friends and colleagues who have lost their families and some of them actually until this 2nd we still praying for them to be saved. and these people are
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still missing another of us until now, with all of this, the regime still trying to but more like, sees and limited their responses for the people and northwest of syria and the bombing some areas. and so, i mean, it just unbelievable. and i think what was more like heart breaking for all of us, the lack of reaction from the you and someone, the so many other international bodies. so i mean like the feeling that we still feel abandoned again and again, we still feel like we left behind everything they are doing now. it's not going to make up anything happened. it's not gonna bring back any people who we lost because of their delay. but yet that's still their duty and they're still there is up to be done. and where do you hope the authority and the responsibility for leadership at this difficult time in northern syria? where will that come from? who will be at the forefront of helping people providing aid,
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making sure those in need of the help that they need. we have amazing heroes. we have the white helmet, this syrian civil defense who are the leaders of our community right now, who they gave hope to so many serious inside and outside and actually to the whole world as well. we have at the same time, but showed us that was the business was turning around in, and it bo laughing and not giving any like actual steps to help people, not even in his areas. so, you know, like it's very clear for us who are, who cares about the city and people who are the syrian people and who are really doing everything they can do and not to save the city and people. there's so many or so local organization, people who are working days and nights to try to get shelter and safety for, for these people who stood outside now. and what we need from the international community now is not negotiating with us at read as are to be to be held under
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accountability for everything you've done before. and for not responding a talk to these people who consider to with his own people as a devastating pitcher through and through art o cuts are many thanks for joining us. all the news. oh, thank you so much. thank you. ah, turkey is worse. earthquake and almost a century has left a vast trail of destruction that will take years to repair business group say the total restoration bill could top $84000000000.00. 13.4000000 people live in the 10 provinces hit by the quake, thus round 15 percent of turkey as population. it produces close to 10 percent of g d p. the countries, clothing and textile industry, could be particularly hard head. a large textile manufacturing centers in gaussian tab and carmen marsh, which export carpets and clothing to europe and elsewhere around the world of large
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areas of vital agricultural land have also been wiped out of the earth. earthquake caused a dam to collapse in north western syria. a famous olive grove was also split in 2 inter key is hattie and province olive oil exports form. the region are usually worth $30000000.00 every year. or osman jeff, that actually is an economist see, joins us now live for missed on ball for, for more this. so welcome to the news our so firstly, what impact are the quakes expected to have in the economy when it comes to dealing with the immediate aftermath of the quakes? this section is huge, obviously when you think in terms of the 10 cities that comprise the region, it's just enormously functions. you know us, but i have spoken like a concept sounds like this. but when you think in terms of the economy overall, the impact of the region. so the overall economy is not that huge. so if you
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compare this to the 999 earthquake for example, you should place in the mama region of the country, which is a bit of a significant g p wise that's shows g d p as region is not very comparable. but nevertheless, when you look at the region itself, the inspection is to so we're talking about the destruction of across the, in the region, which is you mangas it's, it's colossal what we not know the exact magnitude such damage. we don't know how much it would be just like has been basic last b, which must be quite simplified way. but when you take this and use this as a metric for the contribution to the all calm me, it's not that huge. so for example, that the i miss seeing that the growth rate for the country for this year, for food with that he's not going to be talking much probably because this thing. but again, i spoke and lack of commerce because this into place the earthquake in the very beginning of the year. so there is room for recovery construction which is going to
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be providing in growth for the remainder of the year. at this moment, this video could say what the talking back is going to be. i order stage $4000000000.00 numbers. well, i don't find it very credible. to be honest, because you can have some good act back of the look calculations get back up lation, but the in the impact is going to be maybe to show and to be able to see what that is. you need the data set, which we talk about, the small need some input outputs into city in the region, only in property, the info to be able to get it. how much is going to be back in the center. so it's, it's, it's really a very big picture small, but the cost is going to be huge. anyway, me say i, we're $40.00 to $85.00, maybe $1000000000.00 the numbers the ranges. so why? because we don't that info versus the back at this moment, right. of the complication, of course,
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is that the economy and turkey has been in free for, for quite a few years now with inflation running it. so the like 5760 percent of times leading to sky high cost of living. what happens now after a devastation on the scale this inflation is not going to be helped by this obvious region is important. cultural awkward. so we could meet suspecting some pressure on prices coming from the region. so that pushes out the mission before, obviously, but i don't want to go into details with the inflation dynamics 35 to 25 years. so we do have a problem. i would like to point to something else stuff i think. is it more interesting than we should not be comparing this the mighty 99, as i said, earthquake because so it is best dynamics then was in dire straits. it was horrible . what is the dynamic today? is much more favorable, was a the construction of the building. yes. yes. we have another problem which is the
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follower i'll let you try to, but it should be there is room for public expenditures continued to do this deconstruction already building efforts. but this means pop external burner, public sector butter. now, who is going to be the cost of parts when you're borrowed? as you said, so it gives inflation around in the fifty's and seek is going to be going back to the forty's some painting over the inflation. but that is, is by the end of the reach. and for the summer interest that watches the show right now. so it is 25 and 10 years borrowing dates, the treasure rates are independent and you learn which are real, which are already. so if you're going to be resorting to internal bodily, at what rate is that going to be accomplished? because these by nationalist prices are told to be unrelated, so you're. busy gone, i think this was actually, again, i hate talking like the costs, but this would be
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a great opportunity for the public at large to have government g b. i did that for 4 years. where detox government uses the public in terms of borrowing for these expenditures. because no turkish retail basically customer charities, g b i's, is either deposits or effects or stock market with no, we're the chevy g b. these are either held by or investors, john, money's better mama, or banks, or the sample back. right? so or you could be creating another set, the lying toe or the g b i, which is a public and the public would be betty. will they be buying these bonds, surgery boss, by because they want the tribute the effort. so maybe this actually is a bargain offered united all the thought is getting into suspect, but the concept of interest rate, as you probably know, yeah. just bother them the stubs done a bit in these dire circumstances is probably to them makes you believe, right?
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that's right. and so says potentially an opportunity to restructure economically, but also economic turbulence to come in the short time. also monday, i'm say many thanks for joining us. thank you. thanks for. so i have this news on 3 flying objects detected over north american aerospace remain under an identified as to why house defend shooting them down condemns israel's authorization of 9 illegal settler outposts and the occupied west bank and in sport, tennis history is made to the 1st chinese winner, the 80 p to ah, with that what you might call it, winter's been pushed out of the way of europe. precious buildings,
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big dome of air set over the middle and all that was being pushed run it by weather . i mean, cloud may be snow, but even that's rather limited. as you can see now, there is some cloud kept close to ground, which means it will be overcast. can't see the sky cut through the sanchez a in poland and increasingly further south through might remain to bulgaria. west for the west, you hourly. moderate is by day and by night. and the sun is the dominant thing in the sky, but there is still statue eastern side of ukraine and being blown, quite hard in the south. rush these inside of the black sea just catching northern turkeys. well, which gets even more snow, but only the engine is known in the north. during wednesday, the bit of a break of that line of rain you may have noticed. so some ray might coming to some portugal, some across the british isles. when say otherwise, quiet and lofty sunny. now there is rain and significant, right? i think might fall out the sky and morocco, maybe western sahara and this orange you see every where's the harm at wendy's a seasonal wind picks up the dust and the sand. often traits dustin's not
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particularly true at the moment in north africa for the sapphire in the middle of summer is wet, particularly mozambique. and zimbabwe. ah . the karone of virus has been indiscriminate in selecting its victims. it's devastating effects of plague, every corner of the globe, transcending class creed and color. but in britain, a disproportionately high percentage of the fallen have been black or brown skins. the big picture traces the economic disparities and institutional racism that is seen united kingdom fail, it citizens, britain's true colors part to on al jazeera when the news breaks, when people need to be heard and the story told, it's incredible that more people were injured or killed this is mary's eve on the
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ukrainian capital with exclusive interviews, and in them through a much more than $2000000000.00 that might could have addressed. nigeria is going by them to visit in widespread public. al jazeera has teens on the ground to bring you more award winning documentaries and live lives proud of faith. lou. ah, welcome back. a reminder, the top stories here when i was there, it's been a week since to devastating earthquakes. it. turkey and syria or the 37000 people have been declared dead across the 2 countries for the final toll is likely to be significantly higher. rescue operations are still underway and against all odds.
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survivors still being found. on monday, several people including young children, live from beneath collapse buildings, up to 7 and a half days. there were nearly 10000 foreign aid workers now in turkey, a from 74 countries with more of the way we're getting a to syria is much more complicated. help has been slow to arrive in the rebel house. north west volunteers in moscow have collected tons of aid and donated over a $1000000.00 so far to help the quite victims of some have been job aid has more from the russian capital. hundreds of walla dues have been working long days to collect sort pack and ship urgently needed help for earthquake victims and turkey, syria. in the last few months, they have been collecting humanitarian aid for civilians in russian held east of ukraine. as soon as the earthquake happened, the launch, an appeal for help you with a brought in by everyone, people like you and me bring in all they have. i know
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a lot of people who part to jack is out of the 3 they had and only kept one. as soon as they found out about the trouble, inter kia and syria, everyone responded. donors, here are ordinary people, not to wealthy. more than 2 years have gathered in the basement of moscow's largest moss. the charities here run the card fund fundraising platform to help those in need regardless of their faith location. the oldest one until here is 91 of as many as 500 people doing what they can for the earthquake victims. i guess tony's chechens context potters have all come together to help her if the admissions and ethnic groups make up the 20000000 or so muslims in russia and thousands have come to help the people of syria and turkey. and it's not just muslims inside the mosque . for helping out carina is an orthodox christian and is supervising the volunteer teams the whole day during a 14 hours. and at the end of the day,
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i have a lot of in that, and i had a lot of energy and i don't understand why there are a lot of use and a lot of people. but these people are unusual for me or so i don't going to cry many here, get emotional, talking about the plight of the victims and the dedication of the volunteers. this is the understand the scale of the disaster, and will continue to collect much needed 8 for the victims. some of the job with all the 0 moscow. nato secretary general says russia's fears new offensive in ukraine has begun, and moscow's dispatch more troops and weapons for its war effort. insulting is urging european nations to fast track the supply of weapons, ammunition, and fuel to ukraine. same bus or avi has more from cave ukrainian
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forces say they've repelled multiple assault on the town of vulgar south of the besieged city of buckman. and claimed to have destroyed more than 100 armoured fighting vehicles near there in the past week. wiping out potentially hundreds of russian soldiers, 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 dozens of 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 full adore 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,
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her heart stopped moments before reaching safety relief at being out of danger replaced by the grief of loss. so 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 them, the military administration says you have to evacuate, but that doesn't convince them. for some reason. ukrainian positions in bullet are, have held since the start of the war, but russians out number ukrainians on the front line and are making gains nor combust, jani motors 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. de boer cannot shift robinette usually feel. god forbid our forces from
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retreating a 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. the will the latest offensive get 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 were russia and ukraine meet on the battlefield? civilian suffering soon follows the in basra 0 key. now the news, the white house says it has not yet been able to identify 3 recently down objects found in north american aerospace national security council spokesperson, john kirby says, the objects are not necessarily spine balloons or lewalma. you shut down any this
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month. off the coast of south carolina. oh, what house correspondent, kimberly. how could, how small there have been a number that have been in the last week or so shot down by the u. s. military that's left the american public looking for some answers what they did learn definitively in the last hour, according to the white house press secretary, as well as the national security spokesperson, john kirby is that in fact, these objects as they're being called, are not extra terrestrial. in nature now, when asked by reporters, howled that is something that has been definitively definitively proven or concluded. there was no evidence given for that. only that this is something that the pentagon is assuring the american public. but having said that, we still are not told whether it is corporate own state owned or what these objects are in terms of anything beyond what we know that this latest object that was shot down over lake here on over the weekend. that is one of the great lakes,
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one of the 5 great lakes in the center of kind of situated between canada and the united states. that it was october octagonal, in nature. so there's still a lot of unanswered questions about some of these objects that they are being called. the u. s. is condemned. israel's authorization of 9 illegal settler outpost, the occupied westbank israel's far right? finance minister said $10000.00 housing units could be built in separate existing, illegal settlements. the palestinian authority called in an open war against the palestinian people. move could prom friction with the u. s, which is long. opposed creating new settlements on land. the palestinians seek for a state, neither abraham has more from ramallah. let's talk about the context here in the occupied west bank where we've haven't had even one night of con this where we've seen a lot of israeli raids in palestinian cities leading to fatal to is we're talking
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about a month and a half since the beginning of this year and nearly 50 palestinians were killed by israeli forces. this is a 3rd of the number of palestinians who were killed by israeli forces in last year . so that gives you an idea of how tense the situation is. and we are looking at an escalation probably given the nature of this current for right is really government . now we've seen the announcement by the israeli government to legalize the settlement outposts in the occupied westbank and according to international law, all supplements are considered illegal. but what happens is that israeli settlers come and build whatever they want and then wait for an authorization by the israeli government, which were through actively recognizes those outputs. now, according to the palestinian prime minister, he says that this signals that israel has indeed started annexing palestinian
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territories. he said that this is a challenge to all the efforts that has been taking place by us officials to lead to a d escalation in the situation. but as far as the palestinians are concerned, they believe that they are heading towards an escalation given the feature of the kindest way to government. an independent commission looking into the sexual abuse of minors in the catholic church in portugal has uncovered thousands of cases. a report released on monday documented cases pointing to at least 4815 victims. most of them a male. the commission says this is just the tip of the iceberg as estimated there may be thousands of further victims. investigators say 77 percent of the abuses were priests. the prob has been looking at cases dating back to 1950 victims were allegedly abused in catholic schools, priests homes and confessionals, and responding to the report. the head of the catholic church in portugal said it's
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considering the best way to offer justice to victims where we challenge has more in portuguese churches in schools, in priests homes and in confessionals for at least 70 years religious men were abusing their positions of trust to abuse the children in their care. the victims were mostly boys, usually between 10 and 14 years old. but the youngest was just to get a press conference on monday. the commission investigating the crimes delivered the results of their year long mission. it's from when you come to push to made him shoot. these testimonies, as we will explain ahead, carefully allow us to reach to a much more extensive victim network calculated at a minimum number absolute minimum of 4815 victims skins. v t mesh. the portuguese independent commission was set up in november 2021. it was after a similar body in france reveal $200000.00 victims of child abuse in the french
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church. and there are those who think the portuguese investigation should have uncovered comparable numbers. the numbers are pathetically small, and i think that totally implausible. in france, very recently there was a report done that concluded that there were a 3rd different 1000000 victims over a very similar period. the one the portugal has been looking at. and so that means that it's only left a little over one percent. the number in portugal. it's like catholic authorities in many countries around the world. portuguese bishops are struggling to respond to a self inflicted crisis that brought deep suffering to its victims and severely damaged his oppose. it bastisse of morality. some communism. we are aware as a church that we are a church that makes and has made. and we'll certainly make mistakes. i can't
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guarantee that tomorrow, there won't be another case of abuse. i would love to say that, but i don't, i cannot say it. what i can say is that we have a different consciousness today. it wasn't easy for us to go down this path either, but we did it because we had to, it is essential to have the truth for the portuguese victims prospects for justice mixed. 25. testimonies have been sent for criminal investigation, but the rest are outside the 20th statute of limitations. so nothing can be done well, reach helen's out his era new zealand. now this declared a national state of emergency g to the impacts of cycling. gabrielle is the 3rd time in the country's history that the measures have been introduced. will authorities warning the extreme weather is likely to worsen? hundreds of people have been forced to leave their homes in the north island due to rising flood waters. pow house g as are all say being reported in the region, which is still recovering from recent severe flooding. still to come on al jazeera
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ah ah ah ah thomas boy now his peter and dough need. thank you. the kansas city chiefs have won the super bowl for a 3rd time. they fought back to where a classic against the philadelphia eagles. $38.00 points to $35.00. david stokes, as the action the 70000 pack into the state from stadium in arizona to see the kansas city chiefs in philadelphia,
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eagles battle for the vince lombardi. trophy short motion with tickets going for more than $3000.00 to to start quarterbacks did everything they could to get friends, their money's worth, patrick holmes and jaylen hertz by 3 for touchdowns in the early stages of shop, looking for a job said to brushing touchdowns himself to help open up a 10 point lead for the egos with homes seemingly struggling with the recurring ankle injury. heading into the half time show. ah, no in turn grammy winner brianna was the headline act. and her performance certainly seemed to inspire mahoney and his team. i'm with the chiefs came out firing with school from isaiah pacheco and then to quick touchdowns. put them ahead for the 1st time in the game. i
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back came hurt. so we get another rushing touchstone, and a 2 point conversion to square things up here tod. it's super 57. 0. then the key moment with seconds remaining on the clock, my homes cut through the field to set up a match winning field goal opportunity for harrison bucker. i got it in the kansas city chiefs with 3835, the final school. the chiefs and more homes claiming their 2nd title in 4 years. i talked a little bit of everybody. it wasn't like i was only person talking in a locker room and we just challenge each other around to leave everything out there and i don't want so we play tight in the 1st out that you didn't see that same joy that we play with. and i want to guys just know that everything we work for for this moment, you're doing this moment. you can, you can at the moment overtake you. super bowl. 57 m b, p. quarterback. patrick,
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my home, kansas city, 27 year old homes is the 1st place in 999 when 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 l g 0 super bowl winning quarterback patrick holmes was grateful to his teammates on kansas city's medical stuff for helping him get through the game. also entering his ankle before half time all the time that i read the real. busy i don't like i said the real hard ankle was when he, when i tackled it kind of rolled to the outside a little bit. and when you, when, once you have that high eagle spring, when any little tweak like that happens, it just really magnifies it. so the, that was, i mean, come into the game, i felt way better than i did the in the cincinnati game. and obviously that happened there. and where to get that locally were able to get a have time and get some new tape on there. it's a movement to try to get to mobility back and then you just, i mean,
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you think we talked about mouth until they protect me enough or all they would have sit in 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. liverpool have secured victory in the mercy. sy, darby against everton. mohammed sellers strike before halftime meant that he has now been involved in 100 primly goals at anfield. that's that is for goals and assists. and making it very 1st to the club was cody, get her the january signing, doubling lead full yoga tops, men to no fun school. england have made it to winds in a row at the start of the women's t 20 cricket world cup in south africa. island battered 1st and this contest in the town of paul, north of cape town. the irish crumbled from 80 for $2.00 to $105.00 all out sophie egleston and sarah glen each taking 3 wickets. and then alice cap see hammered. a 21 bull half century as the english one by 4 wickets with 34 bulls,
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the spare history has been made in the tennis world with it. you will ye being becoming the 1st ever chinese winner on the b 2, it is only ever won. 6 matches before, but be john esna in the final dallas open 23 year old. i became 44 aces and saved full match points to wind 3 states who was rank 1100 and 21st a year ago. but now enters the wolf top 6 the 1st time. as everybody know is my 1st time, so i'll try my birth right. i made history here for my country and for my own. i'm are very proud of myself and the specially thanks to all the fans and my team will come here as a lord. i couldn't do this without any of you guys. and now thanks again, maclaren avail their new car some 2 weeks out on the start of the new for me to one season. lander norris will be the team's number one driver alongside rookie oscar p . s. 3. norris had one podium finish last year. mclaren has not had
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a will champion since louis hamilton in 2008. and the last one the constructors championship in 1998. you know that the guys have worked extremely out over the winter to um, to bring a car which is more consistent um from restoration we had some good ups, but we also had a lot of downs and i guess trying to minimize the downs, little bit more is, is the 1st thing. scotty shiffler defended. he's phoenix. open title to return to world number one. the master's champion, finished with a 6 under pall round of $65.00. to him by 2 shots, a t p. c. scotsdale. it's, he's 50 j $250.00 and sees him replace mcelroy. the top of the rankings shot of the day had to get ricky fowler. he came up with a hole in one of the 7th, which helped secure a tie. and that's all the sports needs need. but he, thanks peter, without cit from the news, our hear from london will leave you there before we go with some of the images of the earthquakes and ticket and syria,
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wherever you go in the world, one airline goes to make it feel exceptional. katara always going places together. serious, darkest days, with one man leading the country through president alice out as last legitimacy. he needs to step back. how has he retained control through over a decade of war? we examined the global power games of president bashar assad. we believe assad the simply carrying out iranian orders. what keeps you awake at night? many a reason that could effect any human eyesight master of chaos. on al jazeera, there are some of the media stories, a critical look at the global news media cast right on how to 0. government shut off access to social media.
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